| AAE 19000 - Introduction To Aerospace Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Emphasis on the nature of engineering and the engineering method, with special attention to aeronautical and astronautical problems; introduction to design. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 20000 - Undergraduate Sophomore Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. The courses are intended to provide a forum for guest speakers, organizational and informational meetings with undergraduates, and to provide a venue for discussion of professional development. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
In this course students will learn:
1. The requirements for earning a BSAAE degree
2. Advising and registration processes in AAE
3. Professional ethics
4. Current events in Aerospace Engineering
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| AAE 20300 - Aeromechanics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental concepts and principles of bodies in motion, with applications to aeronautical and astronautical problems. Subjects covered include rectilinear motion, curvilinear motion, rotation, and plane motion. The static equilibrium and quasistatic equilibrium situations are treated as a part of motion in which the acceleration is zero. Problems involving impact, separation, work, and energy are considered. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 20400 - Aeromechanics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Loads on aircraft. Strain, stress, and equations of equilibrium. Description of aircraft structures and materials. Torsion of shafts. Fuselage and wing structures. Symmetrical bending and stiffness analysis of solid and stringer-panel box beams. Structural failures. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 20401 - Aeromechanics II Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to strain gauges, dial gauges, and photoelasticity. Tensile test. Torsion of solid and hollow propeller shafts. Stress concentration around skin cut-outs. Bending of symmetrical box wing beams. Combined axial and flexural test of aircraft stringers. Buckling of slender stringers. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 25100 - Introduction To Aerospace Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The role of design in aerospace engineering. Introduction to aerodynamics, performance, propulsion, structures, stability and control, and weights. Layout and general arrangement of aerospace vehicles. Design concept generation and selection. Computational methods for design. Trade studies and graphical optimization. Conceptual design exercise involving aircraft, spacecraft, or both. Technical presentations and communication for aerospace engineering. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 29199 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in aeronautics and astronautics. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 29299 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in aeronautics and astronautics. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 30000 - Undergraduate Junior Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. The courses are intended to provide a forum for guest speakers, organizational and informational meetings with undergraduates, and to provide a venue for discussion of professional development. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
In this course students will learn:
1. Program options within the AAE degree and how to choose them
2. How to interview
3. Getting an internship or other engineering experience
4. Professioanl ethics
5. Current events in Aerospace Engineering
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| AAE 30100 - Signal Analysis For Aerospace Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Signal processing and spectral analysis for aerospace engineering. Fourier and fast Fourier transforms. Vibration analysis; estimation of natural frequencies, wing vibrations. Introduction to linear circuits, operational amplifiers and filtering. Noise suppression. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 33300 - Fluid Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Kinematics of fluids and conservation equations for mass, momentum, and energy. Viscous and inviscid incompressible flow. Lift and drag in subsonic flow. Introduction to compressibility and boundary layers. Potential flow. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 33301 - Fluid Mechanics Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A laboratory course designed to illustrate various aerodynamic phenomena. Experiments in incompressible viscous flow; flow measurement and visualization; laminar and turbulent boundary layers; wakes. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 33400 - Aerodynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Incompressible airfoil and lifting line theory. Steady and unsteady, one-dimensional, linear and nonlinear flows. Normal shock waves. Steady, supersonic, two-dimensional linear and nonlinear flows. Oblique shock waves. Perturbation theory for wings and bodies. Design applications. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 33401 - Aerodynamics Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A laboratory course designed to illustrate various aerodynamic phenomena. Airfoil pressure distribution. Finite wing lift, drag, and moment. Supersonic flow around bodies. Shock waves. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 34000 - Dynamics And Vibrations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Kinematics and kinetics of particles and rigid bodies. Topics include a particle in orbit, systems of particles, vibrations, Euler's equations of motion, Eulerian angles, and aerospace vehicle dynamics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 35103 - Aerospace Systems Design |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Aerospace system lifecycle and design process. Stakeholder needs elicitation and requirements generation. Quality function deployment and hierarchical objective trees. Concept generation and creativity techniques. Introduction to safety, risk, cost and value analysis. Critical evaluation of the applicability of systems engineering techniques in specific contexts. Application of these techniques to a team semester design project. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify appropriate tools, methods and processes to formulate an aerospace system design problem including realistic constraints from technical, economic, social, political, safety, and other relevant contexts.
2. Apply those tools, methods and processes to generate solutions to the aerospace system design problem.
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| AAE 35200 - Structural Analysis I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Properties of wing and fuselage sections. Beam-column moments. Torsion of thin-walled and skin-stringer multiple-cell sections. Nonsymmetrical bending of skin-stringer wing sections. Flexural shear in open and closed thin-walled and skin-stringer sections. Loads and stresses in the rib system. Cutouts and shear lag. Modified beam theory for wing and fuselage design. Deflection by energy method. Introduction to composite structures. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 35201 - Structural Analysis I Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Location of shear center. Torsion of thin-walled open and closed sections. Torsion of multiple-cell, thin-walled section. Nonsymmetrical bending of skin-stringer cross section. Shear lag effect. Bending of composite beam. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 36100 - Introduction To Random Variables In Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Events, sample space, probability, conditional probability, independence, random variables. Probability mass functions, density functions, and cumulative distribution functions. Derived probability density functions. Bernoulli, Poisson, and normal processes. Applications to engineering problems. Some fundamental limit theorems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
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| AAE 36400 - Control System Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Modeling and analysis of dynamical systems with aerospace applications. Laplace transforms, transfer functions, block diagrams. Transient and steady-state response of dynamical systems. Root Locus, Bode, Nyquist methods for control systems analysis. Introduction to controller design. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 36401 - Control Systems Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Enhance student awareness of control systems by providing hands-on experience using dynamic systems representative of air and space vehicles. Design of a control system from start to finish by mapping requirements into control solutions through the process of modeling, identification, and controller design (PID and Lead-Lag). Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 37200 - Jet Propulsion Power Plants |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic operating principles and analysis of performance characteristics of jet propulsion systems (air breathing and rocket). Ramjet, turbojet, and turbofan cycle analysis. Analysis of flow through inlets, combustors, nozzles, compressors, turbines. Component matching. Liquid and solid propellant rockets. Not open to students with credit in M E 43800. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 38199 - Professional Practice Co-Op I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 38299 - Professional Practice Co-Op II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 38399 - Professional Practice Co-Op III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 39000 - Professional Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in aerospace engineering. Program coordinated by the school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit a summary report. Course may be taken more than once. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| AAE 39399 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in aeronautics and astronautics. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 39499 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in aeronautics and astronautics. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 39500 - Undergraduate Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. The course is intended to provide a forum for guest speakers, organizational and informational meetings with undergraduates and to provide a venue for assessment. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Presentation
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| AAE 39599 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in aeronautics and astronautics. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 39699 - Professional Practice Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in aeronautics and astronautics. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| AAE 40000 - Undergraduate Senior Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A lecture-demonstration series emphasizing evaluation of career options, identification and development of professional skills. Example of career-related topics include choosing a job, and post graduate education in engineering or other disciplines. Examples of professional skills topics covered include interviewing, writing, and ethics. Assessment of student achievement of AAE program learning outcomes. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
In this course students will learn:
1. How to get a job
2. How to get into graduate school (and why)
3. How to succeed in the workplace
4. Current events in Aerospace Engineering
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| AAE 41200 - Introduction To Computational Fluid Dynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory course in the formulation and application of finite difference methods for solving fluid flow problems. Classification of partial differential equations and formulation of well-posed problems. Discrete approximation of partial differential equations: stability, consistency, and convergence. Finite-volume formulations. Survey of methods for solving hyperbolic, elliptic, and parabolic problems. Formulation of discrete boundary conditions. Application of methods to one- and two-dimensional flow problems. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 41600 - Viscous Flows |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Navier-Stokes equations, boundary layer theory, frictional drag and heating, separation and transition. Turbulent flows. Computational methods for laminar and turbulent flows. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 41800 - Zero-Gravity Flight Experiment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Team-based design-build-test engineering experience to maximize the benefits of student participation in the NASA Reduced Gravity Student Flight Opportunity Program (or similar). Gravity, orbits, and weightlessness. Low-gravity capillary fluid physics, scaling laws, and components. Experiment design for multiple short zero gravity test times. Technical proposal writing, design for manufacturability, experiment fabrication, planning, testing, and execution. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 42100 - Flight Dynamics And Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Flight vehicle rigid-body equations of motion; linearization via small perturbation techniques. Trim analysis, static and dynamic stability, aerodynamic stability derivatives and control effectiveness. Vehicle transfer functions, stability augmentation, aircraft handling qualities. Introduction to flexible vehicle effects. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 43900 - Rocket Propulsion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Flight mechanics and the propulsion system requirements for terrestrial and interplanetary flight. Basic principles and performance of solid and liquid chemical rocket propulsion systems. Elements of nuclear rockets, nuclear-electrical power systems, and electrical propulsion systems. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 44000 - Spacecraft Attitude Dynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Description of orientation, angular velocity, and angular acceleration in terms of direction cosines, Euler parameters, and angles. Forces and moments acting on space vehicles. Attitude stability of various types of satellites in circular and elliptic orbits. Spin stabilization and gravity gradient torques. Gyroscopic devices and energy dissipation. Introduction to attitude control. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 44300 - Industrial Practices Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students give oral presentations describing their employers and employment during their last coop/intern work session. Outside speakers from industry will also be solicited. Intended primarily for intern and cooperative students enrolled in A&AE. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| AAE 45000 - Spacecraft Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Senior students perform a team-based spacecraft design, requiring application of the education and skills developed in the aerospace curriculum. Components include analysis methods for preliminary design, development of an initial vehicle concept, and development of a complete numerical model of the mission, culminating in oral and written reports by the teams. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 45100 - Aircraft Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Senior students perform a team-based aircraft design, requiring application of the education and skills developed in the aerospace curriculum. Aircraft mission requirements include engine cycle selection and airframe/engine integration, performance, stability and control, structures, human factors, avionics, sensors, and manufacturing processes. The teams present oral and written reports on their designs. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 45300 - Matrix Methods In Aerospace Structures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Matrix algebra and its programming. Energy principles and finite element formulation method. Coordinate transformation and assemblage. Stiffness, mass, and incremental stiffness matrices for aircraft elements - bar, beam, and shear panel. Analysis and design of wing box and fuselage structures using simple computer programs (static and dynamic). Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 45400 - Design Of Aerospace Structures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design/failure criteria for aerospace structures, materials selection, introduction to manufacturing methods, structural assemblies, component details, concurrent engineering, and interdisciplinary design teams. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 49000 - Special Problems In Aeronautical Engineering |
|
Arrange Hours and Credit. Hours and credit to be arranged. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lab 1, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AAE 50700 - Principles Of Dynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Kinematics, fundamental laws of mechanics, constraints, and generalized coordinates. Lagrange's equations, virtual work. Application to particle dynamics, rigid body motion, and spacecraft dynamics. Knowledge of differential equations required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| AAE 50800 - Optimization In Aerospace Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Formulation of optimization problems encountered in aerospace engineering. Minima of functions and functionals, necessary conditions, calculus of variations, control formulation, two-point boundary-value problems. Applications to typical problems in aerospace engineering, such as optimal launch, minimum time to climb, maximum range, and optimal space trajectories. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| AAE 51100 - Introduction To Fluid Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The basic conservation equations are derived for a compressible viscous fluid, and then are specialized for applications in potential flow, viscous flow, and gas dynamics. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 51200 - Computational Aerodynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Finite difference methods for solving fluid flow problems. Review of classification of partial differential equations, well-posed problems, and discrete approximation of partial differential equations. Matrix and von Neumann stability analysis. Consistency and convergence. Grid generation: elliptic, hyperbolic, and transfinite mesh generation methods. Methods for solving the unsteady Euler equations: finite-volume formulations, flux-split and flux-difference formulations, shock-capturing, formulation of boundary conditions, artificial viscosity models, and multi-grid acceleration. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| AAE 51400 - Intermediate Aerodynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Thin airfoil theory and panel methods. Three-dimensional elementary solutions, lifting-line and lifting-surface models. Slender wing and slender body theory. Normal/oblique shock waves. One- and multi-dimensional flows and conical flows. Method of characteristics. Introduction to transonic flow, hypersonic flow, and airfoil design. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
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| AAE 51500 - Rotorcraft Aerodynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to Vertical Take-Off and Landing (VTOL) concepts and configurations. Rotor kinematics. Momentum and blade element theory. Rotor wakes and noise. Airfoil design for rotorcraft. Introduction to Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) techniques, rotorcraft performance, and design. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| AAE 51700 - Unsteady Aerodynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of inviscid fluid dynamics. Linearized flow theory; indicial and harmonic responses; panel methods for unsteady airfoils and wings. Simple applications to dynamic simulation and aeroelastic stability. Nonlinear theory for transonic flow; introduction to time dependent finite difference methods. FORTRAN programming used extensively. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 51800 - Low-Gravity Fluid Dynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and design for control of liquid propellants in weightlessness. Gravity and orbits review. Satellite and space-probe acceleration environments. Capillary-dominated fluid dynamics: contact angle, surface tension, curvatures, and solution methods. Industry practice and current topics. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 51900 - Hypersonic Aerothermodynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Aerodynamics of satellites and planetary re-entry. Continuum hypersonic flow. Inviscid and viscous effects, boundary layers, and heat transfer. Shock and boundary-layer interactions. Equilibrium flow of high-temperature reacting gases. Nonequilibrium effects. Kinetic theory and rarefied flows. Direct simulation Monte Carlo techniques. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| AAE 52000 - Experimental Aerodynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and application of experimental techniques and instrumentation for aerodynamics and fluid mechanics. Computer data acquisition, wind tunnels, force balances, flow visualization, pressure probes, hot wire anemometry, laser Doppler velocimetry and turbulence measurements. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture, Travel Time, Practice Study Observation, Recitation
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AAE 53200 - Orbit Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Orbit determination of near-earth satellites and various perturbations; libration and attitude control; orbit transfer and interception; lunar theory and interplanetary orbits; ascending mechanics and re-entry. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| AAE 53500 - Propulsion Design, Build, Test |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive one-semester treatment of the aerospace propulsion component development process. Derivation of design requirements from mission objective to detailed components; the design process. Standard methods for thermostructural, life, performance, and combustion stability design analysis; combustor design. Experimental procedures; fabrication; test. Special topics according to student interest. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 53700 - Hypersonic Propulsion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of advanced high speed air breathing propulsion concepts for hypersonic flight. Missions and trajectories. Engine/airframe integration. Aerothermodynamic analysis of ramjets, scramjets, and oblique detonation wave engines. On- and off-design of compression inlets and minimum length nozzles. Cryogenic fuels and skin cooling. Ram accelerator ballistic launch concepts. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 53800 - Air Breathing Propulsion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (M E 538) Analysis of operating characteristics of turbojet, turbofan, turboshaft, afterburning, and ramjet propulsion systems. Analysis and design of inlet, diffuser, combustor, compressor, turbine, nozzle. Component matching and off-design performance. Inlet distortion, nozzle-afterbody, and installation losses. Mission analysis. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| AAE 53900 - Advanced Rocket Propulsion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Generalized internal compressible and incompressible flows. Thermochemistry and heat transfer in rocket applications. Advanced topics in solid rocket motor performance and internal ballistics. Liquid rocket engine cycle analysis and turbopump design. Combustion of liquid and solid propellants. Hybrid rockets and thermal-nuclear engines. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| AAE 54600 - Aerospace Structural Dynamics And Stability |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Dynamics of continuous systems: rod, beam, frame, and plate structures. General structural principles: virtual work, Hamilton's principle, Lagrange's equation, and Ritz method for discrete approximations. Modal analysis: eigenanalysis, mode shapes, mode superposition, and complex modes. Nonlinear vibrations: phase plane, Poincare, bifurcation plots, and chaos. Stability of the motion: classification of problems, follower loads, aerodynamic loads, divergence, flutter, pulsating compression, and gyroscopic systems. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AAE 54700 - Experimental Stress Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and application of photoelastic, electric strain gage, and brittle lacquer methods of experimental solution of 2- and 3-D structures problems for static and dynamic loadings. Introductions to holography, moire, and photoviscoelasticity. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| AAE 55000 - Multidisciplinary Design Optimization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basics of numerical optimization: problem formulation, conditions of optimality, search direction, and step length. Calculus-based techniques for univariate and multivariate optimization. Constrained and unconstrained optimization methods. Global optimization methods. Multi-objective optimization: Pareto optimality and approaches. Recent multidisciplinary design optimization techniques: approximations, response surface methodology, and collaborative optimization. Applications of various methods and techniques to representative engineering problems, culminating in a final project. Ability to solve mathematical problems with MATLAB and IMSL and similar software helpful. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
|
| AAE 55100 - Design Theory And Methods For Aerospace Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to design theory, aerospace design process, design specification and requirements, concept generation and selection, design decomposition, improving designs, process design, and concurrent engineering. Design for assembly/manufacture. Projects allow for application and critical analysis of design methods. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AAE 55200 - Nondestructive Evaluation Of Structures And Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of methods employed for nondestructive evaluation of structures and materials taught in the context of damage tolerant structural analysis. Major inspection topics include: radiography, ultrasonics, eddy current, penetrant, magnetic, and visual/optical techniques. Other new emerging inspection techniques also are discussed. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| AAE 55300 - Elasticity In Aerospace Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A basic course in the theory of elasticity with emphasis on understanding the fundamental principles and solution techniques used in the stress analysis of structures. Cartesian tensors. Governing equations for linear elasticity. Rigorous derivation of beam and plate equations from the three-dimensional elasticity equations. Torsion. Thermoelasticity. The stress functions and complex functions approaches to two-dimensional problems. Energy methods and approximate solutions. Three-dimensional problems. Knowledge of differential equations assumed. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 55400 - Fatigue Of Structures And Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development and application of methods for predicting the fatigue life of structural components. Characterization and response of materials to cyclic loading. Fatigue resistant design of aerospace structures. Both fatigue crack initiation and crack propagation concepts are discussed. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| AAE 55500 - Mechanics Of Composite Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Current and potential applications of composite materials. Review of elasticity of anisotropic solids. Methods for determining mechanical properties of heterogeneous materials. Static and dynamic analyses of laminated composites. Fracture and fatigue of laminates. Reliability, testing, and design of composites. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| AAE 55600 - Aeroelasticity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of the effect of aerodynamic forces of flexible aircraft. Static aeroelastic problems; control effectiveness; lift effectiveness; divergence. Dynamic aeroelasticity; classical flutter; an introduction to stability augmentation with controls. A review of standard and modern numerical solution techniques; the k-method, the British or p-k method. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 55800 - Finite Element Methods In Aerospace Structures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the use of advanced finite element methods in the calculuation of deformation, strain, and stress in aerospace structures. Topics include: 1-D, 2-D, 3-D, and axisymmetric elements, isoparametric element formulation, convergence, treatment of boundary conditions and constraints. Special topics include stability, dynamic analysis, and nonlinear material behavior. Emphasis is on the theoretical knowledge of the finite element method. Applied experience is gained by solution of aerospace structural analysis problems through use of professional software. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| AAE 55900 - The Mechanics Of Friction And Wear |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to tribology. Review of elasticity and Hertzian contact. Analytical and numerical methods for non-Hertzian contact, including frictional and elastic-plastic contact. Surface roughness. Friction laws and frictional heating. Wear models and wear testing. Lubrication. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAE 56000 - System-Of-Systems Modeling And Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to features of system-of-systems problems; problem definition tools; role of complexity; network topology analysis and agent-based simulation models; architecture analysis; metrics for multi-stakeholder problems; semester team projects allow students to exercise and critique such methods for analyzing system-of-systems problems. Some background in probability and statistics (e.g. random variables, probability density and distributions, sampling methods) is expected. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. An introduction to modeling and analysis techniques for system-of-systems (SoS) problems in engineering.
2. Center on students’ ability for understanding, modeling, and analyzing SoS problems, which consist of multiple, heterogeneous, distributed systems embedded in networks at multiple levels that evolve over time. These problems are often large-scale and interdisciplinary, involving systems and behaviors found in diverse fields such as engineering, economics, social science, policy, etc.
3. Presents recent developments in addressing system-of-systems problems, describes criteria, lexicon, and analysis methodology for their study, and, through semester-long team projects, allows students to explore the many unknowns that persist in this emerging field.
4. The major subjects covered are: distinguishing traits of and behaviors of SoS problems, complexity and complex adaptive systems, agent-based modeling, modern network theory and analysis tools, modeling for decision-making, and exploratory modeling.
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| AAE 56400 - Systems Analysis And Synthesis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. State space methods of analysis and design of continuous and discrete-time linear systems. Coordinate transformations, Jordan canonical forms, digital control, controllability and observability of continuous and discrete systems. Liapunov stability analysis. The linear regulator problem of optimal control via Hamilton Jacobi theory. Pole assignment, stabilizability, detectability. State estimation for deterministic models. Minimal order observers. MA 51100 recommended concurrently. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
|
| AAE 56500 - Guidance And Control Of Aerospace Vehicles |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Optimal control theory and application to trajectory optimization; flight control synthesis and guidance law development; handling qualities; stability augmentation; auto-pilots. Launch vehicle and ballistic missile attitude control. A&AE 56400 recommended. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AAE 56700 - Introduction To Applied Stochastic Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course in the concept of a discrete and continuous stochastic process based upon physical phenomena that originally gave rise to the specific stochastic models that are studies. Spectral analysis, response of time invariant systems to noise inputs. Estimation theory, Kalman and Winer filtering. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AAE 56800 - Applied Optimal Control And Estimation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces students to analysis and synthesis methods of optimal controllers and estimators for (stochastic) dynamical systems. The topics in this course include a review of probability and stochastic processes, classical estimation techniques, Pontryagin’s maximum principle, dynamic programming. Linear Quadratic Regulator problems (LQR), Kalman filter, duality of LQR with Kalman filter, Linear Quadratic Gaussian (LQG), and a range of engineering applications. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Study analysis and synthesis methods of optimal controllers and estimators for stochastic dynamical systems.
2. Presents a review of probability and random processes, calculus of variations, dynamic programming, Maximum Principles, optimal control and estimation, duality, and optimal stochastic control.
3. Through class projects, students learn how to effectively communicate their ideas and how to formulate a problem and solve it.
|
| AAE 57500 - Introduction To Satellite Navigation And Positioning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to radio-navigation techniques, using the Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS); GNSS signal structures; satellite search and acquisition; satellite tracking; coordinate systems and time; observations; atmospheric effects; and position-velocity-time (PVT) solutions. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| AAE 59000 - Projects In Aeronautical Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Topics vary - projects in Aeronautical Engineering. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AAE 59500 - Aerospace Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. An interdisciplinary seminar that provides a forum for invited speakers and staff to discuss new developments in practice and current research in aerospace engineering. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AAE 60700 - Variational Principles Of Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic concepts of analytical mechanics, calculus of variations, Hamilton's equations, Hamilton-Jacobi theory, canonical transformations. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: AAE 50700. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
|
| AAE 61300 - Viscous Flow Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Compressible, laminar boundary layer theory; Buseman and Crocco integrals; skin friction and heat transfer. Introduction to turbulent boundary layers and transition phenomena. Advanced boundary layer theory; the method of inner and outer expansions. Boundary layers with chemical reaction; applications to hypersonic flow and combustion. Prerequisite: AAE 51100. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AAE 61500 - Aeroacoustics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ME 61500) Quantitative measures of sound (Decibel) scales, spectra, energetics of acoustic motions, and measurement techniques). The wave theory of sound (basic equations and properties, sound propagation in homogeneous and inhomogeneous media, one-, two-, and three-dimensional sound fields, and distributed sources). Effects of source movement. Aerodynamic noise generation-acoustic analogy (Lighthill's equation and Ffowcs Williams-Hawkins equation). Introduction to Computational Aeroacoustics (CAA). Noise from turbulent shear flows (jet noise, cavity noise, and noise from flow over objects). Noise from turbomachinery, propellers, and rotors. Prerequisite: AAE 51100 or ME 50900 or 51300. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| AAE 62400 - Laminar-Turbulent Transition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Instability mechanisms, such as Kelvin-Helmholtz, Tollmien-Schlichting, Gortler, and crossflow. Secondary instabilities. Nonlinear and nonparallel effects; the Parabolized Stability Equations; receptivity; transition prediction. Effects of compressibility, heating, roughness, turbulence, noise, curvature, etc. Turbulent spots and the extent of transitional flow. Prerequisite: AAE 51100. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| AAE 62600 - Turbulence And Turbulence Modeling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Physical description of turbulence. Reynolds averaged equations. Scaling of basic turbulent flows. Homogeneous turbulence, spectra and two-point correlations. Hierarchy of turbulence models, including zero-, one-, and two-equation models, Reynolds stress models, large eddy simulations, and direct numerical simulations. Additional topics, such as compressibility effects on turbulence and probability density function methods, as time allows. Prerequisite: AAE 51100. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| AAE 63200 - Advanced Orbital Dynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discussion of more advanced concepts in astrodynamics. Includes fundamental theories from celestial mechanics, as well as trajectory determination and perturbation analysis with application to the motion of Earth-orbiting and interplanetary spacecraft. Assumes experience with the two-body problem. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: AAE 50700, 53200. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AAE 64200 - Graduate Professional Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and comprehensive written reports of this practice. Approval by the student's adviser or major professor and by the Graduate professional practice administrator. Prerequisite: Approval by the student's adviser or major professor and by the Graduate professional practice administrator. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AAE 64600 - Elastic Wave Propagation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Elastic wave propagation in rods, beams, and plates. Wave motion in semi-infinite bodies; Rayleigh, Lamb and Love waves. Pochhammer-Chree theory for rods. General properties of dispersive waves and approximation techniques. Impact. Wave front and ray methods. Introduction to wave propagation in anelastic and nonhomogenous media, and to large amplitude and shock waves. Prerequisite: AAE 55300 or ME 56300. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AAE 65400 - Fracture Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Methods of stress analysis in elastic media containing cracks. Fracture criteria. The strain energy release rate and J-integral. Crack tip plasticity. Interface cracks. Cracks in anisotropic solids. Bending of cracked plates. Dynamic crack propagation. Prerequisite: AAE 55300. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AAE 66600 - Nonlinear Dynamics, Systems, And Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental concepts and tools that are useful in the analysis of nonlinear systems and in the design of controllers and estimators for such systems. Results are illustrated by, and applied to, aerospace/mechanical systems. Prerequisite: AAE 56400. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AAE 66800 - Hybrid Systems: Theory And Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Hybrid systems are dynamical systems with both continuous and discrete dynamics and they are finding increasing applications in a variety of engineering fields, even in scientific fields such as biological systems. This course will present the recent advances in modeling, analysis, control, and verification of hybrid systems. Topics covered in this course include the following aspects of hybrid systems: continuous-time and discrete-event models; reachability analysis; safety specifications and model checking; optimal control and estimation of hybrid systems; stability analysis and verification tools; stochastic hybrid systems; numerical simulations; and a range of engineering applications. Prerequisites: AAE 56400. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the basic concepts and theory of hybrid systems.
2. Develop ability to analyze these systems using numerical simulation tools.
3. Understand the current state of art of hybrid systems research frontier.
4. Develop ability to apply this knowledge to a problem.
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| AAE 69000 - Advanced Aeronautical Engineering Projects |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| AAE 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AAE 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
Department: Aeronautics & Astronautics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AAS 27100 - Introduction To African American Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the philosophical and methodological principles underlying Afro-American studies. Dimensions of the black experience, including history, education, politics, psychology, economics, religion, social organization, and art, will be covered, and the requisite academic tools and sources will be examined. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Afro-American Studies Center
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAS 27700 - African American Popular Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the production of popular culture through African-based and non African-based traditions among African Americans in the United States. Pop culture forms covered include film, theatre, visual arts, literature, dance, sports, music and religious traditions. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Afro-American Studies Center
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAS 35900 - Black Women Writers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ENGL 35900) This course introduces students to the rich and varied literary texts produced by black women writers. Literary analysis, along with a consideration of historical, cultural, gender, and racial contexts will be emphasized. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Afro-American Studies Center
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAS 37000 - Black Women Rising |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the rise of black women and their impact on economic, social, and cultural issues. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Afro-American Studies Center
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAS 37100 - The African American Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focus on specific topics of the personal experiences of blacks, in Africa and the diaspora, including black identity, black culture, and the relationships between blacks and society. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Afro-American Studies Center
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAS 37300 - Issues In African American Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on a specific topic that relates to selected issues in the life, history, and culture of peoples of African ancestry. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Afro-American Studies Center
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAS 37500 - The Black Family |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course considers and examines the black family as a social institution, focusing on both recent research as well as more descriptive accounts of issues concerning the black family. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Afro-American Studies Center
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AAS 37600 - The Black Male |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines critically the factors contributing to the deteriorating status of African American males and the positive ways of coping with that experience. Includes an overview of research perspectives defining current knowledge on the subject. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Afro-American Studies Center
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AAS 37700 - African American Sexuality And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the history of ideas, approaches, and paradigms that have shaped and defined our understanding of Black sexuality through engaging stereotypes, symbols, and images that have influenced the sexual attitudes and behavior of African Americans. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Afro-American Studies Center
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AAS 39200 - Caribbean History And Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (HIST 39200) This course introduces students to the rich and varied literary texts produced by black women writers. Literary analysis, along with a consideration of historical, cultural, gender, and racial contexts will be emphasized. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Afro-American Studies Center
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAS 47300 - Blacks In Hollywood Film |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A history of the representation of blacks in mainstream film throughout the twentieth century. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Afro-American Studies Center
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AAS 47400 - Research Methods In African American Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers research techniques used by researchers to observe and to interpret scholarly investigation on race, class and gender from an African-American perspective. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Afro-American Studies Center
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AAS 49000 - Directed Readings In African American Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course allows students to create an independent course of study with an instructor on a topic relevant to the African, African American, or African Diasporic experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Afro-American Studies Center
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| AAS 49100 - Special Topics In African American Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Special Topics in African American Studies addresses special topics or projects under the direction of the instructor in the field of African American or African Diasporic Studies. The course may vary from 1-4 credit hours. It may be taught as a lecture or as a lecture with a lab. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Afro-American Studies Center
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AAS 57400 - Research Methods In African American Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers techniques used by researchers and to interpret scholarly investigation on race, class and gender from an African American perspective. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: American Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Critically analyze & synthesize theoretical paradigms of the African American Experience.
2. Apply research methods associated with African American Studies .
3. Enhance interpretive skills.
4. Conduct ethical research.
5. Enhance critical thinking.
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| AAS 57500 - Theories Of African American Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course addresses the development of an African American intellectual tradition. The course will span disciplines and swathes of time in order to understand how scholars not only created new ideas but developed theories that shaped and changed academic inquiry. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: American Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Critically analyze & synthesize Theoretical Paradigms of the African American experience.
2. Present material clearly and facilitate discussion.
3. Enhance interpretive skills.
4. Conduct ethical research.
|
| ABE 20100 - Thermodynamics In Biological Systems I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Thermodynamic principles associated with biological systems and processing of biological materials. Emphasis on the first law of thermodynamics. Fundamentals of steady-state mass and energy balances for reacting and non-reacting processes including multiple unit operations emphasizing living systems and bioprocessing. Applications of the first law conservation of energy to biological systems, energy conversion systems, and the environmental impacts of energy production. Development of engineering problem solving skills via MathCad and MatLab software. Laboratory emphasizes combining technical engineering skills with professional skill development through computer and laboratory exercises including two extensive projects that result in a biological product design. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Analyze problems and use a systematic approach to problem solving in the engineering of biological systems.
2. Develop mass balances for systems with and without biochemical reactions for in vivo and in vitro biological systems.
3. Characterize the properties of solids, liquids, and gases common to biological systems.
4. Estimate gas/vapor properties using gas laws.
5. Understanding the relationships between pressure, partial pressure, and humidity.
6. Apply the basic thermodynamic concepts to quantify phase and chemical equilibrium parameters for food and biological systems.
7. Use models to predict the physical behavior of materials at equilibrium in multi-component, multi-phase systems.
8. Use computational software to solve problems in biological systems.
9. Students will be able to apply science and math skills to develop a new product and the processes required to transform the input materials into the final product.
10. Students will be able to apply engineering fundamentals and analytical skills, specifically mass and energy balances and thermodynamics, to product and process development projects.
11. Students will be able to communicate technical information, oral and written.
12. Students will develop leadership and teamwork skills through personal awareness and reflection, and team experiences.
13. Students will develop an innovative and a strong work ethic through new product development.
14. Students will have increased awareness of ethical responsibility through evaluating case studies and classroom discussion.
15. Students will be more curious and persistent learners through self-directed team projects.
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| ABE 20200 - Thermodynamics In Biological Systems II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Thermodynamic principles and their applications to biochemical and biological systems with emphasis on the second law of thermodynamics and use of molecular interpretations of energies and entropies. Concept of entropy balances and process efficiency. Free energy and chemical equilibrium. Equilibrium between phases, colligative properties, binding of ligands and formation of biological membrances. Molecular motion and transport properties and their application in biochemical analytical methods. Development of physical chemical problem solving skills using MathCad and MatLab software. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ABE 20500 - Computations For Engineering Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of engineering problem solving and design skills. Use of Excel, Matlab, and MathCad for problem solving, data analysis, numerical modeling, and statistics. Introduction to elementary statics, dynamics, materials, thermodynamics, fluid mechanics, and energy topics. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ABE 21000 - Thermodynamics Principles Of Engineering And Biological Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of thermodynamic principles to the design and operation of biological and engineering systems. The focus is on mass and energy balances for non-reacting processes and on the second law of thermodynamics. These principles are applied to biological and agricultural engineering systems. Specific topics include refrigeration systems, power cycles, energy conversion systems, and environmental impacts of energy production. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to apply knowledge of mathematics, science, and engineering.
2. An ability to design a system, component, or process to meet desired needs within realistic constraints such as economics, environmental, social, political, ethical, health and safety, manufacturability, and sustainability.
3. An ability to function on multidisciplinary teams.
4. An ability to identify, formulate, and solve engineering problems.
5. The broad education necessary to understand the impact of engineering solutions in a global, economic, environmental, and societal context.
6. A knowledge of contemporary issues.
7. An ability to use the techniques, skills, and modern engineering tools necessary for engineering practice.
|
| ABE 28100 - Professional Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Supervised professional experience in agricultural and biological engineering. Program conducted under the direction of an engineering faculty member and with the cooperation of an employer. Student submits a summary report. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Internship, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ABE 29000 - Sophomore Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Current agricultural and biological engineering issues will be discussed by students, staff, and guest speakers. Career planning, employment opportunities, professionalism, ethics, and improvement of communication skills will be emphasized. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Presentation
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ABE 29199 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Contributes toward the student’s development in the College of Agriculture outcomes related to professional preparation, critical thinking and problem solving, communication, and teamwork.
2. Contribute to program outcomes related to understanding of the engineering profession and practice, basic engineering principles, knowledge of contemporary issues, and ability to understand and practice ethical responsibility in personal and professional life.
|
| ABE 29299 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Contributes toward the student’s development in the College of Agriculture outcomes related to professional preparation, critical thinking and problem solving, communication, and teamwork.
2. Contribute to program outcomes related to understanding of the engineering profession and practice, basic engineering principles, knowledge of contemporary issues, and ability to understand and practice ethical responsibility in personal and professional life.
|
| ABE 30100 - Modeling And Computational Tools In Biological Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to principles of analysis, setup, and modeling of biological systems using fundamental principles of engineering. Development of algebraic and differential models of steady state and transient processes involving material and energy balances, elementary thermodynamic, transport, and kinetic reaction principles, and economics in biological engineering systems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ABE 30300 - Applications Of Physical Chemistry To Biological Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Physical chemical principles associated with transport of mass, momentum and energy in bioprocesses. Principles for measuring physical chemical properties, a description of predictive equations for their evaluation and the role of these principles in the design and optimization of bioprocesses. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ABE 30400 - Bioprocess Engineering Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Laboratory course focused on bioprocessing topics such as fluid flow, mixing, rheology, hydrolysis, and fermentation of biomaterials. Students will participate in design of experiments, system set up, data collection, statistical data analysis, and presentation of results. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand and analyze the flow behavior in biological systems.
2. Understand and analyze enzymatic reasons in biological systems.
3. Understand and analyze fermentation processes.
4. Understand and analyze mixing and heat transfer in biological systems.
5. Collect and analyze rheological properties.
6. Design and safely execute experiments in a process laboratory.
7. Collection and statistical analysis of experimental data.
8. Present the results of analysis in the form of written report and oral presentation.
|
| ABE 30500 - Physical Properties Of Biological Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Physical properties of agricultural crops and food products and their relationship to harvesting, storage, and processing. Physical properties covered include: density, shape, moisture content, water potential, water activity, friction and flow or particulate solids, terminal velocity, thermal properties, interaction with electromagnetic radiation, and viscoelastic behavior of solids. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ABE 30700 - Momentum Transfer In Food And Biological Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fluid statics, Newton’s law of viscosity, shell momentum balances, equations of continuity and motion, one dimensional flow problems, flow through porous media, velocity distributions with more than one independent variable, two dimensional flow through a channel, stream function, velocity potential, dimensional analysis, boundary layer, turbulent flow, Reynolds stress, form and skin friction, application of macroscopic momentum and mechanical energy balances to engineering problems. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Know the principles of fluid statics.
2. Know the principles of dimensional analysis.
3. Know the characteristics and analysis of the flow of food and biological fluids.
4. Gain an understanding of the principles of turbulent flow.
5. Know how to apply macroscopic mass and momentum balances to flow problems in food and biological systems.
|
| ABE 30800 - Heat And Mass Transfer In Food And Biological Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of transport of energy and mass. Mechanisms of heat transfer, heat conduction, heat convection and heat radiation. Development of applications using macroscopic and microscopic balances of energy. Application of thermal energy balances and Fourier’s Law to describe steady state and transient conduction applications including heat generation. Effect of the geometry on these processes. Basic principles of design of heat transfer equipment and its operation. Application of species mass balances and Fick’s Law to steady state and transient diffusion problems. Effect of geometry on these processes. Analogies between transport of momentum, heat and mass applications to the solution of practical problems in the Food Process and Biological Engineering fields. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to apply knowledge of mathematics, science, and engineering.
2. An ability to design and conduct experiments, as well as to analyze and interpret data.
3. An ability to design a system, component, or process to meet desired needs within realistic constraints such as economic, environmental, social, political, ethical, health and safety, manufacturability, and sustainability.
4. An ability to function on multidisciplinary teams.
5. An ability to identify, formulate, and solve engineering problems.
6. Have the broad education necessary to understand the impact of engineering solutions in a global, economic, environmental, and societal context.
7. A recognition of the need for, and an ability to engage in life-long learning.
8. A knowledge of contemporary issues.
9. An ability to use the techniques, skills, and modern engineering tools necessary for engineering practice.
|
| ABE 31000 - Thermodynamics Of Food And Biological Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic concepts of thermodynamic energy and entropy functions applied to food and biological systems. Equations of state, phase rule, non-ideality, fugacity, activity models, vapor-liquid equilibria, colligative properties, osmotic pressure, ionic solutions, active transport, ATP cycle, characterization of macromolecules, chemical reaction equilibria. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ABE 31400 - Design Of Electronic Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental aspects of circuits, microprocessors, transducers, sensors, instrumentation, and data acquisition are presented, with particular emphasis on electronic systems used in agricultural, biological, and food applications. Laboratory exercises used to apply the course material to constructing and testing circuits, microprocessor controlled systems, and the data collection and monitoring of systems. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to apply knowledge of mathematics, science, and engineering.
2. An ability to design and conduct experiments, as well as to analyze and interpret data.
3. An ability to design a system, component, or process to meet desired needs within realistic constraints such as economic, environmental, social, political, ethical, health and safety, manufacturability, and sustainability.
4. An ability to identify, formulate, and solve engineering problems.
5. A recognition of the need for, and an ability to engage in life-long learning.
6. An ability to use the techniques, skills, and modern engineering tools necessary for engineering practice.
|
| ABE 32000 - Solid Modeling, Simulation, And Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to parametric, feature-based solid modeling; dimensioned 2D and 3D engineering drawings; tolerancing; mechanical dynamic simulation; kinematic models, analysis and simulation of simple linkages and complex systems; mechanism design and evaluation; visualization and animation of results; interfacing of computer aided engineering software. Projects involving industrial parts and assemblies will be discussed and assigned. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ABE 32500 - Soil And Water Resource Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Interrelationships of the plant-water-air-soil system; hydrologic processes; protection of surface and ground water quality; GIS targeting of soil and water protection measures; and design of subsurface and overland drainage systems, irrigation systems, and soil erosion control practices. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. An understanding of the agricultural and biological engineering profession and practice.
2. The ability to understand and apply knowledge of mathematics, science, and engineering.
3. An understanding of, and the ability to, identify, formulate, model and solve problems for engineering systems.
4. The ability to design a system, component or process to meet desired goal subject to constraints.
|
| ABE 33000 - Design Of Machine Components |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to design; stress analysis; deformation and stiffness considerations; static and fatigue strength design; design of components of the food processing, farm and off-highway machines, and mechanical systems. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ABE 33600 - All Terrain Vehicle Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A structured approach to the design process, including innovation, analysis, evaluation, documentation, and presentation. Design areas typically focus on machinery and vehicles related to agricultural applications. During the first two weeks, the students will define their design problem, statement of work, approach, and timeline. Their final report will summarize the design process and the steps used to solve the proposed problem. All students will give a brief presentation of their design during the last weekly lab meeting. Typically offered Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
After successful completion of this course, students will be able to:
Define, execute, document, and present a design project related to machine systems engineering.
Set design goals and specifications.
Define project criteria, constraints, budget, and timeline.
Perform a design study that includes weighing alternatives and recommending a design.
Generate layout drawings.
Estimate the project cost.
Present and defend their design to faculty, industrial representatives, and their peers.
|
| ABE 37000 - Biological/Microbial Kinetics And Reaction Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the rates of chemical/biochemical reaction and catalysis in agricultural, food, and biological systems with applications to engineering process design. Applications include microbial growth, enzyme catalysis, fermentation and reactor design. Introductory enzymatic and microbial reaction concepts will be taught and incorporated into reactor design. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ABE 38199 - Professional Practice Coop I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of department required. Professional Practice students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Contributes toward the student’s development in the College of Agriculture outcomes related to professional preparation, critical thinking and problem solving, communication, and teamwork.
2. Contribute to program outcomes related to understanding of the engineering profession and practice, basic engineering principles, knowledge of contemporary issues, and ability to understand and practice ethical responsibility in personal and professional life.
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| ABE 38299 - Professional Practice Co-Op II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Contributes toward the student’s development in the College of Agriculture outcomes related to professional preparation, critical thinking and problem solving, communication, and teamwork.
2. Contribute to program outcomes related to understanding of the engineering profession and practice, basic engineering principles, knowledge of contemporary issues, and ability to understand and practice ethical responsibility in personal and professional life.
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| ABE 38399 - Professional Practice Co-Op III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Contributes toward the student’s development in the College of Agriculture outcomes related to professional preparation, critical thinking and problem solving, communication, and teamwork.
2. Contribute to program outcomes related to understanding of the engineering profession and practice, basic engineering principles, knowledge of contemporary issues, and ability to understand and practice ethical responsibility in personal and professional life.
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| ABE 39399 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Contributes toward the student’s development in the College of Agriculture outcomes related to professional preparation, critical thinking and problem solving, communication, and teamwork.
2. Contribute to program outcomes related to understanding of the engineering profession and practice, basic engineering principles, knowledge of contemporary issues, and ability to understand and practice ethical responsibility in personal and professional life.
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| ABE 39499 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Contributes toward the student’s development in the College of Agriculture outcomes related to professional preparation, critical thinking and problem solving, communication, and teamwork.
2. Contribute to program outcomes related to understanding of the engineering profession and practice, basic engineering principles, knowledge of contemporary issues, and ability to understand and practice ethical responsibility in personal and professional life.
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| ABE 39599 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Contributes toward the student’s development in the College of Agriculture outcomes related to professional preparation, critical thinking and problem solving, communication, and teamwork.
2. Contribute to program outcomes related to understanding of the engineering profession and practice, basic engineering principles, knowledge of contemporary issues, and ability to understand and practice ethical responsibility in personal and professional life.
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| ABE 39699 - Professional Practice Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Contributes toward the student’s development in the College of Agriculture outcomes related to professional preparation, critical thinking and problem solving, communication, and teamwork.
2. Contribute to program outcomes related to understanding of the engineering profession and practice, basic engineering principles, knowledge of contemporary issues, and ability to understand and practice ethical responsibility in personal and professional life.
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| ABE 43500 - Hydraulic Control Systems For Mobile Equipment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design of basic fluid power components and systems. Includes power steering, hydrostatic and hydromechanical transmission, electrohydraulic servovalves, servomechanism, and manually controlled systems. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ABE 44000 - Cell And Molecular Design Principles |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the design principles underlying the organizations and dynamics of biological networks with an emphasis on genetic/molecular circuits. Topics include the structure and tuning of network motifs and relationship to performance parameters such as robustness to internal noise, temporal response, noise filtering, bi-stability, pattern generation and temporal programs. Examples are presented from the study of natural systems and the design of new synthetic systems. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand, describe, and calculate quantitative features of biological networks.
2. Create simple, mechanistic models of gene expression.
3. Identify different types of networks motifs in biological networks.
4. Describe when particular motifs would be useful for specific types of biological functions.
5. Ananlyze the dynamics and steady state behavior of simple transcriptional motifs or gene circuits.
6. Tune the parameters of a genetic circuit to design a particular behavior such as a temporal program, an asymmetric, or a bistable switch.
7. Design and characterize a transcriptional motif or genetic to result in a particular function, behavior of feature such as robustness, noise filtering, or patterning.
8. Understand the importance of and describe the basic requirements for generating oscillations in cells.
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| ABE 45000 - Finite Element Method In Design And Optimization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of the finite element method as it is used in modeling, analysis, and design of thermal/fluid and mechanical systems; one- and two-dimensional elements; boundary value problems, heat transfer and fluid flow problems; structural and solid mechanics problems involving beam, truss, plate and shell elements; computer-aided design and optimization of machine components, structural elements and thermal/fluid system. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ABE 45700 - Transport Operations In Food And Biological Engineering I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of momentum and heat transfer to biological and food process engineering. Viscosity, non-Newtonian fluids, experimental methods of rheological characterization of food and biological systems; viscoelasticity; design equations for pipe flow, pumps, mixing, emulsification, extrusion, sheeting, heat exchanges, aseptic processing, sterilization, freezing, and evaporation. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Gain and understand the principles, design and analysis of biological and food process engineering operations.
2. Know the characteristics and analysis of the flow of biological fluids.
3. Gain an understanding of the principles, design and analysis of thermal processing operations.
4. Gain an understanding of the principles and analysis of freezing.
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| ABE 46000 - Sensors And Process Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental aspects of transducers, biosensors, instrumentation, and computer control are presented, with particular emphasis on sensors and controls used in agricultural, biological, and food applications. Laboratory and pilot plant scale computer controlled equipment is used to examine response of process variables, sensor calibration, control system modeling, and controller selection and tuning. Prereq: differential equations and a course in either heat transfer or fluid mechanics. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ABE 48400 - Project Planning And Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Review of topics relevant to project planning and execution in industry, including technical communication, budgeting, team management, intellectual property rights, contracts and timelines. Students will select a Capstone project and assemble a project proposal within a team environment. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Synthesize a project plan and proposal, including developing a budget and timeline.
2. Communicate technical content to technical content to technical and non-technical audiences in a concise and informative manner.
3. Enhance communication skills by presenting project proposal (written and oral) in a formal setting.
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| ABE 48500 - Agricultural Engineering Project Management And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Review of information relative to project planning and execution in industry, including budgeting, intellectual property rights, contract and timelines. Machine or system environmental design projects, team or individual, related to contemporary or potential problems in agricultural engineering. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Design an environmental and natural resources system or a machine system.
2. Write a comprehensive design report and/or project report for various target audiences.
3. Model/prototype and test projects in multidisciplinary teams which include government, and industry engineers and marketing personnel supporting the specific projects.
4. Enhance communication skills by presenting project progress and final reports (written and oral) in a formal setting.
5. Experience engineering practice with professionalism and ethical responsibility.
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| ABE 48600 - Agricultural Engineering Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of topics relevant to project planning and execution in industry, including technical communication, budgeting, team management, intellectual property rights, contracts and timelines. Students will select a Capstone project and assemble a project proposal within a team environment. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Design an environmental and natural resources system or a machine system.
2. Write a comprehensive design report and/or project reports for various target audiences.
3. Model/prototype and test projects in multidisciplinary teams with consultation available to students from government and industry engineers and marketing personnel.
4. Enhance communication skills by presenting project progress and final reports (written and oral) in a formal setting.
5. Experience engineering or project management practice with profesionalism and ethical responsibility.
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| ABE 49000 - Professional Practice In Agricultural And Biological Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Career areas in agricultural engineering; job opportunities and graduate study; professional attitudes and ethics; contracts and specifications; patents. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Presentation
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ABE 49500 - Select Topics In Agricultural And Biologicl Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Credit and hours to be arranged. Special topics and projects of contemporary importance or of special interest that are outside the scope of the standard agricultural and biological engineering curriculum. The specific topic that is offered will be indicated on the student's record. A written report and oral presentation of final results are required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 12 credits
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| ABE 49800 - Undergraduate Research In Agricultural And Biological Engineering |
|
Arrange Hours and Credit. Credit and hours to be arranged. Individual research projects for students with the approval of their advisors. Requires prior approval of, and arrangement with, a faculty research advisor. A written report and public oral presentation of final results are required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
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| ABE 49900 - Thesis Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Credit and hours to be arranged. Individualized research on agricultural and biological engineering problems. Arrange with program coordinator before registering. A written report and public oral presentation of final results are required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
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| ABE 50100 - Welding Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design of weldments and modeling of heat transfer and residual stresses of the welding processes. Finite element theory of nonlinear properties for the many processes including laser, submerged arc, manual, Gas Tungsten Arc Welding (GTAW), plasma, and electron beam. Metallurgy topics include continuous cooling transformation curves in optimizing engineered joint strength, including cutting and welding. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ABE 52200 - Ecohydrology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Ecohydrology links hydrological and ecological processes at various spatiotemporal scales and is considered to be one of the most exciting frontiers of the future. Hydrological processes in individual ecosystems and the role of water in linking the myriad components of the landscape will be explored in this three-credit course. Interactions between hydrological and biological processes and factors that regulate and shape these interactions will be covered. The ecohydrology principles covered will include integration of water and biota at the catchment scale, nutrient transport and cycling, modeling ecohydrologic processes, and quantification of ecosystem services. Recommended: a prior course in hydrology. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand emerging area of ecohydrology related to different ecosystems including linkages among biological and physical processes at river basin scale.
2. Quantify ecosystem services from various land use activities.
3. Understand nutrient processes in various ecosystems.
4. Apply ecohydrologic models in developing sustainable ecosystems plans.
5. Critically analyze recent scientific literature related to ecohydrology and watershed management.
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| ABE 52500 - Irrigation Management And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Irrigation management and design, including water resources planning, soil moisture movement and utilization, irrigation scheduling, system selection and operation, pumping plant characteristics and efficiency, hydraulic network analysis, system evaluation, and environmental efficiency. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ABE 52700 - Computer Models In Environmental And Natural Resources Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Offers students in environmental and natural resources engineering programs an understanding of the hydrological processes and related design skills. Principles of soil erosion by water; drainage of agricultural lands; surface runoff; flood and reservoir routing; hydrodynamic and water quality in pipe network; nonpoint source pollution; and transport phenomenon are studied. Current computer models utilized in industry for decision support are applied using case studies to further enhance the understanding of the hydrological processes. Limitations and advantages of the models are discussed. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ABE 52900 - Nonpoint Source Pollution Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Engineering principles involved in assessment and management of nonpoint source (NPS) pollution. Effect of NPS pollution on ecosystem integrity. Use of GIS/mathematical models to quantify extent of pollution. Design/implementation of best management practices to reduce nonpoint source pollution and improve water quality. Discussion of total maximum daily load (TMDL) principles and processes. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand sources and nature of NPS pollution originating from agricultural and urban land use.
2. Link nature of diffuse pollution with physical, chemical and biological integrity of ecosystems and water usage.
3. Quantify amount of diffuse pollution from a watershed using state-of-the-art methods and models.
4. Design best management practices to minimize nonpoint source pollution from agricultural and urban land use.
5. Understand TMDL issues, and processes involved in developing TMDL plans.
6. Understand basic monitoring and modeling principles.
7. Apply engineering principles in developing pollution prevention plan.
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| ABE 53100 - Instrumentation And Data Acquisition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course educates students in the use, selection, and design of instrumentation and data acquisition for agricultural, food, environmental, and biological systems. Emphasis is on measurement of position (GPS), force, pressure, power, torque, flow, and temperature along with environmental sensors. Labs focus on building and using measurement systems and programming PC computers for data acquisition and analysis. Prior knowledge of electrical circuitry is desirable. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Successful completion of the course will enable the students to:
1. Understand the principles of operation and limitations of common measuring instruments.
2. Model instruments and their operating conditions to use the instruments correctly.
3. Design and use signal conditioning devices.
4. Program computers to automate the acquisition and processing of data.
5. Design systems for the acquisition, analysis, and communication of data.
6. Gain awareness of economical and societal aspects of instrumentation systems and communication of data.
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| ABE 54500 - Design Of Off-Highway Vehicles |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Problems associated with the design of off-highway vehicles, with special emphasis on farm and industrial tractors and self-propelled machines; engines; power trains; traction; vehicle control systems; human factors; testing and evaluation of performance. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ABE 55500 - Biological And Food Processing Unit Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Analysis and design of operations, such as sterilization, freezing, dehydration, fermentation, and separation processes. Integration of pilot plant results into the design and scale-up process systems. Emphasis on how the properties of biological materials influence the quality of the processed product. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ABE 55600 - Biological And Food Process Design |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The course will focus on the synthesis, creation, evaluation and optimization of a preliminary process design to convert basic biological materials into a finished product. Concepts of materials and energy balances, thermodynamics, kinetics, transport phenomena of biological systems will be used to design processes to minimize energy and environmental impacts, and evaluate economic factors while maintaining product quality. Group projects, written and oral reports. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ABE 55700 - Transport Operations In Food And Biological Systems II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course includes analysis and design of operations, such as dehydration, fermentation, and separation processes. Development of experimental designs, integration of pilot plant results into the design , operation and scale-up process systems. Emphasis on how the properties of biological materials influence the quality of the processed product. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Ability for self-learning and preparation for lifelong learning.
2. Capacity to apply principles learned to the development of typical industrial processes.
3. Develop and conduct an experimental design to identify impact of process variables to improve product quality.
4. Ability to communicate technical information effectively.
5. Improved computer skills.
6. Ability to work in teams.
7. Ability to meet deadlines.
8. Ability to evaluate ethical, global, and societal contemporary issues.
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| ABE 55800 - Process Design For Food And Biological Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will focus on the design, synthesis, creation, evaluation, and optimization of processes to convert basic biological materials into a finished product. Concepts of materials and energy balances, thermodynamics, kinetics, transport phenomena of biological systems will be used to design processes to minimize energy and environmental impacts, and evaluate economic factors while maintaining product quality. Course will include group projects, oral and written reports. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop an understanding of Bio and Food Separation Processes.
2. Evaluate the economic aspects of product costs.
3. Develop and conduct an experimental design to identify impact of process variables to improve product quality.
4. Develop processes to minimize environmental and energy impact.
5. Develop an understanding of optimization (zero discharge/minimum energy).
6. Develop a business plan.
7. Communicate technological information.
8. Improve computer skills to operate and schedule processes (superPro Designer/Batches).
9. Work in teams to design a biological/food process.
10. Review technical and patent literature
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| ABE 56000 - Biosensors: Fundamentals and Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (BME 52100) An introduction to the field of biosensors and an in-depth and quantitative view of device design and performance analysis. An overview of the current state of the art to enable continuation into advanced biosensor work and design. Topics emphasize biomedical, bioprocessing, environmental, food safety, and biosecurity applications. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| ABE 58000 - Process Engineering Of Renewal Resources |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Physical and chemical structure of biomass. Reaction kinetics of hydrolysis of hemicellulose and cellulose to fermentable sugars. Fundamentals of ethanol production by fermentation. Separation of fermentation products into pure components. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ABE 59000 - Special Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Assignment by consent of the instructor in the selected field of study. Laboratory, field, and library studies and reports on special problems related to agricultural and biological engineering not covered in regular coursework. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ABE 59100 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 4.00. Primarily designed for students (two or more) desiring credit from subject areas for which no specific course, workshop, or individual study plan is offered. Area of study will deal with topics that have enough student interest to justify the formalized teaching of a specialized topic. The course may be repeated by a student as long as the topic being taught is not repeated. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ABE 62700 - Colloidal Phenomena In Bioprocessing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The structure, stability, and rheology of biological dispersions, emulsions, and foams are explained in terms of the principles of electrostatics, hydrodynamics, thermodynamics, and statistical mechanics. Additional topics include colloidal phenomena in downstream bioprocessing, as well as colloidal aspects of some food systems. Prerequisite: Thermodynamics and physical chemistry. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ABE 65100 - Environmental Informatics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will educate students in the use, manipulation and analysis of environmental data by introducing them to scripting languages. (e.g. c-shell, python), data types
(e.g. ASCII, binary, NetCDF), databases (e.g. XML, DBF) and data visualization software (e.g. GMT, ArcMap) as well as techniques for checking data quality, working with missing data, and handling large diverse sources of time series and spatial data. Students will manipulate, check and insert data from a variety of sources, use that data as input to distributed hydrologic model, analyze model output and learn methods for properly documenting their data use (creation of metadata) and long-term archival storage of those data. Skills learned should be applicable to most computer operating systems, but the majority of work for this class will be done within the Unix/Linux environment. Students taking this course should have experience with one or more programming languages, including but not limited to C, Fortran, Perl, Python, java, Basic, or two writing scripts or macros within programs such as MatLab, S-Plus, R, SAS. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate and test hypotheses, conduct experiments and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
2. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
3. Demonstrate the ability to write and speak with effectiveness while considering audience and purpose.
4. Demonstrae the ability to work effectively as part of a problem-solving team.
5. Demonstrate skills necessary for lifelong learning.
6. An ability to apply knowledge of mathematics, science, and engineering.
7. Ability to design and conduct experiments, as well as to analyze and interpret data.
8. An ability to function on multidisciplinary teams.
9. An ability to communicate effectively.
10. A recognition of the need for, and an ability to engage in life-long learning.
11. An ability to use the techniques, skills, and modern engineering tools necessary for engineering practice.
|
| ABE 68000 - Bioseparations And Bioprocess Engineering:Principles, Practice And Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Engineering fundamentals of separations and purification of biological molecules. Case studies and examples illustrate principles and practice of centrifugation, precipitation, crystallization, filtration, membrane separations, chromatography, and affinity separation of recombinant proteins and other biomolecules. Process scale-up and economics of biotechnology products and processes are mentioned in the context of their impact on purification development. Prerequisites: ABE 58000. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ABE 69100 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Primarily designed for advanced specialized topic areas in agricultural and biological engineering for which there is no specific course, workshop, or individual study plan, but having enough student interest to justify the formalized teaching of a course. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ABE 69400 - Graduate Research Training |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Strategies for success in graduate study are taught. Students will learn how to write a graduate research proposal, effectively plan for degree milestones, and learn about benefits of participating in professional societies. Students will also complete required training for graduate student researchers, including responsible conduct of research, laboratory safety, and an equal access/equal opportunity briefing. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Know and be able to use key resources for success in graduate study
2. Complete required training for graduate student researchers (e.g., laboratory safety, responsible conduct of research).
3. Identify critical milestones for graduate study, and be aware of resources for understanding and fulfilling requirements (e.g., graduate manual, current student website.)
4. Develop a personalized plan for success in and beyond their graduate program.
|
| ABE 69600 - Graduate Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Best practices for effectively presenting scientific research are taught and practiced. Students will also present a twenty-minute seminar of original research results, as well as provide and receive constructive criticism on presentation form and content for improved future presentations. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Enhance ability of ABE graduate students in presenting graduate research.
2. Improve ability of ABE graduate students to think critically about research and presentation skills of others.
3. Increase student’s ability to critique his or her own work.
|
| ABE 69700 - Doctoral Professional Development |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Discussion of research problems, methods, procedure, and reports. Discussion and practice to improve written and oral communication. Professional development activites. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Improve your ability to write, read and review scientific documents
2. Improve your skills in preparing and presenting scientific presentations
3. Become more familiar with Responsible Conduct of Research
4. Broaden your knowledge by attending and/or planning research seminars and presentations by peers
5. Become familiar with professional development opportunities
|
| ABE 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ABE 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ACC 12000 - Principles Of Accounting I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A basic introduction to accounting practices, financial statements, and the accounting cycle in various forms of business organizations. Emphasis is on the accounting of assets, liabilities and owner's equity. This course is not open to Management majors. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the meaning of generally accepted accounting principles and identify the elements of the Accounting Framework including the basic assumptions and principles.
2. State the basic accounting equation and explain the meaning of assets, liabilities, stockholders’ equity, revenues and expenses.
3. Identify, analyze and measure the effect of business transactions on the basic accounting equation.
4. Our students will demonstrate the skills necessary to assess firm performance.
|
| ACC 12100 - Principles Of Accounting II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of ACC 12000. Emphasis is on reporting issues including financial and cash flow statements. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Our students will understand different types of costs and their effect on profit.
2. Our students will demonstrate the skills necessary for effective managerial decision making.
3. Our students will apply knowledge of product costing systems in the manufacturing and merchandising areas.
4. Our students will learn to prepare budgets for a manufacturer.
|
| ACC 20000 - Introductory Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The objectives of the course are to help students: (1) understand what is in financial statements and what the statements say about a business, (2) identify the business activities that caused the amounts that appear in the statements, and (3) understand how, when, and at what amount the effects of manager and employee actions will appear in the statements. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and record business transactions and analyze the effect of such transactions on a company’s operating performance and financial position.
2. Explain and implement the basic procedures of the accounting cycle, including preparation of adjusting and closing entries, and the basic financial statements.
3. Strengthen critical thinking and organizational skills by analyzing accounting problems and formulating concise and straightforward solutions to such problems.
4. Demonstrate the ability to explain the contents and purpose of the basic financial statements.
5. Identify the major elements and components of annual reports.
6. Define and/or explain common terminology, key components, concepts, principles, and practices used in accounting to identify, record, and communicate business transactions.
7. Explain how accounting information affects users' decisions by such activities as reading and performing elementary level analysis of financial statements.
|
| ACC 20100 - Management Accounting I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to management's internal use of accounting information--for decision making, production management, product costing, motivating and evaluating performance, and budgeting. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an understanding of costs and how to classify based on purpose.
2. Demonstrate an understanding of product costing; including activity based costing and its differences from traditional costing systems.
3. Apply standard costing and budgeting techniques to business scenarios.
4. Evaluate performance using responsibility accounting concepts and measures.
5. Analyze examples of special business decisions using relevant costs and benefits.
|
| ACC 30900 - Accounting Information Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course emphasizes accounting information systems, transaction cycles, and communication of financial information for management decisions within the context of business. Topics may include ERP systems, e-business and electronic commerce, systems documentation, database management, internal control, management reporting, and projects using business software. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. List and define key components and terminology for each topic covered.
2. Apply accounting concepts, principles, and practices in the framework of AIS.
3. Understand fundamental business processes, analyze potential threats, and apply control objectives.
4. Develop proficiency with accounting software and basic database techniques.
5. Utilize spreadsheets to manipulate data for analysis and report preparation.
|
| ACC 35000 - Intermediate Accounting I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Financial reporting for interested external parties. Emphasis on asset valuation, income measurement, and preparation of financial statements, and on appreciation of discretion available to preparers. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an understanding and justification of the concepts, principles, and practices of financial accounting.
2. Gain an appreciation for the conceptual and measurement issues relating to the impact of various economic transactions and events on the income and financial position of the firm.
3. Demonstrate the ability to develop and interpret financial reports.
4. Study the general rationale and specific methods for producing and disclosing useful financial information
|
| ACC 35100 - Intermediate Accounting II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of Intermediate Accounting I. An examination of additional problems in financial reporting, including long-term assets, liabilities, owners' equity, income taxes, earnings per share, leases, and pensions. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn about the additional problems in financial reporting through the study of long-term assets, liabilities, owners’ equity, income taxes, earnings per share, leases and pensions.
|
| ACC 40200 - Financial Statements Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Develops the ability to use published financial statement information and related disclosures to assess the performance of the enterprise. Equity analysis, credit analysis, prospective analysis, cash flow analysis are covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate knowledge and understanding of the financial reporting framework used by business organizations using IFRS.
|
| ACC 40301 - Accounting Field Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an experiential learning experience while students learn about the international Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) which are being used in more than 100 other countries and are being considered by the USA. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will demonstrate knowledge and understanding of the financial reporting framework used by business organizations using IFRS.
|
| ACC 40400 - Tax Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A foundation course in the law governing taxation of individuals, partnerships, corporations, and property transactions. Tax planning and professional responsibility are also emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Acquire a basic foundation in the law governing taxation of individuals, business entities, and property transactions.
2. Evaluate alternative treatments for tax planning purposes.
3. Recognize ethical and professional obligations of tax practitioners.
4. Demonstrate the ability to work independently using tax software.
|
| ACC 40600 - Auditing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the concepts and procedures of auditing, which is the systematic process of objectively obtaining and evaluating evidence about economic actions and events with regard to audit risk, materiality, and decision-making. Independent, governmental, internal, and international audit topics may also be addressed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop and demonstrate an understanding of concepts related to professional standards, professional ethics, and legal liability in Auditing.
2. Develop and demonstrate a working knowledge of how an audit is conducted.
3. Our students will demonstrate the skills necessary for effective managerial decision making.
4. Develop and demonstrate an understanding of general accepted auditing standards.
|
| ACC 40700 - Cost Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course emphasizes the application of cost management concept for the purpose of facilitating managerial decision making and control. Topics include costing methods, cost analysis for decision making, budgeting, performance evaluation, and financial planning. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. The students will be able to apply cost management techniques and concepts for the purpose of facilitating managerial control and decision making.
2. Students will prepare, explain and analyze managerial/cost information reports that support planning, controlling, and decision-making.
3. Students will evaluate issues and make recommendations supported by managerial/cost accounting information.
|
| ACC 40800 - Government Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the accounting requirements of the three major activities of state and local governments: governmental activities; business activities; and fiduciary activities. Fund accounting and treatment of capital assets and long-term liabilities in governmental systems will be examined as well as the contents of a comprehensive annual financial report (CAFR). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop and demonstrate an understanding of the financial accounting principles and concepts that will be utilized by state and local government unit.
2. Develop and demonstrate an understanding of techniques that will be used in a government accounting working environment and on the CPA exam.
3. Student will develop and demonstrate a personal, professional, and ethical values system necessary as a member of the accounting profession.
4. Integrate the accounting subject matter taught in MGMT 40800 and MGMT 59000 with a discussion of other core business disciplines.
|
| ACC 41000 - Advanced Financial Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an advanced course in financial accounting. A range of contemporary topics in financial reporting such as business combinations and consolidations, foreign transactions, partnerships, governmental and not-for-profit accounting are covered. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand and apply the fair value, equity, and consolidation principles of accounting for investments.
2. Analyze the effect of business combinations on the preparation of financial statements.
3. Understand the basic procedures of the accounting for multi-national operations and transactions.
4. Ability to account for advances partnership transactions and dissolution of the partnership entity.
5. Strengthen accounting skills by formulating concise solutions to accounting problems.
|
| ACC 49500 - Internship In Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Internship in Accounting is a special course in selected areas of accounting, designated to provide practical field experience under professional supervision in selected situations related to the student’s area of specialization. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Gain practical experience in the field of accounting.
2. Apply prior course knowledge to real world situations.
|
| ACC 49900 - Undergraduate Research In Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will work with a faculty member on a research project in their major. They will contribute to ongoing research while learning current research techniques in management. During this process the students will develop critical thinking and oral and written communication skills. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Conduct research in the area of accounting.
2. Learn current research techniques in management and business.
|
| ACC B2010 - Principles Of Accounting I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to accounting emphasizing the basic principles underlying the accounting cycle. Includes the preparation of reports to management and external users of financial statements.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ACE D5000 - Introduction to Adult Education Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the writings of major adult education theorists, including Lindeman, Knowles, Bergivin, and Friere. Adult education theories of practice in historical perspective. Students develop and defend their personal theories of practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ACE D5050 - The Adult As A Client Of Education I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of contemporary adult life with emphasis on the individual as related to the professional discipline of adult education and the
development of educational programs for adults. Critical analysis of the theories and research methods in designing comprehensive adult
education programs. This course is usually referred to as the life stages course.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| ACE D5060 - The Adult as a Client of Education II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course helps the student learn the adult education, human resources development, and training program planning process, including needs assessment, program development and promotion for organizational groups, either in the public or private sector. The course uses a market-based model and is often referred to as the marketing course.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ACE D5120 - Seminar in Forms and Forces in Adult Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The history and current status of adult education in the United States; the nature, scope, purpose, and historical development of adult education institutions and program areas.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ACE D5210 - Participation Training |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Team building in groups; collaborative program planning and implementation; application of the design to appropriate settings; training in the roles of group leader, observer, and recorder; recognition and treatment of dysfunctional behaviors in group settings. Emphasis on functional aspects of group cohesion, consensus decision making, shared leadership, and program evaluation. Participation training is a small group, consensus decision-making process. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ACE D5500 - Practicum in Adult Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Supervised practice in instructional planning, teaching, and program development in adult education settings, including schools and agencies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Practicum
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ACE D5900 - Independent Study in Adult Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individual research or study with adult education faculty members, arranged in advance of registration. A one- or two-page written proposal specifying the scope of the project, project activities, meeting times, completion date, and study product(s) should be submitted to the instructor during the first week of term. This course may be used to do an in-depth study of the relationship of the student?s concentration area to the field of adult education.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ACE D6000 - Seminar in the Teaching-Learning Transaction in Adult Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Critical inquiry into the theory of adult education learning activities. Includes a review of current research in the adult teaching-learning transaction and the designing and evaluating of individualized instruction of adults. This course is commonly called the instructional design course and involves developing an understanding of implementing adult education learning events. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ACE D6130 - Diagnostic Procedure in Adult Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Ways of identifying the educational needs of adults, with major emphasis on the theory and practice of the diagnostic procedure and the use of diagnostic skills for effective adult education program development. The student learns strategic planning, skills forecasting, and developing long-term training objectives. This course is often referred to as the organizational development course.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ACE D6250 - Topical Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A one credit hour weekend workshop whose topics vary. One example is Distance Learning Technologies, which introduces the methods of creating and facilitating, using distributed education technologies.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ACE D6500 - Internship in Adult Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Relates theory to practice through supervised field experiences and faculty appraisal and guidance. Students plan, conduct, and evaluate adult education programs in various institutional and community settings.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ACE D6600 - Reading in Adult Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Guided individual study to meet the professional needs of advanced graduate students. Consultations with instructor required.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ACS 52100 - Topics In Computer Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a survey of advanced concepts in computer graphics. Topics include a review of fundamentals, curves and surface design, ray tracing, radiosity, animation, texture mapping, anti-aliasing, and selected topics depending on current research trends. Students are expected to complete substantial programming projects having some research content. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ACS 54500 - Cryptograph And Network Security |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an in-depth course to cryptograph and network security. Topics include cryptography, security principles, treats, architecture and protocol for security services, security verification and design, and securing network systems and applications. Design projects and/or research papers are required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand cryptography and network security concepts and application.
2. Apply security principles tossystem design.
3. Identify and investigate network security threat.
4. Analyze and design network security protocols
5. Conduct research in network security.
|
| ACS 56000 - Software Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course surveys the engineering aspects of software system design. It concentrates on such matters as formal specification and acceptance requirements, testing and quality management techniques, and the use of CASE tools as an aid to development. Depending on time available, it may include an introduction to database design, performance analysis, and project management tools. The course forms part of the required core for the ACS master's degree. Prerequisite: CS 36000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ACS 56200 - Systems Analysis And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the process of modeling computer system requirements and design, using an object an object-oriented language such as the UML. It presumes an iterative life-cycle, and concentrates on human-oriented aspects of systems development. These include the solicitation and definition of requirements, the design of effective interfaces, and the reconciliation of application and technical needs. Students will carry out a team project. The course forms part of the required core for the ACS master's degree. Prerequisite: CS 36000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ACS 56400 - Human-Computer Interaction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of human-computer interaction (HCI) concepts, theory, and practice, including its interdisciplinary nature. Examination of human needs and capabilities, as well as technological opportunities in the design of interactive systems. Provides an overview and introduction to the field of human-computer interaction and a systematic approach to human-computer design, including tools, techniques, and sources of knowledge. Students are expected to design and evaluate user interface designs in small projects. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ACS 56700 - Software Project Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Consideration of managing the software development process and the implementation of information technologies. Advanced material in project planning, cost and time estimation, mechanisms for monitoring and controlling projects, quality assurance, change management, and leadership and team building. Other topics include: project tracking, managing multiple projects, data sharing, communication plans, and transnational considerations in areas such as staffing and vendor support. Students apply project management software to case studies. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ACS 57400 - Advanced Computer Networks |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to communication networks, the Internet, circuit and packet switching, interfaces between computers and network hardware. Network architecture: OSI seven layer protocol stack, reliable delivery over unreliable channels, transport protocols, datagrams, virtual circuits, internetworking as a fundamental design concept. Network management concepts, client server principles and paradigms, addressing and address resolution algorithms, and remote procedure calls. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ACS 57500 - Database Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the fundamentals of relational database system implementation with emphasis on database engine core technology. Topics include storage management, indexing, materialized views, query processing algorithms and optimization, transaction and concurrency control, logging and recovery. Exposure to one of more of the following active research areas: XML, data integration, streaming databases, data mining, and distributed database systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ACS 57600 - Distributed Database Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers topics in distributed databases. Topics include data replication and synchronization, scalability issues, fault tolerance, distributed transaction control, distributed physical design selection, information integration, and distributed query optimization. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ACS 57700 - Knowledge Discovery And Data Mining |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Data mining has emerged as one of the most exciting and dynamic fields in computer science. With an explosive growth in computer and database technology, the huge amount of data has been collected. Data mining is the process to extract interesting and novel knowledge from large amount of data. This course is designed to provide graduate students a broad background in the design and use of data mining algorithms, exposure to software tools, specialized expertise in applying these ideas to a real-life situation through a term project. Topics include data preprocess, data exploration, frequent pattern mining, classification and clustering analysis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Learning fundamental principles about computational techniques for data preparation (e.g., data cleaning, data integration, and data transformation) and data exploration.
2. Learning principles about computational techniques to discover frequent patterns (e.g., association rule patterns, sequential patterns) in data collection.
3. Learning principles about computational approaches for classification, i.e., machine learning techniques for data mining (e.g., decision tree induction, rule-based classifiers, Bayesian classifiers)
4. Learning principles about computational approaches for clustering (e.g., partitional clusters, hierarchical clusters, density-based clusters).
5. Exposing research papers for knowing current data mining research trends.
6 Learning a data mining software tool for hands-on experience.
7. Developing creative capacities (knowledge, critical thinking, communication, etc.) to apply course material for analyzing a variety of real-world data and evaluating discovered patterns or built models.
|
| ACS 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. This course is designed for a student to conduct intensive individual research under the direction of a Thesis Advisor, leading to a Master¿s Thesis in ACS. The course is taken twice in successive semesters, which are graded independently. Prerequisite: Permission of the Thesis Advisor and Director of the Graduate Program. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AD 10500 - Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Two-dimensional design fundamentals: concepts and processes. Studio problems are used to introduce concepts, vocabulary, and skills applicable to continued study in a variety of visual disciplines. Includes introduction to a variety of two-dimensional media and computer applications. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| AD 10600 - Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Three-dimensional fundamentals: concepts and processes. Studio problems introduce design concepts, vocabulary, and construction skills applicable to continued study in a variety of visual disciplines. Includes introduction to a variety of 3-D media and 3-D computer graphics concepts. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| AD 11200 - Graphic Arts I: Typography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students investigate mechanics of type, using both type and letter forms in a variety of design applications. Students will also experiment with typograhic composition, contrast, text, and value in combination with language. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| AD 11300 - Basic Drawing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to drawing and sketching as a means of communication of ideas. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
CTL:IFA 1320 Drawing
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| AD 11400 - Drawing II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of A&D 11300; emphasis is given to the exploration of a variety of media, the structuring of pictorial space, and figure drawing. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To increase and widen drawing skills.
2. To understand pictorial space as structured through design composition.
3. Be able to discuss art in an educated manner.
|
| AD 11700 - Photography I: Black And White Processes And Aesthetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course in silver-based photographic processes and creative image making. Emphasis is on the development of camera and darkroom techniques, and fostering critical thinking skills related to the traditions and aesthetics of black and white photographic practice. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 11900 - Photography II: Color Imaging And Studio Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory course in creative use of color photographic processes and studio practices. Emphasis is on the acquisition of camera, studio, and digital printing skills which enable students to successfully perceive and structure images reflecting color's formal, symbolic, and emotional impact. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 12500 - Introduction To Interior Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory survey of interior spaces and their impact upon the physical, social, psychological, and aesthetic needs of people. Critical evaluation of concepts in the interior design profession and related fields will be emphasized. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 13000 - Design Process And Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Process of problem solving, design analysis, spatial studies, conceptual ideation, and methods of communicating in various two- and three-dimensional media. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will develop their ability and judgment to visualize and their skills in communicating ideas through two-dimensional graphic representation of three-dimensional objects and space.
2. Students will develop their basic drawing and drafting skills and techniques as a tool for communicating design ideas and as a part of the design process.
3. Students will develop their skills to rapidly visualize and sketch design ideas freely and quickly.
|
| AD 14000 - Entrepreneurship In Arts And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic business skills are surveyed and case studies of successful self-employed artists and entrepreneurs will be studied to develop a broad understanding of this important force in the economy. Guest speakers and selected readings will introduce the student to the scope of opportunities that exist for converting artistic and design skills into self-employment and entrepreneurship. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| AD 14600 - Design Drawing I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Problems in the skills and methods of professional design drawing. Emphasis on development of drawing as a conceptual tool and as part of the design process. Concentration on the media and techniques used in contemporary design drawing. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 19000 - Special Topics In Art And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics will vary. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AD 19100 - Cooperative And Professional Work Experience I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practical experience in professional employment. Programs must be preplanned and conducted under the direction of the departmental coordinator with the cooperation of an employer. Students must submit comprehensive written reports of the experience. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AD 19200 - Cooperative And Professional Work Experience II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practical experience in professional employment. Programs must be preplanned and conducted under the direction of the departmental coordinator with the cooperation of an employer. Students must submit comprehensive written reports of the experience. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AD 19300 - Cooperative And Professional Work Experience III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practical experience in professional employment. Programs must be preplanned and conducted under the direction of the departmental coordinator with the cooperation of an employer. Students must submit comprehensive written reports of the experience. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AD 19400 - Cooperative And Professional Work Experience IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practical experience in professional employment. Programs must be preplanned and conducted under the direction of the departmental coordinator with the cooperation of an employer. Students must submit comprehensive written reports of the experience. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AD 19500 - Cooperative And Professional Work Experience V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practical experience in professional employment. Programs must be preplanned and conducted under the direction of the departmental coordinator with the cooperation of an employer. Students must submit comprehensive written reports of the experience. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AD 20000 - Beginning Painting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to painting, emphasizing fundamental painting techniques and materials in conjunction with varied subject matter. Traditional and nontraditional approaches and their art historical meanings will be examined and applied. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 20100 - Art For Elementary School Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Art theory and experiences, curriculum theory, and materials preparatory for instruction of elementary school children. No undergraduate students may be enrolled in this course until they have been admitted to teacher education and a copy of this acceptance is on file. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| AD 20200 - Introduction To Art Education |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Lectures, readings, and discussions covering the history, theory, and professional literature of art education. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 20300 - Art Activities For Elementary Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An undergraduate course designed to assist the student in gaining basic skills in art media and method as a beginning classroom teacher. This exposure to the basic art program should provide a stimulating, enrichment art program for the classroom. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| AD 20400 - Graphic Arts II: Digital |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the computer as a powerful tool for manipulating and creating images. Students are encouraged to use their own photography and develop their own styles. Adobe Photoshop software package is the primary image processing program used to digitally enhance, alter and retouch images. Electronic layout and typographical issues are discussed, and a page layout program is introduced to combine text with image. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| AD 20500 - Design III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Problems in two- and three-dimensional design, utilizing a variety of tools, materials, and processes. Study is made of the interaction between designer and society, involving concepts in art, psychology, technology, anthropology, and history. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 20600 - Studio In Visual Communications Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigation of visual communications design theory, history, skills, and methodology, as well as preparation of art and mechanicals for graphic arts reproduction. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 21300 - Life Drawing I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to drawing the human figure with emphasis upon structure and gesture.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn fundamental technical and perceptual skills of figure drawing.
2. They will be able to correctly identify major anatomical feature of the human body, as well as, compose sound figurative compositions through the use of basic design principles, foundation drawing techniques, and a variety of drawing materials.
|
| AD 21500 - Materials and Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course in the selection of materials and processes as relevant to design, with laboratory experiences in the safe and proper use of tools and equipment. Required of students wishing extensive access to A&D tools and equipment. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 22000 - Computers In Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to computer graphics concepts and the electronic image as a fine art form. Emphasis is placed on personal expression, using the computer as a two-dimensional art tool. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 22200 - Introduction to Photography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course presents a study of basic photographic technique from a practical and artistic point of view. Students will be presented with the opportunity to develop aesthetic and compositional skills while building a portfolio of significant images. A 35mm camera with adjustable controls or a digital camera is required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify the tools and techniques associated with digital photography.
2. Apply the technical, mechanical and creative skills necessary to produce relevant photography for effective visual communications.
3. Assemble and manage a photography exhibit.
4. Form and define opinions related photography as an art form or a visual communication tool.
|
| AD 22400 - Interior Design Textiles Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory component to AD 32400. Field trips will be required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Student will have a basic understanding of the fabric industry-from fiber through the processes that give a fabric its finished appearance for application by the end-user.
2. Student will be familiar with the language of cloth as used by professional designers.
3. Student will have the basic knowledge to make informed decisions about the expectation of a fabric's performance in a given application and environment, such as upholstery, drapery, wall-, floor-, and window-coverings.
4. Student will understand the designer's role with regard to sustainability and responsible selection of material.
|
| AD 22600 - History Of Art To 1400 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of painting, sculpture, and architecture from their beginnings to the end of the Middle Ages. Typically offered Fall.
CTL:IFA 1311 Art History I
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
|
| AD 22700 - History Of Art Since 1400 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of painting, sculpture, and architecture from 1400 to present. Typically offered Spring.
CTL:IFA 1312 Art History II
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
|
| AD 22800 - Visual Communications Design Computing I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course in visual design computing programs used in the study and production of Visual Communications Design. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 22900 - Visual Communications Design Computing II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intermediate course in visual design computing programs used in the study and production of Visual Communications Design. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 23000 - Interior Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of behavior patterns, perceptions, needs, and usage of three-dimensional space through conceptual solutions to human environments. Interior design theory and application of design process through analysis, research, and synthesis will be explored. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop design communication skills through freehand and instrument drawing tools that can be used in both design and presentation work.
2. Explore a wide range of drawing media such as pencil, markers, and colored pencils to develop design communication skills.
3. Develop the ability to make informed and sensitive decisions regarding the use of color in presentation work.
4. Further develop speed and accuracy in constructing perspectives and renderings.
|
| AD 23300 - Electronic Media Studio |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory class to artistic practices on the computer. Students will work with digital still images, sounds, stop-frame animation and HTML-based websites and learn how to connect simple sensors to the computer to control digital images and sounds interactively. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 23400 - Art And Design Internship Preparation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction and preparation for Art & Design Internship experience. Students will develop a resume, cover letter, and other resources in their search for a suitable internship placement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will have the opportunity for design work experience from the internship program that will familiarize the students with the culture and environment of the professional studio and professional practice.
|
| AD 23500 - Materials and Processes II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Problems in three-dimensional design, incorporating materials, production processes, and applications of current technology, emphasizing aspects of society and technology. An introduction to complete industrial design problems, including problem definition, concepts, resource information, design development, final proposals, and presentation techniques. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 23600 - Lighting Fundamentals For Photography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces fundamental principles of lighting and techniques for achieving high-quality results using available lights, hot lights, electronic flash and strobe lighting techniques. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To introduce students to better control, the full spectrum of the photographic lighting techniques.
2. To study and understand the existing and/or ambient light and light augmented by other source of illumination.
3. To learn the rudiments of metering, mixing light sources, including the use of on-camera or handheld electronic flash within existing lighting conditions.
|
| AD 24000 - Interior Drafting And Drawing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic drafting and drawing techniques used in residential and small commercial buildings. Emphasis on interior projects, on multi-view drawing, isometrics, perspective, and architectural construction drawings, and rendering techniques. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn to explore different concepts and present their ideas through sketches, design drawings, and final models for a small multilevel residential project.
2. Further develop hand sketching, drafting, AutoCAD, and model building skills to communicate their ideas and solutions in the residential remodel.
3. Research and apply information on furniture, stairs, equipment, plumbing, and other elements for a small house project.
4. Execute a comprehensive set of construction drawings for a multilevel residential remodel including floor plans, electrical plans, elevations, details and schedules.
|
| AD 24200 - Ceramics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to ceramic materials and processes used in creating wheelthrown and hand-formed pottery and sculpture. Emphasis on contemporary interpretations of traditional forms. Freshman and Sophomore students have priority. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 24600 - Design Drawing II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of the work done in A&D 245. Emphasis on development of skills and presentation quality design drawing. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 25000 - Interior Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to space planning methodology applied to small-scale residential and nonresidential environments. Human factors and user requirements, physical and psychological, will be emphasized. Interior materials, components, and special environmental concerns will be explored. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 25100 - History Of Photography I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction of the history of photography from the medium's inception until 1950. Emphasis is placed on understanding photographs from a variety of aesthetic, social, and cultural perspectives, including those of race, class, and gender. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 25500 - Art Appreciation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Understanding and appreciation of the problems overcome by mankind in the origins and growth of art. Typically offered Fall Spring.
CTL:IFA 1310 Art Appreciation
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
|
| AD 25600 - Presentation Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Studio preparing students for project presentations. Classes will cover graphic techniques, including page layout, typography, portfolio formats, perspective drawings, photography, and verbal communication. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 26000 - Computer-Aided Design For Interiors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Computer-aided design and drafting on the microcomputer for interior design. Students learn to draw architectural spaces, interior furnishings, and mechanical objects and to manipulate them in two- and three-dimensional space. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AD 26200 - Jewelry And Metalwork I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the design and execution of hand-wrought jewelry and metalwork. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| AD 26500 - Relief Printmaking |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the techniques of woodcut, linocut, collagraph, and related media. Emphasis on fine art conceptual issues, creativity, matting and framing art, and professional practices. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 26600 - Silkscreen Printmaking |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the techniques of silkscreen printmaking on paper, including the uses of handmade and light-sensitive stencils. Emphasis on fine art conceptual issues, creativity, matting, and framing art, and professional practices. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 26700 - Digital Media I: Photography And Digital Imaging |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course in the creative generation and digital enhancement of photo-related imagery. Emphasis is on the development of technical and critical thinking skills, as well as fostering an awareness of pertinent theoretical issues. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 27000 - Constructed Textiles |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A beginning class in non-loom constructed textile techniques such as macram and card-weaving. Emphasis on three-dimensional design in fiber using historical textile structures as the basis for contemporary interpretations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 27100 - Dyed Textiles |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Beginning course in non-screen fabric dyeing techniques such as tie-dye and batik. Survey of historical surface design for contemporary interpretations in both two and three dimensions. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 27500 - Beginning Sculpture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course in sculpture, exploring basic concepts, techniques, and materials. Problems in class will emphasize individual student's aesthetic understanding of techniques and inventive use of materials. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be introduced to contemporary sculptors and their work with the aims of providing a historical background for the study and appreciation of sculpture as a medium and providing resources that students can relate to their own creative processes as artists.
2. Students will proceed through an individually developed series of problems and solutions. Where appropriate, additional historical and contemporary references related to the individual students' specific creative investigations will be provided.
3. Technical demonstration will also be provided as needed by individual students.
|
| AD 28500 - Interior Components And Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of surface materials and subsystems and their application to architectural interior spaces. Emphasis on specification guidelines, including product performance, building codes, fire, safety, and health regulations. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 29000 - Special Topics In Art And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics will vary.
. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AD 30000 - Life Drawing II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis is given to organizing the figure in pictorial space. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to use the figure effectively in a variety of drawing media and begin to develop both conceptual and critical thinking skills on their own.
|
| AD 30102 - Color And Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of color theory and compositional systems. Additive and subtractive color, discussions of color and its relationship to composition, through harmony and contrast, will be explored in a studio setting. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. To demonstrate the ability to effectively use color, the ability to create compositions.
2. Utilize subtractive, additive mixing, warm and cool schemes, high key, low key and full range value.
3. Demonstrate knowledge of color theirs.
4. Evaluate and discuss work critically, using appropriate terminology.
|
| AD 30200 - Theory And Practice Of Elementary School Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and practice of art education for elementary school from early childhood through middle childhood. Restricted to art education majors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 30300 - Art in Middle/Junior High Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and practice of art education for early adolescent students in the middle/junior high school.
. Typically offered Spring Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 30400 - Video Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to digital video as a creative medium for artistic expression. Students will record, digitize, edit and distribute digital video content and author a digital portfolio of their work in the form of an interactive DVD. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will make use of essential tools and techniques required to produce artworks in the medium video – the digital video camera, non-linear video editing techniques on the Macintosh computer and distribution forms such as DVD media and internet-based video.
2. Students will have an understanding of artistic, historical, theoretical context in which they develop video-based artwork.
|
| AD 30500 - Industrial Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to design principles in processes employing basic problem-solving techniques. Emphasis will be placed on man's interaction with form, thought processes, procedures, craftsmanship, and use of materials. Acceptance into professional industrial design concentration by successful performance in the mandatory portfolio review. Prerequisites: Passing mandatory portfolio review. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 30600 - Industrial Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of design through organic and aesthetic principles, natural solutions, and man-made systems. Skills and techniques for communication of creative design solutions. Rapid visualization, rendering, model making, and working models will be stressed. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 30701 - History Of Contemporary Photography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines evolution of major themes in contemporary photography (Digital era to Present) from a variety of aesthetic, social, and cultural perspectives, fostering an awareness of pertinent theoretical issues. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Learning the history of contemporary art photography from the digital revolution to present.
2. Learning photography’s multiple roles including technique and utilitarian function, sociopolitical context, and aesthetics, especially photography in the digital age.
3. Ability to recognize the characteristics of significant photographic works from 1980-present.
4. Understanding of how photographic pictures may reflect ideas and values of a given culture period.
|
| AD 31100 - Greek Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A chronological survey of Greek art and architecture beginning with the Aegean civilization of the second millennium B.C. and ending with Hellenistic Greek art of the first century B.C. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 31200 - Roman Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of Roman art from the second century B.C. to the fourth century A.D., stressing major stylistic developments in the different visual arts. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 31400 - Illustrative Drawing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Individual development of student's drawing abilities and skills at an advanced level, emphasizing illustration.
. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AD 31500 - Design Methodology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will cover the fundamental concepts of design methodology. Studies in various problem-solving and research methods as they apply to the designer and society. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 31600 - Seminar On Ideas In Industrial Design I: Design And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of design and the designer and the factors in society that affect his or her work. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AD 31800 - Fundamentals of Interactive Multimedia Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental issues of interactive multimedia design: Animation, interface design, and experience design from a visual communications perspective. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 31900 - Web Design for Visual Communications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to web-based design from a visual communications application. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 32000 - Interior Lighting Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of principles of illumination, design criteria, specifications, and systems applied to architectural interiors in public and private spaces. Must pass mandatory portfolio review. Prerequisites: Passing mandatory portfolio review. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 32200 - Computer Modeling And Animation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A fine arts approach to three-dimensional computer graphics. Introduction to three-dimensional computer graphics concepts and their application to still and animated images. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AD 32400 - Textiles For Interiors |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An introduction to textile fibers and fabrics used in interior environments with emphasis on design, product performance, and selection criteria. Field trips will be required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Student will have a basic understanding of the fabric industry-from fiber through the processes that give a fabric its finished appearance for application by the end-user.
2. Student will be familiar with the language of cloth as used by professional designers.
3. Student will have the basic knowledge to make informed decisions about the expectation of a fabric's performance in a given application and environment, such as upholstery, drapery, wall-, floor-, and window-coverings.
4. Student will understand the designer's role with regard to sustainability and responsible selection of material.
|
| AD 32600 - Physical Computing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to electronics and computer vision for artists. Students learn to create expressive audiovisual systems that can respond to events in the physical world (movement, light/temperature change, sound, touch, etc.) through custom interfaces. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 32700 - Art History Methodology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Offered in 2002-2003 and alternate years. A comprehensive introduction to the study of the history of art, associated areas of investigation, and the writing of research papers in the field. Practical experience for the serious student of art history. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 32800 - Visual Communication Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course designed to introduce creative problem-solving with emphasis on 2-D solution to conceptual problems in the areas of publication and promotional graphics using word, image and layout. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate a basic knowledge of the practices of graphic design.
2. Demonstrate the use of elements and principles of graphic design, resulting in solved design problems.
3. Demonstrate skills in graphic communication using layout, composition and production.
4. Demonstrate the use of tools and equipment by working with sketching implements, MacIntosh platform computers and applications and also presentation materials.
5. Apply the creative process by taking a project from conception to final production/presentation utilizing production techniques and skills.
6. Exhibit craftsmanship by producing printed presentation of created designs.
7. Professionally present work to client or audience.
8. Discuss and evaluate graphic design using appropriate terminology verbally and in written form.
|
| AD 32900 - Visual Communication Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course designed to introduce continuation of translation of concept into form with emphasis on corporate visual identity system. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate a basic knowledge of the practices of graphic design.
2. Demonstrate knowledge of typography, letterforms, typographic syntax and type specification by utilizing in the solving of graphic design problems.
3. Demonstrate the use of elements and principles of graphic design, resulting in solved design problems.
4. Demonstrate conceptual skills and skill in graphic communication using typography in layout, composition and production.
5. Demonstrate the use of tools and equipment by working with sketching implements, MacIntosh platform computers and applications and also presentation materials.
6. Apply the creative process by taking a project from conception to final production/presentation utilizing production techniques and skills.
7. Exhibit craftsmanship by producing printed presentation of created designs.
8. Professionally present work to client or audience.
9. Discuss and evaluate the use of typography in graphic design using appropriate terminology verbally and in written form.
|
| AD 33000 - Interior Design III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of advanced space-planning criteria and selection of furnishings, equipment, materials, and finishes. Design considerations for special populations (e.g., disabled, aged, low-income) will be explored. Must pass mandatory portfolio review. Prerequisites: Passing mandatory portfolio review. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 33100 - Digital Video Production And Aesthetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to video as an art medium. Approaches include documentary, narrative, experimental, performance, installation, and web-based work. Students gain profiency in technical and conceptual aspects of the medium through shooting exercises, production workshops, digital editing, and group critiques. Prerequisites: Acceptance into Photography and Related Media program by sucessful performance in the mandatory portfolio review. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate ability to function with the basics of video and sound editing software such as Final Cut Pro and Sound Track Pro.
2. Demonstrate how to use DV and SLR video cameras.
3. Demonstrate ability to interpret and evaluate video’s contemporary aesthetic and technical developments, genres, and it’s relationship within broader social, cultural and visual contexts.
|
| AD 33200 - Visual Communications Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course designed to introduce the student to projects that will develop an understanding of basic problem-solving techniques in the areas of publication and promotional graphics. Acceptance into professional VCD sequence via mandatory portfolio review. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 33300 - Photo Silk Screen |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study of the techniques of photo silkscreen and light-sensitive stencils. Emphasis on fine art conceptual issues, creativity, matting and framing art, and professional practices. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 33400 - New Media Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This lecture course provides a historical overview of the development of new media art. In their research, project papers, and practical assignments, students explore issues of media criticism, technology's impact on culture and society and visions of media utopias. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 33700 - Commercial And Professional Practice In Photography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces students the skills necessary to attain entry-level employment in the photographic field and familiarizes students with the vocabulary, procedures, and working realities specific to occupations in the field of photography in the areas of photo-journalism, magazine illustration, advertising/web design, and fine arts. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To prepare materials related to practical application within photographic industry.
2. To learn techniques and strategies for job searches, interviewing, and developing portfolio presentation skills.
3. To produce three parts portfolio consisting of a print portfolio, on-line web portfolio, and job interview portfolio.
|
| AD 33900 - Women Artists In The 20th Century |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course offers a critical yet comprehensive overview of the creative achievements of women artists in the 20th century. It focuses on major female artists, whose works and contributions are considered in both their specific socio-cultural context and in a larger art-historical perspective. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify individuals who have made a major contribution to a style or period.
2. Compare artworks by identifying their differences and similarities.
3. Define terms and concepts in relation to a particular style, artist or artwork.
4. Discuss historical events, social forces, and cultural trends that have had an influence on a particular style, artist or artwork.
5. Develop analytical and writing skills through textual studies of primary and secondary sources, as well as writing exercises.
|
| AD 34200 - Ceramics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of A&D 242; according to student needs in creating ceramic forms, a variety of in-depth experiences: experimental kiln building and firing techniques, methods of ceramic construction, surface treatment, and clay and glaze formulation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 34400 - Latin American Art In The 20th Century |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course offers a critical yet comprehensive overview of modern and contemporary art from Latin America. It focuses on major artists, whose works and contributions are considered in both their specific socio-cultural context and in a larger art historical perspective. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify individuals who have made a major contribution to a style or period.
2. Compare artworks by identifying their differences and similarities.
3. Define terms and concepts in relation to a particular style, artist or artwork.
4. Discuss historical events, social forces and cultural trends that have had an influence on a particular style, artist or artwork.
5. Build the knowledge and understanding of Latin America art.
6. Develop the analytical and writing skills through textual studies of primary and secondary sources, as well as writing exercises.
|
| AD 34800 - Islamic Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An opportunity to study the art and architecture of Islam, from its origins to modern times. Besides mosques and their decoration, there are discussed illustrated books, textiles, ceramics, and metalwork made by Islamic craftsmen, all viewed within their historical context. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will acquire a deep appreciation of the varied forms of Islamic art.
2. Students will understand their historical development over several centuries, and will view them within the larger context of Islamic culture as a whole.
|
| AD 35000 - Interior Design IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of large-scale public and social spaces, emphasizing interior systems and components. Application of design for historic preservation, renovation, or adaptive reuse will be considered. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand how to apply the principles of human physiological, social and psychological factors in the planning of interior environments. Considerations include user needs, human dimensions, personal perception, activities, and the spaces/equipment/furnishings to accommodate them.
2. Students will learn to plan and graphically present schematic, preliminary and presentation drawings and models to communicate design concepts.
3. Students will develop experience in utilizing interior materials, current product information code.
|
| AD 35900 - Medieval European Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comprehensive study of the varied art forms in Western Europe from the decline of the Roman Empire until the beginnings of the Italian Renaissance: 500 A.D. to 1500 A.D. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 36101 - The Constructed Image |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intermediate level course focusing on the production of creative images constructed both in the studio and the field. Readings and discussions investigate both historical and contemporary trends in the art of the photographically-constructed images. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 36200 - Jewelry And Metalwork |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Lost wax casting and mold making, mechanisms and stone setting for jewelry and metalwork. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to design and make wax and non-wax models for jewelry and small metal projects by reductive, addictive, and construction processes.
2. Students will learn to sprue, invest and cast their models by the lost wax centrifugal and vacuum casting methods.
3. They will learn to make waste molds and reusable rubber molds to produce their jewelry projects.
4. They will learn to make mechanisms for jewelry and settings for incorporating stones or other nonmetal materials into their jewelry.
|
| AD 36300 - Documentary Photography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the concept and practice of the documentary mode in photography. Research options entail a variable combination of theory and practice. Prerequisites: Acceptance into Photography and Related Media program by sucessful performance in the mandatory portfolio review. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 36500 - Intermediate Painting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A studio course concentrating on the development of conceptual and technical skills of painting. This course is designed to help individual students gain a greater awareness of their personal creative goals and to foster means of expression. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| AD 36600 - Visual Communications Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Field trips may be required. The study of corporate graphics and visual identity programs. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 36800 - Etching And Intaglio Printmaking |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the techniques of etching, engraving, aquatint, drypoint, collagraph, monoprint, and related processes. Emphasis on fine art conceptual issues, creativity, matting and framing art, and professional practices. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AD 36900 - Lithographic Printmaking |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the techniques of stone and plate lithography. Emphasis on fine art conceptual issues, creativity, matting and framing art, and professional practices. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AD 37000 - Woven Textiles |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A beginning course in loom-woven textiles and pattern drafting. Emphasis on two- and three-dimensional design in fiber, using historical textile structures as the basis for contemporary interpretations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 38000 - Mannerist, Baroque, And Rococo Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the evolution of European fine and decorative arts during the sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 38100 - Fine Art Photographic Printmaking And Artist's Book |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intermediate level course in fine art photographic printmaking, portfolio production, and integration of image with text. Students will explore camera formats, presentation issues, and bookmaking techniques. Special emphasis placed upon the creative process. Prerequisites: Acceptance into Photography and Related Media program by sucessful performance in the mandatory portfolio review. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 38200 - Nineteenth Century Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Critical study of the development of nineteenth-century art in America and Europe, Neo-Classicism, Romanticism, Realism, Naturalism and Impressionism are considered in their art-historical, cultural and theoretical contexts. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 38300 - Modern Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Critical study of the development of modern art in America and Europe. Post-Impressionism, Expressionism, Cubism, Surrealism, Abstract Expressionism, Pop Art, and Minimalism are considered in their art-historical, cultural and theoretical contexts. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| AD 38400 - Contemporary Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comprehensive overview of the visual arts from the 1940’s to the present, designed to help students understand the cultural, social, and historical dynamics that influence artistic creation, and reflect upon the artists’ role in contemporary societies. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 38500 - History Of Interior Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the principle styles, trends, and movements of interior design from antiquity to the Industrial Revolution, emphasizing decorative arts, furnishings, and their relationship to the built environment. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 39100 - History Of Chinese And Japanese Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A historical survey of the visual arts and architecture of China and Japan from antiquity to the present. Emphasis will be placed on the relation of a broad range of art forms to their social and cultural contexts. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 39200 - Special Topics In Art |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics will vary. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AD 39500 - History Of Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the development of design ideas and structures and the influence of technology upon their direction. The course will cover a cross section of ideas developed from the late nineteenth century to the present. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 39600 - Art Museum Practices |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines art museums as cultural institutions with varied collections, serving an important social role. Museum administration and operation are discussed, as are exhibition preparation and museum architecture; a few field trips are required. Museum careers also are explored. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 39700 - Sustainability In The Built Environment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of philosophical concepts, principles, and theories of sustainability as they pertain to building methods, materials, systems, and occupants. To provide a foundation for evaluation of materials, processes, and applications of design components for environmentally responsible. Field trips will be required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 40000 - Advanced Painting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A studio course concentrating on the development of an advanced body of work built upon the conceptual and technical skills of painting. This course is designed to help individual students gain a greater awareness of their personal creative goals and to foster means of expression. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| AD 40200 - Art In Secondary School |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and practice of art education for adolescent and young adult students in the secondary school. Required prior to professional semester.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 40300 - Portfolio Process And Presentation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The process of organizing, editing, and packaging work in a cohesive system will be illustrated in lecture, indivdiualized studio projects, and on-site portfolio reviews. The course will focus on presentation as well as the building of the portfolio and students will participate in discussions, critiques, resume preparation, and mock interviews. Copyright issues and ownership of work will also be discussed. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| AD 40400 - Moldmaking And/Or Wheel-Throwing Production Techniques In Ceramics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. This course will teach mold-making or wheel-throwing (depending on the individual student's interest) with a view to creating ceramic objects suitable for commercial mass-production. Both tableware and/or sculptural objects will be explored. For the wheel-throwing option the students must have at least one year of high school throwing or AD 24200 with a grade of at least "B" or permission of instructor. For the mold making and casting option only, students must be an Art and Design student or have permission of instructor. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The student will learn how to design a model, make the model from clay, make a mold of the designed model (or found object), cast and assemble cast ceramics pieces for possible commercial mass-production. If choosing the wheel-throwing option, the student will learn advanced techniques of throwing and assembling parts to make either functional and sculptural objects for mass-production.
2. Students will also learn simple glazing techniques, and have the option of learning how to screen print and use decals on their final products.
|
| AD 40500 - Industrial Design III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design projects emphasizing sophisticated problem-solving methods. Design projects will stress diversity of industrial design and will trace the development of products from initial concept, research, and development through production. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 40600 - Industrial Design IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design of products in their relation to economic, physiological, psychological, and behavioral patterns of the consumer. Emphasis upon total thought processes to allow environmental considerations as well as technological realities. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 41500 - Professional Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Research development for product design, with emphasis on socioeconomic concerns and documentation techniques. Portfolio refinement, including verbal, written, and other visual documentation and presentation skills in various media, such as drawing. Photography and computer-generated graphics will be stressed. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 41600 - Seminar On Ideas In Industrial Design II: Design And Creative Problem Solving Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of creative problem solving methods as used by the designer in his or her work. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 41700 - Variable Topics In Electronic And Time-Based Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of thematic or specialized topics reflecting the most recent developments and contemporary artistic practices in Electronic and Time-Based Art. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will make use of essential tools and techniques for generating, sketching and realizing ideas in the field of new media art using DIY strategies, commercial as well as open source software and hardware solutions for creative production.
2. Students will be able to analyze key works and artists in the emerging field of Electronic and Time-Based Art.
|
| AD 42100 - Advanced Studies In Photography And Related Media I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The first of two advanced level courses in photography/related media focusing on production of a formally and conceptually coherent body of work. Course emphasizes development of studio and critical thinking skills, and initiates investigation of the creative process. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 42200 - Advanced Studies In Photography And Related Media II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced level course in photography and related media focusing on production of a formally and conceptually coherent body of work, articulated within an appropriate, informed critical context. Culminates in curation of formal exhibition. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 42600 - Robotic Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The Robotic Art Studio is an experimental and interdisciplinary class that explores the aesthetics, technologies, ideologies and cultural impact of robotics. Students build robots that beep, blink, bounce and walk. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 43000 - Interior Design V |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design of multi-use complex environments, emphasizing program and problem solving, facility planning, building systems, and materials technology. Application of alternative presentation technologies will be explored. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 43100 - Visual Communications Design III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The advanced study of communication concepts of poster and poster application in current media. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to demonstrate the ability to initiate and develop creative concepts; evaluate creative work; apply current technology; and communicate effectively.
|
| AD 43200 - Visual Communications Design IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of product identity, packaging. and branding. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to demonstrate ability to initiate and develop creative concepts; present and evaluate creative work; apply current technology related to the profession.
|
| AD 43400 - Professional Practice For Visual Communication Designers |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Specific professional practice topics for the visual communications designer. Subjects range from contracts, professional associations, ethics, to portfolio and resume preparation, the job market and the future of the profession. Field trips may be required. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AD 44000 - Interior Detailing And Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The process of designing, detailing, specifying, and constructing interior environments. Emphasis on teams, building systems, architectural drawing, and building codes. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 44200 - Ceramics III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of A&D 342; according to student needs in creating ceramic forms, a variety of in-depth experiences: experimental kiln building and firing techniques, methods of ceramic construction, surface treatment, and clay and glaze formulation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| AD 44800 - Visual Communication Design III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course designed to introduce advanced design problems with emphasis on individual development and exploration of contemporary design issues. The study of surface design for packaging graphics will be introduced as well. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate advanced knowledge of professional practices, and history of graphic design.
2. Demonstrate the use of elements and principles of graphic design, resulting in solved design problems often presented by clients.
3. Conceptualize, extend, and produce ideas for design projects into 3D applications.
4. Demonstrate and utilize conceptual skill as well as skills in graphic communication using layout, composition, typography, image, and production.
5. Demonstrate the use of tools and equipment by working with sketching implements, MacIntosh platform computers and applications and also presentation materials.
6. Take client driven work and apply the creative process: meeting with client, taking a project from conception to final production/presentation utilizing production techniques and skills.
7. Exhibit craftsmanship by producing printed presentations of created designs.
8. Professionally present work to client or audience.
9. Discuss and evaluate graphic design using appropriate terminology verbally and in written form.
|
| AD 44900 - Visual Communication Design IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course designed to introduce graphic problem solving in the commercial environment; advanced production techniques for the visual communication designer. Field trips may be required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate advanced knowledge of professional practices, and history of graphic design.
2. Demonstrate the use of elements and principles of graphic design, resulting in solved design problems often presented by clients.
3. Conceptualize, extend, and produce ideas for design projects into 3D applications.
4. Demonstrate and utilize conceptual skill as well as skills in graphic communication using layout, composition, typography, image, and production.
5. Demonstrate the use of tools and equipment by working with sketching implements, MacIntosh platform computers and applications and also presentation materials.
6. Take client driven work and apply the creative process: meeting with client, taking a project from conception to final production/presentation utilizing production techniques and skills.
7. Exhibit craftsmanship by producing printed and/or constructed presentations of created designs.
8. Professionally present work to client or audience.
9. Discuss and evaluate graphic design using appropriate terminology verbally and in written form.
|
| AD 45100 - Italian Renaissance Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the development of the major and minor themes and forms in Italy from 1300 A.D. until 1525 A.D., emphasizing the achievements of masters and analyzing the theories of contemporaries. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 45200 - Northern Renaissance Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The development of a mature North European art originating in the International Gothic tradition and culminating in the works of Albrecht Durer, Jerome Bosch, and Pieter Bruegel, the Elder. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 45400 - Modern Architecture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of nineteenth- and twentieth-century architecture. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 46200 - Metalsmithing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Metal forming and metalsmithing processes for small metal objects and jewlery. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn to use traditional jewelry and metalsmithing hammers, stakes, forming tools, and processes such as forging, chasing and repousee, and raising.
2. They will learn to design and make specialized tooling for pressing, forming and altering the shape of sheet metal using a hydraulic press.
3. They will learn to incorporate the resulting forms by fabrication processes into jewelry, and other art metal projects.
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| AD 46500 - Professional Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of professional office and business procedures for the practice of interior design. Includes project administration, contracts, forms, and documents as used in the marketplace. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AD 46800 - Printmaking III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the techniques of photo plate lithography and photo etching, with continued advanced studies in lithography and etching/intaglio. Emphasis on color printmaking, fine art conceptual issues, creativity, matting and framing art, and professional practices. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AD 47000 - Advanced Studies In Textiles |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A textile seminar and studio course in advanced textile design, with the purpose of developing a personal direction and competence in textiles as fiber art. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| AD 47800 - Internship In Art And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Intensive exposure to professional experience through supervised internship in art-and-design-related firms, departments, or studios. Consent to enroll, amount of credit, placement, and evaluation to be approved and coordinated by department. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will experience a working knowledge of the culture and environment of a professional studio and professional practice related to their major course of study in Art and Design.
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| AD 48500 - History Of Contemporary Interiors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The development of modern movements in design, with emphasis placed on new processes and use of materials in relation to architectural and interior design innovations. Movements from the Industrial Revolution to the present will be studied. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AD 49000 - Special Problems In Art And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Individual problems in art and design. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| AD 49100 - Special Topics In Art |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics will vary. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AD 49200 - Advanced Seminar In Art History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study in depth of a period or movement in the history of art. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AD 49300 - Variable Topics In The History Of Art I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of thematic or specialized topics in the study of the History of Art, Design and Architecture. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| AD 49400 - Variable Topics In The History Of Art II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of thematic or specialized topics in the study of the History of Art, Art Theory, Criticism, or Museum Studies. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| AD 49900 - Studio Arts Professional Practice/Senior Exhibition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of professional practice in the contemporary art world: ethics, gallery, exhibition, studio practice, writing, visual documentation, and business of art. Seniors meet throughout spring semester to organize, install, and de-install Fine Arts Senior Exhibition. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Seniors learn to write a professional artist statement and resume.
2. Students will develop a digital portfolio, and through the senior exhibition they gain the knowledge of organizing and installing an exhibition.
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| AD 50200 - Curriculum Studies In Art Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDCI 52000) Study of selected theories of curriculum conception as they apply to constructing arts education curricula in the schools. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AD 50400 - Philosophical Studies In Art Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDCI 52100) To introduce students to philosophy as a mode of disciplined inquiry in art education. Students will critically examine the literature of art education and identify problems requiring philosophical resolution. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 51200 - Interaction Design Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines concepts and methods for interaction design (IXD). It emphasizes a human-centered perspective and explores fundamental components involved in IXD research. Students will explore a wide range of literature and implement IXD theories in multi-disciplinary collaborative projects. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the fundamental architecture and principles of the interaction design.
2. Be familiar with a range of research interests in the domain and start to consider the thesis research topic.
3. Be aware of the diversity of research areas, methodologies and practices relevant to the interaction design program, and be exposed to work of researchers beyond the university, drawn from regional and international venues, to keep informed about updated research achievements.
4. Identify and apply compositional theory to interaction design practice.
5. Develop the ability to articulate intention in work through design iteration.
6. Organize and conduct a design process within an interdisciplinary team.
7. Have a working level of programming fluency, in order to independently produce a working prototype that satisfies given design requirements.
8. Assess and improve production value through design practice, optimization, and media technique.
9. Explore creative process, perception, and problem solving.
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| AD 52000 - Student Visual Design Service |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The course will simulate the operation of a professional design studio affording the opportunity for hands-on experience in the development of a total graphic product from concept to finish and will include contact with clients, typesetters, and printers. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
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| AD 52200 - Interaction Design Evaluation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course builds a foundation for interaction designers to conduct evaluation research. Students start from analyzing evaluation cases on interactive designs and systems to employing evaluation in design projects using quantitative, qualitative, or mixed methods of inquiry. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify the need, justification, and goal of conducting an evaluation.
2. Understand systematic knowledge, logical-deductive processes and various research types, and recognize causes & effects, systematic bias and measurement/observation errors in research.
3. Be familiar with different kinds of qualitative and quantitative research methods and how they differ from each other. Build up reliable knowledge for them.
4. Understand the structure of paradigms, theories, concepts, hypotheses, constructs, variables and data.
5. Be familiar with the techniques such as observation, interviews, contamination, exogenous effects, and unobtrusive measures.
6. Be able to organize quantitative and qualitative data, and use analysis software such as SPSS and ALTAS.ti to find patterns.
7. Present the evaluation outcomes, and try to organize and write research papers based on the analysis.
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| AD 53200 - Cognition In Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on understanding cognitive issues and theories in design. Students are exposed to different cognitive models and phases while they are designing interactive systems. They will develop the cognitive perspective, analyze user experience, and develop an interaction design. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain and evaluate design decisions in terms of elementary cognitive theories.
2. Understand key differences between traditional and emerging models of cognition and the development of these models.
3. Learn about specific human strengths and weaknesses in terms of perception, memory, learning, and cognition and how to use this information to optimally design the interface/interaction to leverage this specific human potential.
4. Apply current models of individual and group cognition to the design of user interaction.
5. Ultimately, analyze, critically evaluate, and improve our interaction with artifacts from the human perspective.
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| AD 53500 - Furniture Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of furniture design trends and designers. Explore materials and manufacturing processes. Design and build a full-size seating unit. Shop skills required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AD 54200 - Information Visualization Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course starts from exploring visual perception and attention theories, studying modern visualization technologies and toolkits, and reviewing evolving visualization research. Students work on small exercises, and then accomplish complicated virtual and physical visualization projects for information representation and communication. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn the principals involved in information visualization. Gain a background that will aid the design of new, innovative visualizations.
2. Learn about the variety of existing techniques and systems in information visualization.
3. Build a sound foundation in human visual perception and how it relates to creating effective information visualization.
4. Proceed through graph and map-making best practices toward advanced topics of data structure and programmatic visualizations.
5. Gain experience describing and critiquing the methods and approaches of data visualization through presentations and critiques.
6. Understand the key design principles for creating information visualizations.
7. Explore the communication and narrative potential of information visualizations.
8. Develop skills in critiquing visualization techniques as applied to particular tasks.
9. Evaluate information visualizations tools.
10.Design new, innovative visualizations.
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| AD 55000 - Research Methods In Art And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intensive course in research methods to assist students in developing a topic for directed study. Introduction to various research tools; exercises exploring issues of style, content, and organization; research methods and how they pertain to art and design. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and develop effective research skills and methods as they apply to individual thesis projects.
2. Analyze and critique existing scholarship.
3. Design an effective thesis statement, devise a research plan and begin conducting research.
4. Practice critical writing skills through peer review of section drafts.
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| AD 55800 - Directed Project Research In Studio Arts |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Initial M.F.A. project research and production in studio arts. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
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| AD 56800 - Directed Project Research In Design |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Initial M.F.A. project research and production in design. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
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| AD 59000 - Special Art Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Individual problems in art history, appreciation, design, crafts, drawing, and painting. Credit dependent upon amount of work done. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| AD 59100 - Practicum For Art And Design Teaching Assistants |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Seminar to train new Art and Design teaching assistants in the content, policies, and format of the courses they teach. Topics include problem/project presentation, critique techniques, grading, and discipline. Subsequent semesters focus on improving and refining teaching skills. Open only to Art Design teaching assistants each semester they teach. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| AD 60000 - Painting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Painting. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AD 60100 - MFA Orientation |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Required for and open only to M.F.A graduate students in art and design. An introduction to the M.F.A. graduate degree program in art and design: policies, procedures, and requirements for successful completion of the M.F.A. degree. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AD 60300 - Theory In Art Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of critical issues in modern and postmodern art and relevant methodologies: formalism, iconography, biography and autobiography. Marxism (cultural studies), semiotics, and psychoanalyses. Elements of contemporary professional art practice discussed, including writing of artists' and designers' statements, biographies, and resumes. Prerequisite: Admission to the M.F.A. program in Art and Design. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AD 60500 - Problems In Industrial Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Problems in product innovation, product design, product development, and environmental design. Emphasis is placed on the development of working prototypes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AD 60600 - Problems In Visual Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Problems relating to printing technology, videotape, film design, computer graphics, perception, and the development of visual communications prototypes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AD 60700 - Graduate Seminar In Photography And Related Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Study and discussion of the aesthetics, theory, and criticism of photography and related media. Applications include historical and contemporary research and/or the development and critical analysis of a body of work. Prerequisite: Admission to the M.F.A. program in Art and Design. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AD 60800 - Advanced Typography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores the communicative and structural aspects of traditional and nontraditional typography, its current and past practitioners, and its evolving presence in the computer age. Independent research and group projects will supplement lectures, assigned readings, and field trips. Prerequisite: Admission to the M.F.A. program in Art and Design. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AD 60900 - Information Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course aims to teach specific principles and methods pertaining to information design, an emerging discipline within visual communications design (graphic design) involving the selection, organization and presentation of information to a given audience, covering a wide and varied group of delivery mediums. Prerequisite: Admission to the M.F.A. program in Art and Design. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AD 61000 - Advanced Poster Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Specific principles and methods pertaining to poster design. Explores the historical and social implications of poster design. Practical and theoretical exercise will aid students in creative thinking and concept generation. Prerequisite: Admission to the M.F.A. program in Art and Design. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| AD 61100 - Advanced Web Design For Visual Communications Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores experimental interface design issues and surveys emerging and advanced theories of interface design for the Web. Application of motion graphics design principles and design experimentation is part of the curriculum. Prerequisite: Admission to the M.F.A. program in Art and Design. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AD 61300 - Drawing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Drawing. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AD 61400 - Graduate Installation And Critique |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A seminar for all graduate students in the studio arts incorporating the process of installation art to facilitate the exchange of ideas and professional criticism. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| AD 61500 - Social Issues In Industrial Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of mass-production materials and processes used by designers. Students will focus on the limitations and benefits of various manufacturing methods. Special attention will be given to injection molding, casting, and stamping. Prerequisite: Admission to the M.F.A. program in Art and Design. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 61600 - Electronic And Time-Based Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. This seminar explores contemporary artistic practices in Electronic and Time-Based Art, including emerging fields such as: generative and interactive art, audio-visual installation, and new media performance. The format of the course is a mixture of critique, workshops, research, presentations, and discussion. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 24 credits
Learning Objectives:
After completing this course, students will: Make use of essential tools and techniques for generating, sketching and realizing ideas in the field of new media art using DIY strategies, commercial as well as open source software and hardware solutions for creative production, collaborative and interdisciplinary team work. Use shared knowledge from online communities that is relevant to their projects. Consider contributing their own findings and knowledge gained in this class to relevant online communities (e.g. arduino.cc, processing.org, instructables.com, makezine.com, etc). Know how to research and find relevant exhibition venues, festivals and competitions. Find the most effective medium for their ideas and concepts. Know how to adjust to a field of artistic expression in which the tools (i.e. digital software and hardware technologies) are changing rapidly. Have developed effective research strategies pertinent to the history of Electronic and Time-Based Art. Be able to analyze key works and artists in the merging field of Electronic and Time-Based Art. Be able to place their artistic practice in a rich historical context of related earlier art forms such as: Kinetic Art, Film, Dada, Fluxus and Performance Art. Understand that "A technology is not merely a system of machines with certain functions; rather, it is an expression of a social world. Electricity, the telephone, radio, television, the computer, and the Internet are not implacable forces moving through history, but social processes that vary from one time period to another and from one culture to another. " (Nye 2006, 47) Have improved their writing skills toward successful project and exhibition proposals, artist statements and research papers according to CAA's latest Guidelines for Faculty Teaching in New-Media Arts (2007): "In this emergent field, contributions to theory should be seen as having equal significance as aesthetic productions. " (see: http://www.collegeart.org/guidelines/newmedia07.html)
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| AD 62500 - Applied Ornamental Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of past and present ornamental design applications and of the cultures that created them. Students will generate their own individual visual iconography to be transformed into designs for consumer products, architectural elements, or furniture. Prerequisite: Admission to the M.F.A. program in Art and Design.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 63500 - Advanced Materials And Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of mass-production materials and processes used by designers. Students will focus on the limitations and benefits of various manufacturing methods. Special attention will be given to injection molding, casting, and stamping. Prerequisite: Admission to the M.F.A. program in Art and Design. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 64000 - Special Topics In Interior Design |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Special topics and theoretical approaches to individual projects within the built environment will be investigated, such as urban environments, existing and new structures, and interior environments. Topics could include either residential or non-residential projects. Prerequisite: Admission to the M.F.A. program in Art and Design. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
|
| AD 65800 - MFA Project Research In Studio Arts |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Intensive M.F.A. project production and thesis research in studio arts. Prerequisite: Three credit hours of AD 55800 with a minimum B- grade. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 12 credits
|
| AD 66100 - Jewelry and Metalsmithing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Jewelry and Metalsmithing. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AD 66500 - Printmaking |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Printmaking. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AD 66800 - MFA Project Research In Design |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Intensive M.F.A. project production and thesis research in design. Prerequisite: Three credit hours of AD 56800 with a minimum B- grade. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 12 credits
|
| AD 66900 - Ceramics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Ceramics. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AD 67000 - Textile Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Textile Art. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AD 67500 - Sculpture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Sculpture. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AD 67800 - Graduate Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Intensive exposure to professional experience through supervised internship in art or design firms, departments, or studios. The internship will consist of work to enhance the development of future professionals. The internship experience will help students integrate theory and practice and confirm career choices. Prerequisite: Admission to the M.F.A. program in Art and Design. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Internship
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| AD 69000 - Advanced Problems In Art And Design |
|
Arrange Hours and Credit. Credit and hours to be arranged. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AD 69100 - Directed Readings In Art History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of specialized publications for in-depth study in an area of special interest. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
|
| AD 69300 - Historical Problems In Art Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDCI 63000) Examination of methods used to investigate art education's history, past theory, and practices. Class work will include readings and discussion and will culminate in guided research and a short historical study. Permission of instructor required. Prerequisite: BA in art education. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AD 69700 - MFA Graduate Exhibition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Completion of M.F.A. thesis, oral defense, gallery installation of M.F.A. exhibition, public presentation, and documentation of exhibition. Prerequisite: Admission to the M.F.A. program in Art and Design. Concurrent Prerequisite: Must complete 12 credit hours of AD 65800 or 66800 during the same or prior session. Only open to M.F.A. graduate students in Art and Design. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AD 69800 - Research MA Or MFA Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MA Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AERO A1000 - Introduction To Aerospace Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to aerospace studies.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AERO A1010 - Air Force Today I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Air Force Today I. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AERO A1020 - Air Force Today II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A survey course designed to introduce students to the United States Air Force and Air Force Reserve Officer
Training Corps. Featured topics include: mission and organization of the Air Force, officership and professionalism, military customs and courtesies, Air Force officer opportunities, and an introduction to communication skills. Leadership Laboratory is mandatory for AFROTC cadets and complements this course by providing cadets with
followership experiences.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AERO A2010 - Develop Air Power I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Develop Air Power I. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AERO A2020 - Development Of Air Power II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Development Of Air Power II. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AERO A3010 - Air Force Management And Leadership I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of the United States foreign and defense policies, with emphasis on the study of international alliances and case studies on policy formulation. Other topics include societal attitudes toward the military, the military officer in a democratic society, the requisites for maintaining national security, constraints on the defense establishment, and military law. Case studies are included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AERO A3020 - Air Force Management Leadership II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of leadership, management fundamentals, professional knowledge, Air Force personnel and evaluation systems, leadership ethics, and communication skills required of an Air Force junior officer. Case studies are used to
examine Air Force leadership and management situations as a means of demonstrating and exercising practical application of the concepts being studied. A mandatory Leadership Laboratory complements this course by providing advanced leadership experiences in officer-type activities, giving students the opportunity to apply leadership and
management principles of this course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AERO A4010 - Natl Sec Affrs/Prep Actv Duty |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Learn about the role of the professional military leader in a democratic society; societal attitudes toward the armed forces; the requisites for maintaining adequate national defense structure; the impact of technological and international developments on strategic preparedness and the overall policy-making process; and military law. In addition, you will study topics that will prepare you for your first active-duty assignment as an officer in the Air Force.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AERO A4020 - National Security Studies and Preparation for Active Duty |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Leadership Laboratory is the application of leadership skills, demonstration of command, effective communication, individual instruction, physical fitness training and knowledge of military customs and courtesies. As an Air Force ROTC cadet, you'll spend one or two class periods each week putting into practice the leadership skills and management theory acquired in class. Leadership Laboratory is taken a maximum of two hours per week throughout your enrollment in Air Force ROTC. Instruction is conducted within the framework of an organized cadet corps with a progression of experiences designed to develop your leadership potential. Leadership Laboratory involves a study of Air Force customs and courtesies; drill and ceremonies; career opportunities in the Air Force; and the life and work of an Air Force junior officer. Develop your leadership potential in a practical, supervised laboratory, which includes field trips to Air Force installations.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AFRO A1060 - Perspectives From The African Diaspora |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course is a study of selected topics or issues in Afro-American/African Diaspora Studies usually coordinated with symposia and/or conferences sponsored by the AAADS Program. This course will expose students to current trends in research techniques, new research, allow them to interact with nationally and internationally known scholars and leaders in the area of AADS. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AFRO A1200 - SoulRevue/Black Popular Music Ensemble |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduces the richness and depth of black popular tradition through authentic performance practices. Repertoire varies from semester to semester. Participation in on- and off-campus concerts, workshops, and lecture demonstrations required. Ability to read music desirable but not essential. May be repeated individually or in combination with A1000 or A1100 for a maximum of 12 credit hours. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 5 times
|
| AFRO A1400 - Intro:African American & African Diasp Study |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the theory, method, social, political, cultural, and economic experiences of people comprising the African Diaspora. Utilizes and interdisciplinary approach and conceptual theoretical and analytical framework to illustrate the interconnectedness of black people's experience and the importance of studying AAADS as a field of scholarly inquiry. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AFRO A1410 - Introduction To Writing And The Study Of Black Literature I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Composition and literature courses that teach the skills of writing. Structuring of ideas through analysis and practice of various techniques of paragraph and essay development. Reading and discussion of representative Afro-american writings, including poetry, short stories, sermons, novels and drama. Typically offered Fall, Spring, Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AFRO A1420 - Introduction To Writing And The Study Of Black Literature II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Composition and literature courses that teach the skills of writing. Structuring of ideas through analysis and practice of various techniques of paragraph and essay development. Reading and discussion of representative Afro-american writings, including poetry, short stories, sermons, novels and drama. Typically offered Fall, Spring, Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AFRO A1500 - Survey Of The Culture Of Black Americans |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the life and experience of Africans in the United States utilizing resources from history, literature, and the social sciences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AFRO A1520 - Introduction To African Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides students with an interdisciplinary, introductory perspective on African continuities and changes. The course will focus on contemporary African societies while considering the lessons learned through the vestiges of slavery, colonization, aparteid and liberation struggles on the continent. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AFRO A1690 - Introduction To Afro-American Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Representative Afro-American writings including poetry, short story, sermons, novel, drama. Not open to students who are enrolled in or who have completed A141-A142. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| AFRO A2000 - Research In African American And African Diaspora Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduce students to basic tools, techniques and processes of scholarly research in African American and African Diaspora Studies. Students learn and apply technology as it pertains to research, address ethical issues, gain and apply technology of basic statistical techniques in research and gain proficiency in reading, writing, understanding, and critiquing research articles, abstracts, and proposals. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AFRO A2020 - The West And The African Diaspora. |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to Western Europe's and America's perception of Africa and Africans. Emphasis is on the image of Africans and their New World descendants, as constructed by European and American intellectuals. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AFRO A2100 - Black Women In America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A historical overview of the Black woman's role in American society, including family, social, and political relationships. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| AFRO A2490 - Afro-American Autobiography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of autobiographies written by black Americans in the last two centuries. The course emphasizes how the autobiographers combine the grace of art and the power of argument to urge the creation of genuine freedom in America. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AFRO A2550 - The Black Church In America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The Black Church In America. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AFRO A3030 - Topics In Afro-American Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Study of selected topics or issues in Afro-American studies occasionally, but not always, coordinated with symposia and/or conferences sponsored by the Afro-American Studies Program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AFRO A3060 - Globalization, Struggle And Empowerment In The African Diaspora |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the shared cultural, political, social and intellectual responses to the transoceanic, experiences of African diaspora population. Utilizes interdisciplinary tools and perspectives to understand the impact of colonialism, imperialism and globalization on African populations of the United States, Canada, Great Britain, and selected West European nations during the modern era. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AFRO A3160 - Women of the Diaspora: Race, Culture, and Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduce students to film, music, poetry, literature, and writing dealing with the experiences of women throughout the African Diaspora, with emphasis on Sub Saharan Africa, Central America, North America, and the Caribbean. Students will be required to read four books in addition to short stories, poetry, and scholarly articles on the topic. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Engage in a critical discourse about the shared experiences and history of women within the African Diaspora.
2. Enhance student's critical thinking, writing, and technological skills.
3. Expose students to literature, music, film, and scholarly works by and about women of the African Diaspora.
4. Understanding of imagery and expression through film, literature, and music.
5. Recognize the works of prominent Afro female writers, filmmakers, political figures and everyday women who comprise the African Diaspora.
|
| AFRO A3260 - Race, Beauty, and Popular Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores and contextualizes the popular cultural meanings and implications of Western beauty standards as they relate to women and/or men of color. Considerations for the course can include discourses involving ideologies of femininity, masculinity, and beauty or attractiveness as they impact issues of race, class, gender, and sexuality. This course addresses questions such as: how are women and/or men of color represented in multimedia, popular culture, and literature? What have been the consequences of applying Western standards of beauty or attractiveness to women and men of color? And how do these standards affect men's and women's attitudes and understandings of how they should look, act, feel, and behave--both past and present? Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AFRO A3520 - Afro-American Art Ii: Afro-American Artists |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the artistic traditions of the Africans in the New World, from the period of slavery in North and South America through contemporary and expatriate African American artists. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AFRO A3550 - Afro-American History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. History of blacks in the United States. Slavery, abolitionism, Reconstruction, and post-Reconstruction to 1900. Credit given for only one of A3550 or HIST A3550. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AFRO A3690 - The African American Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. One of the main goals of this course is to expose students to broad themes in African-American history, while providing the tools to analyze contemporary economic problems and prospects facing the African-American population in the United States. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AFRO A4140 - Seminar In African And African American Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Seminar In African and African American Studies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AFRO A4950 - Individual Readings In African American And African Diaspora Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. By arrangement with instructor. Investigation of topics of special interest to students that are not covered in the regular program curriculum or that students wish to pursue in greater detail. May be repeated once for credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| AFT 11000 - Foundations Of Air Force I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A survey of officership, professionalism, communications skills, the organization of the Air Force, and the missions of the various Air Force major commands. Emphasis is placed on helping students understand what they would experience as an Air Force officer. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Aerospace Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Military
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AFT 11100 - Air Force ROTC Leadership Laboratory I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to military training. Introduction to drill and ceremonies, study and experience in Air Force standards, customs and courtesies. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Aerospace Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Military
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AFT 12000 - Foundations Of Air Force II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A survey of Air Force installations design and location, Air Force professions, principles of flight, geopolitics, defense policy and strategy, terrorism, and the Air Force's partner services in the Department of Defense. Emphasis is placed on helping students understand what they would experience as an Air Force officer. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Aerospace Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Military
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AFT 12100 - Air Force ROTC Leadership Laboratory II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Reinforces Air Force military training, drill and ceremonies, study and experience in Air Force standards, customs and courtesies. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Aerospace Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Military
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AFT 23000 - The Evolution Of USAF Air And Space Power I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Examines the development of air power from the beginning of manned flight through World War II. It traces the development of various concepts of employment of air power in this era and focuses upon factors that have prompted research and technological change. The impact of leadership on the development of Air Force doctrine is explored. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Aerospace Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Military
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AFT 23100 - Air Force ROTC Leadership Laboratory III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Cadets experiment with and develop leadership/management skills. Study of Air Force customs and courtesies, drill and ceremonies, and giving military commands; instructing, correcting, and evaluating the preceding skills, and study the Air Force officer environment. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Aerospace Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Military
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| AFT 24000 - The Evolution Of USAF Air And Space Power II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Examines the development of air power from the end of World War II to the present. A variety of events and elements in the history of air power are stressed, especially where these provide significant examples of the impact of air power on strategic thought. The use of air power as an instrument of national power in dealing with a number of world crises is explored. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Aerospace Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Military
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AFT 24100 - Air Force ROTC Leadership Laboratory IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Cadets continue with emphasis on field training preparation, developing leadership/management skills. Study of Air Force customs and courtesies, drill and ceremonies, and giving military commands; instructing, correcting, and evaluating the preceding skills, and study the Air Force officer environment. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Aerospace Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Military
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| AFT 35100 - Air Force Leadership Studies I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on a study of leadership and management fundamentals, leadership ethics, and communicative skills required of Air Force lieutenants. Case studies are used to examine Air Force leadership and management situations to demonstrate and exercise practical application of concepts being studied. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Aerospace Studies
Course Attributes: Military, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AFT 35200 - Air Force ROTC Leadership Laboratory V |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Intermediate level leadership experience for military training cadets. Cadets lead the planning, coordinating, and directing of military activities for the cadet corps; provide formal training and guidance to increase the understanding, motivation, and performance of other cadets. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Aerospace Studies
Course Attributes: Military, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AFT 36100 - Air Force Leadership Studies II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of AFT 35100, with emphasis on the management functions of planning, organizing, and controlling. Communication skills are developed through oral briefings and writing assignments. Air Force officer professional knowledge requirements are introduced. Air Force case analyses simulate real-life situations. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Aerospace Studies
Course Attributes: Military, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AFT 36200 - Air Force ROTC Leadership Laboratory VI |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Advanced leadership experience for field training preparation cadets. Cadets lead the planning, coordinating, and directing of military activities for the cadet corps; provide formal training and guidance to increase the understanding, motivation, and performance of other cadets. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Aerospace Studies
Course Attributes: Military, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AFT 47100 - National Security Affairs I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the factors that play a part in the formulation of American defense policy, with particular emphasis on current issues. This policy uniquely combines aspects of American government, public administration, international relations, management, and economics. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Aerospace Studies
Course Attributes: Military, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AFT 47200 - Air Force ROTC Leadership Laboratory VII |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Advanced leadership experience for introductory military training cadets. Cadets lead the planning, coordinating, and directing of military activities for the cadet corps; provide formal training and guidance to increase the understanding, motivation, and performance of other cadets. Prepare for active duty. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Aerospace Studies
Course Attributes: Military, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AFT 48100 - National Security Affairs II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of AFT 47100, with special emphasis on the role of the Air Force officer in the formulation and implementation of defense policy. Preparation for active duty and a review of the military justice system is also covered this semester. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Aerospace Studies
Course Attributes: Military, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AFT 48200 - Air Force ROTC Leadership Laboratory VIII |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Advanced leadership experience for field training preparation cadets. Cadets lead the planning, coordinating, and directing of military activities for the cadet corps; provide formal training and guidance to increase the understanding, motivation, and performance of other cadets. Prepare for active duty. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Aerospace Studies
Course Attributes: Military, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 20200 - Spreadsheet Use In Agricultural Business |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Use of computer spreadsheets in business and financial analysis. Students gain capability to use financial, statistical, and logical spreadsheet functions and a wide variety of other spreadsheet capabilities. Accounting, finance, and management principles are put into practice in a spreadsheet environment. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 20300 - Introductory Microeconomics For Food And Agribusiness |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the application of microeconomics as used by farms and agribusiness firms. The behavior of individual firms is evaluated as price and output are determined in various market structures (pure competition, pure monopoly, monopolistic competition, and oligopoly). Other topics include pricing and employment of resources, market failure and the social control of industry (government, economics policy, and regulation), cost and production theory. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 20400 - Introduction To Resource Economics And Environmental Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course provides an overview of microeconomic theory and its application to issues related to evaluating resource economic issues and environmental policy. Topics discussed include efficiency, sustainability, valuation, externalities, governmental policies, and benefit cost analysis. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 21700 - Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. National economic problems such as unemployment, recessions, inflation, taxation, bank interest rates, the growth of government, monetary systems, and a rising national debt are discussed along with the principles, policies, and institutions for solving these macroeconomic problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Lafayette
|
| AGEC 22000 - Economics Of Agricultural Markets |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This class provides an overview of U.S. and international agricultural markets, and develops a framework for analyzing those markets. Concepts include determination of agricultural prices, spatial dimensions of agricultural markets, and trade; temporal dimensions of agricultural markets, and futures and options markets; and public policy in agricultural markets. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 25000 - Economic Geography Of World Food And Resources |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the important issues and economic decisions about worldwide resource use for food and fiber production as influenced by geography, climate, history, social institutions, national self-interest, and the environment. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 26000 - Mentoring Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is designed to teach upperclassmen how to mentor freshman to thrive and survive as entering freshmen in Agricultural Economics. The main focus is on the transition to college life, as well as practical information on time management, taking and rewriting classroom notes, preparing for examinations and quizzes, dealing with stress and interpersonal relationships, and health. Additional topics include opportunities for student involvement in campus life and organizations, career paths for the various programs of study in Agricultural Economics, and how to successfully work in groups. Mentors are restricted to AGBS, AGEC, AGFN, AGMG, FARM, FIMM, QAEC, and SLMK students. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate the ability to write and speak with effectiveness while considering audience and purpose.
2. Demonstrate the ability to work effectively as part of a problem-solving team.
3. Demonstrate knowledge of a range of cultures and an understanding of human values and points of view of other than their own.
4. Demonstrate awareness of civic responsibility to community and society at large.
5. Demonstrate skills necessary for lifelong learning.
|
| AGEC 27500 - Honors Course - Lower Division |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Utilized to offer a new honors course for a maximum of three years. Variable title, credit, and instructional type. Course may be repeated for credit if content and titles are different. Offered primarily to first and second-year students. Courses offered must be approved by departmental or program faculty and College of Agriculture Honors Committee. Enrollment in an honors program. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AGEC 28900 - Foundational Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Foundational internship that is preplanned and conducted under the direction of a faculty or staff member working in cooperation with an employer representative. A learning plan must be developed and approved by the student, faculty or staff coordinator, and employer representative prior to beginning the internship. A comprehensive report describing the management strategies used by the company or organization when he/she spent their internship is required. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| AGEC 29600 - Selected Topics In Agricultural Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Special topics in agricultural economics aimed at sophomore-level students. May be repeated for credit under a different topic title. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
|
| AGEC 29800 - Sophomore Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Current agricultural economics issues will be analyzed and discussed. Issue areas will be related to individual career planning and program development. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 30500 - Agricultural Prices |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of prices and the movement of farm product prices; relations of farm product prices to farm input and other prices; conceptual and statistical analysis of agricultural supply and demand relationships; application of price analysis, price forecasting, agricultural outlook, agricultural policy; adjustment of farming to new price conditions. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture 1, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 31000 - Farm Organization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Economic factors controlling success in farming; types of farming; business records and analysis; adjustment in organization to meet changing economic conditions; organization and management of successful farms. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 31100 - Accounting For Farm Business Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course emphasizes the development of procedures for providing and using data in decision making. Methods will be addressed for finding and organizing both financial and physical data to provide the business information needed in planning and control. Topics discussed include budgeting, reporting unit costs of production, measuring profitability and wealth accumulation, estimating credit needs and income tax liability, and evaluating the strengths and weaknesses of the business as the basis for improving the business. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 32100 - Principles Of Commodity Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An in-depth background on the origin, operation, and application of futures and options in risk management for agriculture. Covers grain, livestock, and yield futures and options. Applications of futures and options to price and yield risk management is provided. Comparison of expected results from various risk management alternatives and decision-making processes to use in selecting a risk management strategy. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and professional conduct.
2. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate and test hypotheses, conduct experiments and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
3. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
4. Demonstrate the ability to write and speak with effectiveness while considering audience and purpose.
5. Demonstrate ability to apply social, economic, political, and environmental principles to living in a global community.
|
| AGEC 32700 - Principles Of Food And Agribusiness Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a study of the major components of marketing decisions made by food and agribusiness firms. The course examines the marketing process, market research, marketing opportunities, and marketing strategies. Students will work on developing skills for evaluating and making marketing decisions. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and professional conduct.
2. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
3. Demonstrate the ability to write and speak with effectiveness while considering audience and purpose.
4. Demonstrate the ability to work effectively as part of a problem-solving team.
5. Demonstrate knowledge of a range of cultures and an understanding of human values and points of view of other than their own.
6. Demonstrate ability to apply social, economic, political, and environmental principles to living in a global community.
|
| AGEC 33000 - Management Methods For Agricultural Business |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Management of nonfarm, agriculturally related businesses. Topics include tools for management decision making, legal forms of business organization, basics of accounting, and important financial management techniques. Case studies and computer simulation game. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 33100 - Principles Of Selling In Agricultural Business |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The principles of salesmanship and their application to the agricultural business. Topics include attitudes and value systems, basic behavioral patterns, the purchase decision process, relationship of sales to marketing, selling strategies, preparing for sales calls, making sales presentations, handling objections, and closing sales. Emphasis is placed on application of principles to real-world situations and on building selling skills through class projects. Requires class trips. Students will pay individual lodging or meal expenses when necessary. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 33300 - Food Distribution - A Retailing Perspective |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Distribution factors that affect the food industry. Particular attention to the food wholesaling and retailing sectors. Presentation of economic tools to evaluate performance in the food industry. Discussion of the relative importance of each of the major departments in the modern supermarket. Discussion of current and future industry prototypes. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and professional conduct.
2. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate and test hypotheses, conduct experiments and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
3. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
4. Demonstrate the ability to write and speak with effectiveness while considering audience and purpose.
5. Demonstrate ability to apply social, economic, political, and environmental principles to living in a global community.
|
| AGEC 34000 - International Economic Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to introduce students to issues and problems related to international economic development. Topics covered include a description of the current situation in developing countries and the history of growth and development. The course is grounded in the body of theory associated with economic development, but concentrates on the many practical problems such as poverty, population growth, urbanization, education and the environment. The three areas with the greatest attention are agricultural development, international trade, and policy analysis for developing countries. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 35200 - Quantitative Techniques For Firm Decision Making |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to mathematical programming and computing as an aid to agricultural decision making by firms, linear programming, game theory and strategy, simulation, the waiting-line problem, the equipment replacement decision, and multiproduct scheduling methods. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 37500 - The Process Of Economic Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is a study of the process of conducting economic research. The course examines the research problem and objectives, literature review, conceptual framework, methods and procedures, and reporting research. Students will identify a research topic and project advisor. For Honors program students only in Agricultural Economics. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 39000 - Cooperative Professional Programs In Agricultural Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Supervised professional experiences in agricultural economics. Programs must be preplanned and conducted under the direction of the departmental coordinator with the cooperation of an employer. Students must submit a summary report. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AGEC 40000 - Agricultural Economics Study Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. Utilized to record credits earned through participation in Purdue study abroad programs with cooperating foreign universities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
|
| AGEC 40600 - Natural Resource And Environmental Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (FNR 40600) Introduction to economic models of renewable and nonrenewable natural resources and the use of these models in the analysis of current resource use and environmental issues. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 41000 - Agricultural Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Economic analysis of U.S. food and agricultural policy; current and past farm legislation; international trade; agricultural policies in selected countries; domestic and foreign food assistance; structural change; agricultural research policy; macroeconomic linkages with the agricultural sector; and emerging environmental policy issues, land and water use. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 41100 - Farm Management |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Principles of farm organization and management, farmer interviews, and the application of computerized farm decision-making methods. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and professional conduct.
2. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate and test hypotheses, conduct experiments and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
3. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
4. Demonstrate the ability to write and speak with effectiveness while considering audience and purpose.
5. Demonstrate ability to apply social, economic, political, and environmental principles to living in a global community.
|
| AGEC 41200 - Farm Business Management Workshop |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Making decisions regarding the organization and operation of farm businesses with which students will be associated after graduation. Areas of decision making include enterprise selection, farm growth, organizing large-scale farms, communication, labor management, machinery management, operating agreements, legal organization, and tax strategies. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and professional conduct.
2. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate and test hypotheses, conduct experiments and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
3. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
4. Demonstrate the ability to write and speak with effectiveness while considering audience and purpose.
5. Demonstrate ability to apply social, economic, political, and environmental principles to living in a global community.
|
| AGEC 41500 - Community And Resource Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles and structures of group decision making for improving income and quality of living for people, including analysis of private and public interest in economic and social planning. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 42100 - Advanced Commodity Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of commodity marketing principles to grain, livestock, and other commodity sectors. Applications include hedging, speculation, risk management, and fundamental and technical price analysis. Examination and testing of pricing strategies and the development of commodity marketing plans. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and professional conduct.
2. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate and test hypotheses, conduct experiments and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
3. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
4. Demonstrate the ability to write and speak with effectiveness while considering audience and purpose.
5. Demonstrate ability to apply social, economic, political, and environmental principles to living in a global community.
|
| AGEC 42400 - Financial Management Of Agricultural Business |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of the major types of financial decisions made by agriculturally related firms, including investment in inventory, receivables and cash, property, plant, and equipment; sources and types of short-term, intermediate, and long-term capital; legal patterns of the business organization, emphasis on implementation involving agribusiness case problems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and professional conduct.
2. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate and test hypotheses, conduct experiments and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
3. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
4. Demonstrate the ability to write and speak with effectiveness while considering audience and purpose.
5. Demonstrate ability to apply social, economic, political, and environmental principles to living in a global community.
|
| AGEC 42500 - Estate Planning And Property Transfer |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The ownership and transfer of farm business property. Includes tax and other implications of life estates, trust arrangements, sale of property, and charitable contributions. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 42700 - Advanced Agribusiness Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of marketing principles to market planning, research, and analysis. Development of strategic marketing plans for agribusiness. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and professional conduct.
2. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate and test hypotheses, conduct experiments and analyze date, and derive conclusions.
3. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
4. Demonstrate the ability to write and speak with effectiveness while considering audience and purpose.
5. Demonstrate ability to apply social, economic, political, and environmental principles to living in a global community.
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| AGEC 42900 - Agribusiness Marketing Workshop |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Research, development, and presentation of a strategic agribusiness marketing plan. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AGEC 43000 - Agricultural And Food Business Strategy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced course in business planning and strategy for potential agribusiness and food firm managers. Focuses on development of viable business strategy in the context of the firm's market and its internal condition. Makes extensive use of case studies that document management dilemmas of agribusiness firms, ranging from those providing inputs to agricultural producers to firms involved in the retail distribution of food. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and professional conduct.
2. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate and test hypotheses, conduct experiments and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
3. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
4. Demonstrate the ability to write and speak with effectiveness while considering audience and purpose.
5. Demonstrate ability to apply social, economic, political, and environmental principles to living in a global community.
|
| AGEC 43100 - Advanced Agri-Sales And Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Advanced techniques of salesmanship, field application of selling techniques, improving communication skills, study of agribusiness marketing strategies, interaction with industry agri-marketers, and strategies for career development in agri-marketing. Requires class trips. Students will pay individual lodging or meal expenses when necessary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and professional conduct.
2. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate and test hypotheses, conduct experiments and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
3. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
4. Demonstrate the ability to write and speak with effectiveness while considering audience and purpose.
5. Demonstrate ability to apply social, economic, political, and environmental principles to living in a global community.
|
| AGEC 43300 - Executive In The Classroom |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students meet weekly with industry leaders in the food processing, wholesaling, and retailing industries. Discussion of management philosophies and strategies, exploration of career opportunities, and review of trends, issues, and problems in the contemporary food industry. Students participate in the Midwest Grocers Association and the Food Marketing Institute trade shows. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 43500 - Leadership In A Changing World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of various leadership theories and the importance of leadership. Drawing upon research from many disciplines and fundamental aspects of leadership, students will read, discuss, and apply these concepts to leadership experiences and to develop competencies to be more effective leaders in their family, workplace, and community. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 45000 - International Agricultural Trade |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of U.S. agricultural trade with emphasis on international trade theory, exchange rates and their determination, relationships between domestic agricultural policies and trade policies, and analysis of institutional arrangements for world trade in agricultural products. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 45100 - Applied Econometrics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of strategies to economic problems. Simple and multiple regression, dummy variables, logit analysis, time series, and forecasting. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 45500 - Agricultural Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected general legal topics (courts, contracts, torts, property and commercial law) with emphasis on farming problems (e.g., landowner-tenant, grain contracts, fences, and animal liability) and cases. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 45600 - Federal Income Tax Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the federal income tax laws applicable to individuals and small business with emphasis on the farming business. The course includes management implications and the policy basis for the tax law system. Techniques and practice for the preparation of selected forms will be included. There will be limited exposure to taxation of partnerships, corporations, estates, and to federal gift and estate tax law. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 47500 - Honors Course - Upper Division |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Utilized to offer a new honors course for a maximum of three years. Variable title, credit, and instructional type. Course may be repeated for credit if content and titles are different. Offered primarily to third and fourth-year students. Courses offered must be approved by departmental or program faculty and College of Agriculture Honors Committee. Enrollment in an honors program. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AGEC 48900 - Professional Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Professional internship that is preplanned and conducted under the direction of a faculty or staff member working in cooperation with an employer repesentative. A learning plan must be developed and approved by the student, faculty or staff coordinator, and employer representative prior to beginning the internship. A summary report describing their economic or business analysis for the company or organization where he/she spent their internship is required. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| AGEC 49600 - Selected Topics In Agribusiness Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Intended for individuals in the food industry marketing and management, sales and marketing, agribusiness management, agricultural finance, and farm management options. Also open to students in other agricultural economics options as well as to students outside the department. Focuses on current topics in the management of food and agribusiness firms. Provides advanced treatment of these topics for upper-division students. This is a set of one-hour seminars that will address current topics in food and agribusiness management. The topics of focus will be those that either are not treated in other courses, or are not treated in depth needed by a student pursuing a management career in the food and agribusiness industries. Topics will be reviewed annually as to relevance and will be changed as needed. Five week session. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 5 times
|
| AGEC 49800 - Special Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Open primarily to qualified seniors who want to study special problems in agricultural economics not covered in regular work. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| AGEC 49900 - Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| AGEC 50600 - Agricultural Marketing And Price Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Marketing margins and derived demand; elasticity. Modeling supply and demand relationships; single and multiple equation systems; forecasting. Industrial organization economics applied to the food processing, wholesaling, and retailing industries; subsector analysis, vertical coordination; marketing and competition policies. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AGEC 51600 - Mathematical Tools For Agricultural And Applied Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides first year graduate students and advanced undergraduate students with the specific set of applied mathematical tools needed to support graduate coursework in microeconomics, macroeconomics, economic programming, and econometrics. The course reviews skills and concepts from a number of fields of mathematics including matrix algebra, calculus, optimization theory, and mathematical statistics. The course emphasizes specific applications to economic theory and applied problems in agricultural economics and related areas. Students should be comfortable with introductory-level calculus before entering the course. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Knowledge and Scholarship: The ability to identify and conduct original research, scholarship or creative endeavors.
2. Communication: The ability to effectively communicate their field of study.
3. Critical Thinking and Problem Solving: Think critically, creatively and solve problems in their field of study.
4. Ethical Conduct: Conduct research in an ethical and responsible manner.
5. Professional Development: demonstrate attributes of professional development consistent with expectations within their field of study.
|
| AGEC 52400 - Agricultural Finance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to provide students the concepts and tools to apply financial management principles to farm businesses. Topics include financing alternatives, preparation and interpretation of financial statements, and capital investment analysis using discounted cash flows. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 52500 - Environmental Policy Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to assist in understanding how environmental information and knowledge are produced, disseminated, and utilized in a variety of institutional contexts. Readings are selected to promote discussion and interaction concerning alternative mechanisms for protecting environmental resources. Prerequisite: introductory microeconomics course suggested. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 52600 - International Food And Agribusiness Marketing Strategy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will develop their analytical, decision-making, and communication skills related to marketing management of food systems in the world economy. They will analyze a foreign market's potential and market entry strategies; compare consumer differences and similarities across markets; define issues related to marketing mix standardization or adaptation; and evaluate effects of economic, social, and legal environments on marketing strategy. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 53000 - Strategic Agribusiness Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Addresses issues in the strategic management of agricultural and food businesses. Emphasis is on developing a framework for formulating strategy, making strategic choices in a variety of business environments, and implementing strategy. Extensive use of management case studies and a major term project with an agribusiness firm focus on developing managerial problem-solving skills. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 53300 - Supply Chain Management For Food And Agribusiness |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will develop an understanding of how the theory of logistics is applied as supply chain management for food and agribusiness firms. Through case studies and problem sets, students will analyze and consider contemporary issues and problems. Analyses will focus on tradeoffs among customer service, forecasting, inventory control, information technology, transportation management, warehousing and materials handling, and supply chain planning. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 55200 - Introduction To Mathematical Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to constrained and optimization problems and their solution using mathematical programming techniques. Theory and implementation of linear, quadratic, and integer programming methods are examined. Applications to farm management, diet and feed rations, spatial market equilibrium, agricultural sector analysis, and other problems from agricultural economics. Use of computer software packages for practical problems. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 59600 - Seminars In Current Issues In Agricultural Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Study of selected current developments in agricultural economics. Topics will be announced in advance. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AGEC 60000 - Agricultural Finance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced capital budgeting topics including: tax policy, inflation, optimal replacement, bid models, and inclusion of financing flows; application of expected utility theory and mathematical programming to optimal capital structure decisions of proprietors; farmland investment, pricing, and dynamics; pricing contingent claims. Prerequisite: AGEC 52400; AGEC 55200 suggested. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 60200 - Preparation And Procedures For Policy Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Research methods, scientific methodology, problem identification, and the nature of policy problems including economic policy readings, case studies, and practice project proposals. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 60400 - Fundamentals Of Applied Welfare Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Basic concepts and principles of applied welfare economics including Pareto conditions for welfare maximization; public goods, externalities, and property rights; consumer and producer surplus; theory of the second best; and neoclassical and contemporary theories of income distribution. Concurrent Prerequisite: ECON 51100. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 60500 - Agricultural Price Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Use of economic theory and quantitative methods to solve problems in price analysis, problem formulation, estimation, forecasting, and model evaluation. Prerequisite: AGEC 65000, ECON 51100. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 60800 - Benefit-Cost Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Principles and practice for analysis of the benefits and costs of public investments. Topics include measures of project worth, choice of the discount rate, analysis of projects with multiple objectives and purposes, identifying and quantifying benefits and costs, applications of consumer and producer surplus in project analysis, treatment of risk and uncertainty, and shadow pricing techniques for project evaluation in developing counties. Concurrent Prerequisite: AGEC 60400; a graduate course in microeconomic theory. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 61200 - Agricultural Production Economics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Economic theory and empirical research methods for management of natural resource based production systems. Topics include: analysis of response in crops and livestock production, resource allocation, economics of site specific management, commodity supply and input demand. Concurrent Prerequisite: ECON 51100. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 61300 - Introduction To Economics Of Risk |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A background in expected utility theory and applications. EUH axioms, risk aversion, utility elicitation, expected utility and moments, stochastic dominance, mean-variance, risk free asset, diversification, single index model, increasing risk, production under risk, programming models and applications. Prerequisite: AGEC 55200, ECON 51100, STAT 51100. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 61600 - Resource Economics And Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Natural resource development and allocation in both static and dynamic contexts. Analysis of scarcity and growth issues, equity considerations, derivation of optimal pricing and depletion rules. Application of advanced production concepts to national resource problems. Prerequisite: AGEC 60400, ECON 51100. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 61800 - Applied General Equilibrium Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and empirical techniques behind numerical general equilibrium analysis. The course is divided into two parts: 1) development of the basic analytical framework and model properties, and 2) in-depth study of selected applications in international trade, price analysis, and resource and environmental economics. Homework assignments involve a mix of qualitative analysis and microcomputer-based computational exercises. Prerequisite: AGEC 60400; Prerequisite: ECON 51100 or 60700. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 61900 - Applied Microeconomic Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides students with the capability to apply microeconomic theory and econometrics to analyses of economic issues and problems. Students will work through applied producer/consumer problems to gain experience in the uses of econometric estimation. Topics include: primal-dual approaches, direct and indirect functions, flexible functional forms, static optimization, separability and aggregation, risk and expectations, dynamics and demographics. Examples are drawn from both consumer and producer applications. Prerequisite: AGEC 65100, ECON 60700. Typically offered Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 62000 - Computational Analysis Of Markets And Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exposes students to a variety of topics in applied economics relating to markets and policy. Students build, calibrate, and revise simple economic models, with the basic structure of more complex models being provided. Through a series of problem sets focusing on analytical skills and computation, students bridge theory and application in economics.
. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 62200 - Food System Organization And Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of framework to study food system organization and policy; survey of measurement and empirical testing problems in industrial-organization research on food-system market structure and performance; review of competition policies and evaluation of policy alternatives. Prerequisite: Graduate courses in microeconomic theory and marketing. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 62500 - Macroeconomic Issues In Agriculture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Studies the nature and importance of linkages between agriculture and the macro economy, and examines theories and methods used to establish or quantify these linkages in agricultural models. Extensions of macroeconomic accounting and theory into an open economy are explored by examining attempts by agricultural economists to estimate macroeconomic linkages and build them into commodity models, and considering consequences of implicit and explicit macroeconomic assumptions in much of our work. The changing role of agriculture in an economy under structural transformation will be key to understanding these linkages and how they evolve, as shown in several new developments seeking to explain both recent events and policy history in macro-theoretical frameworks consistent with observed empirical regularities. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 63000 - Urban And Regional Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The literature discussed in this urban and regional economics course covers theoretical texts, conceptual as well as statistical, and empirical applications in order to introduce the student to the economist's view on spatial variation in economic outcomes. This ranges from coverage of the theory of industrial location choice, through theoretical and empirical analysis of the spatial distribution of economic activities (agglomeration theory, industrial clusters, central place theory), to theoretical and empirical explanations for the spatial structure of cities, the working of regional labor markets and migration. The course covers various empirical tools utilized in spatial data analysis (spatial econometrics) and modeling of regional economies and their interrelations (interregional input-output analysis). Prerequisites: AGEC 20300 or ECON 34000 or ECON 51100. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 63100 - The Theory And Practice Of Spatial Econometrics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course deals with the analysis of spatial data and centers on both exploratory tools developed in spatial statistics and GIScience, as well as on econometric models that have been the main focus in spatial econometrics. During the course, the theoretical basis for the analysis of spatial data and spatial models will be covered. This theoretical angle will be combined with ample opportunities to acquire hands-on experience in the analysis of spatial data. To the effect, up-to-date software, such as GeoDa, R, Stata, and Matlab will be used. A good working knowledge of basic statistics and regression techniques is needed. Prior experience with GIS is helpful but not required. Prerequisites: AGEC 45100 or 65000 or ECON 67100 or STAT 41700 or STAT 51200 or STAT 51700. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 63200 - The Economics Of Health Care And Health Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the economic analysis of health outcomes, the health-care sector and health policy issues in the United States. The course explores the allocation and distribution of resources in the health-care industry. Topics covered include: the demand for health care, health insurance, hospitals and hospital care, and the services and health-care professionals. The health outcomes will include analyses of studies on obesity, race and socioeconomic status on child and adult health. This course also introduces the student to the unique economic challenges of financing and developing effective health services in developing countries. The course is especially suitable for students who are considering a career in a health profession, in health management or administration, health policy, or in public policy with a strong emphasis on health care. Prerequisites: STAT 30100 or 50100 or 51100 or 51200 or SOC 38200 or 58100 or PSY 50000 or AGEC 55200. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 63300 - Advanced Topics In Space, Health, And Population Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is designed to introduce students to advanced research in space, health, and population economics. It is designed to introduce both topical content and state-of-the-art research tools to students through a combination of guest speakers, faculty presentations, and discussions. The seminar also serves as a forum for students to present their own work and receive critical commentary from faculty and peers. The course is organized as a graduate seminar and gives students a chance to actively explore their own research ideas. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| AGEC 64000 - Agricultural Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Policy analysis for agriculture in the world economy. Emphasis on application of economic theory to analyze commodity programs, international trade, environmental concerns, and investment in human capital and agricultural research. Prerequisite: AGEC 41000, 60400. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 64300 - Theory Of Economic Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The economic theories behind the predominant approaches to economic development are reviewed. Both the sources of growth and problems in the development process are stressed. Emphasis is on the analysis and evolution of the models supporting the different approaches and the empirical analysis leading to changes in the paradigms. The role of agriculture in the economic development process is one of the topics. Other important issues are technological change, income distribution, structural adjustment, and the debt problem. Prerequisite: ECON 51100, 51200. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 64400 - International Agricultural Trade |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. International trade theory relevant to understanding world agricultural trade and the problems of agriculture in an open economy. Models for analyzing the effects of trade policy and market conditions on the agricultural sector. Welfare analysis of restrictions on trade. Prerequisite: ECON 51100, 51200. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 65000 - Application Of Quantitative Analysis: Econometrics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Brief presentation of probability concepts, mathematical expectation, probability density and distribution functions as background for studying principles of economic model construction. Emphasis is on econometric single equation models, principles of estimation, the general linear model, tests of hypothesis, confidence interval estimation, and special topics such as errors in the variables, multicollinearity, dummy variables, hetero-scedasticity, autocorrelation and prediction problems. Prerequisite: STAT 51100; ECON 51100 or 60700, matrix algebra. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 65100 - Application Of Quantitative Analysis: Econometrics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis is on using advanced econometric techniques. The course covers use of computer software and interpretation and reporting of econometric results. The first part of the course includes general econometric concepts, such as least squares and maximum likelihood estimation, desirable statistical properties, assumptions of the classical linear regression model, Monte Carlo methods, nested and non-nested hypothesis tests. Later, more specialized topics are covered, including multiple equation models, simultaneous equation models, limited dependent variable models, and other topics that are deemed relevant. Prerequisite: AGEC 65000. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AGEC 65200 - Application Of Quantitative Analysis: Mathematical Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Recent literature on the theory and application of mathematical programming and agricultural modeling. Model building and analysis techniques with focus on matching solution methods to problems. Prerequisite: AGEC 55200, ECON 61200; a course in matrix alegbra. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AGEC 65400 - Economic Dynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Focuses on the application of the tools of dynamic optimization to problems in economics. Covers continuous-time and discrete-time dynamic optimization techniques, including the calculus of variations, optimal control theory, and dynamic programming. Applications are drawn from a range of problems in microeconomics and macroeconomics, including current topics in agricultural economics, natural resource economics, and investment theory. Course meets weeks 1 - 10. Prerequisite: AGEC 65200, ECON 60700. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AGEC 66000 - Teaching Agricultural Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A study of approaches successful teachers of agricultural economics use in undergraduate classrooms, starting with course organization and content through giving grades. Each student will critically observe experienced teachers and participate in a thorough microteaching experience. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AGEC 68100 - Economics for Food and Agribusiness Managers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Addresses the institutional setting, business climate, and structure of the food and agricultural markets. Encompasses both the domestic and international dimensions of the food chain, including consumer demand, global sourcing, and worldwide production potential. Focuses on managerial economics, as applied to such topics as food system market structure, the nature and dimensions of domestic and global competition, the components of cost and revenue, and the food system value chain. MS-MBA in Food and Agribusiness majors only. Prerequisite: EMBA Food Agr Business majors only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| AGEC 68200 - The Macroeconomics and Trade Environment of the Food System |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exposes students to the nature of linkages among agriculture, international markets, and the macro-economy, which are key to the fortunes of U.S. farmers and agribusiness. Exam theories and methods that allow students to establish or quantify these linkages and evaluate the consequences of alternative policies, demonstrating the usefulness of economic analysis as a tool. Also explores current policy issues facing the food and agribusiness industries, which might include farm legislation; environmental regulations; and food safety and nutrition labeling rules, among other policy topics. Prerequisite: EMBA Food Agr Business majors only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| AGEC 68400 - Applied Quantitative Methods For Decision Making |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores the application of contemporary concepts and quantitative techniques for decision making in the face of uncertainty. Focus is on application of statistical tools to decisions facing the food and agricultural business manager. Prerequisite: EMBA Food Agr Business majors only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 68500 - Advanced Quantitative Methods For Decision Making Under Uncertainty |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores key areas of risk management of the food and agricultural firm, including price, production, strategic, regulatory, technology, market/competitor, political, financial, and exchange rate risk. Contemporary tools, such as score carding, decision trees, and real options are introduced for quantifying and managing uncertain decisions. Prerequisite: EMBA Food Agr Business majors only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 68600 - Strategic Food and Agribusiness Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores integration of the functional areas of business at the corporate level. Heavy emphasis is on analysis of the business environment, setting strategic direction, assessing core competencies, choosing a market position and developing competitive advantage, and organizational implementation and control in the context of the food and agricultural markets. The course makes heavy use of case studies of firms in the food and agricultural marketplace. Prerequisite: EMBA Food Agr Business majors only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 68700 - Problem Solving And Project Management For Decision Makers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Develops a structured approach to problem solving, including problem definition, development of alternatives, identifying consequences, assessing trade-offs, and making informed choices. Research methods and project management concepts will be addressed. A major business analysis project will be framed during the course, to be completed as part of the capstone course in business analysis. Prerequisite: EMBA Food Agr Business majors only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 68800 - Business Analysis Capstone Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Capstone experience where students will work on individual projects focused on a comprehensive detailed analysis of an issue facing their employer or an issue of general interest to the student. It is expected that this project will draw on tools and concepts developed throughout the MS program and be delivered to an appropriate audience of decision-makers upon completion. Prerequisite: EMBA Food Agr Business majors only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| AGEC 69000 - Seminars In Agricultural Economics |
|
Arrange Hours and Credit. Intensive study of selected current developments in agricultural economics. Topics will be announced in advance. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AGEC 69100 - Topical Research In Agricultural Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Topics of interest to the student. Designed to give training in research. Credit dependent upon amount of work done. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AGEC 69200 - Workshop In Applied Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A workshop on how to communicate research results in a seminar setting. Students present at least once during the course and will be present for other students' presentations. Students may present their own research, or a paper from a recent journal also is acceptable. The course is open to master's students, and one credit of this course is required of doctoral students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AGEC 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AGEC 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agricultural Economics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AGR 10100 - Introduction To The College Of Agriculture And Purdue University |
|
Credit Hours: 0.50. Students are introduced to the College of Agriculture and Purdue University. Specific areas discussed include the diversity of career opportunities within agriculture, the relationships between different areas of agriculture, ethics, the impact of undergraduate coursework, including the core curriculum, on scholarship and career preparation, and the challenges facing the food, agricultural, and natural resource system. The use of guest lecturers provides a networking opportunity for students. Enrollment in this course is restricted to beginning freshmen students. Course meets weeks 1-8. Typically offered Fall.
0.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: College of Agriculture Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand academic program options, academic rules and regulations, academic student services, scholarship offerings, career opportunities and services.
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| AGR 11100 - Introduction To Agricultural And Biological Engineering Academic Programs |
|
Credit Hours: 0.50. An introduction to the academic programs offered in the Department of Agricultural and Biological Engineering which include Agricultural Systems Management, Agricultural and Natural Resources Engineering, and Biological and Food Process Engineering. Topics include, but are not limited to undergraduate plans of study, courses, experiential programs, internships, student organizations, career opportunities, academic policies, scholarships, and student services. Course meets during weeks 1-8. Typically offered Fall.
0.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: College of Agriculture Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand academic program options, academic rules and regulations, academic student services, scholarship offerings, career opportunities and services.
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| AGR 11200 - Introduction To Agricultural Economics Academic Programs |
|
Credit Hours: 0.50. An introduction to the academic programs offered in the Department of Agricultural Economics. Topics include, but are not limited to undergraduate plans of study, courses, experiential programs, internships, student organizations, career opportunities, academic policies, scholarships, and student services. Course meets during weeks 1-8. Typically offered Fall.
0.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: College of Agriculture Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand academic program options, academic rules and regulations, academic student services, scholarship offerings, career opportunities and services.
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| AGR 11300 - Introduction To Agronomy Academic Programs |
|
Credit Hours: 0.50. An introduction to the academic programs offered in the Department of Agronomy, which includes Applied Meteorology, Agronomic Business and Marketing, Environmental Soil Science, International Agronomy, Plant Genetics and Plant Breeding, Soil and Crop Management, Soil and Crop Science, Turf Science, and associate degrees. Topics include, but are not limited to undergraduate plans of study, courses, experiential programs, internships, student organizations, career opportunities, academic policies, scholarships, and student services. Course meets during weeks 1-8. Typically offered Fall.
0.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: College of Agriculture Admin
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand academic program options, academic rules and regulations, academic student services, scholarship offerings, career opportunities and services.
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| AGR 11400 - Introduction to Animal Sciences Academic Programs |
|
Credit Hours: 0.50. An introduction to the academic programs offered in the Department of Animal Sciences. Topics include, but are not limited to undergraduate plans of study, courses, experiential programs, internships, student organizations, career opportunities, academic policies, scholarships, and student services. Course meets during weeks 1-8. Typically offered Fall.
0.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: College of Agriculture Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand academic program options, academic rules and regulations, academic student services, scholarship offerings, career opportunities and services.
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| AGR 11500 - Introduction To Biochemistry Academic Programs |
|
Credit Hours: 0.50. An introduction to the academic programs offered in the Department of Biochemistry. Topics include, but are not limited to undergraduate plans of study, courses, experiential programs, internships, student organizations, career opportunities, academic policies, scholarships, and student services. Course meets during weeks 1-8. Typically offered Fall.
0.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: College of Agriculture Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand academic program options, academic rules and regulations, academic student services, scholarship offerings, career opportunities and services.
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| AGR 11600 - Introduction To Botany And Plant Pathology Academic Programs |
|
Credit Hours: 0.50. An introduction to the academic programs offered in the Department of Botany and Plant Pathology. Topics include, but are not limited to undergraduate plans of study, courses, experiential programs, internships, student organizations, career opportunities, academic policies, scholarships, and student services. Course meets during weeks 1-8. Typically offered Fall.
0.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: College of Agriculture Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand academic program options, academic rules and regulations, academic student services, scholarship offerings, career opportunities and services.
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| AGR 11700 - Introduction To Entomology Academic Programs |
|
Credit Hours: 0.50. An introduction to the academic programs offered in the Department of Entomology. Topics include, but are not limited to undergraduate plans of study, courses, experiential programs, internships, student organizations, career opportunities, academic policies, scholarships, and student services. Course meets during weeks 1-8. Typically offered Fall.
0.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: College of Agriculture Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand academic program options, academic rules and regulations, academic student services, scholarship offerings, career opportunities and services.
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| AGR 11800 - Introduction To Food Science Academic Programs |
|
Credit Hours: 0.50. An introduction to the academic programs offered in the Department of Food Science. Topics include, but are not limited to undergraduate plans of study, courses, experiential programs, internships, student organizations, career opportunities, academic policies, scholarships, and student services. Course meets during weeks 1-8. Typically offered Fall.
0.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: College of Agriculture Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand academic program options, academic rules and regulations, academic student services, scholarship offerings, career opportunities and services.
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| AGR 11900 - Introduction To Forestry And Natural Resources Academic Programs |
|
Credit Hours: 0.50. An introduction to the academic programs offered in the Department of Forestry and Natural Resources. Topics include, but are not limited to undergraduate plans of study, courses, experiential programs, internships, student organizations, career opportunities, academic policies, scholarships, and student services. Course meets during weeks 1-8. Typically offered Fall.
0.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: College of Agriculture Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand academic program options, academic rules and regulations, academic student services, scholarship offerings, career opportunities and services.
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| AGR 12000 - Introduction To Horticulture And Landscape Architecture Academic Programs |
|
Credit Hours: 0.50. An introduction to the academic programs offered in the Department of Horticulture and Landscape Architecture. Topics include, but are not limited to undergraduate plans of study, courses, experiential programs, internships, student organizations, career opportunities, academic policies, scholarships, and student services. Course meets during weeks 1-8. Typically offered Fall.
0.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: College of Agriculture Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand academic program options, academic rules and regulations, academic student services, scholarship offerings, career opportunities and services.
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| AGR 12100 - Introduction To Youth Development And Agricultural Education Academic Programs |
|
Credit Hours: 0.50. An introduction to the academic programs offered in the Department of Youth Development and Agricultural Education which includes Agricultural Communication and Agricultural Education. Topics include, but are not limited to undergraduate plans of study, courses, experiential programs, internships, student organizations, career opportunities, academic policies, scholarships, and student services. Course meets during weeks 1-8. Typically offered Fall.
0.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: College of Agriculture Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand academic program options, academic rules and regulations, academic student services, scholarship offerings, career opportunities and services.
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| AGR 12200 - Introduction To Natural Resources And Environmental Science Academic Programs |
|
Credit Hours: 0.50. An introduction to the academic programs offered in Pre-Environmental Studies and Natural Resources and Environmental Science. Topics include, but are not limited to undergraduate plans of study, courses, experiential programs, internships, student organizations, career opportunities, academic policies, scholarships, and student services. Course meets during weeks 1-8. Typically offered Fall.
0.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: College of Agriculture Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand academic program options, academic rules and regulations, academic student services, scholarship offerings, career opportunities and services.
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| AGR 12300 - Introduction To College of Agriculture Interdisciplinary Agriculture Academic Programs |
|
Credit Hours: 0.50. An introduction to the academic programs offered in Interdisciplinary Agriculture. Topics include, but are not limited to undergraduate plans of study, courses, experiential programs, internships, student organizations, career opportunities, academic policies, scholarships, and student services. Course meets during weeks 1-8. Typically offered Fall.
0.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: College of Agriculture Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand academic program options, academic rules and regulations, academic student services, scholarship offerings, career opportunities and services.
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| AGR 12400 - Introduction To College Of Agriculture Pre Veterinary Medicine Academic Programs |
|
Credit Hours: 0.50. An introduction to the academic programs offered in Pre-Veterinary Medicine. Topics include, but are not limited to undergraduate plans of study, courses, experiential programs, internships, student organizations, career opportunities, academic policies, scholarships, and student services. Course meets during weeks 1-8. Typically offered Fall.
0.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: College of Agriculture Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand academic program options, academic rules and regulations, academic student services, scholarship offerings, career opportunities and services.
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| AGR 20100 - Communicating Across Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will provide students with an opportunity to understand their place in a multicultural, multiethnic, multinational country, the United States. It is designed to provide an academic overview of the field of multicultural education as it evolved to this day. The course will offer an introductory overview of the many differences that exist within all human beings. Because the diversity among individuals is endless, we cannot study all differences, but will study a sampling such as race, ethnicity, gender identity, age, social class, disability, learning styles, and religion/spiritual orientation. Issues of poverty, language, and social justice may also be examined in relationship to the above major areas of emphasis. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: College of Agriculture Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Social-Behavioral, GTC-Information Literacy, UC-Information Literacy, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AGR 29000 - Special Topics In Agriculture |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Presentation of subject matter not available in other courses offered by the college. The specific topic that is offered will be indicated on the student's academic record. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: College of Agriculture Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Learning outcomes addressed include communication, critical thinking, and professional development.
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| AGR 29400 - Directed Readings In Agriculture, Environment, and Society |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Presentation of subject matter not available in other courses offered by the college. Directed reading and discussion of books and other documents of significant importance and current interest in agriculture, food systems, renewable natural resources, and the environment. The specific topic that is covered will be indicated on the student’s academic record. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: College of Agriculture Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop an appreciation and understanding of the importance for the practice of critical reading.
2. Develop the ability to come up with questions that address the bigger/broader picture as shared through the readings.
3. Clearly articulate position and/or justify and defend stand amongst one’s peers.
4. Carefully review and consider the facts, consider and propose future directions, next steps that could be taken as a result of the readings.
5. Develop initial strategies to discover pertinent and reliable information to improve your understanding.
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| AGR 40000 - Agriculture Study Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. Utilized to record credits earned through participation in Purdue study abroad programs with cooperating foreign universities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: College of Agriculture Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
|
| AGR 49000 - Special Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Topics and credit hours to be arranged. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: College of Agriculture Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
|
| AGR 49300 - Special Topics In International Agriculture |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. A course that provides students interested in international agriculture opportunity for in-depth study and analysis of major issues associated with the relationship of U.S. agriculture to world agriculture and agricultural development abroad. Current and significant topics will be selected. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: College of Agriculture Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| AGR 49400 - Advanced Readings In Agriculture, Environment, and Society |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Presentation of subject matter not available in other courses offered by the college. Directed reading and discussion of books and other documents of significant importance and current interest in agriculture, food systems, renewable resources and the environment. The specific topic that is offered will be indicated on the student’s academic record. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: College of Agriculture Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop an appreciation and understanding of the importance for the practice of critical reading.
2. Develop the ability to come up with questions that address the bigger/broader picture as shared through the readings.
3. Clearly articulate and/or justify and defend stand amongst one’s peers.
4. Carefully review and consider the facts, consider and propose future directions, next steps that could be taken as a result of the readings.
5. Develop initial strategies to discover pertinent and reliable information to improve your understanding.
|
| AGR 49500 - International Professional Experience In Agriculture, Food, Or Natural Resources |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Supervised international professional experiences in agricultural, food, or natural resource disciplines. The professional experience period must be preplanned and conducted under the supervision of a College of Agriculture faculty member. Students must submit a summary report. Consent of the College of Agriculture international professional experience program coordinator required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: College of Agriculture Admin
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AGR 49600 - Multicultural Professional Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. The multicultural professional experience must be pre-planned and conducted under the supervision of a College of Agriculture faculty member. The experience must be a minimum of four weeks in length. Students must submit a summary report. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: College of Agriculture Admin
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AGRY 10500 - Crop Production |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental principles of crop production and distribution. Emphasis is placed on applying technological advances in agronomy to active crop-production situations, including basic soils, agricultural meteorology, and crop physiology and breeding. Typically offered Spring Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lab 1, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and professional conduct.
2. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate and test hypotheses, conduct experiments and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
3. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
4. Demonstrate the ability to write and speak with effectiveness while considering audience and purpose.
5. Demonstrate the ability to work effectively as part of a problem-solving team.
6. Demonstrate knowledge of a range of cultures and an understanding of human values and points of view of other than their own.
7. Demonstrate ability to apply social, economic, political, and environmental principles to living in a global community.
8. Demonstrate awareness of civic responsibility to community and society at large.
9. Demonstrate skills necessary for lifelong learning.
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| AGRY 11000 - Survey Of Turfgrass Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A survey of the challenges and opportunities available in the turfgrass industry. Students will visit a wide range of turf sites to see turf problems and their solutions. Professional turf managers, upperclass undergraduate students, and faculty will share their experiences with the class to provide a broad perspective of the turf industry to the students. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AGRY 15500 - Introduction To Soil Morphology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course features an introductory field experience in evaluating soil morphology. Students will develop skills determining horizon nomenclature, texture, soil color, structure, consistence and drainage. Basic concepts regarding the impact of soil morphology on use of soils for various purposes will be presented. Collegiate soil judging is a portion of the subjet matter discussed. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lab 1, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and professional conduct.
2. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate and test hypotheses, conduct experiments and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
3. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
4. Demonstrate the ability to write and speak with effectiveness while considering audience and purpose.
5. Demonstrate the ability to work effectively as part of a problem-solving team.
6. Demonstrate knowledge of a range of cultures and an understanding of human values and points of view of other than their own.
7. Demonstrate ability to apply social, economic, political, and environmental principles to living in a global community.
8. Demonstrate awareness of civic responsibility to community and society at large.
9. Demonstrate skills necessary for lifelong learning.
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| AGRY 20400 - Crop And Weed Identification |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. (BTNY 20400) The identification by sight of plant mounts and seeds of over 200 crops and weeds is taught. The first eight weeks, which covers restricted weeds, prohibited noxious weeds, common weeds, and seed diseases, can be taken for one credit; the last eight weeks covers cereals, grass and legume forages, and legume crops. The list of species to be studied for two credits is obtained from the Intercollegiate Crops Judging Manual. The species to be covered for one credit include the above-listed weeds and additional weed specimens pertinent to the weeds contest. The use and origins of the species are discussed briefly. Suggested course in preparation for AGRY 30500 Seed Analysis and Grain Grading. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lab 1, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AGRY 21000 - Fundamentals Of Turfgrass Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course in turfgrass management emphasizing turfgrass growth and development, species characteristics, their adaptation and basic cultural requirements for ornamental and functional turfgrass areas. The requirements and cultural inputs needed for proper establishment and maintenance of a high quality, low maintenance lawn will be discussed. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| AGRY 21100 - Fundamentals Of Turfgrass Culture Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Companion lab to AGRY 21000. Laboratory exercises will focus on turfgrass and seed anatomy, morphology, identification as well as the hands-on basic principles of turfgrass culture. Designed for the student who intends to pursue a career in turfgrass management and plans to enroll in AGRY 510. Enrollment preference will be given to Turfgrass Science Majors. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AGRY 25100 - Introduction To Soils |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Characteristics of soils and associated landscapes; soil genesis and classification; relation of soils to land use; soil management relative to erosion, tillage, drainage, moisture supply, and aeration. Credit cannot be given in both AGRY 25100 and AGRY 25500/NRES 25500 or AGRY 27000. Course meets during weeks 1-6. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Travel Time, Recitation
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AGRY 25500 - Soil Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (NRES 25500) Differences in soils; soils genesis; physical, chemical, and biological properties of soils; relation of soils to problems of land use and pollution; soil management relative to tillage, erosion, drainage, moisture supply, temperature, aeration, fertility, and plant nutrition. Introduction to fertilizer chemistry and use. Not available to students who have taken AGRY 27000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Travel Time, Recitation
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and professional conduct.
2. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate and test hypotheses, conduct experiments and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
3. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
4. Demonstrate the ability to write and speak with effectiveness while considering audience and purpose.
5. Demonstrate the ability to work effectively as part of a problem-solving team.
6. Demonstrate knowledge of a range of cultures and an understanding of human values and points of view of other than their own.
7. Demonstrate ability to apply social, economic, political, and environmental principles to living in a global community.
8. Demonstrate awareness of civic responsibility to community and society at large.
9. Demonstrate skills necessary for lifelong learning.
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| AGRY 27000 - Forest Soils |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development, distribution, and classification of soil profile; soil characteristics related to forest practices; nature and cause of soil differences; fertility and plant nutrition. Not available to students who have taken AGRY 25500 or NRES 25500. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Travel Time, Recitation
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AGRY 27500 - Honors Course - Lower Division |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Utilized to offer a new honors course for a maximum of three years. Variable title, credit, and instructional type. Course may be repeated for credit if content and titles are different. Offered primarily to first- and second-year students. Courses offered must be approved by departmental or program faculty and College of Agriculture Honors Committee. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 12 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Critical thinking.
2. Communication.
3. Cultural understanding.
4. Civic responsibilities.
5. Professional preparation.
6. Scientific principles.
7. Social science principles.
8. Teamwork.
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| AGRY 28500 - World Crop Adaptation And Distribution |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of how environmental factors, including climate and soils, impact the global distribution of major food crops. Identification of the types of naturally occurring plant communities and comparison of these communities with those of environmentally and economically sound field cropping systems. Exploration of how man's intervention has maintained or modified the productivity of food crops in agricultural communities and how his intervention has affected the environment. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AGRY 29000 - Introduction To Environmental Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (NRES 29000, EAPS 11300) An introduction to environmental science, including issues such as air and water pollution, toxic waste disposal, soil erosion, natural hazards, climate change, energy resources, and environmental planning. Includes extensive in-class discussion of case studies. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AGRY 30500 - Seed Analysis And Grain Grading |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A practical study of factors influencing commercial grain quality and purity of seed lots. Training in the ability to recognize crop products for their market worth by knowing defects that reduce grain quality. Purity analysis of seed lots will be performed. In-depth identification of 200 crops and weeds important to United States agriculture. Intercollegiate crops judging is a portion of the subject matter discussed. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AGRY 30600 - Seed Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An introduction to the seed industry with emphasis on morphological development, production, cleaning, and testing as well as storage and merchandising techniques. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AGRY 31100 - Turfgrass Diagnostics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An intermediate to advanced level course covering relevant applied problem solving skills required to be a professional turfgrass manager.
Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| AGRY 32000 - Genetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The transmission of heritable traits; probability; genotypic-environmental interactions; chromosomal aberrations; polyploidy; gene mutations; genes in populations; the structure and function of nucleic acids; biochemical genetics; molecular genetics; coding. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AGRY 32100 - Genetics Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Experiments with plants and microorganisms to elucidate the basic concepts of molecular and classical genetics as applied to genome analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AGRY 33500 - Weather And Climate |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course in meteorology and climatology with applications to daily life. The study of the fundamental physical principles behind weather and climate and how they apply to the homeowner and the world citizen. Emphasis is on how to interpret weather conditions and forecasts, what controls the wide range of climates in the world, and what the future may hold. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AGRY 33700 - Environmental Hydrology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide undergraduate students with both the basics of how water moves through the environment and current theories as to how hydrologic response is modified by environmental change at a variety of temporal and spatial scales. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 33800 - Environmental Hydrology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This laboratory course is designed to provide hands-on examples of the hydrologic concepts covered in the AGRY 33700 Environmental Hydrology class and with practical experience in hydrologic field techniques. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Enhanced understanding of physical, chemical, and biological hydrological processes.
2. Development of critical thinking skills and the application of field methods and instrumentation used in evaluating hydrologic processes.
3. Development of technical communication skills and problem solving abilities on topics related to surface water hydrology.
4. Encouragement of lifetime learning habits through practical problem solving.
|
| AGRY 34900 - Soil Ecology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course that will cover the basic concepts of soil ecology. Biological diversity and the interactions between and within biotic and abiotic components of the soil ecosystem, nutrient cycling, and genetic engineering are introduced. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 35000 - Global Awareness |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A seminar-type course about world geography, cultures, and agriculture. Speakers are selected from the many Purdue graduate students and visiting scholars from around the world. Extra credit may be earned through independent study of a global issue. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 4 credits
|
| AGRY 35500 - Soil Morphology And Geography |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course features field experience in advanced techniques in soil morphology including the study of the relationship of soils to landscaped, common parent materials of Midwest and classification of soils in the Soil Taxonomy. Course material emphasizes the development of detailed descriptions of soil properties and how these properties directly impact the interpretations and recommendations for land use options. Use and management of soils based on landscape position and morphology will be covered including on-site waste disposal, homes with basements as well as road and street construction. Collegiate soil judging is a portion of the subject matter discussed. Requires class trips. Students will pay individual lodging or meal expenses when necessary. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lab 1, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and professional conduct.
2. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate and test hypotheses, conduct experiments and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
3. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
4. Demonstrate the ability to write and speak with effectiveness while considering audience and purpose.
5. Demonstrate the ability to work effectively as part of a problem-solving team.
6. Demonstrate knowledge of a range of cultures and an understanding of human values and points of view of other than their own.
7. Demonstrate ability to apply social, economic, political, and environmental principles to living in a global community.
8. Demonstrate awareness of civic responsibility to community and society at large.
9. Demonstrate skills necessary for lifelong learning.
|
| AGRY 36500 - Soil Fertility |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of soil chemistry and physics influencing plant nutrition; emphasis on diagnosis and solution of problems on soil reaction and nutrient status; fertilizer chemistry and use; reaction of pesticides and growth regulators with soils. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and professional conduct.
2. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate and test hypotheses, conduct experiments and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
3. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
4. Demonstrate the ability to write and speak with effectiveness while considering audience and purpose.
5. Demonstrate the ability to work effectively as part of a problem-solving team.
6. Demonstrate knowledge of a range of cultures and an understanding of human values and points of view of other than their own.
7. Demonstrate ability to apply social, economic, political, and environmental principles to living in a global community.
8. Demonstrate awareness of civic responsibility to community and society at large.
9. Demonstrate skills necessary for lifelong learning.
|
| AGRY 37500 - Crop Production Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Factors affecting management decisions in crop production systems. Development of small grain and row cropping systems. Interaction of factors affecting efficient production systems, including seed selection, tillage, planting management, pest management, and harvesting and storage considerations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 38000 - Field Crop Diagnostic Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. (BTNY 380, ENTM 380) Identification of field crop problems via in-field diagnostic techniques, determination of the magnitude of problems utilizing in-field thresholds, evaluation of optional multidisciplinary management strategies, and development of appropriate strategies based upon economic, environmental, and cultural concepts. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 38500 - Environmental Soil Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. (NRES 38500) Designed as an upper level introductory course covering environmental soil chemistry concepts in framework most applicable to inorganic and organic chemical contamination of soil and water resources and intended for students in environmental science fields that may not have a strong chemistry and/or math background. (el.5). Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and professional conduct.
2. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate and test hypotheses, conduct experiments and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
3. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
4. Demonstrate the ability to write and speak with effectiveness while considering audience and purpose.
5. Demonstrate the ability to work effectively as part of a problem-solving team.
6. Demonstrate knowledge of a range of cultures and an understanding of human values and points of view of other than their own.
7. Demonstrate ability to apply social, economic, political, and environmental principles to living in a global community.
8. Demonstrate awareness of civic responsibility to community and society at large.
9. Demonstrate skills necessary for lifelong learning.
|
| AGRY 39000 - Professional Cooperative Programs In Agronomy |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Supervised professional experiences in agronomy. Programs must be preplanned and conducted under the direction of the departmental coordinator with the cooperation of an employer. Students must submit a summary report. Consent of the departmental cooperative professional program coordinator required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AGRY 39800 - Agronomy Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Weekly discussions of agronomic topics and other subjects relative to agronomic interest. Students are expected to participate in the discussions. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Critical Thinking: Demonstrate critical thinking by using evidence-based information to develop sound responses to complex problems.
2. Professional Preparation: Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and ethics.
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| AGRY 39900 - Individual Study |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Supervised individual study or research over topics not covered in other courses. Arrange with agronomy faculty before registering. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| AGRY 40000 - Agronomy Study Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. Utilized to record credits earned through participation in Purdue study abroad programs with cooperating foreign universities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
|
| AGRY 43100 - Atmospheric Thermodynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EAPS 42100) Structure and composition of the atmosphere. Thermodynamics of dry and moist air, including adiabatic and pseudoadiabatic processes, hydrostatic stability, and air mass determination. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 43200 - Atmospheric Dynamics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EAPS 42200) A study of the general system of equations governing mass and momentum changes in the atmosphere; special horizontal wind representations; thermal wind relationships; circulation, vorticity, divergence, and vertical motion. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 43300 - Atmospheric Dynamics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EAPS 42300) An extension of AGRY 43200 with the emphasis on perturbation theory and hydrodynamic stability, air mass and frontal theory, barotrophic and baroclinic models, wave cyclone theory, and numerical weather prediction. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 44100 - Synoptic Laboratory I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. (EAPS 43100) Analysis of vertical distributions of temperature and moisture with applications to adiabatic and pseudoadiabatic processes, hydrostatic stability, and air mass determination. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 44200 - Synoptic Laboratory II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. (EAPS 43200) Analysis of horizontal distributions of pressure, temperature, wind, vorticity, and vertical motions. Applications to synopticscale wave propagation. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 44300 - Synoptic Laboratory III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. (EAPS 43300) Diagnosis of midtropospheric wave propagation and growth. Analysis of surface pressure fields and fronts and their relationships to upper air features. Extensive use is made of teletype and facsimile weather information. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 44400 - Weather Analysis And Forecasting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EAPS 43400) In-depth study of contemporary weather analysis and forecasting techniques and problems. Extensive use is made of teletype and facsimile data and numerical weather prediction guidance provided by the National Meteorological Center. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 45000 - Soil Conservation and Water Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (NRES 45000) Principles of soil conservation with emphasis on control of soil erosion by wind and water; impact of soil management decisions on environment; soil-water-plant relations, includes agronomic aspects of water management for both irrigation and drainage. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and professional conduct.
2. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate and test hypotheses, conduct experiments and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
3. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
4. Demonstrate the ability to write and speak with effectiveness while considering audience and purpose.
5. Demonstrate the ability to work effectively as part of a problem-solving team.
6. Demonstrate knowledge of a range of cultures and an understanding of human values and points of view of other than their own.
7. Demonstrate ability to apply social, economic, political, and environmental principles to living in a global community.
8. Demonstrate awareness of civic responsibility to community and society at large.
9. Demonstrate skills necessary for lifelong learning.
|
| AGRY 46000 - Contemporary Issues In Agriculture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ANTH 46000) Current agricultural issues are examined from a problem-solving standpoint. Class includes discussion and debate of the social, economic, and technological decisions facing agricultural communities. Agricultural issues are examined from a humanistic as well as a scientific viewpoint. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 46500 - Soil Physical Properties |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Physical properties and processes in soils; water flow, soil structure, chemical movement; principles and methods of physical analysis of soils; the influence of soil physical processes on environmental quality and plant growth. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and professional conduct.
2. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate and test hypotheses, conduct experiments and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
3. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
4. Demonstrate the ability to write and speak with effectiveness while considering audience and purpose.
5. Demonstrate the ability to work effectively as part of a problem-solving team.
6. Demonstrate knowledge of a range of cultures and an understanding of human values and points of view of other than their own.
7. Demonstrate ability to apply social, economic, political, and environmental principles to living in a global community.
8. Demonstrate awareness of civic responsibility to community and society at large.
9. Demonstrate skills necessary for lifelong learning.
|
| AGRY 47500 - Honors Course - Upper Division |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Utilized to offer a new honors course for a maximum of three years. Variable title, credit, and instructional type. Course may be repeated for credit if content and titles are different. Offered primarily to third- and fourth-year students. Courses offered must be approved by departmental or program faculty and College of Agriculture Honors Committee. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Critical thinking.
2. Communication.
3. Cultural understanding.
4. Civic responsibilities.
5. Professional preparation.
6. Scientific principles.
7. Social science principles.
8. Teamwork.
|
| AGRY 48000 - Plant Genetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles and recent advances in plant genetics including: genetic segregation, linkage, DNA markers and applications, chromosomes and genomes, variation in chromosome number and structure, mutation, recombination and DNA repair, quantitatively inherited traits, introduction to principles of population genetics, gene expression, gene organization, regulation of gene activity, gene function, identifying important genes, cloning genes, reverse genetics, plant transformation, applications of genetic engineering, genome sequencing, using sequence data. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 49800 - Agronomy Senior Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Weekly discussions and presentations on assigned topics in Agronomy, interpersonal interactions, professional ethics, and leadership skills. Student teams will evaluate case studies and present their analysis orally and in writing. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 49900 - Thesis Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. For students doing individualized research on agronomic problems; report required. Arrange with academic advisor and honors research advisor before registering. Admission to honors program. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| AGRY 50500 - Forage Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of the role of economically important crop species in the soil-plant-animal complex. Physiology, utilization, and management of forage species will be emphasized. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 51000 - Turfgrass Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced course in turfgrass management which focuses on the management requirements of intensively cultured turfgrass areas, with a specific emphasis on golf course and athletic fields. Interrelationships among soil, plant and atmospheric environments, management practices and turfgrass quality will be stressed. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 51100 - Population Genetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ANSC 51100, FNR 51100) Basic concepts of population genetics. Characterization of populations using gene frequencies, gametic and zygotic disequilibrium; forces changing gene frequencies (mutation, migration, selection, and random genetic drift) and genotypic frequencies (mating systems: inbreeding, crossbreeding, and phenotypic assortative) and related hypothesis testing; gene trees and the coalescent process; and molecular phylogenies. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 51200 - Integrated Turfgrass Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Integration of agronomic principles for professionally managing golf courses, athletic complexes, lawn care companies, and sod production facilities in an efficient and environmentally friendly manner. Emphasizes independent thinking and team cooperation for understanding the social, ethical, and economical aspects underlying the daily agronomic management decisions, including construction, establishment, cultural practices, fertilization, and pest management. Course meets for weeks 1-10. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 51500 - Plant Mineral Nutrition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental principles and concepts of the mineral nutrition of higher plants; processes and mechanisms controlling nutrient bioavailablilty and acquisition; physiological, genetic, and ecological aspects of plant nutrition including rhizosphere dynamics and interaction with disease. Offered in even-numbered years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 52000 - Principles And Methods Of Plant Breeding |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to methods and techniques of breeding field crops, with emphasis on the application of genetic principles; analysis of and present approach to the solution of specific breeding problems in selected field crops. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 52500 - Crop Physiology And Ecology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the physiological basis for growth, yield, and adaptation of crop plants. Topics emphasized include: carbohydrate assimilation and partitioning, nitrogen metabolism, crop growth and development, water relations, stress tolerance, and crop improvement using physiological genetics. Basic background in college level plant biology is recommended. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 53000 - Advanced Plant Genetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced treatment of principles and recent advances in plant genetics including: mutagenesis; cell, molecular and direct approaches to genetic analysis and genetic interactions; haploidy; chromosomal organization and aberrations; transposable elements; mutations, paramutation and epigenetics in higher plants; extranuclear inheritance; cytogenetic and molecular affinities between crop plants and their wild relatives; genetic manipulations; gene discovery; genetic approaches to understanding agriculturally useful plant traits. ESTs and global gene expression analysis, proteomics, metabolic profiling, comparative genomics and geonme evolution. Offered in odd-numbered years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 53500 - Boundary Layer Meteorology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EASP 52500) This course has required class trips. Students will pay individual lodging or meal expenses where necessary. A study of the physical nature of the lowest layers of the atmosphere. The energy balance concept and the turbulent transfer of heat, momentum, and water vapor are discussed in detail. Some specific microclimates are studied in this context. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 53600 - Environmental Biophysics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of the energy fluxes to and from terrestrial plants, insects, mammals, and humans as they exist in their macro and microclimates. Agricultural meteorology methods (both research and operational) will be presented. Labs will be both in-laboratory and in-field with reports required. A special project will be required of all students and will be presented in class and written as if for publication. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 54000 - Soil Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis on processes controlling the gaseous, solution, and solid phases in soils including precipitation, acid-base, oxidation-reduction, complexation, absorption, and ion exchange. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 54400 - Environmental Organic Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The fundamental properties and processes responsible for the fate of organic chemicals in the environment, with emphasis on soil and water chemistry. Areas to be addressed will include both conceptual and theoretical aspects of processes relevant to environmental fate of contaminants; measurement, estimation, correlation, and application of the parameters most commonly used to assess various chemodynamic properties in soil-water systems. Typically offered in spring semester of even-numbered years.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 54500 - Remote Sensing Of Land Resources |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of remote sensing and spatial databases for observing and managing land resources within the Earth System; analysis and interpretation of remotely sensed data in combination with field observations and other data sources; conceptualization and design of a global earth resources information system. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 55000 - Field Crops Breeding Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Field nursery experience, including crossing procedures, plant evaluation, selection for pest resistance and for agronomic characters, and field data evaluation. Typically offered Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 55300 - Introduction To SAS For Statistical Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to SAS as a programming language, for students with no prior exposure to programming languages. Basics of programming languages, SAS concepts, data input and manipulation. Introduction to SAS for graphs, univariate statistics, simple statistics for classification data, analysis of variance, simple and multiple regression. Typically offered Summer Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 55500 - Soil And Plant Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles and methods of chemical analysis of plants and soils. Topics include soil carbon analysis, exchangeable cations, soil acidity, salinity, pesticide analysis, and elemental analysis of plant tissue and forage analysis. Quantitative gravimetric and volumetric techniques are reviewed followed by use of instrumental methods of analysis including atomic absorption, UV/Visible spectrometry, HPLC, and gas chromatography. Laboratory safety, quality assurance/quality control, and data reporting are emphasized. Students having at lease one year of chemistry including a quantitative analysis laboratory will be suitably prepared. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 56000 - Soil Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of soil physics; transport of chemicals, heat, and gases; field spatial variability; principles and methods of physical analysis of soils; the influence of soil physical processes on environmental quality and agricultural production. Students having an understanding of introductory soil science will be suitably prepared. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 56500 - Soils And Landscapes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Soils as natural components of landscapes, geomorphology and soil characteristics; processes of soil formation; principal soils of Indiana, their adaptations, limitations, productivity and use; global soil distributions; application of GPS and mobile GIS in the field. This course requires two all-day field trips. Students will pay individual meal expenses when necessary. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 57200 - Molecular Cytogenetics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Principles of chromosome biology: behavior of chromosomes at meiosis and mitosis, polyploidy, haploidy, aneuploidy, chromosome rearrangements, chromosome structure/evolution, chromatin organization and regulation of gene activity, chromosome engineering and genome architecture, and application of molecular techniques to chromosome biology.
. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 57300 - Molecular Cytogenetics Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Application of principles from Molecular Cytogenetics. Lab consists of chromosome preparation from mitotic/meiotic samples, identification of meiotic stages, chromosome banding, fluorescence in situ hybridization, and preparation of dipteran polytene chromosomes. Students are encouraged to bring samples from their own thesis research to use as test samples for molecular analysis. Offered in odd-numbered years.
. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 58000 - Soil Microbiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The soil microbial population and its role in the soil ecosystem; microbial transformations of inorganic and organic compounds; decomposition of residues; and dynamics of soil organic matter. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 58200 - Environmental Fate Of Pesticides |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis is given to developing a fundamental understanding of the processes controlling the fate of organic chemicals, such as pesticides, in the environment. Processes considered include: volatilization, degradation, leaching, and sorption. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 58500 - Soils And Land Use |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Soils as a resource in development planning; soil properties affecting land use; use of soil survey, aerial photos, topographic maps, and other resource data in land-use allocation; nonengineering aspects of site selection for various land uses, water conservation, waste disposal, and erosion control. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 59600 - Professional Presentations |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Develop confidence and skills in preparing and delivering professional presentations to both peer scientific and student audiences. (el. 7). Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 59700 - Communicating With The Public |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will prepare students being trained as agronomy professionals to enhance their communication skills so they can successfully interact with the public. (el. 7) Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 59800 - Special Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Research on agronomic problems conducted in laboratory, field, or library; report required; arrange with an agronomy staff member before registering. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AGRY 60000 - Genomics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the technologies and analytical methods used in studying genomes, their functions and systems biology. This course prepares graduate students for further study of these techniques in additional courses and in their research. Students with an understanding of introductory genetics and statistics will be suitably prepared for this course. Offered in even-numbered years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 60500 - Advanced Plant Breeding |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study of genetic principles and their application to plant breeding systems, techniques, and objectives. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: AGRY 52000; a course in statistics covering simple analysis of variance. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 61100 - Quantitative Genetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of AGRY (ANSC) 511. Quantitative genetics in animals and plants. Genotypic and environmental variances; covariances between relatives; single- and multiple-trait selection and correlated responses; genotype-environment interaction. Inbreeding and crossbreeding: means, variances, heterosis, intra- and inter-population improvement. Prerequisite: STAT 51200; Prerequisite: AGRY 51100 OR ANSC 51100. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 63500 - Micrometeorology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A rigorous study of the atmospheric boundary layer with special attention to turbulent diffusion processes in the lower atmosphere. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: AGRY 53500. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 64900 - Molecular Microbial Ecology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on the application of various molecular genetic techniques for studying micro-organisms from and in the environment. The method, theoretical basis of each method, and interpretation of results are covered. The major areas discussed are the application of molecular genetic techniques to study: (1) total microbial communities; (2) diversity of micro-organisms in a community; and (3) biotechnological uses of micro-organisms. Prerequisite: AGRY 32000 or 58000 or BCHM 56200 or BIOL 24100 or 43800 or 54900. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 65000 - Clay Mineralogy |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Principles of crystal chemistry, survey of clay mineral structures, and identification of clay minerals by X-ray diffraction, chemical methods, differential thermal analysis, infrared spectroscopy, and specific surface area measurements. Role of clay minerals in the natural environment. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 65500 - Soil Genesis And Classification |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of soil classification in general and of U.S. soil taxonomy in particular. Factors and processes of soil formation. Mineral weathering, geomorphology, and climate as related to the formation and distribution of soils. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: AGRY 56500. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AGRY 69600 - Agronomy Graduate Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Weekly discussion of assigned topics in soil and crop science. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
|
| AGRY 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AGRY 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AHLT C1500 - Body Structure And Function |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the basic structures and functions of the human body, fundamental anatomic terminology, and relationships of clinical laboratory to diagnosis. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| AHLT C4600 - Clinical Hematology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Lecture and clinical experiences related to the functions, maturation, morphology, and clinical laboratory evaluation of blood cells and cellular elements in body fluids. Laboratory evaluation of homeostasis. Techniques, instrumentation, and quality control routinely used in the hematology department of a clinical laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AHLT C4610 - Clinical Analysis Of Urine and Body Fluids |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Lecture and clinical experiences in the biochemical, physical, and microscopic examination of urine and other body fluids. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| AHLT C4620 - Clinical Microbiology and Mycolgy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Lecture and clinical experiences for the isolation, identification, and susceptibility testing of medically important microorganisms and fungi. Techniques, instrumentation, and quality control routinely used in the microbiology department of a clinical laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| AHLT C4630 - Clinical Parasitology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Lecture and clinical experiences in the collection and processing of specimens, identification techniques, and diseases associated with clinically significant parasites. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| AHLT C4640 - Clinical Serology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Lecture and clinical experiences in immunology as applied to the serologic diagnosis of infectious diseases and various syndromes. Technology, instrumentation, and quality control routinely used in the serology department of a clinical laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| AHLT C4650 - Clinical Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Lecture and clinical experiences in the application of analytical methods for the clinical detection of clinical disorders. Techniques, instrumentation, and quality control routinely used in the clinical chemistry department of a clinical laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| AHLT C4660 - Clinical Inmunohematology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Lecture and clinical experience in the serologic principles and methods for safe transfusion practice. Techniques, instrumentation, and quality control routinely used in the blood bank department of a clinical laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| AHLT C4670 - Professional Development Topics In Medical Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Lectures and exercises in principles of supervision for the medical laboratory, teaching and evaluation in the clinical setting, and other aspects of professional development. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| AHLT E2010 - Emergency Medical Technician Basic I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Together with E202 prepares student to challenge the State Emergency Medical Technician--Basic Exam. EMT-BS serve as a vital link in the chain of the healthcare team by providing basic life support care with an ambulance or other specialized service. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AHLT E2020 - Emergency Medical Technician Basic II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Together with E201 prepares student to challenge the State Emergency Medical Technician--Basic Exam. EMT-BS serve as a vital link in the chain of the healthcare team by providing basic life support care. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AHLT M1900 - Coding I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of ICD-9-CM coding and classification principles, and CPT coding principles, as used in acute ambulatory and long-term care facilities.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| AHLT M1950 - Medical Terminology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of the language of medicine, including word construction, definitions, spelling and abbreviations; emphasis placed on speaking, reading and writing skills. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| AHLT N2650 - Nutrition And Exercise |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will allow the student to apply the principles of physiology, chemistry, and biology to describe the role of nutrition and exercise in the human body and to explore the interrelated and protective role of nutrition and exercise in wellness, health promotion, and disease prevention. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AHLT N5910 - Seminar Nutrition and Dietetics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Exploration of various topics and issues in nutrition. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
|
| AHLT R1850 - Medical Terminology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course covers medical terminology, symbols, and abbreviations and the application of this new language in the field of health care. While terms are covered as they relate to body structure and function, the main focus is on medical vocabulary and being able to construct terms using word parts such as roots, suffixes, and prefixes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-South Bend
|
| AHLT R2820 - Clinical Experience In Radiography |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Clinical application of radiographic positioning, exposure techniques, and departmental procedures in all phases of radiologic technology, under the direct supervision of a registered technologist until mastery of clinical objectives is reached. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| AHLT R2830 - Clinical Experience In Radiography |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Clinical application of radiographic positioning, exposure techniques, and departmental procedures in all phases of radiologic technology, under the direct supervision of a registered technologist until mastery of clinical objectives is reached. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| AHLT W1050 - Medical Terms For The Health Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is a programmed learning approach to the study of medical terminology. The course will cover the definition and spelling of medical word roots and combining forms, prefixes, suffixes, and medical abbreviations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AHLT W5400 - Patient-Reported Outcomes and Economic Evaluation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explorations of selected patient-centered outcomes assessment methodology and its use in economic evaluation.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AHS B1000 - Introduction To Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Through a survey of art and artifacts from ancient through modern times and the historical and social elements that helped to shape them, course offers an introduction to the understanding and appreciating painting, sculpture, and architecture. Open only to students not majoring in art. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| AMST 20100 - Introduction To American Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the interdisciplinary study of American culture, history, and society in its national and global contexts. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: American Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AMST 30100 - Perspectives On America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced interdisciplinary study of American culture, history, and society in their national and global contexts. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: American Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| AMST 49000 - Senior Capstone In American Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Interdisciplinary senior capstone project in American Studies. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
6.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: American Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Conceptualizing a research project from two or more disciplinary perspectives, conducting original research designed to reveal key aspects of American culture past or contemporary, and presenting interdisciplinary research findings in verbal, visual, or an approved creative form.
|
| AMST 59000 - Directed Readings In American Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A reading course in aspects of American Studies directed by the instructor in whose particular field of specialization the content on the reading falls. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: American Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Critically analyze and synthesize American Studies scholarship.
2. Enhance interpretive and critical thinking skills.
3. Develop an understanding of the theoretical and methodological approaches used in American Studies scholarship.
|
| AMST 60100 - Introduction To American Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An exploration of the cultural and institutional history of American Studies designed to acquaint students with the interdisciplinary concepts of American Studies by focusing on major canonical texts associated with that history. Prerequisite: Master's student standing and American Studies majors only. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: American Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AMST 60200 - Contemporary Issues In American Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An investigation of analytical categories, particularly race, class and gender, the multiple methodologies, and theoretical premises that shape developments in the field of American Studies. Prerequisite: AMST 60100. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: American Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AMST 60300 - American Studies Interdisciplinary Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will conduct independent research under faculty supervision towards completion of the Special Field examination for the Ph.D. degree. The project should be an extended, original research essay, based upon interdisciplinary research. The project should aim to produce original findings on a clearly defined topic or problem. In addition to the research and essay, students must produce a statement of methodology in which they explain their choice of sources and how their project contributes to the field of American Studies. To be taken in the final semester of coursework. Prerequisite: AMST 60100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: American Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AMST 61000 - Transnational American Studies Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides students an annual opportunity to study abroad and to familiarize themselves with Transnational scholarship in the field of American Studies. The seminar reflects efforts of the program to internationalize its curriculum and to establish ties with international universities. The course also complements the requirement of second language study for the Ph.D. in American Studies. Prerequisite: AMST 60100. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: American Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AMST 62000 - Archival Theory And Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This class explores recent theories of the Archive, as well as theories of archiving, examines scholarly approaches to archival research, and introduces students to the practical aspects of accessioning, arranging, describing, and preserving archival collections. Archival work for the class will be conducted under the supervision of a faculty member and a partnering library. Prerequisite: AMST 60100, 60200. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: American Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AMST 63000 - M A Research Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. A research seminar required of all M.A. students in their final semester. Students write substantial essays based upon original research in which they seek to crystallize, in practice, methods and concepts of American Studies. Prerequisite: AMST 60100. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: American Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AMST 65000 - Reading Seminar In American Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A reading seminar on a selected topic in American Studies, taught by two faculty members from different disciplines, usually one from the humanities and one from the social sciences. Prerequisite: AMST 60100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: American Studies
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AMST 69500 - American Studies Service Learning/Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is to be used by students to complete a service learning or internship project that provides professional development towards completion of the degree. The project must be conducted under the supervision of a faculty member and community partner. The faculty supervisor will be responsible for determining the academic content of the course and requirements of service. In addition to academic requirements for the course, a final written report on the project must be filed with the American Studies program. The final report must describe the relationship between work completed for the course and the student's plan of study. Prerequisite: AMST 60100, 60200. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: American Studies
Course Attributes: Internship, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AMST 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: American Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AMST A1010 - Introduction To American Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the interdisciplinary methods of American Studies and how they enable better understanding of American cultures and ideas. Questions of race, ethnicity, nation, nationality, class, gender, sexuality, and religion are considered in relation to American identities and communities. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AMST A1030 - Topics In American Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Interdisciplinary consideration of various American studies topics sometimes coordinated with symposia and/or conferences sponsored by the IUPUI Center for American Studies. AMST A103 cannot be counted as credit toward an American studies minor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AMST A2000 - Comparative American Identities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the formation of legal, social, cultural, and economic identities with the United States and within U.S. controlled territories. Who counts as "American"? To what ends have citizens and non-citizens assumed, claimed, or refused "American" identity? This curse employs a comparative frame in considering elite and subordinated classes (and/or genders, races, ethnicities, sexualities); institutional and countercultural forms of self-definition; official history and alternative acts of collective memory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| AMST A2010 - Representative America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Representative America. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| AMST A3010 - The Question Of American Identity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Is American culture unified or does it consist of a potpourri of more or less distinct cultures? Beginning with the 1600s but emphasizing the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, this course explores classic texts in American culture, seeking to locate the terms of American unity in the midst of obvious diversity. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AMST A3020 - The Question Of American Community |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. What are the varieties and forms of American social life? This course will explore the manner in which Americans, from Puritan times through the later decades of the twentieth century, have structured and experienced social life in rural, urban, and suburban settings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AMST A3030 - Topics In American Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Interdisciplinary consideration of various American studies topics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AMST A4400 - Senior Seminar in American Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Senior Seminar in American Studies. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| AMST A4410 - America In Global Perspective |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (INTL I441) This course examines domestic and foreign interpretations of America as a world citizen from a variety of disciplinary perspectives. The course is intended to make students more aware of global issues and of what it means to be a "global citizen", and more understanding of views of America from outside its borders. Credit not given for both AMST A441 and INTL I441. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| AMST A4970 - Overseas Study |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. This course reflects study at the University of Derby, UK. The variable topics title gives the title of the overseas study course. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AMST B4790 - Overseas Study, Newcastle UK |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Overseas Study, Newcastle UK. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AMST B4970 - Overseas Study |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Overseas Study. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ANAT A2100 - Elementary Human Anatomy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the basic structure of the human body. Course taken by dental hygiene students. Credit not allowed toward a biology major. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| ANAT A2150 - Basic Human Anatomy |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00 or 5.00. This course presents a systemic approach to the study of the human body. Lecture presentation begins with an introduction of anatomical terminology and an overview of cellular processes and tissue classification. Students then learn the gross and microscopic anatomy of the following systems: integumentary, skeletal, muscular, nervous, circulatory, respiratory, digestive, urinary and reproductive. The laboratory component of the course generally parallels and reinforces lecture concepts through the use of models, histological slides, skeletal materials and cadaver demonstration.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ANAT A4640 - Human Tissue Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00 or 5.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| ANAT D5010 - Human Gross Anatomy |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Introduction to the concepts, terminology, and basic structure of the human body. Prosecution of the body will use a regional approach. Emphasis on providing fundamental knowledge of the structure/function of major organ systems, peripheral nervous system, and vascular supply to the trunk, head and neck, limbs and back. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ANAT D5020 - Basic Histology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Lecture and laboratory instruction on the microscopic structure of the basic tissues and organs of the body.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ANAT D5260 - Methods In Cell And Neurobiology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Methodology and theory of the latest techniques in analyzing biological
structure, including chemistry of cell structure, chemical and molecular neuroanatomy, imaging neurochemistry, quantitative image analysis and cell-cell interactions. Lab provides experience with 15 commonly used methods in current cell biology and neurobiology research.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ANAT D5270 - Neuroanatomy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an introductory course in neuroanatomy designed to introduce graduate students to the concepts, terminology and basic structure of neuroanatomy. Emphasis will be on providing a fundamental working knowledge of the structure and function of the central and peripheral nervous system. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ANAT D8560 - Advanced Histology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Indepth consideration of selected topics on the microscopic anatomy of cells, tissues, and organs. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ANAT D8660 - Electron Microscopy |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to electron microscopy, including rationale of biological specimen preparation, general principles of instrument operation, and related techniques.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ANSC 10100 - Animal Agriculture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Importance of livestock in the field of agriculture, and the place of meats and other animal products in the human diet. Course not available for students enrolled at the West Lafayette campus. Credit cannot be obtained for both ANSC 10100 and ANSC 10200. Offered at regional campuses, Vincennes University, and other distance education sites. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 10200 - Introduction To Animal Agriculture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of animal agriculture emphasizing the efficient production of animal food products from poultry, dairy and meat animals. Credit cannot be obtained for both ANSC 10100 and 10200. Course may also be offered for dual credit with cooperating Indiana high schools upon documented approval by Department of Animal Sciences. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Concurrent Credit
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 10600 - Biology Companion Animal |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the various aspects of companion animal biology. Topics include anatomy, physiology, health, immunity, nutrition, growth, digestion, metabolism, behavior, genetics, reproduction and lactation. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Concurrent Credit
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 18100 - Orientation To Animal Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to the faculty, programs, opportunities, career preparation, and personal development requirements needed to succeed in a career in the animal industries. Course meets during weeks 1-8. Requires class trips. Students will pay individual lodging or meal expenses when necessary. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 20100 - Functional Anatomy And Animal Performance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course designed to observe the norms for acceptable conformation of breeds of farm animals and to relate significant characteristics of farm animals to performance and profitability. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 22100 - Principles Of Animal Nutrition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Classification and function of nutrients, deficiency symptoms, digestive processes, characterization of feedstuffs, and formulation of diets for domestic animals. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
|
| ANSC 23000 - Physiology Of Domestic Animals |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A lecture course designed to present physiology of domestic farm animals. Function of tissues and organs, maintenance of internal steady-state conditions, and body responses to external environmental conditions will be presented. Physiological mechanisms involved in lactation, growth, and reproduction will be included. Typically offered Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 24500 - Applied Animal Management |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Skills and practices related to handling and care of beef and dairy cattle, horses, poultry, sheep, and swine. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 28100 - Career Planning In Animal Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A seminar course designed to inform students of the career opportunities in animal industries, develop their interviewing and other interpersonal skills, and begin to plan the course of study, work experiences, and marketing methods needed to obtain a successful internship and employment. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 29200 - Special Assignments |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To be arranged with individual staff members prior to registration. Reading, discussions, written reports, seminar presentations, teaching, field or laboratory experiences provided for enrichment in special areas of animal science.
. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ANSC 29300 - Special Assignments |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Reading, discussions, written reports, seminar presentations, teaching, field or laboratory experiences provided for enrichment in special areas of animal science. Combination of ANSC 29300 and 49300 cannot exceed six credits. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ANSC 29400 - Exploring International Animal Agriculture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An experiential learning class. Interrelationship of animal agriculture with agronomic production, feed industries, culture, national infrastructure, political systems and international trade will be investigated through international travel. Critical thinking and communication skills will be enhanced by topic leadership, comparative analysis and seminar presentation. May be repeated for credit with variable title. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ANSC 29500 - Special Topics In Animal Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Lecture presentation of specialized material not available in formal courses of the department. The specific topic that is offered will be indicated on the student's record. May be repeated for credit with variable title. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ANSC 30100 - Animal Growth, Development, And Evaluation |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of meat animal growth and developmental processes, including micro and gross anatomy, and factors that affect body/carcass composition with application to animal and carcass evaluation. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 30200 - Animal Growth, Development and Evaluation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of meat animal growth and developmental processes, including micro and gross anatomy, and factors that affect body/carcass composition, carcass quality, and value. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ANSC 30300 - Animal Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discussion of animal behavior with emphasis on developing an understanding of the reasons domesticated animals react the way they do toward their kind and to humans. The laboratory will be used for observation of behavior patterns in animals. Solutions for unusual behavior include behavior modification techniques. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 31100 - Animal Breeding |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Genetic principles and their applications in improvement of production efficiency in livestock. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 32400 - Applied Animal Nutrition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of the principles of animal nutrition to the formulation and feeding of supplements and complete rations for animals; ration ingredients and substitution values; computer applications; legal aspects of feed formulation; and industry practices. Requires class trips. Students will pay individual lodging or meal expenses when necessary. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 33200 - Environmental Physiology Of Domestic Animals |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Interactions of environmental factors with physiological processes in domestic animals. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 33300 - Physiology Of Reproduction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic information on the physiological processes of reproduction. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 33400 - Physiology Of Reproduction Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Anatomical structures, physiological processes, and techniques concerned with animal reproduction. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 34500 - Animal Health Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The objectives of this course are to familiarize the student with disease processes and mechanisms. Management techniques in food, companion, and research animal species that minimize or prevent disease will be emphasized, as well as the consequences on animal production, reproduction, and human health. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 35100 - Meat Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of muscle and meat, principles involved in the conversion of living animals to meat and by-products; efficient utilization of all types of meat as food. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 35101 - Meat Science Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Application of scientific principles to the meat industry, with emphasis on all aspects of processing including: harvest; carcass grading and evaluation; fabrication; cured, smoked, and comminuted meat products; quality control; product development; and retail and food service merchandising. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 37000 - Livestock Evaluation |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is designed to develop logical thinking and speaking skills, while developing the ability to critically evaluate livestock in their production environments. Prior experience in public speaking or judging is not required. The combination of ANSC 37000, 37100, 37200, 47000, 47100, and 47200 cannot exceed three credits toward ANSC electives. Requires class trips. Students will pay individual lodging or meal expenses when necessary. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 37100 - Dairy Evaluation |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course will enable the student to become familiar with breeds of dairy, parts of dairy cattle and their relationship to function. Opportunities will exist to associate with people from various breed organizations within the dairy industry. The combination of ANSC 37000, 37100, 37200, 47000, 47100, and 47200 cannot exceed three credits toward ANSC electives. Requires class trips. Students will pay individual lodging or meal expenses when necessary. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 37200 - Horse Evaluation |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A student-centered laboratory course designed to familiarize students with functional horse conformation and type that maximizes athletic ability, applies selection criteria established by national breed associations for evaluating performance events, and prepares students to select halter and performance horses of many breeds and disciplines. The combination of ANSC 37000, 37100, 37200, 47000, 47100, and 47200 cannot exceed three credits toward ANSC electives. Requires class trips. Students will pay individual lodging or meal expenses when necessary. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 38100 - Leadership For A Diverse Workplace |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An interactive, small group discussion class covering effective interpersonal and group skills needed to enhance career satisfaction in a diverse workplace including building networks within industry, cross-cultural communication and gaining experiences in group problem-solving and decision-making. This course may be used as an additional written communication elective as required in all plans of study in Animal Sciences. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 39000 - Animal Sciences Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Internships with producers, businesses, or agencies arranged in cooperation with faculty coordinator. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 39300 - Animal Industry Travel Course |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. A classroom and travel course designed to expose students to animal production operations, agribusinesses, industry leaders, and their philosophies as well as critical contemporary issues throughout various geographical areas of the United States. Travel is conducted during spring break or summer sessions and includes visits to animal production farms, universities, and agribusinesses. Additional fee required. Limited to two credits toward Animal Sciences electives. Offered in odd numbered years. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 TO 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
|
| ANSC 40000 - Animal Sciences Study Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. Utilized to record credits earned through participation in Purdue study abroad programs with cooperating foreign universities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
|
| ANSC 40400 - Animal Welfare |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A multi-disciplinary course that introduces students to the fields of animal welfare and the ethics of animal use. The course will emphasize farm animal welfare and production issues. Requires class trips. Students will pay individual lodging or meal expenses when necessary. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 43500 - Reproductive Management Of Farm Animals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Management practices associated with improved reproductive efficiency. Procedures for diagnosis of reproductive failure and practical methods of controlling reproduction will be identified. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 44000 - Horse Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Current breeding, feeding, housing, selection, disease control, and other management practices essential for sound economic planning of horse operations in today's horse industry. Laboratory farm visits provide students with real application examples and industry contacts. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 44100 - Beef Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Breeding, feeding, and management practices essential for economical beef production, including performance testing. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 44200 - Sheep Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Breeding, feeding, and management practices essential for economical sheep production and commercial lamb feeding, including performance testing. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 44300 - Swine Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Breeding, feeding, and management practices essential for commercial swine production, including performance testing. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 44400 - Dairy Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Current breeding, feeding, physiology, disease prevention, and management practices essential for economical milk production. Requires class trips. Students will pay individual lodging or meal expenses when necessary. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 44500 - Commercial Poultry Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Current developments and practices in the commercial production of eggs, broilers, and turkeys; principles of breeding, physiology, nutrition, management, and disease prevention. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 44600 - Companion Animal Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course details understanding of the economic scope of the pet industry as well as the role of pets in American society. The students will acquire the information to be responsible pet owners by experiencing their knowledge of housing practices, nutritional care, health care, behavior and breeding of companion animals. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 47000 - Livestock Judging |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is designed to teach livestock evaluation, relationship of production data to live animal evaluation characteristics, expand logical thinking and reasoning skills, and enhance oral communication skills. Requires class trips. Students will pay individual lodging or meal expenses when necessary. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 47100 - Dairy Judging |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Opportunities will exist to allow the student to practice analysis and enhance decision-making processes in placing animals in collegiate dairy contests. Communication skills will be developed to properly present and defend those decisions with confidence. Requires class trips. Students will pay individual lodging or meal expenses when necessary. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 47200 - Horse Judging |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An intensive capstone experience for those students wishing to apply their knowledge of functional horse conformation, athletic ability, selection criteria established by national breed associations, and develop advanced decision making, communication, and experience working within a team environment by preparing and competing in national judging contests. Requires class trips. Students will pay individual lodging or meal expenses when necessary. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 48100 - Contemporary Issues in Animal Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Industry-led and student-led discussions and debate of current issues facing animal industries. Experiences from internships, research problems, study abroad, or job shadowing will be shared among the students. Course meets during weeks 1-8. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture 1, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 48300 - Contemporary Issues In Animal Sciences II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.50. Student-led discussion and debate of current issues facing animal industries. Topics include environmental impact, food safety, animal care and well-being, ethics, use of biotechnology, world food supply, and international agricultural trade issues. Students will share their experiences with each other from course work, internships, research problems, study abroad and club activities as they address contemporary issues facing animal industries. Course meets during weeks 1-8. Typically offered Spring.
0.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 48500 - Dairy Farm Evaluation |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course will provide students with an opportunity to integrate and apply knowledge of dairy cattle management systems, nutrition, reproduction, genetics, milk quality, animal handling, physical farm facilities, manure handling and management, personnel and their financial implications. Students will develop critical analysis skills and apply troubleshooting principles in the identification and resolution of dairy farm management issues in a learning environment that is structured around farm evaluation field trips and case studies. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 49100 - Special Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Supervised individual laboratory or library assignments. Written reports required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| ANSC 49200 - Special Assignments |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To be arranged with individual staff members prior to registration.
Reading, discussions, written reports, seminar presentations, teaching, field or laboaratory experiences provided for enrichment in special areas of animal science. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ANSC 49300 - Special Assignments |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Reading, discussions, written reports, seminar presentations, teaching, field or laboratory experiences provided for enrichment in special areas of animal science. Combination of ANSC 29300 and 49300 cannot exceed six credits. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
|
| ANSC 49400 - Animals And Food Security: International Services Learning |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. This course prepares students for a service learning international experience and includes the planning of the trip, the actual trip and a reflective learning post-trip class. The course is a partnership between Purdue Animal Sciences, a host university and their students, a local community organization, and an international community development, NGO. The core of the experience is the faculty-led international service learning course where students live and work in villages in a developing country. Students will learn extension methodologies and how to contribute to sustainable projects. Students will be expected to work in bi-national teams across agricultural and community disciplines to not only contribute to the communities served but to apply their classroom knowledge and experience to make a difference in the community. AGEC 43000 (Introduction To World Agricultural Development) is a highly recommended prerequisite. Prerequisites: Multicultural Awareness course (COA list). Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Professional Preparation: Demonstrate proficiency in the application of the knowledge, skills, technology, extension methodology, and professional conduct of animal sciences.
2. Critical Thinking: Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems in a rural international village setting.
3. Communication: Demonstrate the ability to write and speak with effectiveness while considering audience and purpose.
4. Teamwork: Demonstrate the ability to work effectively as part of a bi-national problem-solving team.
5. Cultural Understanding: Demonstrate actual intercultural skills and knowledge of a range of cultures and an understanding of human values and points of view other than their own.
6. Social Science Principles: Demonstrate ability to apply social, economic, political, and environmental principles to serving an international rural village.
7. Civic Responsibility: Demonstrate awareness of civic responsibility to community and society at large.
|
| ANSC 49500 - Special Topics In Animal Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Lecture presentation of specialized material not available in the formal courses of the department. The specific topic that is offered will be indicated on the student's record. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
|
| ANSC 49900 - Thesis Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. For students doing specialized animal sciences research; report required. Arrange with academic advisor and honors research coordinator before registering. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| ANSC 51100 - Population Genetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (AGRY 51100, FNR 51100) Basic concepts of population genetics. Characterization of populations using gene frequencies, gametic and zygotic disequilibrium; forces changing gene frequencies (mutation, migration, selection, and random genetic drift) and genotypic frequencies (mating systems: inbreeding, crossbreeding, and phenotypic assortative) and related hypothesis testing; gene trees and the coalescent process; and molecular phylogenies. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 51300 - Design Of Animal Breeding Programs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Integration of principles of animal breeding and genetics into animal improvement programs. Emphasis is placed on the interaction among genetics, nutrition, and physiology. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 51400 - Animal Biotechnology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Presentation and discussion of the history, developments, and applications of molecular genetic analysis of human and animal genomes, and use of gene transfer in research, animal agriculture, and human medicine. Ethical and economical ramifications of biotechnology in society will be introduced through reading assignments and discussion. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 52200 - Monogastric Nutrition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Digestion and absorption, nutrient utilization and interrelationships in poultry, swine, and other monogastric animals. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 52400 - Ruminant Nutrition And Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Physiological, microbiological, and biochemical effects and their interrelationships on digestion and metabolism in the ruminant animal. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 53400 - Advanced Reproductive Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of mechanisms that interact to control reproduction in farm animals. Current scientific literature and hypotheses are presented, and potential methods to enhance reproductive efficiency are examined. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 53500 - Avian Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. (BMS 82800) A study of the basic principles of physiology and functional anatomy of birds. Topics include the following systems: muscular, nervous, cardiovascular, respiratory, digestive, lymphoid, endocrine, and reproductive. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 53600 - The Digestive System In Health And Disease |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Comparative study of the physiology of the gastrointestinal tract focused on the importance of, and interactions between, gut physiology, gut associated immune system, and intestinal microorganisms in relation to health and disease. Offered in odd-numbered years. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 53700 - Adipocyte Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course will provide the student with a conceptual background in the development of adipose tissue and its biological function with emphasis on the endocrine and immunologic aspects of the adipocyte. Differences between species will be emphasized where possible. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Enhance understanding of the role of adipocytes/adipose tissue in regulation of metabolism and impact on obesity, diabetes and efficiency of animal growth.
2. Develop critical thinking skills and the application of scientific principles to emerging issues in adipose biology research.
3. Encourage lifetime learning habits by seeking information to fill gaps in a dynamic field of study.
|
| ANSC 55500 - Animal Growth And Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the molecular and cellular processes controlling embryonic development and growth of domesticated animals. Includes discussions of current research concerning molecular mechanisms of fertilization, egg activation, early development, and endocrine factors controlling cell growth, differentiation, and tissue formation. Experimental approaches utilized for developmental and growth biology research are discussed. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 55600 - Stem Cell Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Adult or tissue cells are stem cells that reside in different tissues and, depending on where they are from, have different properties. This dual level course aims to cover the origin, identification, isolation, differentiation, self-renewal, and senescence of various tissue-specific stem cells and their function in animal growth and maintenance. The course will focus on the latest advances in adult stem cells and their applications in tissue regeneration. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Enhance understanding of the role of adipocytes/adipose tissue in regulation of metabolism and impact on obesity, diabetes, and efficiency of animal growth.
2. Develop critical thinking skills and the application of scientific principles to emerging issues in adipose biology research.
3. Encourage lifetime learning habits by seeking information to fill gaps in dynamic field of study.
|
| ANSC 59500 - Special Topics In Animal Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Lecture presentation of specialized material not available in the formal courses of the department. The specific topic offered is indicated on the student's record. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ANSC 62000 - Proteins And Amino Acids In Nutrition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Presentation of concepts concerning requirements for dietary amino acids, nutritional regulation of amino acid metabolism, and regulation of protein metabolism. Integrates biochemical and physiological functions of amino acids and features topics in nutritional regulation of whole-body protein turnover in mammalian and avian species. Offered in odd numbered years. Prerequisite: BCHM 56200. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 62600 - Nutritional Biochemistry And Physiology II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. (F&N 606) Integration of biochemical and physiological functions of nutrients in humans and animals emphasizing post-absorptive use of nutrients as sources of energy and for the synthesis of macromolecules. Offered weeks 1 - 8. Prerequisite: ANSC 62500. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 62700 - Nutritional Biochemistry And Physiology III |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. (F&N 60700) Integration of biochemical and physiological functions of nutrients in humans and animals, emphasizing lipid metabolism and transport in the context of cardiovascular function. Offered weeks 9 - 16. Prerequisite: ANSC 62600. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANSC 66000 - Intestinal Microbiology And Immunology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. (FS 66000) Discussion and critique of recent journal articles related to intestinal microbiology/immunology. The specific areas covered under this forum are: (1) intestinal microbiology, (2) food microbiology as it relates to gastrointestinal diseases, (3) probiotics and prebiotics-related to intestinal health or pathogen control, and (4) mucosal immunity with major emphasis on intestinal immunology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate effective oral and written communication skills. This includes such skills as writing technical reports and making formal presentations.
2. Apply critical thinking skills to new situations including critical evaluation of published papers.
3. Independently research scientific and nonscientific information and use library resource.
|
| ANSC 68100 - Animal Sciences Graduate Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Presentations by graduate students on topics of interest in animal sciences. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ANSC 69100 - Topical Research Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. To be arranged with individual staff members prior to registration. Requires approval of the department head. Supervised individual research projects. Written reports required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ANSC 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ANSC 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Animal Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ANTH 10000 - Introduction To Anthropology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A general introduction to anthropology's holistic approach to human nature and behavior. A basic survey of biocultural developmental and evolutionary processes, and human uniformity and diversity through time and across space. Typically offered Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 10500 - Cultural Anthropology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the principles underlying variations in human culture and behavior. Emphasis is on culture as an adaptive mechanism and on how societies function. Topics include technology, social organization, economy, politics, ideology, and language. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
|
| ANTH 20100 - Introduction To Archaeology And World Prehistory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the ideas and practices of archaeology that are used in the study of human prehistory, from the earliest stone tools to the development of agriculture and states. Emphasis is placed on the objectives and methods of contemporary archaeology. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 20300 - Biological Bases Of Human Social Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to human social behavior from the perspective of biological anthropology, with special emphasis on human evolution and non-human primates. Topics include aggression, communication, learning, maturation, sexuality, and the evolution of social systems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 20400 - Introduction To Biological Anthropology And Human Evolution |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course surveys biological anthropology through a review of evolutionary theory and genetics, the fossil evidence for current theories in human evolution with insight from modern non-human primates, and the influence of environmental stressors on modern human biological variation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 20500 - Human Cultural Diversity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Using concepts and models of cultural anthropology, this course will survey the principal cultural types of the world and their distribution, and will undertake a detailed analysis of societies representative of each type. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 21000 - Technology And Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the social dimensions of technology from the perspective of ancient, modern, and post-modern society. Topics include the origins of particular technologies; processes of technical development and dissemination; the politics of everyday artifacts; virtual identities; and technologies of the body. Suggested courses (not pre-requisite): ANTH 10000, 20100 and/or 20500
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 21200 - Culture, Food And Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide an introduction to the field of Medical Anthropology in which we will examine issues related to health and illness from various perspectives outside of the Western biomedical perspective. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 23000 - Gender Across Cultures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores gender and sexuality from a cross-cultural perspective. Draws on case studies to explore the complexities of women's and men's lives. Examines gender hierarchies, gender in a globalized world, and the cultural construction of sexuality and gender. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 23500 - The Great Apes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will learn the behavior and conservation of our closest relatives and how early ape studies changed our understanding of what it meant to be human. Topics include gender in science, ethics of research and cross-cultural understandings. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will obtain knowledge and understanding of great ape anatomy, behavior and ecology and conservation issues and strategies implemented by communities worldwide.
2. Students will explore the role of the scientist in the studies of great apes and the relationship of scientific to folk understandings.
3. Students will be able to read primate research articles, gather and synthesize written and media sources and communicate and express ideas with clarity and logic.
|
| ANTH 28200 - Introduction To LGBT Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (WGSS 28200) This course offers students an introduction to the interdisciplinary study of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer lives. It provides a basic grounding in theories of sexuality and LGBT histories, identities and movements in the U.S. and globally. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain a broad overview of the cultural history of sexualities both in the West and globally from the pre-modern era to the contemporary period. They will grasp the way sexual and gender identities change over time and across space. They will analyze how sexual identity intersects with gender, race, and class. They will develop a theoretical understanding if the social construction of sexuality, sexual identities and transgender identities.
|
| ANTH 30500 - Ethnographic Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces students to the basic methods of ethnographic research: the collection, analysis, and presentation of data derived from the systematic, direct observation of human behavior and interviewing of key informants. Students are required to complete a field project. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 31000 - Mortuary Practices Across Cultures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores how death is treated or has been treated in diverse world cultures and time periods. Death is viewed as an expression of social behavior and as an expression of symbolic meaning. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 31100 - The Archaeology Of The Ancient Andes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of Andean culture from its earliest roots through the Spanish conquest of the Inca empire in the 16th century. Topics will include first settlement, the development of the first complex societies, and the emergence and collapse of the Inca Empire. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 31200 - The Archaeology Of Ancient Egypt And The Near East |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected topics on the archaeology of ancient Near Eastern cultures in Mesopotamia, the circum-Mediterranean area, Egypt, and the Nile Valley, emphasizing an anthropological interpretation of the political, social, religious, and economic systems that contributed to their development. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 31300 - Archaeology Of North America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Archaeological overview of North America emphasizing Indigenous cultures prior to the arrival of Europeans, but including Contact and Post-Contact communities of the Historic Period. Topics will include the peopling of the Americas, culture and environment, social complexity, and Cultural Resource Management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 32000 - The Evolution Of Prehistoric Civilizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Based on archaeological sources, compares the nature of political, social, and technological change during the formative periods of the world's major early civilizations, emphasizing Mesoamerica, the Central Andes, Nile Valley, Mesopotamia, Indus Valley, and China. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 32700 - Environment And Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides a general overview to the field of environmental anthropology, and surveys key methods, and theories that anthropologists use to interpret human-environment interactions. Topics include culture ecology, agroecology, ethnobiology, political ecology, and environmental justice. Typically offered Summer, Fall, or Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 33500 - Primate Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to the primate order and primate studies. The emphasis is on field studies. Ecological influences on social organization and behavior, learning, play, and communication will be considered as adaptations within an evolutionary framework. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 33600 - Human Variation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Biological differences between human individuals and groups, causes of variations, the role of genetics, concepts of race, and the interrelationship between the social and biological meanings of race will be considered. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 33700 - Human Diet: Origins And Evolution |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will survey humans evolving relationship with food over the last few million years; from our Pilo-pleistocene origins (foraging) through the origins of agriculture to modern industrial food production. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn that humans, and every other organism on the planet, construct and maintain themselves from environmental building blocks, and over time come to change their environments as they are changed by them.
2. Students will gain a fundamental perspective on how to healthfully, sustainable, and ethically consume into the future.
|
| ANTH 34000 - Global Perspectives On Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines health issues and risks faced by individuals around the world, but especially in resource poor geographical areas. We will explore in-depth the gendered, ethnic, cultural, and class dimensions that underlie the patterning of disease and illness worldwide. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 34100 - Culture And Personality |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A cross-cultural survey stressing different basic personality types and the processes by which adult personality is acquired. Case studies of selected non-Western cultures will be used to provide comparative perspective. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 35200 - Drugs, Culture, And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (SOC 35200) The course provides an overview of the social and cultural underpinnings of drug use across societies. Students engage with various topics, including addiction, global markets, drug epidemics, public policy, and cross-cultural differences in drug use. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 35201 - Drugs Culture And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (SOC 35201) The course provides an overview of the social and cultural underpinnings of drug use across societies. Students engage with various topics including addiction, global markets, drug epidemics, public policy, and cross-cultural differences in drug use. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the trends, patterns, and types of drug use in the U.S. and cross-culturally.
2. Analyze the various social responses to drug use, displaying an understanding of the emergence of these responses being linked to particular cultural and social structural shifts.
3. Analyze the social construction of drug use as a social problem.
4. Differentiate the contributing factors in the process of evaluating substance abuse and dependence.
|
| ANTH 35800 - African Cultures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the diversity of African cultures emphasizing detailed studies of selected cultural groups. Ethnographic writings about African cultures are assessed in relation to general information about the continent, its people and the colonial experience. Typically offered Summer, Fall, or Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 36800 - Sociolinguistic Study Of African American English |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the history, structure, uses, and educational concerns of African American speech communities and the culture at large. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 37000 - Ethnicity And Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course examines ethnicity and nation as constructs that vary across cultures, history and space, and surveys theories of cultures, ethnicity and nationalism. Issues examined include cultural identities, power, domination and resistance, and the role of identity politics in contemporary conflicts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The ability to analyze ethnicity and nationalism in a variety of forms, especially as aspects of the organization of difference and domination.
2. A competent level of knowledge of several multicultural situations, including cases of ethnic conflict, and ability to discuss them comparatively.
3. The ability to discuss cultural, national, religious, and gender differences with others in a respectful, knowledgeable, and insightful manner.
4. The ability to function in an international multicultural world and appreciate the roles in it of specific ethnic and national groups.
|
| ANTH 37300 - Anthropology Of Religion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Anthropological theories of the origin, development, and functions of religion, ritual, and myth. Data drawn from western and non-western societies, with special emphasis on the relationship of religion to social structure, cultural patterns, and social change. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 37700 - Anthropology Of Hunter-Gatherer Societies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selective global survey of societies whose mode of subsistence is/was based on the collection of wild food resources. Topics to be covered include: the development and current state of theory, ecology, social organization, land use, demography, subsistence rights, and worldview. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 37800 - Archaeology And Cultural Anthropology Of Mesoamerica (Mexico, Belize And Guatemala) |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of Mesoamerican peoples, cultures, and languages from the earliest periods to the rise of civilizations including Aztec, Maya, and Zapotec, and from the Spanish Conquest to the modern Indian communities of Mexico, Guatemala, and Belize. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 37900 - Native American Cultures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. General survey of Native cultures of the Americas. Topics to be covered include prehistory, language, religion, aesthetics, culture contact and change, contemporary issues, and social, economic and political organization. Typically offered Fall (and occasionally in the Spring).
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, S General Education, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 38000 - Using Anthropology In The World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The use of anthropology in practical contexts. What anthropological practice is, how it originated, how it can be applied in non- academic and interdisciplinary contexts and careers. The main contemporary issues surrounding anthropological practice, including training, ethics, relevance, and rigor. For majors and non-majors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the history of applied anthropology.
2. Describe how anthropology is used in 4 to 6 major non-academic domains.
3. Discuss the major issues, controversies, and opportunities surrounding the application of anthropology.
4. Know how to prepare for a career in anthropological practice; and/or use anthropology in their work.
|
| ANTH 38500 - Community Engagement In Anthropology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course offers hands-on service learning experience with local community organizations involved with minority and immigrant populations. Part of the semester will include class meetings to explore issues and experiences of immigrant and ethnic groups in the U.S. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop a theoretical and experiential understanding of migration and ethnicity in a variety of forms, especially in the U.S. historically and currently.
2. Grasp the intersections of class, race and gender.
3. Gain a basic understanding of anthropological field methods.
4. Apply course concepts to real-life situations through engagement in hands-on community service with minority and immigrant populations.
|
| ANTH 39000 - Individual Research In Anthropology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individual research or reading in an area of anthropology under the guidance of an anthropology faculty member. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| ANTH 39200 - Selected Topics In Anthropology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Various topics in anthropology that may change from semester to semester are presented by anthropology faculty members. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 12 credits
|
| ANTH 40400 - Comparative Social Organization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course uses a broad cross-cultural comparative perspective to identify and analyze the major forms of human social organization. Emphasis is on kinship terminology, descent, marriage, residence units, economic exchange, political structure, and social inequality. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 40700 - The Development Of Contemporary Anthropological Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores the history of anthropological theories pertaining to the understanding of commonality and variation in human biology, behavior, society, and cultures as they have developed over the approximately two centuries since anthropology was founded as a separate discipline. Considers those social, cultural, and historical factors that have influenced the history of anthropological ideas. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 41400 - Introduction To Language And Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An exploration into the nature of human communication, particularly the structures, functions, and substance of human language. Focus is on the interpenetration of language, culture and cognition, on the evolution of language and speech, and on their uses in everyday life. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 41800 - Field Methods In Cultural Anthropology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 9.00. Introduces basic field methods in Cultural Anthropology. Topics may include ethnographic or other interviewing techniques and methods of inquiry into any of the broad topics covered by Cultural Anthropology. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Understanding the use of anthropological methods such as participant observation, ethnographic analysis and general interviewing techniques.
|
| ANTH 42500 - Anthropological Archaeology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the theory and methods of contemporary American archaeology. Basic field and laboratory methods are placed in the context of theoretical viewpoints and problems. Major theoretical issues in the field are explored, showing the integration of American archaeology with anthropology. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 42800 - Field Methods In Archaeology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.0 to 9.0. Introduces basic field and laboratory methods in contemporary archaeology: methods of site survey, mapping, and excavation through the excavation of archaeological sites; the basics of archaeological data analysis and classification, and the computer-based analysis of archaeological data. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer.
0.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 43600 - Human Evolution |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This class examines the fossil evidence for human evolution and theories proposed to explain the development that led from the origin of primates to modern humans. This course will include lectures, exercises with fossil casts, presentation, and discussions. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 43800 - Field Methods In Biological Anthropology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 9.00. Introduces basic laboratory methods in Biological Anthropology. Topics may include analysis of human or primate nutritional and biological markers or laboratory methods in the analysis of human skeletal populations. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Understanding the use of anthropological methods such as anthropometric measurements, primate behavioral observations and/or general interviewing techniques.
2. Students will gain an appreciation for ethical issues in biological anthropological research.
|
| ANTH 46000 - Contemporary Issues In Agriculture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (AGRY 46000) Evaluates environmental, social, and humanistic implications of technological change in modern agriculture, using a problem-solving perspective. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 47800 - Native Cultures Of The Great Lakes Woodlands |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Native cultures that developed in the Great Lakes region from prehistoric times through the present will be examined through archaeology, ecology, technology, social organization, and world views of specific tribes (Chippewa, Illinois, Iroquois, Potawatomi, Miami, Ottawa, etc.). Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| ANTH 48200 - Sexual Diversity In Global Perspectives |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on anthropological and interdisciplinary research in the study of sexuality with particular attention to lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender identities. It explores historical, theoretical and ethnographic work on sexualities and genders in the US and globally. Typically offered Summer, Fall or Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop an in-depth understanding of the cultural and historical processes that shape sexual identities and practices in different cultural contexts globally.
2. Assess the impact of political, cultural, and global ideologies on systems of gender and sexuality.
3. Think critically about sexual and gender representations in the US and globally.
4. Develop an advanced understanding of queer and feminist theories of sexuality.
|
| ANTH 49700 - Senior Honors Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A critical examination of some major works in anthropology and sociology, both classical and modern, and of some current theoretical and substantive issues in these disciplines. Open only to students in the departmental honors program. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: Honors, S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 49800 - Senior Honors Paper |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Requires a substantial paper on a topic approved by the instructor. The student is expected to work closely with the instructor on the paper's content and style. A presentation of the results of the work is made at the end of the semester. Open only to students in the departmental honors program. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: Honors, S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 50400 - Problems In World Prehistory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Key problems in the evolution of human culture examined using the most recent theories and data. Major topics include understanding early human behavior, the processes of domestication of plants and animals, and the emergence of complex societies. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 50500 - Culture And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to cultural anthropology for the advanced student. A review will be made of the history of anthropology and its place in the social sciences. Emphasis will be placed on problem formulation and methodology in the study of culture change. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 50600 - The Development Of Modern Anthropology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The ways and kinds of thinking about the human species in pre-nineteenth-century Europe: nineteenth- and twentieth-century developments in Europe and North America; the central scientific paradigms; professional societies and journals; and national/international anthropologies will all be covered. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 50700 - Theory In Sociocultural Anthropology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theoretical orientations (evolutionism, historicism, functionalism, cultural ecology), types of culture theory (technoeconomics, social structure, ideology, personality), and methods of formal analysis (ethnoscience, structuralism, symbolic) will be examined. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 51400 - Anthropological Linguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the anthropological view of linguistics and the ways in which anthropologists use linguistics as a research tool. The emphasis will be on structural and historical linguistics, but other approaches to the study of language will be considered. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 51900 - Introduction To Semiotics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (AUSL 58900, COM 50700, ENGL 57000, LC 57000) The study of languages, literatures, and other systems of human communication. Includes a wide range of phenomena which can be brought together by means of a general theory of signs. The course deals with three fundamental areas: 1) verbal communication, 2) nonverbal communication (iconic systems, gestures, body language, etc.), and 3) communication through art forms. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 53400 - Human Osteology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Anatomy of the human skeleton and dentition. Detailed study of skeletal elements and teeth, morphology, function, disease, and pathology. Identification of human remains with regard to age at death, gender, growth, and development in biocultural context. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 53500 - Foundations Of Biological Anthropology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers such topics important in Biological anthropology as applied to both living and extinct humans and primates. Possible topics include: evolutionary thought; genetics, race, and human variation; the intersection of biology and culture; fossils and paleoanthropology; ecology and speciation; primate behavior; and theories on the social behavior of early humans. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 53600 - Primate Ecology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the complex interrelationships between populations of nonhuman primates and their habitats. Course topics focus on behavioral ecology and conservation including, predator-prey relationships, diet, and interspecific relations. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 56500 - Sociolinguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (SLHS 56500, COM 56500, ENGL 56500, LC 56500, LING 56500) An introduction to language in its social context, focusing on uses and users of language. Topics include social class, ethnic group, gender, language attitudes, and bilingualism. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 57500 - Economic Anthropology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigates economic aspects of nonindustrial societies, including forager, tribal, and peasant social formations. Emphasis on the economics of the domestic sphere and how households are linked to larger structures such as market systems and "world systems.". Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 58900 - Archaeology And Materials Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides instruction in the methods and theories used by archaeologists and materials scientists to study ancient and historic technology. The course focuses on the analysis and interpretation of archaeological artifacts and provides opportunities for hands-on learning. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1) gain a more nuanced understanding of, and appreciation for, contemporary technology and materials science,
2) understand the historical development of theory in anthropology and archaeology related to the study of technology,
3) understand the role of materials science in contemporary archaeological studies,
4) be able to critique the application of scientific and materials science methods to the analysis of archaeological material through a discussion of case studies,
5) demonstrate the ability to write a research proposal that incorporates the use of materials science in investigating past technology,
6) understand the relationship between Culture and Technology and appreciate the impact of this relationship on the environment and issues of sustainability.
|
| ANTH 59000 - Individual Research Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individual research or reading in an area of anthropology under an anthropology staff member. Does not include thesis work. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ANTH 59200 - Selected Topics In Anthropology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 12 credits
|
| ANTH 60500 - Seminar In Ethnographic Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A selection of ethnographic monographs will be read, reported on, and discussed by seminar participants under the direction of the anthropology staff. The monographs will be discussed in terms of field methods employed, particular theoretical strengths and weaknesses, and their value to current anthropological method and theory. Participants will assume responsibility for presenting materials to stimulate discussion. 12 credit hours in Anthropology, or Sociology; Prerequisite: ANTH 50500 or 50600. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 60600 - The Conduct Of Anthropological Inquiry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course provides a broad overview of research strategies and techniques commonly employed in the various subfields of anthropology. Topics would include field techniques, the use of data banks (e.g., the HRAF files), sampling, hypothesis testing, and computer application. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 60900 - Seminar In Anthropology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 12 credits
|
| ANTH 61100 - Special Topics In Archaeology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Critical examination of a selected aspect of contemporary archaeological research and theory. Topics will vary from year to year. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
The content of the course is designed to have both methodological and theoretical components by helping graduate students appreciate how archaeologists have conceptualized landscapes as analytical units, and how landscapes are inscribed with meaning by the people who occupy them. By the end of the course students will have the tools to think critically about space and landscapes across a variety of archaeological contexts, and be exposed to a body of method and theory on which they may draw for their own research.
|
| ANTH 62000 - Special Topics In Cultural Anthropology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Critical examination of a selected aspect of contemporary cultural anthropology research and theory. Topics will vary from year to year. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| ANTH 67300 - Seminar In The Anthropology Of Religion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores anthropological approaches to studying the place of religion in human experience. Considers different theories that anthropologists have developed for understanding religion - symbolic, materialist, evolutionary, psychological, and others - and how they fit with ethnographic data on religion in different cultures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ANTH 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ANTH 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Anthropology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ANTH A1030 - Human Origins And Prehistory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of human biological and cultural evolution from early pre-Pleistocene hominids through the development of urbanized state societies, with the goal of better understanding our human heritage. (Not open to students who have had ANTH A3030.). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ANTH A1040 - Introduction to Cultural Anthropology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of cultural and social processes that influence human behavior, with comparative examples from different ethnic groups around the world, with the goal of better understanding the broad range of human behavioral potentials and those influences that shape the different expressions of these potentials. (Not open to students who have had A304.). Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ANTH A1050 - Human Origins and Prehistory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The focus of the course is the biological and cultural evolution of the human species. The first half of the course will examine a variety of "background" issues such as the history of evolutionary thought, modern evolutionary theory, techniques for dating the past, the nature of the
fossil and archaeological record, the biological relationships of humans to our closest relatives, and the fossil record of those forms ancestral
or closely related to the earliest humans. The second half of the course will begin with the appearance in the fossil record, about 5 million years ago in eastern and southern Africa, of the Australopithecines, a "proto-human" form that is clearly ancestral to our species, and the appearance "shortly" thereafter (about 2.5 million years ago) in this area of the first definite evidence of cultural (as opposed to purely biological) behavior. With the appearance of purposely made stone tools at this time our concern broadens to include both biological and cultural evolution (and the interaction of the two), as early humans expanded out of their original homeland and adapted to diverse environmental situations using an increasingly complex array of cultural mechanisms. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ANTH A2000 - Topics In Anthropology Of Culture And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected topics in the anthropological study of social and cultural institutions. Emphasizes understanding and developing anthropological approaches to questions about social, economic, political, and historical relationships among groups and individuals in contacts across the globe. Course topics may utilize ethnographic, archaeological, linguistic, and historical information. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 6 times
|
| ANTH A2010 - Survey of Applied Anthropology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of such issues in applied anthropology as cultural resource management, community development, cross-cultural communication, Third World development, museum studies, archaeological ethics, and the impact of human diversity on health care, education,and social programs. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ANTH A3030 - Evolution And Prehistory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced survey of human biological and cultural evolution from pre-Pleistocene hominids through the development of urbanized state societies. (Not open to students who have had ANTH A103.). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ANTH A3040 - Social And Cultural Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced survey of cultural and social processes that influence human behavior, with comparative examples from different ethnic groups around the world. (Not open to students who have had ANTH A104.). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ANTH A3600 - The Development Of Anthropological Thought |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of the major theoretical developments within anthropology, as the discipline has attempted to produce a universal and unified view of human life based on knowledge of evolution and prehistoric and contemporary cultures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-South Bend
|
| ANTH A3610 - Applied Cultural Change |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of major concepts of cultural and social change, and an evaluation of different models of applied change. The course emphasizes both a sound understanding of change and its practical application in developmental change. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ANTH A3850 - Topics In Anthropology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A conceptual examination of selected topics in the field of anthropology. Students may receive credit for only 3 credit hours of ANTH A385 and 3 credit hours of ANTH A460.
Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| ANTH A3950 - Field Experiences In Anthropology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A supervised field experience in a selected area of anthropology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| ANTH A4010 - Cultural Resource Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The concept of cultural resource management as a theoretical and functional tool to effect the conservation and protection of archaeological resources. Law, project review, site registration, and preservation strategies will be addressed.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ANTH A4120 - Senior Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An independent study course, taken toward the end of undergraduate studies in which students apply their anthropological expertise to projects that range from original research to applied work in the community. Students work on individual projects of their own design in consultation with faculty supervisors. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ANTH A4130 - Senior Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Senior Seminar. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ANTH A4600 - Topics In Anthropology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A conceptual examination of selected topics in the field of anthropology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
|
| ANTH A4620 - Truth And Reconciliation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of truth and reconciliation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ANTH A4630 - Ethnographic and Ethnologic Southeast Asia |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Ethnographic and Ethnologic Southeast Asia. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ANTH A4740 - Anthropologic Folklore |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Anthropologic Folklore. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ANTH A4850 - Topics In Applied Anthropology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An examination of a selected topic where the concepts, principles, and methods in anthropology are utilized to address a particular community or social issue. (May not be repeated for more than 6 credit hours.). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| ANTH A4950 - Individual Readings in Anthropology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. A supervised, in-depth examination through individual research on a particular topic selected and conducted by the student in consultation with an anthropology faculty member. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 4 credits
|
| ANTH A4960 - Field Study In Anthropology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 8.00. Planning of research project during year preceding summer in field. Time spent in research must amount to at least one week for each credit hour granted. Research paper must be presented by end of semester following field study. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
|
| ANTH B1010 - Introduction To Cultural Anthropology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces the diversity of human social life as shaped by culture, relating the origins and nature of culture to variations in such universal aspects of human experience as the food quest, family organization, social control, the arts, and religion.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ANTH B2000 - Bioanthropology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the biological nature of mankind. The evolution of human beings. An examination of speciation, race, and racial groups. The future evolution of humans. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ANTH B3700 - Human Variation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Variation within and between human populations in morphology, gene frequencies, and behavior. Biological concepts of race, race classification, along with other taxonomic considerations and evolutionary processes acting on humans in the past, present, and future. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ANTH B3710 - The Anthropology Of Human Nature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the foundations of human behavior as viewed from the biocultural and evolutionary perspective of anthropology. This course strives to provide the student with a rational middle ground in the nature/nurture debate by demonstrating that human behavior is innately plastic. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ANTH B4000 - Undergraduate Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the field of ancient DNA research, including a historical perspective on the development of the science, and a review of the current trends and exciting new results. The ability to access ancient molecules (not only DNA but also proteins, lipids, and other interesting molecules) has opened new doors in our understanding of the prehistory of our plants. This course will focus on applications within Anthropology, but will also touch on paleontological and forensic applications of this science, and will include discussion of the work currently in progress in the instructor’s Ancient DNA laboratory in the IU Institute of Molecular Biology. Grades are based on discussion participation, five written critical commentaries on assigned readings, and a research paper, with each component contributing one-third of the course grade. Although there are no specific prerequisites for this course, a good knowledge of bioanthropology as well as some basic genetics is assumed. This course requires a significant amount of reading of primary literature. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| ANTH B4050 - Fieldwork In Bioanthropology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Fieldwork In Bioanthropology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ANTH B4260 - Human Osteology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the types of information that can be recovered from bones, including age, sex, size, pathology, diet and demography as well as how this information can be utilized to obtain an integrated picture of an individual. The skills learned are applicable to forensic anthropology, archaeology, human evolution and anatomy. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| ANTH B4800 - Human Growth And Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of human growth and development from a biocultural perspective including the physical mechanisms, and social, cultural, and environmental factors that lead to normal growth and development throughout the human life cycle. Causal factors, patterns of expression, and methods of assessment are stressed. Also available for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ANTH E1020 - Anthropology of America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Anthropogical analysis of American society; marriage, descent, kinship organization, religion, social stratification and economic basis of social structure. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ANTH E1050 - Culture And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the variations and diversities of living human groups. Social structure, religion, ecology, marriage, and personality variations of peoples of the world. Emphasis on preliterate cultures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ANTH E2000 - Social and Cultural Anthroplolgy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intermediate survey of theories and problems in social and cultural anthropology. Historical development, methods of inquiry, focal problems, and contemporary theoretical perspectives. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ANTH E3000 - Culture Areas And Ethnic Groups |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An ethnographic survey of a selected culture area or ethnic group. (May not be repeated for more than 6 credit hours.). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| ANTH E3010 - Plain People Of Indiana |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to two representative groups of Plain People: Old Order (house) Amish and Old German Baptist Brethren. Topics include their beliefs and practices, societal structure, sense of community (in language, dress, architecture, transportation, schooling, demography), and the special problems which beset them as traditional societies in a technocratic age. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ANTH E3100 - Introduction To Cultures In Africa |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The vitality and diversity of African cultures today testifies to the tenacity and creativity of human societies who have faced seveer ecological, political, and social pressures throughout their histories. During the semester, we will explore six cultures in depth throug reading ethnographies that explore a broad spectrum of social situations across the continent. Books, videos, and CD-ROMS will guide us from deserts to deep forests, from city neighborhoods to remove villages, and into communities on every side of sub-Saharan Africa-West, Central, East and South. The authors present different backgrounds and interests in specific topics and theories. Africans also wrestle with issues we share, like changing family values, religious loyalities, interethnic relations, dirty politics, budget cuts, hunger and protecting national prosperity. The course requires consistently preparing for class meetings, taking an active part in discussions and group activities during class, completing worksheets and other assignments outside of class, and three essay exams including the final. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ANTH E3130 - Anthropology Of The Muslim World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course considers modern ethnographic work on Islamic cultures throughout the world. Central questions to be addressed include the construction of gender, negotiations between textual traditions and “popular” religious traditions, the relationship between religion and political regimes, and trends in western perspectives on the Muslim world. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ANTH E3160 - Prehistory Of North America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will introduce students to the cultural variety and complexity of prehistoric native North Americans. The course focuses on the various environmental adaptations, lifeways, social systems, and material culture that have been revealed through archaeological research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ANTH E3200 - Indians Of North America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the political, economic, ecological, religious, kinship, and warfare patterns of representative North American Indian tribes before and at the time of European contact. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the nonwestern culture studies requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
|
| ANTH E3210 - Peoples Of Mexico |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Surveys modern Indian groups, peasant societies, and problems of acculturation and urbanization in contemporary Mexico. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the non-Western culture studies requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ANTH E3240 - Native American Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to the visual arts of Native Americans in the period since contact. Topics will include the artist (traditional and contemporary); the relationship of art, myth, and ritual; the effects of contact with other cultures on Indian arts; and shamanism and art. Class discussion will be illustrated with slides and movies. The class will visit and utilize the collections of Indian art at the Mathers Museum. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ANTH E3260 - Modern Greek Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines modern Greek life from an anthropological perspective. Recent Greek history, and the changing circumstances of both village and urban dwellers are explored. The complexity of cross-cultural understanding emerges as the various images that outsiders hold of modern Greece are compared to the realities of contemporary life there. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ANTH E3290 - Indians In The US In The Twentieth Century |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Position of the American Indian as an ethnic minority, including health, education, economy, and political consideration of proposals to change the Indian's status.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ANTH E3300 - Indians Of South America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The cultural development and contemporary life of aboriginal societies in the tropical and marginal areas of the continent. Ethnic relationship and characteristics of major cultural groups are examined through detailed study of representative tribal units. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the nonwestern culture studies requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ANTH E3350 - Ancient Civilizations of Mesoamerica |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The cultural development of the great Pre-Columbian civilizations in Mexico and Guatemala, especially the Aztec, Toltec, Olmec, and Maya. Emphasis on the social life, cultural achievements, religion, world view, and political systems to illustrate the diversity and richness of Amerindian life before the Spanish conquest. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the nonwestern culture studies requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| ANTH E3400 - Indians of Mexico and Central America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Indians of Mexico and Central America. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ANTH E3410 - Culture Of China |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of Chinese culture and society. Geography, history, linguistic and ethnic groups, social and political organizations, education, religion, etc. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the non-Western culture studies requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ANTH E3450 - Ethnographic and Ethnologic Southeast Asia |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Ethnographic and Ethnologic Southeast Asia. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ANTH E3480 - Peoples And Cultures Of Russia, Ukraine, And Newly Independent States |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the peoples and cultures of Eurasia, especially the former Soviet Union. Use case studies and ethnographies to learn about the histories of specific regions and groups, and to discuss religion and tradition, historical memory and cultural heritage, gender, childhood, and popular culture. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ANTH E3500 - European Ethnography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. European peoples and cultures. Emphasis on comparison of cultural assumption and social organization of selected European cultures; techniques for anthropological research in European societies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ANTH E3540 - Popular Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 . This course studies how traditional anthropological insight can analyze social and political complexities of contemporary popular cultural phenomena. Focuses on how anthropological subjects such as class, racism, and regionalism lurk within popular cultural phenomena including post-1950 music subcultures, civil religion, and consumer culture.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ANTH E3560 - Cultures Of The Pacific |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the varied peoples and adaptations of the three main culture areas in the Pacific region ( Micronesia, Polynesia, Melanesia) and explores such topics as male/female relations, sorcery, exchange, colonialism, and economic development. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| ANTH E3750 - Cultural Psychiatry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course surveys contemporary theory and research on the complex interaction of culture and mental health. We will examine a range of mental disorders in various societies, forms of psychiatric treatment and healing, and key concepts and methods used in the study of mental health and culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ANTH E3800 - Urban Anthropology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of urban social organization in cross-cultural perspective, including theoretical perspectives on urbanization, kinship and social networks, economic and political factors, and cultural pluralism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ANTH E3840 - The African Diaspora |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the cultural formation of the African Diaspora in the Americas. The course focuses specifically on the development of the African diasporic populations in the Caribbean, Central America and South America in comparative perspective. Students will develop a critical understanding of the African Diaspora as a geographical displacement, as an assemblage of cultural groups, and as a process of political identification. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ANTH E3910 - Women In Developing Countries |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the nature of women's roles in developing countries. Particular emphasis is placed on examining how development and cultural change have affected the lives of women. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ANTH E3980 - Peoples And Cultures Of Central Asia |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. General anthropological introduction to societies and cultures of contemporary Muslim successor states of former Soviet Central Asia, Western China (Xinjiang), and Iran and Afghanistan. Topics include ecology, ethnohistory, traditional subsistence strategies, family, kinship, gender, sociopolitical organization, impact of colonial rule of tsarist and Soviet Russia and China and development of modern nation-states in Iran and Afghanistan, dynamics of current conflicts and future prospects. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ANTH E4000 - Undergraduate Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive examination of selected topics in anthropology. Emphasis upon analytic investigation and critical discussion. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ANTH E4010 - Ecology And Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. How human beings, nature, and culture interrelate. Examination of the varied approaches used in hunting, agricultural, and industrial societies for adapting to the physical environment. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the nonwestern culture studies requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ANTH E4020 - Gender in Cross-Cultural Perspectives |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course considers the meaning and social implications of gender in human society. Cultural definitions of "male" and "female" gender categories as well as associated behavioral and structural differentiation of gender roles will be analyzed using current anthropological concepts and theories. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ANTH E4030 - Women Of Color In The United States |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course focuses on the women of color in the United States. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ANTH E4040 - Field Methods In Ethnography |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the methods and techniques anthropologists use to study other peoples. Preparation of a research proposal, interviewing, and the use of life histories and case studies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| ANTH E4050 - Principles Of Social Organizations |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Comparative analysis of the social organization of selected societies from the perspectives of major theoretical positions in anthropology. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the non-Western culture studies requirement. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| ANTH E4060 - Anthropology And Documentary Film |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Comparative analysis of historical and social contexts. Discussion of points of view and aims of individual filmmakers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| ANTH E4110 - Wealth, Exchange, And Power In Anthropological Perspective |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines cultural patterns of production, exchange, and consumption, with an emphasis on non-Western societies and how these factors influence economic development in the Third World. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| ANTH E4200 - Economic Anthropology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Comparative study of technologies and economic systems of selected non-western peoples. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the non-Western culture studies requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| ANTH E4210 - The Anthropology Of Aging |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores age and the aging process cross-culturally by looking at the specific cultural context in which individuals age and by analyzing similarities and differences across cultures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
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| ANTH E4400 - Political Anthropology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Political Anthropology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| ANTH E4450 - Medical Anthropology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the cross-cultural properties of disease and curing. Focus on investigations into the ideology and meaning of illness, the relationship between patient and healer, and how responsibility for illness is assigned. Medical anthropology is concerned with knowledge about socio-cultural contexts of disease and healing and with how such knowledge might inform the management of our own health problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
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| ANTH E4550 - Anthropology Of Religion |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Critical evaluation of current approaches to the analysis of religious myth, ritual, and symbolism. Problems in understanding religious beliefs of other cultures. Modern development of the anthropology of religion. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the non-Western culture studies requirement. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| ANTH E4570 - Ethnic Identity |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Nature of ethnic groups and identity viewed in cross cultural perspective, effects of colonialism and nationalism on ethnic groups; sue of identity as an adaptive strategy, stereotypes and stereotyping, symbols and styles of ethnic identity, and retention and elaboration of local styles. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
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| ANTH E4620 - Anthropologic Folklore |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Function, forms, and interpretations of folklore in traditional societies. Folklore as an expression of continuity and change. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the non-Western culture studies requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| ANTH E4700 - Psychological Anthropology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The similarity and diversity of human personalities. How culture forms personalities and is formed by them. Focus on individual variation within a cultural framework. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the nonwestern culture studies requirement. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| ANTH E4900 - Development And Anthropology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The vast majority of the world’s people live in poverty, and lack access to many basic resources, services and rights. They face problems and challenges that are difficult for most Americans to understand. It is even harder for us to find ways of helping these people solve their economic, social and political problems. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| ANTH H4450 - History and Theory of Anthropology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the historical development of the field of anthropology concentrating upon the intellectual roots and context that surrounded its emergence, as well as contemporary problems, perspectives, methods, and theories. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| ANTH L2000 - Language And Culture |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the study of language and its relations to the rest of culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| ANTH L3000 - Language And Culture |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the relationships between language and culture, focusing on research methodology and surveying various theoretical frameworks. Topics to be discussed include linguistic relativity (the Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis), ethnographies of communication, interview techniques, and methods of data collection and analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| ANTH L4000 - Seminar in the Enthnography of Communication |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Current issues in linguistic anthropology, designed to acquaint the student with readings and points of view not covered in the introductory courses. Topics such as (1) languages of the world; (2) variation in language; (3) problems in linguistic structure; (4) culture and communication. May be repeated once for credit with a different topic. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
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| ANTH L4010 - Language, Power, And Gender |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course investigates sociocultural aspects of language use, focusing on the interaction of power and gender with language. Topics include differences in men's and women's language use, discourse patterns and power relationships, and identity and language use. To what extent does the language we speak sustain the dominance of certain groups in our society?. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| ANTH N1900 - The Natural World |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces students to the methods and logic of science, and helps them understand the importance of science to the development of civilization and the contemporary world. Provides a context within which to evaluate the important scientific and technological issues of modern society, interdisciplinary elements. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ANTH P2000 - Introduction to Prehistoric Archaeology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. World archaeology in the framework of major prehistoric cultural innovations. History, techniques, methods, and significance of archaeological research. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| ANTH P2100 - Life In The Stone Age |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of the major developments in the Stone Age, emphasizing technological innovations, changes in subsistence patterns, and geographic and ecological expansions of human populations. The course will consist of weekly lectures and a laboratory practicum where students will learn to make and use stone tools. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Richmond
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| ANTH P2200 - The Rise And Fall Of Ancient Civilizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focus on how societies develop from band and tribal level to state level social organization. Special emphasis on the continuing evolution of the state. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
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| ANTH P2400 - Archaeology And The Movies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines how archaeologists and archaeological knowledge are represented in popular cinema, and compares these views with the work that archaeologists actually do. Topics include the history of archaeology, archaeological ethics, and archaeological interpretation. Feature films studied cover archaeological practice, the archaeology of early humans, Rome, and ancient Egypt and related topics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| ANTH P3000 - Topics In Pre-History |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. World archaeology in the framework of major cultural stages. The methods, analysis, and significance of archaeological research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| ANTH P3100 - Old World Archaeology |
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Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Prehistoric cultures of Europe, Asia, and Africa from Old Stone Age through Iron Age. Maximum of 3 credits. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| ANTH P3300 - Historical Archaeology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. We will examine the ways in which historical archaeologists investigate Colonial and American cultures and lifeways in various regions of North America throughout time. Special attention will be given to understanding the long and complex history of Native American / European interactions, North American social systems, interaction with and exploitation of the environment, technologies, and material culture. The theory and methods used by historical archaeologists will also be emphasized. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| ANTH P3400 - Modern Material Culture |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Modern Material Culture. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| ANTH P3500 - Archaeology Of Ancient Mexico |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Surveys the archaeology of ancient Mexico. Traces cultural developments of indigenous peoples from the Olmec to the Aztec, and examines issues, controversies, and current debates in Mexican archaeology. Topics include the transition to settled villages, initial complexity, craft production, urbanization, ideology, gender, religion, warfare, and the conquest. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| ANTH P3600 - Archaeology of North America |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to antiquity of the American Indian, principal culture areas, and field methods and techniques incident to recovery of archaeological data and materials. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the non-Western culture studies requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Richmond
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| ANTH P3610 - Prehistory Eastern North America |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of prehistoric cultural developments in eastern North America from man's first occupation of this area until European contact, set primarily within the framework of changing ecological adaptations. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| ANTH P3700 - Ancient Cultures of South America |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Evidence for successive migrations into the continent, the subsequent development of local cultures, and civilization in the central Andes. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the nonwestern culture studies requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| ANTH P3760 - Archaeology Of Death |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of mortuary behavior using archaeological and biological data. Methods of studying variation in mortuary practices. Identification of skeletal remains in laboratory setting. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| ANTH P3820 - Archaeological Research Design |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Construction and implementation of archaeological research design using a graphics-oriented computer simulation model. Computer displays sites, features and artifacts located by student using various methods of survey and excavation. Hypothesis testing, sampling strategies and budget constraints are emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| ANTH P3980 - The Rise Of Civilization |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This class coverts the historical period of the development of complex societies in several regions of the world. The material is approached from an anthropological perspective, with emphasis on archaeological methods of data collection and analysis. Early civilization in Iraq, India, Egypt, Rome, China, Peru, and Central America may be discussed.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| ANTH P3990 - Undergraduate Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive examination of selected topics in archaeology. Development of skills in analysis and criticism. Topic varies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
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| ANTH P4000 - Archaeological Methods and Techniques |
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Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Methods and mechanics of archaeology in field and laboratory. Use of survey instruments, drawing tools, and photographic equipment, treatment of recovered materials leading to printed report. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| ANTH P4020 - Archaeological Method And Theory |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This class is concerned with how archaeologists know what they know about the past. Methods of data collection are reviewed and theoretical interpretations are discussed. The focus of the course is on evaluation of archaeological research and explanation, with special emphasis on critical thinking. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| ANTH P4050 - Fieldwork in Archaeology |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Archaeological work directed toward field techniques: excavation and preservation of materials, surveying, photography, cataloguing. One credit hour per full week of fieldwork. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Richmond
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| ANTH P4210 - Moche Archaeology Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The Moche were an archaeological culture from the desert coast of Peru that provide an opportunity to explore anthropological theories regarding nascent state formation, priestly elites, feasting and ritual, human sacrifice, conflict and warfare, environmental degradation, and societal collapse. We will explore these topics using a comparative, four-field anthropological approach. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| ANTH P4300 - Archaeology Of Violence And Conflict |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this course we will examine how we identify violence and warfare in the past. Second, we will explore how violence has affected societies around the world and through time. We review multidisciplinary literature on violence and ask how and why violent acts and institutions of violence develop and persist. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| ARAB 10100 - Standard Arabic Level I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to Modern Standard Arabic: the writing and sound systems, and systematic presentation of basic grammatical structures. Reading, writing, and vocabulary building are emphasized throughout. The course also includes an introduction to Arab culture. No previous knowledge of Arabic required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| ARAB 10200 - Standard Arabic Level II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Further study of Modern Standard Arabic. Continued presentation of the basic structures of Arabic grammar and expansion of vocabulary. Reading and writing will be emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| ARAB 11100 - Elementary Standard Arabic Conversation I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Development of oral skills for self-expression. Guided practice in conversation to enhance communicative competence. Group discussions in Standard Arabic on practical topics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ARAB 11200 - Elementary Standard Arabic Conversation II |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Development of oral skills for self-expression. Guided practice in conversation to enhance communicative competence. Small group discussions in Standard Arabic on practical topics. May be taken concurrently with ARAB 10200. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ARAB 20100 - Standard Arabic Level III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to allow students to use the grammar and vocabulary acquired in the first two semesters in dealing with specific social situations. Continued improvement of conversational, reading, and writing abilities and expansion of vocabulary. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ARAB 20200 - Standard Arabic Level IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Increased mastery of the four language skills, with emphasis on reading and translation using materials from literary classical and modern Arabic. The course includes a study of some parts of the Koran. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ARAB 21100 - Elementary Standard Arabic Conversation II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Continuation of ARAB 11200. May be taken concurrently with ARAB 20100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ARAB 21200 - Elementary Standard Arabic Conversation IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Continuation of ARAB 21100. May be taken concurrently with ARAB 20200. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ARAB 22400 - Arabic level IV: Business Arabic |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Practical reading, writing, speaking, and listening comprehension skills directed toward use of Arabic for business purposes, including language needed for business negotiations, financial situations, travel, and memo writing. Aspects of cultural and social appropriateness needed in business situations in the Arab world. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Improved skills of speaking, writing, reading and listening in Arabic, with emphasis on business situations.
2. A clear understanding of the cultural appropriateness and cultural conventions that characterize Arabic business situations.
3. Knowledge of how to write basic business letters, memos, notices, and short reports in Arabic.
4. Skills that facilitate both business visits and pleasure travel to Arabic-speaking countries, such as making hotel reservations, using various types of transportation, dealing with customs, and filing official forms and other documents.
5. An expanded vocabulary including specific terminology used in trade, finance, banking, accounting, and business transactions.
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| ARAB 23000 - Arabic Literature In Translation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of Arabic literature, from the classical to the postmodern period. Emphasis on connections between literary works and contemporary life. Conducted in English; no knowledge of Arabic required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ARAB 23900 - Arab Women Writers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of Arab women writers from North Africa, the Middle East, and Arab communities in the western world. Emphasis on issues of sexuality, marriage, work, travel and immigration. Conducted in English; no knowledge of Arabic required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ARAB 28000 - Arabic Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A historical and literary survey of defining characteristics of Arabic culture from pre-Islamic times to the modern period. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ARAB 28100 - Introduction To Islamic Civilization And Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a survey of broad currents in the cultures, thought and civilization of the Muslim world. It emphasizes religious, intellectual and cultural trends, social and political structures and contemporary issues of Muslim societies within the current global cultural world. Taught in English. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Gained understanding of the basic teachings of Islam, sources of Islamic civilization and culture, its historical development and major aspects of Islamic thought and art through today.
2. Make connections and understand the interplay among religion, politics, culture and other forms of artistic expression.
3. Provide students with tools to undertake further research about the cultures of Islam and examine the impact Islam makes in lives of communities and contemporary problems facing Muslims in a globalized cultural world.
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| ARAB 30100 - Standard Arabic Level V |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continued development of Arabic speaking, listening, reading, and writing abilities, using materials dealing primarily with the everyday life and civilization of Arabic-speaking countries, from various sources (newspapers, poetry, chapters from the Qu'ran). Conducted primarily in Arabic. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ARAB 30200 - Standard Arabic Level VI |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Further work to develop speaking, listening, reading and composition skills in Standard Arabic, using materials dealing with ideas and events that have shaped the Arabic-speaking culture. Conducted primarily in Arabic. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ARAB 33400 - Maghrebi Literature And Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A view of the culture and society of the Maghreb (Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, and Libya). Emphasis on issues of race, politics, religion, and gender through literature and other forms of artistic expression, including film and music. Conducted in English; no knowledge of Arabic required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ARAB 58700 - Modern Arab Thought |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Prominent and critical issues in modern Arab thought. Identity, historical meaning, the Arab-Islamic cultural legacy, and tradition vs. modernity are engaged through Arab encounters with the West. Conducted in English; no knowledge of Arabic required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Successful completion of this course will enable students to: become familiar with the main lines of modern Arab thought; identify critical issues in modern Arab thought, in relation to questions of identity, cultural heritage, and religious faith; situate those issues within their historical, social, and political contexts; and appreciate the nuanced relationship between the Arab world and the West in terms of an often painful dialogue between tradition and modernity.
|
| ARET 11000 - Sketching For Technology And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focusing on problems of the built environment this course teaches students how to represent proportionately objects, planes, and volumes by developing observational skills and hand to eye coordination. Students are introduced to fundamental knowledge in composition, line work, lettering, contour drawing, sketching, shades, shadows, multiview drawings, sectional views, isometrics, and perspective drawing. Skills are developed in the use of multiple media including pen and ink, pencil, and monotone marker rendering. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Recognize and describe humanistic, historical, or artistic works or problems and patterns of the human experience.
2. Analyze the concepts and principles of various types of humanistic or artistic expression.
3. Create, interpret, or reinterpret artistic and/or humanistic works through performance or criticism.
4. Demonstrate an understanding of the creative process the vocabulary of the appropriate discipline.
5. Perform or create a work of personal expression and bring the work to fruition using applicable skills.
6. Articulate a reflective and critical evaluation of their own and other’s creative efforts using written and/or oral communication.
|
| ARET 11600 - Construction Drafting |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to drafting fundamentals with emphasis on architectural and civil engineering topics. Use of instruments, lettering, orthographic projection, auxiliary views, intersections, perspectives, and working drawings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ARET 11700 - Construction Drafting And CAD |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to drafting fundamentals with emphasis on architectural and civil engineering topics. Develop basic drafting skills, using orthographic projections, auxiliary views and perspectives. Students will be introduced to the fundamentals of CAD. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ARET 11800 - Architec Projections |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to projection, intersections, shadowing and shadows, and perspective drawing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ARET 12300 - Digital Graphics For Built Environment I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to graphic communication in the architectural, engineering, and interior design professions. CAD software and/or other digital media are utilized in the production of working drawings. Projects are adapted to the various professions. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ARET 12400 - Architectural Engineering Construction I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of residential building and the graphic and written documents required for its construction. CAD familiarity is required and a model may be required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ARET 16700 - Construction Systems and Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Properties of construction materials and components and an introduction of their use in various construction systems. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ARET 17000 - Materials and Systems Of Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the nature of the construction industry and a survey of the most commonly used construction materials with special emphasis on their properties characteristics, limitations and applications into different construction elements and systems such as foundations columns, trusses, arches, frames, etc. Guest speakers will discuss the nature and opportunities within the construction industry. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ARET 20400 - Building Regulations |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Building codes, ordinances, and regulations with emphasis on those for structures in Indiana. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ARET 21000 - Architecture And Urban Form |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of styles and influence of cultures which led thru history to the development of architecture and engineering from the earliest times to the early 20th century. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in reading, evaluating, analyzing, and using material collected from electronic sources (such as visual, electronic, library databases, internet sources, other official databases, federal government databases, reputable blogs, wikis, etc.).
2. Summarize or paraphrase an oral message to demonstrate comprehension.
3. Represent information/data in mathematical form as appropriate (e.g. with functions, equations, graphs, diagrams, tables, words, geometric figures).
4. Demonstrate knowledge of major concepts, theoretical perspectives, empirical patterns, or historical contexts within a given social or behavioral domain.
5. Identify examples of how social, behavioral, or historical knowledge informs and can shape personal, ethical civic, or global decisions and responsibilities.
6. Recognize and describe humanistic historical, or artistic works or problems and patterns of the human experience.
7. Analyze the concepts and principles of various types of humanistic or artistic expression
|
| ARET 22000 - Freehand Drawing II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Continuation of ARET 120. The study of color theory and the use of color techniques in watercolor, especially of architectural subjects. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ARET 22200 - Architectural Engineering Construction II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Preparation of preliminary and working drawings for an intermediate-sized commercial or institutional building. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| ARET 22300 - Digital Graphics For Built Environment II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced presentation of digital graphic communication for the Architectural, Engineering, and Construction (AEC) Industry. An accreditable program in Architectural Engineering Technology will prepare graduates with the technical and managerial skills necessary to enter careers in the planning, design, construction, operation or maintenance of the built environment. Graduates of associate degree programs typically have strengths in their knowledge of the building, testing, operation, and maintenance of building systems with the ability to produce and utilize basic construction documents and perform basic analysis and design of system components, whereas baccalaureate degree graduates are prepared to analyze and design systems, specify project methods and materials, perform cost estimates and analyses, and manage technical activities in support of architectural projects. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
|
| ARET 22400 - Architectural Construction III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of ARET 222 with emphasis on larger and more complex structures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ARET 22500 - Creative House Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Using fundamentals of space planning and pattern language students design their own home. A written justification for design decisions will be required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Master vocabulary and tools of residential design.
2. Master modeling and rendering software with analysis.
3. Create personal expression based on social and global issues.
|
| ARET 25000 - Architectural Construction I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of wood frame construction through a semester project requiring planning, preliminary and working drawings, and laboratory experience in wood framing. Field trips may be included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ARET 27600 - Construction Specifications And Contracts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analyze the content and organization of specifications and how they relate to working drawings during construction. A study of the various types of contract documents used for construction. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| ARET 27800 - Construction Regulations |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Building codes, ordinances and regulations, with emphasis on those for sturctures in Indiana. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ARET 28100 - Environmental Equipment for Buildings I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of basic environmental control parameters of heating, ventilating, air conditioning, plumbing, lighting, electricity, and their equipment (size and shapes) and the physiological effects on mankind. Emphasis placed on definitions, types of systems, and physical characteristics of equipment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ARET 28200 - Environmental Equipment for Buildings II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of ARET 28100 with emphasis on calculation and basic design for heating, ventilating and air conditioning, plumbing, lighting, electrical and other equipment, with laboratory practice applying concepts and calculations to a term project. Term project is the development of mechanical, plumbing, lighting, and power plans for a light commercial building or residence. Computer application. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ARET 28300 - Mechanical And Electrical Equipment For Buildings |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of basic environmental systems, including heating ventilating, air conditioning, plumbing, lighting and electrical equipment. A discussion of standard design parameters including an introduction to heat loss and heat gain calculations and circuit loads. Emphasis is placed on definitions, types of systems and the physical characteristics of equipment. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ARET 28500 - Electricity For Buildings |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of electrical and lighting requirements for residential and commercial buildings. Lighting fundamentals and design, electrical circuits, power requirements and wiring layout. Field trips to appropriate locations are part of the course. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ARET 29900 - Architectural Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. This is a variable course. Hours and subject matter to be arranged with staff. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
|
| ARET 30900 - History Of Architecture I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of styles and influence of cultures which led to the development of architecture from the earliest times to the present day. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ARET 31000 - Architecture And Urban Form In The Modern World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of architectural and engineering developments by site visitations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in reading, evaluating, analyzing, and using material collected from electronic sources (such as visual, electronic, library databases, internet sources, other official databases, federal government databases, reputable blogs, wikis, etc.).
2. Summarize or paraphrase an oral message to demonstrate comprehension.
3. Represent information/data in mathematical form as appropriate (e.g. with functions, equations, graphs, diagrams, tables, words, geometric figures).
4. Demonstrate knowledge of major concepts, theoretical perspectives, empirical patterns, or historical contexts within a given social or behavioral domain.
5. Identify examples of how social, behavioral, or historical knowledge informs and can shape personal, ethical civic, or global decisions and responsibilities.
6. Recognize and describe humanistic historical, or artistic works or problems and patterns of the human experience.
7. Analyze the concepts and principles of various types of humanistic or artistic expression
|
| ARET 31100 - History Of Architecture I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of architectural development of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ARET 31200 - History Of Architecture II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of western architecture of the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth centuries with an emphasis on the related structural, technological, socioeconomic and cultural influences that caused the architectural expressions of this periods. Not open to students with credit in HIST 316. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ARET 32000 - Applied Imagination |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of imaging and idea sketching as a means of graphic communication for the student with little or no experience in this area. A broad spectrum course with creative approaches in the study of basic drawing skills for perceptual ends, including composition and color with particular application to vocational useage. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ARET 32100 - Architectural Presentation Techniques I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Professional office oriented project presentation techniques. Can include model building, sketching, perspectives, and rendering with a variety of media. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ARET 32400 - Sustainable Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course approaches sustainable construction for buildings by examining the physiology required for human functions and considers how building components and systems affect human performance and well-being. Examines the construction process from site planning through construction process, to commissioning and occupancy. Develops understanding of Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) criteria. A model may be required. Computer application. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ARET 34100 - Architectural Engineering Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Planning, development and architectural delineation of small buildings. A model may be required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ARET 34200 - Architect Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of ARET 341 with emphasis on larger and more complex structures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ARET 35400 - Principles Of Land Use |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Comprehensive study of how land is used by human communities in the context of planners, architects, engineers, and constructors. Case studies will be examined in conjunction with problems and procedures in land use planning. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ARET 35500 - Techniques of Land Utilization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Lectures and projects in land analysis and planning techniques for use in assessment of land development. Subjects will cover building location, grading, drainage, roads, parking requirements, and utilities. Computer application. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ARET 36000 - Community Plan I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of planning methods, legislation, and agencies. Emphasis on collection of data about an existing community and the preparation of land-use maps from that data. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ARET 36200 - Community Plan II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of planning methods to the development of a new community or the redevelopment of an existing community. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ARET 38400 - Environmental Equipment for Buildings III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course covers the advanced study of plumbing, HVAC, lighting, electrical, and sprinkler and alarm systems for buildings. This course builds on material and calculations presented in ARET 281 and ARET 282. Students are required to present a research paper, written and orally. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ARET 42400 - Building Design Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design and preparation of a set of working drawings for a moderate size building. Emphasis will be primarily on architectural and structural drawings, building codes, and drafting techniques. Secondary emphasis will be placed on mechanical, electrical, and plumbing systems as they apply to the project. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ARET 42500 - Solar Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of building orientation, energy conservation principles, insulation, and a survey of passive and active solar energy systems. An investigation of building materials and systems of construction as they relate to passive solar energy systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ARET 43500 - Building Rehabilitation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. As a construction elective course in the program, this course is designed to provide upper level construction management and engineering technology students an opportunity to study all aspects of rehabilitating existing structures with primary emphasis on architectural, structural, mechanical, electrical, historic and financial considerations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ARET 46000 - Real Estate |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the legal aspects and practices of the real estate business, including appraising fiance, property management, and land development. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ARET 47600 - Construction Specifications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Expansion of the general principles of construction documents covered in ARET 276. Detailed study of purpose and intent of specifications. Preparation of various sections of specifications for specific jobs, including development of the general conditions, adaption of selected provisions from standard specifications, and delineation of special supplemental conditions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ARET 49000 - Senior Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Final project aimed at combining the skills and knowledge gained from the varoius areas of studies. The student will be expected to report graphically, orally, and in written form on a final project approved by the advisor. Presentation will be made to a representative board of the faculty determined by the advisor. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ARET 49900 - Architectural Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Hours, subject matter and credit to be arranged with staff. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
|
| ART 10500 - Introduction To Design Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of the field of interior design and architectural technology, development of skills, principles as applied to the interior environment, while also developing skills to hand-draft basic floor plans and elevations with architectural lettering, create professional quality sample boards and present them to a client/group. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Examine professional practice and history in design.
2. Apply and evaluate design elements and principles in interior applications.
3. Read and interpret two-dimensional floor plans and elevations.
4. Analyze and practice spatial organization within defined spaces.
5. Practice design concept development.
6. Create design solutions using the design process methodology.
7. Research finish and furnishing resources.
8. Apply scale measurement to architectural drawings.
9. Create design presentation boards.
10.Practice project record keeping and billing.
11.Practice interview, presentation, and critique skills.
|
| ART 11700 - Construction Drafting And CAD |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to drafting and CAD fundamentals, with emphasis on architectural and civil engineering topics. Development of basic drafting skills, using orthographic projections, auxiliary views, pictorial drawings, and drafting conventions. Students may not receive credit for both ART 116 and ART 117.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ART 12000 - Architectural Presentation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Techniques for production of presentation drawings for a client. Three-dimensional drafting techniques, including different perspective drawing techniques and other 3-D drafting methods are covered. The course also includes rendering; shades and shadows; and coloring using pen, pencil, and color markers. Focus is on learning presentation methods rather than learning rendering techniques.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ART 15000 - Architect Construction I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of wood frame construction through a semester project requiring planning and working drawings. Field trips may be included.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| ART 15500 - Residential Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Wood frame construction through a semester project requiring planning, preliminary, and working drawings. Outside lab assignments are required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ART 16200 - Building Materials And Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Properties and use of various building materials in modern construction.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ART 16500 - Building Systems and Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the structural systems used in structures. The study of properties, uses, and methods of incorporation of various construction materials in modern construction. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ART 17200 - Systems Of Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A survey of the organization of the construction industry and introduction to various building components and systems, with an emphasis on structural systems.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ART 20000 - Fundamentals Of CAD For Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to computer-aided design (CAD) hardware and software with emphasis on two-dimensional drawings and design. Assignments focus on practical architectural and civil engineering applications for construction.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ART 21000 - History Of Architecture I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of styles and influence of cultures which led to the development of architecture and engineering from the earliest times to the early 20th century. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
|
| ART 22200 - Commercial Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Preparation of preliminary and working drawings for an intermediate-size commercial or institutional building.
. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ART 22400 - Architect Construction III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of ART 222 with emphasis on larger and more complex structures. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ART 28400 - Mechanical Systems For Buildings |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Plumbing, heating, ventilation, air-conditioning and other mechanical systems for buildings, including calculations and design for such systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ART 28500 - Electrical Systems For Buildings |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A survey of electrical and lighting system requirements for residential and commercial buildings. Lighting fundamentals and design, electric circuits, power requirements, and wiring layout used for building construction systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ART 28900 - Plans And Specifications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will cover reading and interpretation of contact documents for construction. Emphasis will be on plans and specifications for a variety of structures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the construction process.
2. Understand the Project Manual concepts and the separate components.
3. Understand how to read the drawings and specifications.
4. Understand the importance of MSDS requirements.
5. Have a better knowledge of math calculations and unit conversions.
6. Learn how to read and use an engineer’s scale.
|
| ART 29900 - Architectectural Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Hours and subject matter to be arranged with staff. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
|
| ART 35000 - Energy Conservation In Buildings |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Heat loss and heat gain calculations in buildings using computers. Principles of energy-conserving building construction and insulation methods as to details and materials. Life-cycle costing of construction alternatives. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ART 35503 - International Design Charrette |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 - 4.00. Introduction to project-management tools and techniques; practical use of the tools and techniques to plan, analyze, lead and monitor a project in collaborative international design. Course content is integrated into a collaborative-design project offered in connection with partner universities in Thailand. Other sections of this course may be offered in other locations where an approved study-abroad program is active. Students participating in domestic service-learning projects may be eligible. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Plan, conduct, and evaluate an approved and discipline-specific project using specific project-management techniques.
2. Explore the role of leadership in effective project management.
3. Work productively in a project team.
|
| ART 47600 - Writing Construction Documents |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Purpose and intent of specifications for specific jobs, including developemnt of the general conditions, adaptation of selected provisions from standard specifications, and delineation of special supplemental conditions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ART 47700 - Senior Project Proposal |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course prepares the student for their capstone senior project. The focus is upon project, proposal creation, with attention being given to the development of the project's objectives, goals, concept statement, required resources as well as precedents, best practices and inspirations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Construct a project proposal that describes a project's objectives, goals, concept, required resources as well as precedents, best practices, and inspirations that led to the design proposal.
2. Prepare written and graphic documentation for a self-directed project.
3. Synthesize and apply information and data from a variety of sources to propose a concept for a community, national, or global design problem.
|
| ART 47800 - Senior Project (Delivery) |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The focus of this course is upon the development of the student's senior project. Building upon the project, proposal developed in the previous term, the student works on the preliminary design, design development, documentation and presentation of a building project. This project must showcase the student's expertise in both building technology and computer graphics. Projects can be renovation/retrofit based or new construction of mid-sized buildings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Complete architectural working drawings (partial contract documents) for their project using BIM software.
2. Demonstrate improved BIM and computer graphic skills.
3. Prepare written and graphic documentation for a self-directed project.
4. Demonstrate an understanding of best practices in architectural graphic presentation.
5. Demonstrate an understanding of the building science and construction practices required to build their project.
6. Synthesize and apply information and data from a variety of sources to propose a solution or solutions to a community, national, or global problem.
|
| ART 49000 - Senior Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Final project aimed at combining the skills and knowledge gained from the various areas of study. The student will be expected to report graphically, orally, and in written form on a final project approved by the advisor. Presentation will be to a representative board of the faculty determined by the advisor. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ART 49900 - Architectural Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AS 42900 - Senior Engineering Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. See ENGR 460-Senior Engineering Design II. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ASAM 24000 - Introduction To Asian American Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A general introduction to Asian American history and culture, with a focus on the diverse and multifaceted experiences of peoples of Asian descent in America and their contributions to U.S. culture and society. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ASAM 34000 - Contemporary Issues In Asian American Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overviews various issues in contemporary Asian American Studies through theoretical and literary readings combined with examinations of popular media. Topics examine the multiple intersections of race, ethnicity, class, gender, and sexuality. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ASAM 34200 - Special Topics In Asian American Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will focus on specific issues and themes in Asian American Studies. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. The goal of this course is the extended exploration of specific topics in Asian American Studies.
2. The students are expected to acquire knowledge and critical skills pertinent to the examination of Asian American issues, texts and other cultural materials.
|
| ASCS Q2940 - Basic Career Development |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course includes three steps for making informed career decisions; Self-definition: Explore your interests, values, skills, and personality as they relate to careers and occupational environments. Structural decision-making: Choose a potential major or career using a systematic method. Research in depth: Discover what you don’t know about majors and careers and familiarize yourself with campus and community resources. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ASIA B1010 - Introduction To Asian Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces the geographic, historic, anthropologic, economic, and political bases for understanding southern and eastern Asia, from Pakistan to the Philippines, from Indonesia to Japan, giving sufficient background to understand contemporary realities and their origins. Colonial, post-colonial, and other time periods are covered.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ASIA B1020 - Asian Traditions And Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of religious beliefs, philosophies, and living traditions of the Asians and their expression in art, music, drama, literature and architecture.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ASL 10100 - American Sign Language I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A basic introduction to American Sign Language. This course introduces students to the tools for mastering the grammar at a basic expressive and receptive level. Introduction to cultural and historical aspects of ASL and the deaf community. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ASL 10200 - American Sign Language II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of ASL 10100. Further study of the language with more emphasis on receptive and expressive conversational skills. Includes readings of research studies relevant to lectures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ASL 20100 - American Sign Language III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A more advanced study of American Sign Language. Further development of receptive and expressive skills using more advanced material. Continued emphasis on cultural and historical aspects in relation to the evolution of the language and language usage. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ASL 20200 - American Sign Language IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of ASL 20100. Includes some introduction to linguistic structure, especially classifiers, temporal sequencing and aspect, and conversational regulators. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ASL 23000 - ASL In Conversaion And Narrative |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of expressive skills in ASL. Guided practice in conversation designed to enhance communicative competence. Introduction to a variety of artistic uses of ASL narrative, poetry and theatre. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ASL 28000 - American Deaf Community: Language, Culture, And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The linguistic, cultural, and societal context of the deaf community in America. Both historical and contemporary aspects of deaf identity will be included, with an emphasis on the central role that ASL plays in the lives of deaf individuals. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ASL 39000 - Undergraduate Research In American Sign Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to allow for the investigation of topics related to the linguistic structure of ASL, populations of ASL language learners, sub-populations of the Deaf Community at the undergraduate level. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| ASL A1170 - Beginning American Sign Language I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory language sequence of courses designed for students with no prior exposure to American Sign Language. Emphasis on developing basic conversational skills as well as awareness of Deaf culture. Credit not given for A117-A118-A119 and A131-A132.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ASL A1180 - Beginning American Sign Language II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory language sequence of courses designed for students with no prior exposure to American Sign Language. Emphasis on developing basic conversational skills as well as awareness of Deaf culture. Credit not given for A117-A118-A119 and A131-A132.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ASL A1190 - Beginning American Sign Language III |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introductory language sequence of courses designed for students with no prior exposure to American Sign Language. Emphasis on developing basic conversational skills as well as awareness of Deaf culture. Credit not given for A117-A118-A119 and A131-A132.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ASL A1310 - First Year American Sign Language I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Intensive introductory language sequence of courses. Recommended for students with prior experience in American Sign Language or for prospective majors in Interpreting. Emphasis on developing basic conversational skills as well as awareness of Deaf culture. Credit not given for ASL A1170, ASL A1180, ASL A1190, and ASL A1310, ASL A1320. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ASL A1320 - First Year American Sign Language II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Continuation of introductory ASL language course. Emphasis on receptive and expressive ASL skills as well as awareness of American Deaf Culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ASL A2110 - Second Year American Sign Language I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. A continuation of training in ASL conversational skills and American Deaf culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Manage more complex interactions using expanded ASL vocabulary and grammar.
2. Continue to apply language learning skills outside the language classroom.
3. Act with respect, knowledge and understanding of Deaf people and ASL with an appreciation for their linguistic and cultural diversity.
4. Understand more complex ASL grammatical rules, sign and sentence structure and sign and sentence meaning.
5. Attend Deaf Community events and workshops.
|
| ASL A2120 - Second Year American Sign Language II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. A continuation of training in ASL conversational skills and American Deaf culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Manage more complex interactions using expanded ASL vocabulary and grammar.
2. Continue to apply language learning skills outside the language classroom.
3. Act with respect, knowledge and understanding of Deaf people and ASL with an appreciation for their linguistic and cultural diversity.
4. Understand more complex ASL grammatical rules, sign and sentence structure and sign and sentence meaning.
5. Attend Deaf Community events and workshops.
|
| ASL A2150 - Advanced Fingerspelling And Numbering Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an advanced class in fingerspelling, ASL's unique number systems and other advanced grammatical features. Emphasis is on expressive and receptive clarity and accuracy through intensive practice in comprehension and production. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ASL A2190 - History And Culture Of The American Deaf Commnity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for students who have completed ASL 211 or a Sign Language Proficiency Interview Placement since this course will be taught in ASL only. During the course students will be introduced to American Deaf culture and components of the American Deaf Community including history, norms, rules of social interactions, values, traditions, and dynamics during the 19th and 20th centuries. Educational, social, and political factors unique to the Deaf community will be explored, as well as community organizations, impact of technology, and emerging issues/trends. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ASL A3210 - Linguistics Of American Sign Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will learn to analyze ASL linguistically, exploring the building blocks of ASL: phonemic analysis, phonology, morphology, syntax, and semantics. The application of these concepts to a visual language will be the focus of the course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ASL I3010 - Introduction To Interpreting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides an overview of the field of ASL/English interpreting. Emphasis is on exploring a progression of philosophical frames in the development of the profession; exploring models of the interpreting process and identifying requisite responsibilities, skills, and aptitudes for interpreters. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| ASL I3030 - Interpreter Ethics and Responsibilities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on ethical descision-making practices in the interpreting profession. Codes of ethical conduct from other professions will be analyzed and compared to codes within the interpreting profession. Role playing will be used to allow students to learn about their own ethics and morals with regard to interpreting. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| ASL I3630 - Interpreting Community Texts: Consecutive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is the second interpreting course that prepares students for the analytical skills needed to interpret. In this course, students continue their practice with interlingual mapping exercises. The greatest change is from an unlimited to a limited time for preparation and production of texts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| ASL L3420 - Discourse Analysis: American Sign Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the analysis of language use in different genres ASL so that interpreting students become explicitly aware of the feature of everyday language interviews, and other types of speech genres while reading and discussing theoretical notions underlying language use in ASL. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| ASM 10400 - Introduction To Agricultural Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic principles of selection and operation of agricultural production equipment, including farm tractors and machines and crop-processing equipment. Planning considerations for crop storage and animal production systems and devices for water conservation and erosion control. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ASM 10500 - Agricultural Systems Computations And Communication |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Use of computers to solve problems related to agricultural technology and businesses. Spreadsheets, word processors, and presentation software will be the focus. Emphasis will be on logical problem solving and data presentation using advanced features of office software. A 10000-level number is being used because it is intended as a first-year course. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ASM 20100 - Construction And Maintenance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental principles in the selection and use of tools for the construction and maintenance of agricultural and related facilities, equipment, and machines. Areas covered include small engines, concrete and masonry, wood, plumbing, electricity, and metal. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ASM 21100 - Technical Graphic Communications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to graphic communication methods using traditional techniques and emphasizing modern computer-based techniques. Topics covered include: free-hand sketching, lettering, and dimensioning; selection of data presentation methods; and plan interpretation and cost calculations. A majority of assignments will include use of commercially available computer-aided drawing packages. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ASM 21500 - Surveying |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to plane surveying. Instruction and practice in the use of surveying instruments for distance measurement, leveling, angle measurement, direction determination, traversing, and mapping. Office procedures for surveying data reduction. Practical problems and field exercises of the type encountered by the landscape architect and forester. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ASM 22100 - Career Opportunities Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An introductory course to acquaint students with career and employment opportunities in the field of agricultural systems management. Guest speakers are invited to share their experiences and philosophies with the students. Special emphasis is given to improving communication skills. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ASM 22200 - Crop Production Equipment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of machine performance, capacity, machinery components, and operation. Study of tractors, trucks, utility vehicles, and combines. Equipment topics include chemical application, tillage tools, planters and seeders, hay and forage harvesters, electronic monitors and controllers. Computer-based analysis of equipment sizing and systems selection. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ASM 24500 - Materials Handling And Processing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of materials handling and processing. Physical properties and characteristics of food, fiber, and feed materials as related to harvesting, handling, processing, and storage. Processing of agricultural materials including drying, preservation, size reduction (e.g. grinding, crushing, shredding), mixing and blending, refrigeration, extrusion, and pelleting. Conveying and transport systems with consideration of their effects on damage and quality. The course elements are tied together by a treatment of scheduling and coordination of biologically based systems, which involve production, handling, quality control, and processing. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ASM 31100 - Advanced Technical Graphics Communications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Symbol library creation and manipulation, computer-aided drawing (CAD) data-base extraction for report generation, introduction to Lisp programming and drawing automation, three-dimensional wire frame modeling, surface rendering, and introduction to solid modeling. Assignments will include use of commercially available CAD packages. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ASM 32200 - Technology For Precision Agriculture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Technology and applications of electronics for precision agriculture. Characteristics of personal computer hardware, electronic sensors, monitors, machine controllers, environmental monitors, and global positioning systems. Production management information systems; processing and marketing information systems; and yield mapping, geographic information system data handling, and software options. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ASM 33300 - Facilities Planning And Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of facility (system) planning and management involving buildings, equipment, and materials handling and flow. Student teams select a case firm (problem) with instructor approval. Principles learned week by week are applied to the development of an overall plan for the complex, over the course of the semester. Case examples can include firms handling supplies, seeds, grains, feeds, chemicals, wastes, and farm produce, as well as farming operations producing grain, forage, and/or livestock products. Students will learn to use AutoCAD to develop drawings, without prior computer drafting experience. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ASM 33600 - Environmental Systems Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of environmental systems with special emphasis on non-urban and agribusiness needs. Technological and sociological solutions to environmental problems. Computer-based tools are used to analyze global environmental issues, chemical use and management, waste disposal and management, water and air quality, soil and water conservation, sustainable agriculture, regulatory and policy issues. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ASM 34500 - Power Units And Power Trains |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to power generation and transfer in mechanical and fluid power systems. Internal combustion engines, fuels, and cycles are introduced. Clutches, mechanical transmissions, automatic transmissions, hydrostatic transmissions, and final drives are discussed. Principles of hydraulics, fluids, cylinders, pumps, motors, valves, hoses, filters, reservoirs, and accumulators are studied. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ASM 35000 - Safety In Agriculture |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An overview of the agricultural safety movement in the United States with consideration given to the specific human environmental and technological factors influencing farm-related accidents. Special emphasis is given to reduction of unnecessary risks in agricultural production. Course meets during weeks 1-8. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ASM 39000 - Agricultural Systems Management Co-Op |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Supervised professional experiences in agricultural systems management. Programs must be preplanned and conducted under the direction of the departmental coordinator with the cooperation of an employer. Students must submit a summary report. Consent of the departmental cooperative professional program coordinator required. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ASM 40000 - Agricultural Systems Management Study Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. Utilized to record credits earned through participation in Purdue study abroad programs with cooperating foreign universities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
|
| ASM 42000 - Electric Power And Controls |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals and application of electric power for agricultural facilities; safe wiring principles; operation and performance characteristics of electric motors; applications of control systems that include monitors, sensors, relays, and programmable logic controllers. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ASM 42100 - Senior Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Professional attitudes and ethics, resume preparation and interview procedures, business correspondence, meetings, and career planning. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Have shown you can provide and receive constructive criticism.
2. Have a respectable resume and cover letter.
3. Apply differing theories and views regarding ethics and be able to identify applications of them.
4. Distinguish between good and poor meeting structure and involvement.
5. Understand principles of developing a long term career plan.
6. Have demonstrated good oral communication skills.
7. Have demonstrated high quality written communication ability.
8. Understand the importance of remaining current and have practice at doing so.
9. Be ready to graduate as a professional (of course you must meet other curricular requirements).
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| ASM 44100 - Methods Of Teaching Agricultural Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Emphasis on facilities, shop layout, organization, course planning, and demonstrations. Course meets during weeks 1-6. For students seeking certification as teachers of agriculture. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ASM 49000 - Special Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Assignment by consent of instructor in the field of selected study. Laboratory, field, and library studies and reports on special problems related to agricultural systems management not covered in regular coursework. A written report and oral presentation of final results is required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| ASM 49100 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Designed for specialized topic areas for which there is no specific course, but have enough student interest to justify formalized teaching of an undergraduate-level course. The course may be repeated by a student as long as the topic being taught is not repeated. The specific topic that is offered will be indicated on the student's record. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 4 credits
|
| ASM 49400 - Project Planning And Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Discussion of topics relevant to project planning and execution in industry, including technical communication, budgeting, team management, intellectual property, and timelines. Student teams will develop project proposal to address contemporary issues in agricultural systems management. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify agricultural systems problems, locate relevant information, develop and analyze possible alternatives, and formulate and implement solutions.
2. Recognize and define agricultural systems problems and the impact of their proposed technological solutions in an international and societal context.
3. Demonstrate appropriate listening, speaking, writing, presentation, and interpersonal skills needed to interact and communicate effectively.
4. Function with, and contribute effectively to, multi-disciplinary teams.
5. Understand professional and ethical responsibilities and put them into practice.
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| ASM 49500 - Agricultural Systems Management Capstone Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Planning, organization, and analysis of individual or team projects related to contemporary issues in agricultural systems management. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand and apply the basic principles of mathematics, science, technology, management, and economics to agricultural systems.
2. Identify agricultural systems problems, locate relevant information, develop and analyze possible alternatives, and formulate and implement solutions.
3. Effectively use economic principles, scientific technologies, techniques, and skills necessary to manage agricultural systems.
4. Recognize and define agricultural systems problems and the impact of their proposed technological solutions in an international and societal context.
5. Understand and participate in performance evaluations, collect, analyze and interpret data, and communicate the results.
6. Demonstrate appropriate listening, speaking, writing, presentation, and interpersonal skills needed to interact and communicate effectively.
7. Function with, and contribute effectively to, multi-disciplinary teams.
8. Understand professional and ethical responsibilities and put them into practice.
|
| ASM 49800 - Directed Experience In Teaching Mechanized Agriculture |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course is designed primarily for students majoring in agricultural education, extension education, agricultural systems management, and agricultural engineering. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ASM 49900 - Thesis Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Thesis Research. Admission to honors program. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| ASM 51000 - Agrosecurity-Emergency Management For Agricultural Production Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Prepares individuals for management and loss control positions in agricultural production, agribusiness operations, and emergency management agencies. Addresses prevention, preparation, mitigation, response, and recovery from disasters such as fires, explosions, entrapments, tornadoes, floods, winter storms, earthquakes, vandalism, chemical releases, and bio-terrorism. Students complete a community service learning activity, in which they assist a farm or agribusiness manager in developing formal emergency preparedness plans. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ASM 53000 - Power And Machinery Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Management and selection of farm machines and power units with emphasis on cost analysis and evaluation of new machines and practices. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ASM 54000 - Geographic Information System Application |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of GIS analysis applied to environmental, agricultural, and engineering-related problems. Topics include data sources, spatial analysis; projections; creating data and metadata, and conceptualizing and solving spatial problems using GIS. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ASM 55000 - Grain Drying And Storage |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Crop drying and storage principles including equilibrium moisture, psychrometrics, and drying rates. Modern drying and conditioning techniques including dryeration, in-bin counterflow drying, and combination drying. Estimating fixed and variable drying costs, aeration of stored grain, and maintenance of grain quality. Offered in even-numbered years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ASM 59000 - Special Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Assignment by consent of the instructor in the field of selected study. Laboratory, field, and library studies and reports on special problems related to agricultural systems management not covered in regular coursework. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ASM 59100 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Primarily designed for specialized topic areas in agricultural systems management for which there is no specific course, workshop, or individual study plan, but having enough student interest to justify the formalized teaching of a course. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Travel Time
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ASM 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Ag & Biological Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AST A1000 - The Solar System |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Celestial sphere, measurement of time, earth as a planet, moon, eclipses, planets and their satellites, comets, meteors, theories on origin of solar system. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| AST A1020 - Gravity The Great Attactor |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Gravity The Great Attactor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AST A1030 - Search For Life The Universe |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The search for life and life-friendly environments in the universe is an interdisciplinary focus of modern science. This course explores the origin, nature, and history of life on Earth, prospects for life in our own and other planetary systems, extrasolar planet detection, and the possibility of other technological civilizations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AST A1050 - Stars And Galaxies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Principles of physics as applied to astronomy, sun as a star, physical properties of stars, stellar motions and distributions, double stars, variable stars, star clusters, nebulae, Milky Way System, other galaxies, expanding universe. Typically offered Summer Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| AST A1100 - Introduction To Astronomy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Earth as a planet, motions and physical properties of planets, satellites, and comets. The Sun. Properties of stars. Stellar systems. Extragalactic objects. The nature of the observable universe. Credit not given for both A1000 and A1100 or for both A1050 and A1100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| AST A1150 - Birth and Death of the Universe |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to Cosmology traces the ideas describing the origin and evolution of the Universe from ancient geocentric cosmologies to the Big Bang cosmology. A115 does not count toward the astronomy or astrophysics major. A115 will not be counted with A110. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| AST A1300 - Short Courses In Astronomy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Five-week short courses on a variety of topics in astronomy. Examples of topics include: The Big Bang, Black Holes, Astronomy From Your Back Yard, How to See Stars, The Birth and Death of Our Sun. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| AST A1500 - Introductory Astronomy Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The observation of selected celestial objects using astronomical binoculars and telescopes. Astronomical data will be gathered and plotted by the student using auxiliary equipment installed on the telescopes. (This course may not be used to fulfill the B.A. degree distribution requirement of a laboratory science.) Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| AST A1510 - Introductory Astronomy Research Lab |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course provides hands-on photoelectric photometry conducted at the IUS observatory. The students work in teams at night to gather and process data that may result in publications. Additional projects include Charge-Coupled Device imaging and computer access sessions with the forty-five foot radio telescope of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-New Albany
|
| AST A2000 - Introduction To Cosmology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Historical and philosophical development of our physical picture of the Universe, evolution of galaxies, origin of the elements, cosmic distance scale, development of large scale structure, and the earliest stages of the Big Bang. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| AST A2050 - Quasars, Pulsars And Black Holes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course for both non science majors who have an interest in Astronomy. Explores the most interesting objects in the universe. Surveys stars of all types. Explores the birth, life, and death of stars. Discussion of how relativity affects certain astronomical objects and how relatively may impact the future of human space exploration. Also includes the H-R diagram, clusters of stars, and exploration of our own sun. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| AST A3900 - Reading Course |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Directed and in-depth study in certain aspects of astronomy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AST N1900 - Worlds Outside Our Own |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this course we will look at planetary bodies, including Earth. Although we will note systematic similarities, we will focus on the unusual features that make them "worlds" in their own right. Major topics will include the following: historical background and observing the night sky; a quantitative description of planetary motion; light and radiation; and planetary bodies (planets, their moons, asteroids and comets). We will also discuss social and political issues, such as the priority we should place on exploring the Solar System considering competing demands for our limited resources. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ASTR 26300 - Descriptive Astronomy: The Solar System |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A descriptive, nonmathematical course in astronomy intended for non-physics majors. Topics include: description of the sky; historical development of astronomy; motion of the sun and the moon; solar and lunar eclipses; the seasons and the calendar; the sun and the planetary system; comets, meteoroids, and asteroids. Includes required observing sessions. Not available to students with credit in ASTR 36300. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| ASTR 26400 - Descriptive Astronomy: Stars And Galaxies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A descriptive, nonmathematical course in astronomy intended for non-physics majors. Topics include: properties of stars; stellar birth and death; the Hertzsprung-Russel diagram; main sequence stars; binary systems; stellar clusters; red giants and white dwarfs, nova and supernova; neutron stars and black holes; galaxies and the cosmological red shift. Includes required observing sessions. Not available to students with credit in ASTR 36400. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| ASTR 26500 - Descriptive Astronomy: Astronomical Origins |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is largely non-mathematical course in astronomy intended for non-science majors. Topics will include ancient ideas about the origin of the Universe, cosmology, formation of Solar Systems, and the formation and evolution of life elsewhere in the Universe. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| ASTR 36200 - Exoplanetary Environments |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course intended for physics or engineering majors. Recent observations from astronomical satellites and spacecraft will be used to discuss the solar system and the physical processes responsible for its formation and evolution. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand the physics of the gravitational, thermal and radioactive decay processes shaping the diverse collection of bodies within the influence of the sun.
2. Students will appreciate how knowledge of exoplanatory systems is developed by analogy with the Solar System.
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| ASTR 36300 - The Solar System |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is intended for students in science or engineering. The components of the course consist of an overview of solar system objects and an overview of the physical processes that control the evolution of solar system objects since formation. The overview of solar system includes observations of the Sun, planets, asteroids and Kuiper-belt objects, comets, and interplanetary dust. Specific processes that are discussed include hydrostatic equilibrium, orbital dynamics, radioactive decay, and heat flow. The role of these processes in shaping planetary surfaces and atmosphere is explored. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The students will acquire extensive knowledge on the solar system, including its formation and evolution.
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| ASTR 36400 - Stars And Galaxies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is intended for students in Science or Engineering. This is the second of a two-semester introductory sequence on astronomy and astrophysics, although it is designed to be a standalone course. It is intended mainly for Science and Engineering majors who are comfortable with calculus-based contents. The course provides an overview on the formation and evolution of stars, galaxies, and clusters of galaxies. Selected topics that are covered in more detail include stellar structure and atmosphere, properties of black holes, neutron stars, and white dwarfs, galactic dynamics, and dark matter in galaxies and clusters of galaxies. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The students will acquire extensive knowledge on the properties of stars and galaxies.
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| ASTR 37000 - Cosmology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intended for science and engineering majors. Basic physics and math knowledge will be assumed. The picture of how the Universe came to be and how it has evolved has recently come into sharp focus. This progress is the result of improved observational techniques that have resulted in high resolution images of very distant galaxies, a more accurate mapping of the Large Scale Structure of the Universe or the high resolution picture of the young universe provided by Cosmic Microwave Background observations. We will present a historical perspective of how ideas and data have shaped Cosmology through the centuries. In addition, we will review the theoretical models that are in agreement with the current observations. Our goal will be to provide the students with a broad overview of the current research in Cosmology with an eye toward stimulating the students curiosity about the many questions still awaiting answers in this field. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will acquire extensive knowledge and a broad overview of Cosmology, the study of how the Universe came to be and how it has evolved.
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| ASTR 40100 - Introduction To Astrophysics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an overview of astrophysics with an emphasis on how physics is applied to astronomy. It will explore the fundamental physical concepts and apply basic principles such as Newton's laws of motion, Newtonian gravitation and orbital mechanics, electromagnetic waves and behavior, kinetic theory of gases, special and general relativity, and quantum mechanics to astronomical systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to describe the physics of orbits.
2. Students will be able to describe electromagnetic radiation for stars.
3. Students will be able to describe stellar spectra and our interpretation of such.
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| ASTR 45100 - Galaxies And Large Scale Structure |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course covers basic observed properties and models of galactic structure, dynamics of stars, physics of the interstellar medium and intergalactic medium, formation of galaxies, properties of clusters of galaxies, and dark matter. This is a calculus-based course. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. To further develop understanding of newtonian gravitation, special and general relativity, electromagnetism, quantum and statistical mechanics, and thermodynamics through their application to galaxy formation and cosmology.
2. To develop skill in computational physics.
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| ASTR 47100 - Stellar Evolution |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. We will discuss observations related to stellar astrophysics. These will include formation of galaxies and stars; evolution of stars; cosmology; cosmic rays, their origin and acceleration; radio astronomy, radio galaxies; the H-21 cm line; gravitational radiation; stellar X-rays and gamma rays. This is a calculus-based course. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. To further develop understanding of Newtonian gravitation, special and general relativity, electromagnetism, quantum and statistical mechanics, and thermodynamics through their application in astrophysics.
2. To develop skill in computational physics.
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| ASTR 56000 - Stellar Evolution |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (PHYS 56000) Observational basis of astrophysics; formation of galaxies and stars; evolution of stars; white dwarfs, supernovae and neutron stars, pulsars, quasars, black holes; cosmic rays, their origin and acceleration; radio astronomy, radio galaxies; the H-21 cm line and the 3mK blackbody radiation; gravitational radiation; X-ray and g-ray astronomy; cosmology; space physics, magnetosphere, and solar wind. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ASTR 56100 - Galaxies And Large Scale Structure |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (PHYS 56100) Covers basic observed properties and models of galactic structure, dynamics of stars, physics of interstellar medium, formation of galaxies, properties of clusters of galaxies, and dark matter. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ASTR 56200 - Introduction To High Energy Astrophysics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (PHYS 56200) An overview of important physical processes in a variety of astronomical settings and of the experimental techniques employed in the field of high energy astrophysics. Covered in more detail are individual systems that include black holes, neutron stars, white dwarfs, supernova remnants, active galactic nuclei, clusters of galaxies, gamma-ray bursts, and cosmic rays, with special emphasis on several research frontiers. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ASTR 56300 - Astroparticle Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (PHYS 56300) An overview of an emerging research frontier in modern physics that lies at the interface of particle physics and astrophysics. Emphasis is on topics that are particularly relevant to both fields, including cosmology, cosmic ray physics, very-high-energy gamma ray astrophysics, neutrino astrophysics, and gravitational wave physics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ASTR B1000 - Introductory Astronomy: A Study Of The Solar System And Beyond |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the physical nature of objects in the universe and methods used by astronomers to understand them. Topics selected from basic laws of nature, the solar system, stars, nebulae, galaxies, and cosmology. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| AT 10000 - Introduction To Aviation Technology |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. An introduction to the Department of Aviation Technology and its curricula as well as an overview of the aviation industry and associated careers. Aviation safety practices and human factors issues are discussed. An overview of aviation regulations and the regulatory process is included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
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| AT 10100 - Gateway To Aviation Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to Aviation Technology as well as fundamentals of the aviation industry. Course topics include basic aircraft science, aircraft nomenclature, theory of flight, and aviation regulations and the regulatory process. Aviation safety practices and human factors issues are discussed as well as the subject areas and information needed to operate as a private pilot in the aviation environment. As part of this course, every student will gain flight experience in a turbine powered aircraft. A special fee is charged for this experience. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the aeronautical subject areas required by the Federal Aviation Administration as a private pilot
2. Demonstrate familiarity with the terminology associated with aerodynamics, transonic and supersonic aircraft, and the effect of supersonic motion on air.
3. Demonstrate familiarity with the various documents common to aviation operations, the priviledges and limitations of certified airmen and the record keeping requirements for aircraft flight
planning, operations and maintenance.
4. Demonstrate familiarity with the definitions, weighing conditions, TCDS specifications, and calculations in performing weight and ablance calculations on aircraft.
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| AT 10200 - Aviation Business |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A discussion of the financial structure and operation of the aviation industry including aircraft and aerospace design parameters, as well as aviation financial and industrial processes. The course will cover material relevant to the overall structure of the aviation industry including history, current status of aerospace manufacturers, commercial airlines, and general aviation as well as governmental aviation agencies and international aviation. Commercialization of space and current issues in aviation will also be covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the historical background of the numerous aspects of the air transportation industry.
2. Explain the general concepts of the national and international aviation legal system.
3. Describe the overall design and operation concepts of airports.
4. Understand the concepts utilized in air traffic control.
5. Describe the international aviation weather observation and dessemination system.
6. Understand the role of aviation as it relates to environmental problems.
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| AT 10300 - Aerospace Vehicle Propulsion And Tracking Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to propulsion systems used in aerospace vehicles. The student will learn terminology, component parts, and operational theory of propulsion systems. Course topics covered are reciprocating and turbine engine operation theory as well as rocket propulsion systems. including electrical, fuel, fire, ignition and lubrication. Operational and regulatory fuel requirements are discussed. Emerging technologies and environmental practices will be explored. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate familiarity with the theory, principles of operation, types of aeronautical propulsion systems.
2. Understand various manufacturer and FAA publications corncerning maintenance of aircraft powerplants and acccessories.
3. Understand safety issues associated with fuels, energy, and their interaction with environmental polices.
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| AT 10500 - Basic Aircraft Electrical Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of aircraft DC electrical circuits, Ohm's Law, Kirchoff's Law, series and parallel circuits, magnetism, electromagnetism, DC power systems along with aircraft schematics and aircraft wiring practices. Laboratory experiments cover installation of aircraft electrical systems along with basic system analysis. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
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| AT 10600 - Basic Aircraft Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to federal regulatory systems and associated publications. Includes aircraft nomenclature, theory of flight, and fundamentals of the aviation industry. Introduces weight and balance procedures. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
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| AT 10800 - Aircraft Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of the materials and their properties utilized in aircraft structures and powerplants. Laboratory content will consist of basic processes involved in the design, testing, and utilization of such materials. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
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| AT 12100 - Aircraft Powerplants For Flight Crews |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental principles of aircraft powerplants and accessories, including theory of operation. Topics include fuel and related systems, lubrication, carburetion, induction, ignition, propellers, and technical publications. Emphasizes reciprocating engines, with an introduction to gas turbine propulsion. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AT 14400 - Private Pilot Lectures |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of the subject areas and information needed to operate as a private pilot in the aviation environment. The FAA private pilot written exam will be offered to those who qualify. Typically offered Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
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| AT 14500 - Private Pilot Flight |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. In this course, the student will receive the necessary dual flight instruction and solo flight time to qualify for the FAA Private Pilot Certificate. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in take-offs and landings.
2. Demonstrate proficiency in flight at minimum controllable airspeed including stalls and recoveries.
3. Demonstrate proficiency in planning and execution of cross-country flights using various means of navigation.
4. Demonstrate proficiency in night operations and simulated instrument flight.
5. Demonstrate proficiency in abnormal and emergency procedures.
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| AT 14502 - Private Pilot Flight Under Federal Aviation Regulations Part 141 |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. In this course, the student will receive the necessary dual flight instruction and solo flight time to qualify for the FAA Private Pilot Certificate under Part 141 of the Federal Aviation Regulations. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in takeoffs, landings, and flight at minimum controllable airspeed including stalls and recoveries.
2. Demonstrate proficiency in planning and execution of cross-country flights using various means of navigation.
3. Demonstrate proficiency in night operations and simulated instrument flight.
4. Demonstrate proficiency in abnormal and emergency procedures.
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| AT 14700 - Aircraft Propulsion Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The theory of operation, design, and construction of modern aircraft propulsion systems. This includes familiarization with fuel, electrical, ignition, instrument, and control systems for both reciprocating and gas turbine powerplants on large transport aircraft. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
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| AT 18700 - Aircraft Propulsion And Operating Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An overview of propulsion and operation systems theory of operation, design, and construction. This includes fuel, electrical, ignition, instrument, powerplant control, environmental, flight control, and navigation systems found on modern aircraft. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
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| AT 20100 - Aircraft Design And Structures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of aerospace materials and their properties utilized in aircraft structures and powerplants. This includes introduction to computer aided design, engineering drawings, aircraft structural concepts, aircraft design concepts, metallic and composite materials, aircraft loads and stresses, and aerodynamics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify standard and special aircraft fasteners and demonstrate knowledge of their proper installation.
2. Understand the basic types of materials used in aircraft, the difference between structural and non-structural components, the various forces exerted upon structural
members, and the types of joints found in aircraft applications.
3. Identify and use sources of technical information.
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| AT 20200 - Aerospace Vehicle Systems Design, Analysis And Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the design and engineering analysis of various systems found on modern aircraft and aerospace vehicles. Operational theory will also be presented for specific aircraft. Systems include electric power distribution, digital data, instrumentation, hydraulic, pneumatic, environmental, flight management, and autoflight. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe transport category aircraft systems.
2. Diagram the basic electrical and electronic systems design on modern airacraft.
3. Understand how major aircraft systems work together.
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| AT 20300 - Aviation Operations Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides a forum for investigating contemporary issues facing the aviation and aerospace industries. Major topics include aviation operation, human resources, fiscal, and technology management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the operational aspects of managing a large aerospace enterprise.
2. Describe airline and aerospace operations financing.
3. Discuss the trends in technology and the future roles and possibilities of various technical implementations in the industry.
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| AT 20501 - Statics For Aerostructures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to the static analysis of aerostructures. Force systems, resultants and equilibrium, moments, distributed loads, and centroids as they relate to aeronautical structures are studied. CAD software is introduced. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Determine the resultant of multiple vectors.
2. Draw free-body diagrams and apply equilibrium equations to those diagrams.
3. Demonstrate an understanding of the analysis of distributed loads in aerostructures.
4. Develop knowledge of internal forces and moments in structural members.
5. Develop an ability to calculate centroids and moments of inertia.
6. Use CAD software to represent and analyze aerostructures.
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| AT 20700 - Introduction To Aircraft Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles and design concepts of aircraft operating systems are covered. Emphasis is given to flight control, electrical, environmental, hydraulic, pneumatic, pressurization, oxygen, heating, cooling, fire protection, and ice and rain protection systems. Also included are theory of operation and design of aircraft instruments and associate systems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AT 20800 - Aircraft Materials II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course includes final assembly and finishing procedures for fabric and metallic aircraft structures. Repairs to such components are included. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Perform structural repairs to aluminum aircraft structures.
2. Demonstrate the ability to perform basic welding of steel and aluminum.
3. Determine static loads of simple structures.
4. Identify special aircraft fasteners and determine their load characteristic.
5. Design sheet metal repairs according to FAA standards.
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| AT 20802 - Aircraft Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this course students study aluminum and composite materials used in aircraft. The course covers elements of design, fabrication, final assembly, and testing. Students also study the practical application of statics for airframe loads. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Use tools for the fabrication, final assembly, and testing of materials.
2. Use and apply technical information, including drawings, sketches, blueprints, charts, and graphs.
3. Analyze damage and design repairs to aircraft materials.
4. Demonstrate the basic skills of oxyacetylene welding and the concepts of welded repair design.
5. Apply the concepts of statics as they relate to airframe structural members.
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| AT 21000 - Ground Trainer I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Included in this course are maneuvers to develop basic attitude instrument flying skills. The student then proceeds into VOR, ADF, and ILS tracking, holding, and approaches. Intersection holding and DME arc flying will also be covered. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AT 21100 - Ground Trainer II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is a continuation of Ground Trainer I. The student will continue work on VOR, ADF, and ILS holding and approaches. Additionally, there will be a minimum of three instrument cross-countries flown in the ground trainer. The final portion of the course will be to increase the proficiency level of instrument flying in preparation for the Instrument Rating Flight test. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AT 22300 - Human Factors For Flight Crews |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the fundamental concepts of single pilot and multi-crew human factors issues. The first part of the course focuses on the physiological factors that affect single pilot aeronautical decision-making. The second part examines human error, threat and error management, and domains of crew resources management. The third segment utilizes team-building exercises, case study presentations, and a formal assignment to emphasis course learning outcomes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Examine the relationship of human factor issues to aviation safety
2. Examine crew resource management fundamentals in single and multi-crew environments.
3. Apply appropriate decision-making and problem-solving skills in team situations.
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| AT 23100 - Human Factors For Flight |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An overview of physiological and psychological factors affecting the decision-making process for pilots is presented. Prerequisite: FAA Private Pilot Certificate. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AT 23300 - Ethics And Aviation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This discussion-oriented class is an introduction to the principles of ethical theory and the application of that theory to practical problems associated with the aviation industry. Actual aviation case studies are used to illustrate major concepts. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
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| AT 24100 - Aircraft Systems For Flight Crews |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will introduce the student to the basic aircraft systems. Includes electrical, fuel, hydraulic, pneumatic, environmental, and flight control systems. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AT 24200 - Mountain Flying |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Selection of this course is determined by the AFT faculty. Mountain Flying includes dual and solo flight training in the mountains of Wyoming, Colorado, and surrounding states. Weather and performance problems associated with high-altitude operations are experienced. Typically offered Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AT 24300 - Commercial Flight I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The course is designed to develop a higher degree of coordination and judgment through additional experience in more advanced flight maneuvers and cross-country flying. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AT 24302 - Commercial Flight I Under Federal Aviation Regulations Part 141 |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is designed to develop a higher degree of coordination and judgment through additional experience in more advanced flight maneuvers and cross-country flying under part 141 of the Federal Aviation Regulations. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in takeoffs, landings, and flight at minimum controllable airspeed.
2. Demonstrate proficiency in advanced commercial pilot maneuvers.
3. Demonstrate proficiency in cross-country flight and electronic navigation.
4. Demonstrate proficiency in night, abnormal, and emergency operations.
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| AT 24500 - Cross-Country Flight |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The course consists of solo cross-country flying required to help meet the minimum flight times and proficiency for the FAA Commercial Pilot Certificate. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AT 24700 - Aircraft Operating Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The theory of operation of environmental, flight control, and navigation systems found on modern aircraft. This includes avionics, flight management, flight control, and instrumentation systems. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| AT 24800 - Commercial Flight II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The course is a continuation of the flight training received in AT 24300. Basic instrument flying techniques will be introduced to further enhance and refine the development of precision flying skills. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AT 24802 - Commercial Flight II Under Federal Aviation Regulations Part 141 |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is a continuation of the flight training received in FAR 141 Commercial Flight I. Basic instrument flying techniques will be introduced to further enhance and refine the development of precision flying skills. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in advanced commercial pilot maneuvers.
2. Demonstrate proficiency in cross-country flight and electronic navigation.
3. Demonstrate proficiency in night, abnormal, and emergency operations.
4. Demonstrate proficiency in basic altitude instrument flying.
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| AT 24900 - Instrument Flight Lectures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the operation of flight instruments and radio navigation aids, federal aviation regulations pertinent to instrument flight, meteorology, instrument charts, instrument flight planning, and air traffic control procedures. Preparation for the FAA Instrument Rating written examination. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate competency in aircraft flight instruments and navigation systems.
2. Demonstrate competency in the Federal Aviation Regulations for instrument flight.
3. Demonstrate competency in using instrument enroute charts, approach charts, SIDS and STARS in IFR flight planning.
4. Demonstrate knowledge in conducting instrument approaches and holding patterns.
5. Demonstrate knowledge in aviation weather and aviation weather services.
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| AT 25200 - Aviation Projects |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will introduce the students to group projects in collaboration with industrial partners in aviation. A new project will be conducted each semester. Students will participate in the development of project goals, conducting field research, and developing a final course document and presentation. Travel outside of the normal assigned classroom time might be required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Become familiar with the conduct of an industry research project.
2. Work in small research teams.
3. Develop presentation skills.
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| AT 25300 - Instrument Flight |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The course is designed to prepare the student for the FAA Commercial Pilot Certificate and Instrument Rating. Flight, ground pilot trainer, and ground instruction are included. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Master all commercial maneuvers in the Arrow.
2. Master all take offs and landings in the Arrow.
3. Master holding entries and procedures.
4. Master Instrument approaches.
5. Master IFR cross-country procedures.
6. Accomplish Instrument Rating Practical Test.
7. Accomplish Commercial Pilot Practical Test.
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| AT 25302 - Instrument Flight Under Federal Aviation Regulations Part 141 |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is designed to prepare the student for the FAA Commercial Pilot Certificate and Instrument Rating under Part 141 of the Federal Aviation Regualtions. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in all commercial maneuvers, including takeoffs and landings.
2. Demonstrate proficiency in holding procedures, instrument approaches, and IFR cross-country procedures..
3. Accomplish Instrument rating and Commercial Pilot Practical Tests.
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| AT 25400 - Commercial Flight Lectures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course is designed to review the principles of flight, aircraft systems, pertinent federal aviation regulations, and airman publications and service in order to prepare the student for the FAA Commercial Pilot written examination. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Review selected concepts from previous flight and ground courses.
2. Understand advanced aircraft systems and appopriate regulations needed in commercial operations.
3. Prepare for the Commercial Pilot Exam.
|
| AT 25800 - Air Transportation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides a framework to understand the aviation industry. Students study the industry's history and the current status of aerospace manufacturers, commercial airlines, and general aviation. Governmental aviation agencies and international aviation are also discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| AT 26200 - Basic Aircraft Powerplant Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of the design, construction, and operating practices of aircraft reciprocating and small gas turbine engines. Laboratory exercises emphasize airworthiness evaluation, fault-isolation techniques, and standard service/maintenance practices. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| AT 26300 - Fluid Power Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of design, construction, and operation of the fluid power systems. Topics range from fluids and hardware through individual component analysis to diagnosis and repair of complex systems. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Lafayette
|
| AT 26500 - Aircraft Electrical Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An overview of both AC and DC aircraft electrical systems, dealing specifically with components and their relationship to the aircraft. Aircraft charging systems, main power distribution, solid state electronics, batteries, and motors are discussed. Laboratory emphasis is placed specifically on volt/ohmmeter usage for the analysis of various aircraft electrical systems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Express the applications of alternating and direct current electrical systems as found on aircraft.
2. Utilize common troubleshooting tools and equipment to diagnose and analyses electrical circuits.
3. Read and understand common aircraft electrical system schematics and diagrams.
4. Design and construct basic electrical systems using commonly accepted practices.
5. Possess the knowledge, skills, and attitudes necessary to be a successful aviation technical environment.
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| AT 26502 - Aircraft Electrical Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An in-depth study of aircraft electrical components, both individually and as systems in the aircraft. DC electrical circuits, series and parallel circuits, magnetism, and electromagnetism are covered, as are DC power systems, schematics, and aircraft wiring practices. Aircraft charging systems, main power distribution, solid state electronics, batteries, and motors are also discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop an understanding of electrical principles as they relate to aircraft system operation.
2. Construct, analyze, and isolate faults in circuits.
3. Demonstrate troubleshooting procedures for direct currently electrical aircraft components and power distribution circuits.
|
| AT 26700 - Fixed And Rotary Wing Assemblies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of various fixed and rotary wing components and systems. Flight control systems, landing gear, fuel systems, wheels, brakes, and rotor systems are among the subjects studied. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Read, analyze, and interpret technical instructions.
2. Complete a set of aviation maintenance related tasks.
3. Jack, hoist, shore, level, and weigh an aircraft and calculate its weight and balance.
4. Knowledge of radio communications and aircraft mooring.
5. Operate a helicopter rotor balancing computer and balance a helicopter main and tail rotor.
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| AT 26800 - Aircraft Material Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of the processes by which aircraft materials are converted into usable components. Laboratory activities include machining, welding and analysis of material properties. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 26900 - Air Traffic Control I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An introduction to the principles of air traffic control, including tower, approach control and enroute separation. Navigation theory as it relates to the ATC system will be explained, as well as the theory of operation of ATC radar and computer systems. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| AT 27100 - Powerplant Propulsion Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory, design, and operation of propellers and propeller systems are emphasized. Use of technical data, application of operating principles, parts modifications, and airworthiness evaluations are stressed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| AT 27200 - Introduction To Composite Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to basic composite materials, processes, construction, testing, and repair. Students will work with a variety of wet and pre-impregnated fiber and matrix systems including glass, aramid fiber, and carbon-graphite. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Familiar with wet lay, prepreg, and VARTM processes.
2. Use of CATIA workbenches: part design, drafting, composite design.
3. The basics of CNC machining.
4. The fundamentals of mold making.
5. The importance of curing operations for composite materials.
6. Repair damaged composite structures.
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| AT 27800 - Nondestructive Testing For Aircraft |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of nondestructive testing methods used to evaluate the structural integrity of airframes, engines, and components. Magnetic particle, liquid penetrant, electromagnetic, ultrasonic, and radiographic inspection are covered. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| AT 28100 - Traffic Control II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An intensive review of air traffic control procedures and aviation regulations for students interested in seeking employment as air traffic controllers. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| AT 28500 - ATC Procedures and Weather |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the technical procedures involved in the development and operation of the air traffic control system. Instrument procedures and design will be covered. Weather theory as pertaining to ATC will be discussed, along with observation and dissemination systems used by the FAA and NWS. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| AT 29000 - Aviation Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Independent study primarily for sophomore students who wish to pursue study and development work in special areas. Subject material must be arranged with the instructor before enrolling in the course. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AT 29300 - Industrial Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Industrial practice and experience in participating industry. Requires written report of the experience. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 29400 - Industrial Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Industrial practice and experience in participating industry. Requires written report of the experience. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 29900 - Aviation Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Hours, credit, and subject matter to be arranged by staff. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| AT 30000 - Global Aviation Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of airspace and airfield needs for aircraft operation. Also included are the effects of international, national, state, and local laws and regulations upon the operation of these facilities. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| AT 30100 - Crew Resource Management |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course explores the fundamental concepts affecting decision-making, communications, leadership styles, and crew coordination in the cockpit. Topics include stress management, situational awareness, and conflict resolution. Case study presentations and team-building will be emphasized. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| AT 30300 - Aircraft Service |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course involves the student in the maintenance of aircraft in daily operation. Powerplant inspection is stressed. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 30700 - Advanced Aircraft Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An in-depth study of aircraft components and operation with an emphasis on transport-category aircraft. Systems covered include fuel, environmental (air-conditioning, pressurization, and oxygen), fluid-power, flight control, fire protection, ice-control, warning, and auxiliary power. Practical projects utilize small and transport category aircraft. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The terminology of systems analysis and design.
2. The proper planning of projects.
3. The industrial safety culture and ability to analyze all safety issues of the project including team member safety.
4. Inspect and determine system airworthiness.
5. Develop troubleshooting skills in an industry environment.
|
| AT 30702 - Advanced Aircraft Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An in-depth study of aircraft components and operation with an emphasis on transport-category aircraft. Systems covered include fuel, environmental, fluid-power, flight control, fire protection, ice-control, warning, and auxiliary power. Practical projects utilize small ad transport-category aircraft. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an understanding of the terminology of systems analysis and design.
2. Demonstrate proper project planning ability.
3. Demonstrate knowledge of the industrial safety culture and the ability to analyze all safety issues of the project, including team member safety.
4. Determine system airworthiness.
5. Develop troubleshooting skills in an industry environment.
|
| AT 30800 - Aircraft Materials Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the processes by which aircraft materials are converted into usable components. Laboratory activities include machining, welding, and analysis of material properties. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate NC programming skills by manually writing and then operating a milling programming.
2. Demonstrate CAD/CAM familiarization by using SurfCam to stimulate the application of an NC lathe operation to produce parts.
3. Demonstrate familiarity with the basic operations of a lathe, including boring.
4. Demonstrate familiarity with the basic operations of a Mill, and to maintain close tolerances on their work.
5. Demonstrate familiarity with the various properties of metals.
6. Demonstrate familiarity with the strength attributes of metals and their measurement.
7. Use MMPDS in determining the mechanical properties of the materials involved in a riveted joint and be able to apply that information in simple repair design for non-pressurized aircraft.
8. Demonstrate familiarity with the basic concepts of damage tolerant repair design.
9. Demonstrate familiarity with the concept of aircraft reliability control as used to support large transport category aircraft.
10. Demonstrate familiarity with the properties of specific metals used in the aerospace industry and discuss their application.
|
| AT 30802 - Aircraft Materials Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the processes by which aircraft materials are converted into usable components. Laboratory activities include machining, welding, and analysis of material properties. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate familiarity with the basic operations of lathes and mills, maintaining close tolerances on work.
2. Demonstrate familiarity with the various properties and strength attributes of aerospace materials and their measurement and application.
3. Demonstrate familiarity with the basic concepts of damage-tolerant repair design.
4. Demonstrate familiarity with the concept of aircraft reliability control as used to support large transport category aircraft.
5. Use teamwork and communication skills to produce parts and/or assemblies.
|
| AT 32100 - Transport Aircraft Operations Lectures I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A review of airway procedures and instrument flight techniques as applicable to the operation of a transport category aircraft. Flight techniques of handling a large aircraft and cockpit resource management will be discussed. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the correct completion of all normal operation checklists and satisfactory operation of all B727-100 systems.
2. Recall from memory pertinent B727-100 operating limitations and specifications.
3. Understand correct flight procedures in the B727-100.
4. Demonstrate calculation of takeoff/landing data.
5. Demonstrate mastery of FAR parts 1, 63, and 91.
|
| AT 32200 - Transport Aircraft Operations Lectures II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A continuation of AT 32100. This course places emphasis on cockpit resource management, abnormal procedures, and advanced emergency and instrument procedures that may be encountered in transport category aircraft operations. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 32300 - Transport Aircraft Operations Lab I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory is conducted in a transport category aircraft simulator. Normal instrument and aircraft procedures and cockpit resource management will be stressed. Abnormal procedures are introduced. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The student will become proficient in crew coordination, normal procedures, instrument procedures, flight planning, and crew resource management.
2. The student will fly as First Officer, but will be familiar with the procedures of all cockpit positions.
3. The student will demonstrate proficiency in take off, departure, holding pattern, non-precision approach and missed approach, ILS approach and normal landing procedures.
|
| AT 32400 - Transport Aircraft Operations Lab II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A continuation of AT 32300. This laboratory emphasizes abnormal and emergency flight procedures that may be encountered in a transport category aircraft. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 32501 - Advanced Aviation Meteorology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for students who are preparing for careers as professional pilots or dispatchers and require an advanced knowledge of the impact of weather on aviation operations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop increased awareness of meteorology and its application to aviation operations.
2. Demonstrate knowledge of aviation meteorological concepts, with an emphasis on meteorological hazards for instrument flight operations.
3. Demonstrate the use of aviation weather data types and sources.
4. Develop expertise in obtaining and evaluating appropriate weather data, and in integrating these data into the preflight planning required for a professionally-flown instrument flight.
|
| AT 32700 - Advanced Transport Flight Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will address advanced aviation topics to include high speed aerodynamics, automated cockpit instrumentation, domestic/international flight operations, and global navigation. Commercial Pilot Certificate required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 33100 - Introduction To Transport Aircraft Systems And Procedures Lecture |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is for students not majoring in Professional flight technology. Students will be introduced to the systems and operating procedures of a jet transport aircraft. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 33200 - Advanced Transport Aircraft Systems And Procedures Lecture |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is for students not majoring in Professional Flight Technology. Advanced systems knowledge and operating procedures will be discussed. Automated cockpit technology will be explored. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 33300 - Introduction To Transport Aircraft Systems And Procedures Lab |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is for students not majoring in Professional Flight Technology. Flight officer duties, instrument procedures, crew resource management, and line-oriented flight training will occur in a transport category aircraft simulator. Private Pilot Certificate with Instrument Rating required. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 33400 - Advanced Transport Aircraft Systems And Procedures Lab |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is for students not majoring in Professional Flight Technology. Advanced training maneuvers and systems trouble-shooting in a transport category simulator will be emphasized. Students gain proficiency with automation, crew resource management, decision making, and performance planning. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 33500 - Avionics Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The components and operation of aircraft communication and navigation systems are studied to a functional block diagram level. Included in the course are microwave and pulse navigation systems. Installation requirements and system inspections are emphasized in the laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| AT 33502 - Avionics Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the theory of operation and applications of common electrical components used in various aircraft circuits. The theory and mathematical relationships of alternating current, reactance, impedance, and phase shift are examined. Operational theory, installation practices, and troubleshooting concepts of common aircraft communication and navigation systems are investigated. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate the theory of operation and application of common electrical components used in various aircraft circuits.
2. Demonstrate the operational theory, installation practices, and troubleshooting concepts of common aircraft communication and navigation systems.
3. Explain the theory and mathematical relationship of alternating current, reactance, impedance, and phase shift.
|
| AT 33800 - Airline Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a detailed study of airline management principles and processes. Topics include airline, economics, organization, forecasting, marketing, alliances,pricing, scheduling, finance, fleet planning, labor relations and air freight. Business ethics pertaining to airlines are introduced. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the economic characteristics and the management structure of the commercial airline industry.
2. Understand forecasting, marketing, pricing, scheduling, fleeting planning, labor relations, financing, and air cargo operations.
3. Demonstrate oral and written communication skills on topics related to the airline industry.
4. Understand global geography in relation to the international aviation industry.
|
| AT 34100 - Aircraft Electrical And Electronic Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Orientation and system description of primary DC power supply and distribution, starter, ignition, alternator, accessory, utility, and lighting circuits. Introduction to flight instruments, electrical load analysis, and weight and balance procedures. Operative procedures and specifications for avionics equipment are discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 34200 - Aircraft Communication And Navigation Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of characteristics and operation of typical aircraft communication and navigation equipment. Emphasis is on installation and maintenance of avionics systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 34300 - Aircraft Pulse And Microwave Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of characteristics and operation of weather radar, distance measuring equipment, transponders, and encoding altimeters. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 34400 - Integrated Flight Control Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of flight control equipment and integrated systems. This course includes slaved gyro compass systems, horizontal situation indicators (HSI), flight director systems, autopilots, and radio altimeter equipment. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 34500 - Aviation Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to the principles of marketing with emphasis on aviation-related industries. It demonstrates the practical and managerial applications of balancing an organization's objectives and resources against needs and opportunities in the marketplace. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| AT 34600 - Transport Category Aircraft Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A study of the components and operation of systems found on current transport-category aircraft. Systems covered include fuel, environmental (air-conditioning, pressurization, and oxygen), fluid-power, flight control, fire protection, ice-control, warning, and auxiliary power. Airframe and Powerplant Certificate required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| AT 34700 - Avionics Troubleshooting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course presents the materials, techniques, and procedures to correctly troubleshoot the various communication and navigation systems found on modern aircraft. The main focus of the course is flightline troubleshooting techniques used to determine which avionics component or system within the aircraft is defective. Flight line repairs of these systems are addressed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| AT 34800 - Aircraft Power and Flight Management Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Power system components are discussed with respect to generation, distribution, protection, and control of electrical power. Electrical load profiles are mapped for various phases of flight. Flight management systems are introduced along with their supporting subsystems. Autopilot/Flight Director, Inertial Reference, Air Data, Navigation sensors, and Display elements are included. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 35100 - Flight Instructor Flight |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Flight training in preparation for flight instructor certification. Instructional techniques are demonstrated and practiced by the student. Heavy emphasis is placed on student practice teaching of all maneuvers. FAA Commercial Pilot Certificate with Instrument Airplane Rating required. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Must be able to perform, critique and analyze all Private Pilot maneuvers.
2. Must be able to perform, critique and analyze all Commercial Pilot maneuvers.
3. Must be able to teach all knowledge areas for the Private Pilot Certificate.
4. Must be able to teach all knowledge areas for the Commercial Pilot Certificate.
5. Must be able to teach aircraft systems.
6. Accomplish the Flight Instructor Airplane Practical Test.
|
| AT 35200 - Flight Instructor Lectures |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The course teaches techniques of flight and ground instruction, analysis of maneuvers, aircraft performance, and federal aviation regulations applicable to flight instructors. Some practice teaching will be required. Preparation for the FAA written exam is included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Know the definitions, objectives, elements, and common errors for all items listed in the FAA practical test standards.
2. Know the learning process, elements of effective teaching, student evaluation and testing, course development, lesson planning and classroom training techniques.
3. Know Flight Instructor privileges and limitations, record keeping and eligibility requirements.
4. Know Flight Instructor endorsements for student pilots, private pilot, and commercial pilot applicants.
|
| AT 35300 - Multi-Engine Flight |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Prepares the student for the FAA multi-engine rating. Dual flight instruction is conducted in a multi-engine aircraft. Individual ground instruction will be arranged. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 35400 - Turbine Flight Operations Lecture |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A study of corporate aircraft systems and operations and an orientation to operational procedures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Locate Federal Aviation Regulations related to oxygen requirements.
2. Understand Embraer Phenom 100 aircraft systems, associated cockpit procedures and checklist usage.
3. Compute Phenom 100 basic weight & balance and flight planning calculations.
4. Conduct an external pre-flight inspection of the Phenom 100.
5. Understand safety and security procedures related to the operation of jet aircraft.
|
| AT 35500 - Transport Aircraft Systems And Operations I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This is an introduction to transport aircraft limitations, systems, and systems operation. Topics include turbojet aircraft powerplants, flight instruments, electrical power, air-conditioning, pressurization, hydraulic, and flight control systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Use the correct terms and nomenclature as they relate to transport category aircraft systems.
2. Understand the theory and basic operation of all B-727 major aircraft systems.
3. Draw the basic schematic of the electrical, pneumatic, and hydraulic systems.
4. Relate how the major aircraft systems integrate together.
|
| AT 35600 - Turbine Flight Operations Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Provides students with flight experience/instruction in passenger-carrying operations using turbine-powered aircraft. Emphasis is on safe and efficient practices and techniques. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 35700 - High-Altitude Operation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is designed to acquaint and orient the student to the operation of, and effects on, light aircraft at high elevation airports during an intensive, two-week instructional session. In addition, the course is intended to familiarize the student with mountain flying techniques during cross-country flights. FAA Private Pilot Certificate required. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 35800 - History Of Flight |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to trace the effort to achieve and sustain flight from early mythology to the present. Special emphasis is given to the evolution of the airplane. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 35900 - Airport Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a study of the history and development of contemporary airport facilities. Areas of study will include FAA airport design requirements, master plans, and airport operations. Field trips may be required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand how airports are managed.
2. Describe and understand the issues and challenges facing airport managers.
|
| AT 36201 - Aviation Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces students to the principles of managing a complex aviation operation. Students will be assigned active roles in monitoring and reporting on aircraft flight and maintenance practices. Every student will be assigned a role as part of a small group whose responsibility is to gather appropriate information, develop reports, and conduct practical research tasks as assigned. Weekly and monthly group meetings will be conducted similar to those found in the airline industry with students playing an active role in these meetings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Become familiar with the operation of a functioning flight operation.
2. Develop research and presentation skills appropriate to those utilized in airline management.
3. Work within a team as well as how to lead a team.
|
| AT 36300 - Fundamentals Of Powerplant Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory, design, operation, and overhaul of ignition and fuel metering systems are emphasized. The use of technical data, applications of operating principles, parts modifications, and airworthiness decisions are stressed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the components and theory of operation of aircraft engine ignition systems, fuels, and fuel metering systems.
2. Develop knowledge and skills required to support, maintain, overhaul, and troubleshoot components under study.
3. Develop judgment required to determine the airworthiness of the components under study.
4. Learn to use vendor information for servicing, support, overhaul, and troubleshooting of components.
|
| AT 36302 - Fundamentals Of Powerplant Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers powerplant systems, including fuel metering devices, ignition systems, and propeller and propeller-related systems. Students learn to use the special tools required for these systems, and the processes for inspection, repair, and overhaul. Airworthiness evaluation and determination is stressed, as are testing and fault diagnosis procedures. The properties and operating characteristics of aircraft fuels are also covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate the ability to support, maintain, and overhaul powerplant systems.
2. Apply standard testing protocol and procedures to powerplant systems.
3. Develop an understanding of technical information related to powerplant systems.
4. Develop an understanding of fuel characteristics and operation.
|
| AT 36500 - Instrument Flight Instructor Flight |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Flight and ground training in preparation for the Instrument Flight Instructor Flight Test is given. Instructional techniques are demonstrated and practiced by the student. Analysis of maneuvers and common student errors also included. FAA Flight Instructor Airplane Pilot Certificate and Flight Instructor Instrument written exam passed. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 36600 - Multi-Engine Flight Instructor Flight |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Flight and ground training in preparation for the Flight Instructor Multi-engine Flight Test is given. Instructional techniques are demonstrated and practiced by the student. Analysis of maneuvers and common student errors also included. FAA Flight Instructor Airplane, Instrument Airplane, Commercial Pilot Certificate with Airplane Multi-engine Land Rating, 15 hours pilot in-command in multi-engine airplanes. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 36800 - Aerobatic Flight |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Course provides instruction in basic aerobatic maneuvers and recovery from unusual attitudes. Students must develop proficiency in the aircraft before beginning aerobatic training. Course also includes classroom discussion of relevant supporting material. FAA Commercial Pilot Certificate with Instrument Airplane Rating required. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| AT 36900 - Air Traffic Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the principles of air traffic control, including tower and enroute separation. Navigation theory as it relates to the ATC system will be explained, as will the theory of operation of ATC radar and computer systems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Operate ATC simulation equipment.
2. Understand the basic information required to perform the duties of an air traffic controller.
3. Understand operations in the National Airspace System.
|
| AT 37000 - Advanced Aircraft Powerplants |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course consists of the disassembly, visual inspection, cleaning, structural inspection, dimensional inspection, serviceability, reassembly, installation, testing, and preservation of reciprocating aircraft powerplants. Use of technical data, airworthiness evaluations, and laboratory records is stressed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| AT 37002 - Advanced Aircraft Powerplants |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the design, construction, operation, and overhaul practices of aircraft reciprocating and small gas-turbine engines. Airworthiness evaluation, fault-isolation techniques, and standard service and maintenance practices are emphasized. Dimensional and visual inspection and testing of engines following overhaul are stressed, as well. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate knowledge of engine operation theory.
2. Demonstrate familiarity with and ability to apply troubleshooting and fault analysis procedures.
3. Develop and follow a plan for the complete overhaul and return to service of an engine.
|
| AT 37100 - Powerplant Propulsion Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory, design, and operation of propellers and propeller systems are emphasized. Use of technical data, application of operating principles, parts modifications, and airworthiness evaluations are stressed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 37200 - Aircraft Maintenance Practices |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An in-depth study of practices and procedures used to ensure that an aircraft is maintained in an airworthy state. Aircraft publications and maintenance methodology are emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 37600 - Aircraft Gas Turbine Engine Technology I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic aircraft gas turbine engine theory, nomenclature, component design, turbine engine systems, operation, and fault isolation techniques are emphasized. Turbine engine maintenance, overhaul, operation, and inspection procedures are studied in detail. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the basic operating principles of gas turbine engines.
2. Understand the operation and function of the major components of the gas turbine engine.
3. Understand the operation, function and troubleshooting of gas turbine engine systems.
4. Explain the basic procedures and operations used or encountered in maintaining airworthiness of gas turbine engines.
|
| AT 38000 - Helicopter Design, Inspection, And Maintenance |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The design, construction, and maintenance of type-certificated helicopters. Areas of study include rotary wing aerodynamics, structural components and materials, main and tail rotor systems, rotor blades, primary and secondary controls, and general inspection and maintenance practices. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 38100 - Aviation Security |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the challenges and complexity of aviation security faced by aviation professionals across the industry. It traces the evolution of current security approaches and explores technologies and processes targeting threat mitigation and improved operational efficiency. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the literature in the student’s field.
2. Exhibit the highest level of professionalism in the aviation security industry.
3. Solve problems in aviation security.
4. Work effectively as part of a team.
5. Conduct basic research, interpret ad analyze the data and make useful presentations based on that research.
|
| AT 38400 - Transport Aircraft Systems And Operations II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Turbojet transport aircraft anti-ice, autoflight, auxiliary power unit, fire protection, oxygen, and fuel systems are studied. Aircraft operations and systems discussed in AT 35500 are also reviewed. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 38500 - Design Support Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to teach students interested in engineering design, design support, customer support, or aerospace manufacturing, the elements of product support and the analysis of design as related to the manufacturability, maintainability, and supportability of aerospace products. The students will be expected to complete a life cycle cost analysis and logistics plan for a design. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| AT 38502 - Design Support Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course covers the elements of product support and the analysis of design as related to the manufacturability, maintainability, and supportability of aerospace products. The students will be expected to complete a life-cycle cost analysis and logistics plan for a design. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Decompose a system into its functional groups.
2. Determine the mean time between failure and availability of a system.
3. Determine failure drivers, cost drivers, and maintenance drivers of a system.
4. Determine system life cycle ownership costs.
5. Determine the facilities, staffing, tooling, and spare parts requirements for a system.
|
| AT 38800 - Large Aircraft Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces transport aircraft limitations, systems, and systems operation. Topics include turbojet aircraft powerplants, flight instruments, electrical power, air-conditioning, pressurization, hydraulic, and flight control systems. Emphasis is aircraft and systems manufacturer's design and operational philosophies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Define large aircraft systems terminology and nomenclature.
2. Understand the theory and basic operation of major aircraft systems.
3. Describe aircraft and system manufacturer's design philosophies.
4. Explain how major aircraft systems work together.
|
| AT 39300 - Industrial Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Industrial practice and experience in participating industry. Requires written report of the experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AT 39400 - Industrial Practice IV |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Industrial practice and experience in participating industry. Requires written report of the experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AT 39500 - Turbine Aircraft Simulation Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is a laboratory flight experience in a turbine aircraft flight simulator, emphasizing normal and abnormal aircraft operations. Emphasis is on FAA-required flight procedures for certification and safe operation of turbine-powered aircraft. Students seeking a type rating must receive a grade of at least a B- in AT 35300. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in flight planning, instrument flight procedures, and simulated aircraft operations.
2. Demonstrate proficiency in preflight, takeof, departure, holding patterns, approach/missed approach, and normal landing procedures.
3. Demonstrate proficiency in operating all aircraft systems in both normal and abnormal situations.
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| AT 39600 - Turbine Aircraft Flight Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is a laboratory flight experience in a turbine-powered aircraft, emphasizing normal and abnormal aircraft operations. Emphasis is on FAA-required flight procedures for certification and safe operation of turbine-powered aircraft. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in normal aircraft operations and instrument flying procedures as well as flight planning.
2. Demonstrate proficiency in preflight, takeoff, departure, holding patterns, approach/missed approach, and normal landing procedures.
3. Demonstrate proficiency in operating all aircraft systems in both normal and abnormal situations.
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| AT 40000 - Aviation Professional Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A study of professional issues related to employment in the aviation industry. Topics discussed include attributes of an aviation professional, certification, and career planning. A review of the information and tools necessary for the student's job search is included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
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| AT 40200 - Aircraft Airworthiness Assurance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Practicum in performing aircraft maintenance and inspection to airworthiness standards for large aircraft, incorporating Quality and Safety Management Systems into maintenance operations, planning and executing maintenance on large aircraft and managing technical teams. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Differentiate and explain historical and modern-day approaches to quality and safety management systems in aviation maintenance.
2. Compare and interpret differences and similarities in global safety and quality standards for aviation maintenance.
3. Apply industry standards and practices for enabling airworthy transport category aircraft maintenance.
4. Create, validate, and deploy a functional aircraft maintenance job task card for an assigned section of Purdue's transport category aircraft, using process problem solving and risk assessment techniques.
5. Plan and develop checklists for and demonstrate safe operation or aircraft systems relevant to Purdue's transport aircraft, using technical writing principles, job hazard assessment and process mapping techniques.
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| AT 40300 - Airman Certification Procedures |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A survey of the procedures for obtaining federal certification as an Aircraft Maintenance Technician. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
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| AT 40400 - Turbojet Copilot Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Provides students who are selected to participate in the turbojet copilot program with classroom, simulator, and flight instruction in turbojet systems and operation. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AT 40500 - Turbojet Copilot Practicum I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course provides students with copilot flight experience in a corporate-type turbojet aircraft. Student copilots gain experience in turbojet systems and operation, high-speed/high altitude ATC procedures, advanced navigation, and high-altitude meteorology. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AT 40800 - Advanced Aircraft Manufacturing Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces students to NC and CAD/CAM applications. Laboratory projects include manual NC program, a CAD/CAM program, and a design/build/test/analysis of an aviation-oriented project working in teams with aeronautical engineering students. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AT 41200 - Aviation Finance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course will focus on the financial knowledge needed to operate and evaluate aviation businesses. Content will cover the impact of financial decisions on operational outcomes that add/decrease value to an aviation company's bottom line. Case studies will be utilized to demonstrate practical aspects of financial decisions as they relate to organizational performance and profitability. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand financial reports and impact on operations.
2. Learn how to read and construct cash flow, profit loss, and balance sheet.
3. Understand how these relate to each other.
4. Gain knowledge of hedging concepts and how to build a selective hedging program to mitigate risk.
5. Obtain knowledge of financial measurements and how they affect operational decisions for bottom line improvements.
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| AT 41600 - Airline Indoctrination |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course provides a forum for investigating contemporary issues facing the airline industry. Case studies are utilized to analyze the many perspectives involved in decision-making and how they affect the stakeholders. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate knowledge of air carrier operating procedures and techniques, including cockpit scans and flows.
2. Demonstrate knowledge of transport-category aircraft systems.
3. Demonstrate working knowledge of applicable Federal Aviation Regulations.
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| AT 42001 - General Aviation Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of corporate and business operations that occur at general aviation fixed-base operations. Emphasis will be placed on financial and operational considerations as well as on regulatory requirements and constraints. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Become familiar with the operation of a general aviation, full service flight operation.
2. Utilize financial principles to determine business viability in a general aviation setting.
3. Develop marketing plans and programs to promote a general aviation business and operation.
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| AT 42101 - Managerial Economics In Aviation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the process of making managerial decisions based on modern economic principles and concepts, and provides the student with a set of tools that can be used to make those decisions. Marginal analysis, forecasting, and cost analysis concepts are introduced, as are game-theoretic and probabilistic decision-making models. Bargaining strategies and linear programming tools are covered, as well. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Articulate and define managerial economic decision-making terminology.
2. Illustrate the central decision problems that managers face.
3. Provide appropriate solutions for those decision problems using tools introduced in the course.
4. Apply managerial economic decision-making concepts to solve an aviation industry problem.
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| AT 42700 - Transport Aircraft Maintenance Practices |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course provides the student with experience performing inspection and maintenance practices on transport category aircraft. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AT 43300 - Supervised Aviation Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Supervised aviation experience directed toward providing orientation, background, and insight into flight or ground operations. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
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| AT 43400 - Supervised Flight Instructional Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Supervised internship experience as a flight instructor. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| AT 43500 - Supervised Instructional Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. This course provides students with experience as instructors in an aviation classroom or laboratory environment under the supervision of faculty. In addition to the supervisory skills gained, students will become knowledgeable in task planning and communication techniques. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
Learning Objectives:
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| AT 43700 - Airline Maintenance Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An orientation to basic business disciplines for the airline maintenance industry. Documentation development and control, work scheduling, and reliability analysis are stressed. Basic statistical reliability control techniques will be applied and the results analyzed. A 10-hour practicum involving aircraft maintenance activities is a required part of this course. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
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| AT 43800 - Airline Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students in this course study airline operations in depth. Topics include marketing, route analysis, aircraft selection, financial analysis, federal regulations, and scheduling. Currently industry problems are discussed as well. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate knowledge of the characteristics, scope, and economic influence of an airline.
2. Develop operations management skills by creating aircraft schedules, forecasting fuel pricing, and budgeting for quality programs.
3. Analyze airline financial statements.
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| AT 44000 - Turbojet Flight Engineer Procedures Laboratory I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This is an introduction into normal, irregular, and emergency procedures in a transport aircraft, with emphasis on flight engineer duties. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AT 44100 - Turbojet Flight Engineer Procedures Laboratory II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course reviews normal, irregular, and emergency procedures in preparation for the FAA turbojet flight engineer oral and practical examinations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AT 44200 - Turbojet Flight Engine Procedures Laboratory III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Turbojet Flight Engine Procedures Laboratory III. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AT 44500 - Aircraft Electronics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of the computer-based electronic systems used to control both flight and engine parameters on modern aircraft. The course examines the various systems with an emphasis on how each component integrates into the electronic structure of the aircraft. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
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| AT 44502 - Aircraft Elecronics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the computer-based electronic systems used to control both flight and engine parameters on modern aircraft. The course examines the various systems with an emphasis on how each component integrates into the electronic structure of the aircraft. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an understanding of design, operation, and troubleshooting concepts of advanced digital and analog systems found on modern aircraft.
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| AT 44700 - Advanced Aircraft Electronics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Line maintenance techniques for the various computer-based airframe and powerplant electronic systems are studied. The course emphasizes return-to-service repair of the system with troubleshooting techniques taught to a component level. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
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| AT 44900 - Airline Transport Lectures |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Review of appropriate regulations and radio, navigational, meteorological, and operations principles and procedures applicable to airline transport piloting. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AT 45000 - Airline Transport Flight |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Course provides flight and academic preparation for the airline transport pilot certificate flight check. Applicant must have successfully completed the Airline Transport Pilot written examination meet federal aviation regulation requirements for the flight check. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AT 45100 - Airport Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an in-depth examination of airport operations for air carrier and general aviation airports, with a strong emphasis on practical problem solving of current operational issues facing local and area airports. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
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| AT 45200 - Aviation Global Experience Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course prepares students for faculty-led study trips and similar international experiences for which direct course credit is not available. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AT 45300 - Aviation Global Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Supervised international study experience for AT students for which direct course credit not available. Specific objectives, requirements, and credit determined by the Aviation Technology department. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AT 45400 - Human Factors In Aviation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students investigate the disciplines known as human factors and ergonomics and how they apply to various aviation career areas from a management perspective. Common industry models and error management strategies will be studied and evaluated. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| AT 45500 - Introduction To Data Acquisition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores fundamental concepts of data acquisition and provides the student with an understanding of the implementation of those concepts through theoretical development and practical application. Analog-to-digital conversion, electrical measurements, signal conditioning, and physical parameter measurements are introduced. The course culminates with a project that encapsulates the core concepts of data acquisition. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Articulate and define data acquisition terminology.
2. Demonstrate knowledge of the analog-to-digital conversion process.
3. Demonstrate understanding of signal conditioning techniques.
4. Utilize transducers for measurement of physical properties.
5. Apply data acquisition concepts to an aviation project by examining requirements, designing and constructing an acquisition system, operating the system, and analyzing the acquired data.
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| AT 45900 - Airport Manager Certification |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course prepares students for the certified manager exam offered by the American Association of Airport Executives (AAAE). This certificate is the first step toward industry accreditation as an airport manager and director. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an understanding of the fundamental aviation safety and security principles as they apply to the national and international aviation environment.
2. Develop the ability to identify and provide realistic recommendations to resolve national and international aviation deficiencies.
3. Demonstrate understanding of alternative views in order to balance historical and modern interpretation of airspace and airfield needs for aircraft operation.
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| AT 46200 - Occupational Certification And Licensure |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 15.00. Industrial, technical, and professional experience will be evaluated, and a maximum of 18 hours of credit may be granted. After evaluation and possible examination by the faculty, credit may be granted based upon the type and number of ratings and certifications held by the applicant. Credit may only be utilized to fulfill aviation technology selective and elective course requirements. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 15.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 18 credits
|
| AT 46500 - Transport Aircraft Operations Lecture III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instrument flight techniques, trouble-shooting, emergency procedures, advanced maneuvers, and systems operations in transport aircraft in preparation for AT 46700. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| AT 46600 - Transport Aircraft Operations Lecture IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This is a continuation of AT 46500, which emphasizes line-oriented flight training (LOFT) in aircraft equipped with electronic flight instrumentation systems, satellite navigation, and flight management systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| AT 46700 - Transport Aircraft Operations Lab III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This lab provides a practical application of instrument flight techniques in a flight training device or transport category flight simulator having electronic flight instrumentation systems, satellite navigation, and flight management systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 46800 - Transport Aircraft Operations Lab IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Unique flight scenarios emphasizing line-oriented flight training (LOFT) and crew operations in aircraft equipped with electronic flight instrumentation systems, satellite navigation, and flight management systems will be encountered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 46900 - Airline Copilot Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This is an intensive training experience emphasizing systems management and line-oriented flight training (LOFT) in a transport category flight simulator. Students may be required to pass an FAA checkride. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 47000 - Aircraft Powerplant Research And Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 18.00. Aircraft powerplant research and test data analysis, including advanced engine operations, instrumentation, propulsion system design, and the design and analysis of computer data acquisition systems for aircraft powerplants are studied. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 47200 - Advanced Composite Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will perform a variety of fabrication, testing, and repair tasks using specialized composite fibers, matrices, and core materials. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| AT 47500 - Aviation Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the fundamental legal and aviation law principles as they apply to the various participants in the aviation industry. Special emphasis is placed on contemporary aviation law issues such as pilot, flight instructor, and mechanic liability; product liability; and aviation insurance. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Undertand the fundamental aviation law principles as they apply to the various stakeholders in the national and international aviation environment.
2. Apply pertinent knowledge in identifying and solving problems.
|
| AT 47600 - Aircraft Gas Turbine Engine Technology II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a study of turbofan engines and systems. Engine installation, testing, and operational procedures are stressed. Emphasis is placed on performance evaluation, data calculations, and predictions of operational properties. Turbofan design theory, operational efficiencies, and fault isolation are discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| AT 47700 - Aircraft Maintenance Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course provides the knowledge, information and experience required for aviation professionals to interact safely in a general aviation environment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate familiarity with activities related to general, airframe and powerplant maintenance tasks.
2. Demonstrate the ability to safely perform in a general aviation maintenance environment.
|
| AT 47800 - Advanced Nondestructive Testing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of advanced magnetic particle, liquid penetrant, and eddy current testing, and evaluation theory and indication interpretation. Instruction in ultrasonic testing emphasizes the performance of ultrasonic testing techniques. Instruction in radiographic inspection requires students to make radiographic exposures, process film, and interpret radiographs. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| AT 47900 - Control Tower Operator |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course includes a review of air traffic control procedures, federal aviation regulations, and aviation weather observation and reporting. It is designed to prepare students to pass the FAA Control Tower Operators Examination. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the operation of FAA air traffic control facilities.
2. Understand air traffic communication process, including formatting of authorized communications, phraseology and control symbology.
3. Identify the purpose the VFR, IFR, and dVFR flight plans and uses of such by ATC.
4. Identify the purpose of basic FAA orders and manuals.
|
| AT 48100 - Aviation Safety Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides the opportunity for students to study problems associated with aviation safety. Particular attention will be given to the formulation of specific recommendations for improvements in aviation safety. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Familiar with the fundamental safety theories and possible applications.
2. Understand the characteristics human errors.
3. Identify and analyze the casual factors of a mishap.
4. Explain the process of emergency response and accident prevention programs.
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| AT 48200 - Advanced Composite Tooling Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will study the theory, design, fabrication, and testing of tooling for open and closed molding operations. Students will construct a tool by fabricating a master model, a master mold, and a laminated mold. The tooling process will include fabrication, mold testing, and mold repair. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
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| AT 48500 - Corporate Operations Lecture I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An examination of the evolution of, and justification for, corporate aviation. Discussion of issues related to personnel management, financial management, and equipment acquisition and operation within a corporate flight operation. High performance flight planning and navigation, hazardous materials handling, and security will also be discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| AT 48600 - Corporate Operations Lecture II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A discussion of drug testing regulations and company procedures, operating manuals (company operations manual, MEL's, performance charts, airport analysis); further discussion of the management of the corporate flight department. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 48700 - Transport Aircraft Simulation Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.0. This is a laboratory course conducted in a turbine-type aircraft simulator. This course emphasizes normal instrument and aircraft procedures as well as aircraft systems and cockpit resource management. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in normal aircraft operations and instrument flying procedures as well as flight planning.
2. Demonstrate proficiency in crew coordination, normal procedures, instrument procedures, flight planning, and crew resource management.
3. Familiar with the procedures required of all cockpit positions.
4. Demonstrate proficiency in the operation of all aircraft systems in both normal and abnormal situations.
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| AT 48800 - Flight Testing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course presents experimental methods for determining aircraft performance and flight qualities. Case studies utilizing either a flight training device or aircraft are assigned for data collection and analysis. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 49000 - Aviation Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Independent study for junior and senior students who wish to pursue study and developmental work in special areas. Subject matter must be arranged with the instructor before enrolling in the course. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| AT 49300 - Industrial Practice V |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Industrial practice and experience in participating industry. Requires written report of the experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 49600 - Applied Research Proposal |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students will study all aspects of performing a product or process design review and life-cycle management analysis. Topics include reliability, supportability, life cycle management, and performance analysis. Each student will select their capstone research area and development a proposal for conducting a product or process analysis for their applied research project. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Integrate knowledge and skills to plan and propose a process/product/service improvement or process/product/service design for design, aircraft operations, or maintenance.
2. Use teamwork and communication skills to prepare and present a project plan and proposal.
3. Demonstrate knowledge of design and improvement processes.
4. Demonstrate the application of problem-solving and technical knowledge learned throughout the curriculum.
5. Apply life-long learning skills throughout the planning of the project to acquire knowledge and skills or resources required to complete the project.
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| AT 49700 - Applied Research Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This capstone course requires students to conduct an in-depth product or process evaluation. The evaluation includes analyzing product or process performance against design criteria to complete their applied research project. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| AT 49800 - Aviation Technology Capstone |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The Aviation Technology Capstone course encourages teamwork in small groups on a substantial project. The intent of this course is to provide a capstone experience that integrates the material and previous experience of the student’s curriculum. It also provides an opportunity for students to recognize and evaluate the interrelationship of their general education courses with the courses taken for their major. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Complete a project that integrates previously learned material in an original manner.
2. Conduct a critical evaluation of previously published information.
3. Submit a project in a format compatible with business, industry and/or academic standards.
|
| AT 49900 - Aviation Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Hours, credit, and subject matter to be arranged by staff. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| AT 50500 - Research Methods In Aviation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the practical approach to research as it applies to identifying and exploring pragmatic problems in aviation industry settings. Industry based problems and issues often require a diversity of research skills, both quantitative and qualitative, in order to effectively address dynamic problems in complex and often high-risk work environments. This course offers an overview of mixed research methods which lends itself well to practical problem solving in industry. This course may also be offered in an online format. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Select and develop an appropriate design and investigative methodology for commonly-encountered aviation research problems.
2. Perform, and properly interpret, elementary descriptive statistical analysis.
3. Determine the need for, and correctly apply, appropriate inferential statistical tests for a variety of data.
4. Test research and null hypotheses.
5. Prepare well-written scholarly papers, using specific style instructions.
6. Prepare survey instruments appropriate to differing aviation settings.
7. Correctly utilize an accepted style/publication manual in preparation or written work.
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| AT 50600 - MS Capstone Research Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A formal investigation of a particular problem under the guidance of the advisory committee. Not applicable to a thesis option plan of study. Enrollment during at least two consecutive terms for a total of three credits is required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Research
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AT 50800 - Quality And Productivity In Industry And Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (IT 50800) Examines the contemporary issues of continuous improvement in quality and productivity in manufacturing and service industries. Includes a close examination of the evolving philosophies bearing on the scope, improvement, and costs of quality assurance programs in industry and technology. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| AT 52000 - Operational Assessment And Improvement |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on developing the skills to analyze, formulate, and apply techniques for work task improvement. Concepts to be studied include workflow enhancement, critical element streamlining, and value added analysis. Students will explore process map construction, process ownership, measurement system validation, standards creation, and decision factors. An industry project will be assigned and used to facilitate course objectives. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| AT 52100 - Resource Analysis And Optimization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides the student with insight to develop and apply business models that adjust and adapt to the changing climate of daily operations in support of aviation customers and product movement. The course uses a combination of lecture and group discussion, as well as project activity to address resource analysis topics, such as queuing fundamentals, swarm theory, and forecasting models. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| AT 52400 - Managerial Economic Decision Making |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores managerial decision making, using economic and strategic impacts of new technology and transformation methodologies on the enterprise system. Management planning and decision making, process costing and allocation, operational control, management control, activity-based costing, and multi-attribute decision-making models are covered. Theory of constraints and lean implementations in aviation are studied to understand the short and long-term effects on financial measures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Upon successful completion of the course, students should be able to:
1. Articulate the managerial economic decision-making terminology.
2. Describe how the impacts of technology implementations affect the enterprise in economic and strategic ways.
3. Describe the short-term and long-term effects of implementations using activity-based costing and financial measures.
4. Analyze and evaluate the impact of technology using a multi-attribute model.
5. Apply managerial economic decision-making to an aviation industry case.
|
| AT 52500 - Process Improvement And Simulation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores process modeling and simulation as applied to decision-making for process design and improvement. Emphasis is placed on understanding the application of process simulations to business problems including using fundamental statistical methods in the solution of an industry relevant problem. By planning and executing a computer-based simulation supporting an aviation or aerospace process design and improvement project, students improve analysis and project management skills. In addition to simulation, preparing visualizations of the process is also included for increased understanding of process interactions. Tyically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The student will have the knowledge and skills required to plan and execute a process improvement and simulation project.
2. The student will be able to compose and evaluate process models and simulations in terms of validity, verification, and usefulness in decision-making.
3. The student will be proficient in Arena or another appropriate process modeling and simulation computer application, as assigned.
4. The student will demonstrate appropriate use of process modeling techniques and data collection required to support the models.
5. The student will prepare and present a formal report describing a process design and improvement project, the methodology used in the project, and the results.
6. Assessment of the objectives is done by: Student's project plan and report; Individual test scores; and Participation in discussion and collaboration with other graduate students.
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| AT 52600 - Aviation Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is intended for future aviation and aerospace managers. Using foundational readings, case studies, and critical analysis techniques, the contribution of past and contemporary aviation leaders will be reviewed. This course is designed for online delivery.
Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Perform a situational analysis of an aviation enterprise management or leadership challenge and recommend appropriate courses of action.
2. Form, lead, and support a team in an aeronautical work setting.
3. Distinguish management roles and actions from leadership roles and actions in both an air carrier organization as well as in a general aviation company.
4. Apply appropriate theories of leadership to realistic organizational situations such as an aviation manufacturing company, a corporate flight department, or aerospace industry organization.
5. Identify salient characteristics of individual and organizational behavior; plan courses of action for organizational change.
6. Identify the competencies of past successful airline leaders; plan a leadership development program for an individual leader in a current aeronautical position.
7. Accurately determine the viability and sustainability of vision strategies as they relate to activities such as flight training schools, fixed-base operator, or airport administration.
8. Recognize global cultural differences and assess the impact of those differences on appropriate leadership styles and organizational change initiatives in selected emerging aeronautical enterprises.
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| AT 52800 - Management And Design Of Training Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will examine the practical applications of managing the training process in industry and educational settings, including the development of instructional materials from an adult learner perspective. Curriculum design using various forms of media and delivery strategies will be emphasized. This course may also be delivered in an online format. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The student will gain management knowledge and skills required to develop a training program for industry or education.
2. The students will be able to design a learning module using instructional design principles in his/her interest area.
3. The student will be able to assess the effectiveness of the training design process.
4. The student will write a comprehensive training plan in an area of his/her field of study.
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| AT 53000 - Multi-Cultural Issues In Team Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the nature and origins of professional, national, and organizational culture and their role in multi-disciplinary team activities. Power distance, individualism/collectivism, gender differences, and uncertainty avoidance are examined in terms of research by Hofstede. Management studies of several international air carriers will be utilized to highlight how cultural differences can affect perceptions. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| AT 53100 - International Civil Aviation Regulatory Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides extensive multi-modal transportation security experience. Students will receive detailed information on air, maritime, rail, mass transit, trucking and oil pipeline security programs, as well as applicable threat mitigation processes. Completion of an undergraduate course in either aviation law or aviation security is recommended. This course may be applicable to undergraduates with appropriate experience and background in aviation or other transportation systems. There are no citizenship or security clearance requirements for this course. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Discuss the history, organization, and interdependence of international, regional and national civil aviation regulatory systems.
2. Discuss the partnerships and alliances between government, industry, stakeholders and financial organizations to support international civil aviation.
3. Discuss transparency and access to international aviation regulatory oversight programs and efforts to mitigate deficiencies and support efficiency.
4. Identify and conduct research on emerging international aviation issues.
5. Demonstrate critical thinking in developing presentations on emerging international aviation regulatory topics.
|
| AT 53200 - Contemporary Issues In Transportation Security |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides extensive multi-modal transportation security experience. Students will receive detailed information on air, maritime, rail, mass transit, trucking and oil pipeline security programs, as well as applicable threat mitigation processes. Completion of an undergraduate course in either aviation law or aviation security is recommended. This course may be applicable to undergraduates with appropriate experience and background in aviation or other transportation systems. There are no citizenship or security clearance requirements for this course. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the threats and countermeasures for transportation systems.
2. Describe the legislative and regulatory agencies responsible for security management.
3. Describe the techniques, policies and practices to counter security gaps.
4. Collect and analyze security data and information.
5. Process and disseminate information related to security mitigation programs.
6. Evaluate a security management program for a transportation system.
|
| AT 54000 - Aviation And Aerospace Sustainability |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores sustainability as applied to aviation and aerospace industries and agencies, both in the private sector and public sector. Students improve analysis skills, and knowledge of the reasoning and application of sustainability. Emphasis is placed on understanding the global and national policies that lead to the regulations and practices in aviation and aerospace. Using a balanced scorecard and a triple bottom line approach, students will develop a project using aviation and aerospace publications to analyze an industry-relevant project using sustainability in the analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Dept of Aviation Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Evaluate sustainability projects affecting aviation and aerospace using multi-attribute analysis techniques such as triple bottom line analysis and balanced scorecard.
2. Collect, assess, organize and present sustainability information.
3. Demonstrate understanding of sustainability terms, policies, and concepts.
4. Develop, communicate and defend an analysis of a sustainability initiative in the aviation or aerospace industry.
|
| AT 54200 - Aviation Fuels And Exhaust Emissions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on aviation fuels, including engine operation with fuel, combustion principles, chemistry, exhaust emissions, and fuel testing procedures. Additionally, the topics of greenhouse gases, global warming, oil reserves, fuel costs, and other factors driving the development of alternative aviation fuels will be covered. Current research in these areas will be discussed and testing procedures will be studied. Students will research new fuels in development, and will analyze the sustainability and potential for success promised by the new technologies in comparison with existing fuels. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Evaluate the relationship of fuel chemistry, properties, and characteristics to the extent necessary to predict impact on performance.
2. Analyze and differentiate the steps in the refining process to determine the characteristics and costs of the various grades of aviation fuels.
3. Analyze fuel test results to predict engine performance utilizing this information.
4. Analyze and compare the exhaust emissions produced by current and new aviation fuels in relation to current and emerging air pollution regulations and policies.
5. Evaluate new fuels and fuel production processes to determine overall sustainability and projected costs under the European Union Emissions Tax Scheme.
6. Analyze the distribution requirements for new fuels in comparison with the existing infrastructure to determine the modifications or accommodations required for system-wide delivery and implementation.
|
| AT 54400 - Aircraft Lifecycle Management Innovations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores sustainability as applied to aviation and aerospace industries and agencies, both in the private sector and public sector. Students improve analysis skills, and knowledge of the reasoning and application of sustainability. Emphasis is placed on understanding the global and national policies that lead to the regulations and practices in aviation and aerospace. Using a balanced scorecard and a triple bottom line approach, students will develop a project using aviation and aerospace publications to analyze an industry-relevant project using sustainability in the analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Analyze and identify relational components of a complex high technology data architecture using the FAA’s Next Generation Air Transportation System (NextGen) construct; create and deploy a small scale aircraft maintenance data management system.
2. Create visual process and data flow maps documenting current and future system and technology constructs within aircraft Maintenance Repair and Overhaul (MRO), its complexity and role in the support of a product/asset’s in–service lifecycle.
3. Conceptualize and explain complex data system structures, the role of systems thinking and technical data needs, and their role in “NextGen” product/asset MRO sustainability.
4. Analyze and identify specific technical data content and delivery needs of the maintainer, within a NextGen, network-enabled work environment for large aircraft.
5. Present and defend a formal report describing a maintenance operations design and improvement project, the methodology used in the project, and the results.
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| AT 54600 - Aviation Financial Instruments And Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course concentrates on increasing the understanding of financial expertise in analyzing trading and hedging programs for application in reducing aviation operational risk exposure. The studies include research into the development and use of operational indexes and their possible relation to hedging with commodity and security instruments. Emphasis will be placed on the understanding of current operational measurements and correlations to trading and hedging financial instruments in providing improved risk management in operational environments. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Propose and defend an analysis using operational data, trading, and hedging programs to reduce financial and operational risk in a specific business area in airline operations.
2. Collect, assess, organize, and present the relationships between operational data, financial data, and commodity volatility.
3. Develop and present the impact of complexity on airline business operations.
|
| AT 55000 - Critical Systems Thinking |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the application of critical systems thinking to complex problems. Using systems theory and case studies developed by technology visionaries, students will investigate alternative solutions to difficult industrial problems with global impact. Outcomes for this course include written assignments, oral presentations, and a final project that addresses a major industrial problem. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand how to frame complex issues in terms of systems thinking methodologies.
2. Be able to synthesize information from different sources to develop a comprehensive aviation strategy.
3. Critically evaluate options and alternative solutions to complex problems.
4. Develop an appreciation for key aviation industry concerns as visionary aviation industry leaders.
5. Develop an eye to see and seize opportunities for innovation within industry.
6. Effectively articulate solutions to complex systems problems.
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| AT 55100 - Graduate Aviation Research Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course provides graduate students with an opportunity to present and develop ongoing research activity in a seminar setting. Individual student research designs, report/thesis structures, and project issues are developed in open forum. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop focused and appropriate research questions.
2. Understand and apply ethical considerations for human subjects research in an appropriate research design.
3. Prepare effective research proposals for use with theoretical or applied research investigations.
4. Effectively analyze and critique current research.
5. Understand manuscript considerations for scholarly publication.
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| AT 57200 - Human Error And Safety |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores the definition and nature of human error, error chains, and causal factors in error generation. Error taxonomies are reviewed in order to provide a classification scheme for grouping errors and assessing error criticality. Methods for assessing risk and predicting error generation potentials are learned, as well as strategies for controlling or eliminating errors. Case studies are utilized throughout the course to illustrate course concepts. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| AT 57300 - Managing The Risk Of Organizational Accidents |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines strategies various industries use to assess the risk of organizational accidents and to develop safety management programs to prevent, capture, and recover from conditions that lead to disastrous outcomes. Strategies such as High Reliability Organizations, Operational Risk Management, Behavioral Based Safety, Tripod Delta, and Safety Cultures are explored as successful methods for improving organizational safety in high-risk environments and endeavors. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| AT 57400 - Exploratory Studies In Aviation Human Factors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of contemporary issues and research related to human factors theory and program strategies as they relate to the aviation industry. The course ventures beyond ergonomic issues into more diverse human factors considerations, while discussing an industry-wide and organizational perspective. The course utilizes a combination of lecture, group discussion, and independent study into issues relevant to student interests and career goals.
. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| AT 57500 - Aviation Safety Program Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The goals of this course are to create a working safety office that allows students to work as a safety officer reacting to real-life aviation safety problems. In so doing, students will achieve the following objectives and will be able to: (1) describe the regulatory and risk environment in which airline safety offices exist; (2) describe safety theories and models; (3) describe human factors and accident causation; (4) collect and analyze safety related data; (5) prepare documentations for references and trainings; (6) manage an airline safety office and implement safety precedents; (7) process and disseminate information related to accident prevention and risk minimization; (8) audit safety plans for air careers, airports, or FBOs. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Be able to describe the regulatory and risk environment in which airline safety offices exist.
2. Be able to describe safety theories and models.
3. Be able to describe human factors and accident causation.
4. Be able to collect and analyze safety related data.
5. Be able to process and disseminate information related to accident prevention and risk minimization.
6. Be able to manage an airline safety office and implement procedures.
7. Be able to design a safety management program for an air career or FBO.
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| AT 58100 - Workshop In Aviation Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. Advanced study of technical and professional topics. Emphasis is on new developments relating to technical, operational, and training aspects of industry and technology education. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| AT 59000 - Special Problems In Aviation Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Independent study of a special problem under the guidance of a member of the staff. Does not substitute for either M.S. thesis or M.S. project credit. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| AT 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Aviation Technology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BA 39000 - Topics In Business |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. An opportunity to investigate and study particular problems and topics in the field of business. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BA 49000 - Problems In Business |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Topics selected for enrichment and further study in special areas of business. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BAND 11000 - Marching Band |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Open through audition. Additional lab and activity fees involved. Mandatory participation required in Marching Band Workshop one week prior to start of fall classes which conflicts with Boilermaker Gold Rush. Workshop covers similar orientation to Gold Rush. Do enroll in BAND 11000 during summer registration prior to the workship and audition process. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Bands
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BAND 11100 - Symphony Orchestra |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Open through audition. Additional lab and activity fees involved. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Bands
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BAND 11200 - American Music Review |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Singers and pianists only. American Music Review is a jazz big band plus 4-5 singers open through audition. Additional lab and activity fees involved. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Bands
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BAND 11300 - Jazz Ensemble |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Open through audition. Additional lab and activity fees involved. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Bands
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BAND 11400 - Basic Jazz |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Open through audition. Additional lab and activity fees involved. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Bands
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BAND 11500 - String Orchestra |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The rehearsal, study, and performance of string orchestra music from the classical, romantic and contemporary areas of composition. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Bands
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BAND 11600 - Symphonic Band |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Open through audition. Additional lab and activity fees involved. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Bands
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BAND 11700 - Concert Band |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Open through audition. Additional lab and activity fees involved. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Bands
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BAND 11800 - Collegiate Band |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Open through audition. Additional lab and activity fees involved. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Bands
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BAND 11900 - Varsity Band |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Open through audition. Additional lab and activity fees involved. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Bands
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BAND 12000 - Applied Music Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Private study on individual wind, string, and percussion instruments. Additional fees involved. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Bands
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BAND 12100 - Symphony Orchestra |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Symphony Orchestra. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Bands
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BAND 12200 - American Music Review |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. American Music Review. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Bands
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BAND 33000 - Summer Concert Bands |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Continuation of BAND 32000. Typically offered Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Bands
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BAND 33100 - Summer Jazz Bands |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Continuation of BAND 33000. Typically offered Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Bands
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BAND 34000 - Renaissance Ensemble |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A survey of renaissance and baroque ensemble literature to be played on appropriate instruments. Reproductions of renaissance and baoque wind, stringed, and brass instruments are available for use in the Department of Bands. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Bands
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BAND 34100 - Renaissance Ensemble |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A survey of renaissance and baroque ensemble literature to be played on appropriate instruments. Reproductions of renaissance and baoque wind, stringed, and brass instruments are available for use in the Department of Bands. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Bands
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BAND 35000 - Wind Ensemble I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The University Wind Ensemble is an organization composed of 42 instrumentalists selected by audition from staff, graduate students, and symphony band members. Concentrating on the rehearsal and performance of contemporary wind music of a highly virtuoso and concertante nature, it offers its members extensive opportunities to rehearse and study works of considerable difficulty from the contemporary area of composition as well as some aspects of the baroque and classical fields. This organization meets once a week throughout the academic year. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Bands
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BAND 35100 - Instrument Ensemble Colloquium |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Instrument Ensemble Colloquium. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Bands
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BAND 36000 - Wind Ensemble II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The University Wind Ensemble is an organization composed of 42 instrumentalists selected by audition from staff, graduate students, and symphony band members. Concentrating on the rehearsal and performance of contemporary wind music of a highly virtuoso and concertante nature, it offers its members extensive opportunities to rehearse and study works of considerable difficulty from the contemporary area of composition as well as some aspects of the baroque and classical fields. This organization meets once a week throughout the academic year. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Bands
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BAND 36100 - Instrument Ensemble Colloquium |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Instrument Ensemble Colloquium. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Bands
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BAND 43000 - Summer Concert Bands |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Summer Concert Bands. Typically offered Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Bands
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BAND 43100 - Summer Jazz Bands |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Summer Jazz Bands. Typically offered Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Bands
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BAND 44000 - Renaissance Ensemble |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A survey of renaissance and baroque ensemble literature to be played on appropriate instruments. Reproductions of renaissance and baroque wind, stringed, and brass instruments are available for use in the Department of Bands. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Bands
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BAND 44100 - Renaissance Ensemble |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A survey of renaissance and baroque ensemble literature to be played on appropriate instruments. Reproductions of renaissance and baroque wind, stringed, and brass instruments are available for use in the Department of Bands. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Bands
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BAND 47000 - Wind Ensemble III |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The University Wind Ensemble is an organization composed of 42 instrumentalists selected by audition from staff, graduate students, and symphony band members. Concentrating on the rehearsal and performance of contemporary wind music of a highly virtuoso and concertante nature, it offers its members extensive opportunities to rehearse and study works of considerable difficulty from the contemporary area of composition as well as some aspects of the baroque and classical fields. This organization meets once a week throughout the academic year. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Bands
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BAND 47100 - Ensemble Colloquium |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Ensemble Colloquium. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Bands
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BAND 48000 - Wind Ensemble IV |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The University Wind Ensemble is an organization composed of 42 instrumentalists selected by audition from staff, graduate students, and symphony band members. Concentrating on the rehearsal and performance of contemporary wind music of a highly virtuoso and concertante nature, it offers its members extensive opportunities to rehearse and study works of considerable difficulty from the contemporary area of composition as well as some aspects of the baroque and classical fields. This organization meets once a week throughout the academic year. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Bands
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BAND 48100 - Ensemble Colloquium |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Ensemble Colloquium. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Bands
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BCHM 10000 - Introduction To Biochemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A survey of modern biochemistry using case studies that highlight general theories and unifying concepts. This course is open to all students and does not require any college science courses as background or prerequisite. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Students will understand the molecular principles of life based on the core disciplines of biology, chemistry and physics.
Students will understand the scientific method. They will be able to develop hypotheses, design experiments and critically analyze results to create new knowledge.
Students will appreciate the ethical issues facing professionals in the life sciences.
Students will understand the contribution of our discipline to society, including improvements to medicine, agriculture, the economy and the environment.
|
| BCHM 22100 - Analytical Biochemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discussion of qualitative and quantitative analysis of biological compounds including pH measurement and control, spectrophotometry, measurement of radioactivity; theoretical basis of various separation techniques, including chromatography and electrophoresis; application of these methods to separation and analysis of biological compounds. Laboratory sessions will provide practical experience in the use of these methods. This course is designed for biochemistry majors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BCHM 27500 - Honors Course - Lower Division |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Utilized to offer a new honors course for a maximum of three years. Variable title, credit, and instructional type. Course may be repeated for credit if content and titles are different. Offered primarily to first and second-year students. Courses offered must be approved by departmental faculty and College of Agriculture Honors Committee. Restriction: Enrollment in an honors program. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Critical thinking.
2. Communication.
3. Professional preparation.
4. Scientific principles.
5. Teamwork.
6. Cultural understanding.
7. Social science principles.
8. Civic responsibilities.
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| BCHM 29000 - Experimental Design Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to fundamentals of scientific principles and practice in biochemistry. Students will learn how to develop hypotheses, design experiments, and critically analyze results to create new knowledge. Intended for sophomores. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Students will have an understanding of the scientific method. They will be able to develop hypotheses, design experiments, and critically analyze results to create new knowledge. Students will have an appreciation of ethical issues facing professionals in the life sciences. Students will communicate scientific knowledge, experiments and conclusions effectively as speakers and writers.
|
| BCHM 29800 - Introduction To Biochemistry Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Supervised individual research. This course is intended to provide an introduction to independent undergraduate research. The primary goal of this experience is to learn the mechanics of laboratory science. Students will learn to work in a real laboratory situation where experiments are not preassembled for them. Students will record their data in laboratory notebooks, and gain experience in trouble-shooting and critically analyzing the results of their experiments. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the scientific method. They will be able to develop hypotheses, design experiments, and critically analyze results to create new knowledge.
2. Use scientific instrumentation to evaluate the activity or function of biological macromolecules.
3. Demonstrate knowledge of analytical and preparative methods that can be applied to biochemistry.
4. Demonstrate knowledge of accepted safe laboratory practices.
5. Demonstrate laboratory experience working with a diverse group of individuals as part of a research team.
6. Demonstrate the ability to organize and document laboratory procedures and results.
7. Appreciate the ethical issues facing professionals in the life sciences.
|
| BCHM 29801 - Head Start To Introductory Biochemistry Research |
|
Credit Hours: 0.50 to 1.00. Supervised individual research. Weeks 9-16. This course is intended to provide a brief introduction to independent undergraduate research. Students should plan on continuing their research in the same laboratory in the following semester. The primary goal of this course is to gain experience working side-by-side with researchers in a real laboratory setting. Students will begin to learn how to best record their data in laboratory notebooks, and gain experience in trouble-shooting and critically analyzing the results of their experiments. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.500 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand the scientific method. They will be able to develop hypotheses, design experiments, and critically analyze results to create new knowledge.
2. Students will use scientific instrumentation to evaluate the activity or function of biological macromolecules.
3. Students will demonstrate knowledge of analytical and preparative methods that can be applied to biochemistry.
4. Students will demonstrate knowledge of accepted safe laboratory practices.
5. Students will demonstrate laboratory experience working with a diverse group of individuals as part of a research team.
6. Students will demonstrate the ability to organize and document laboratory procedures and results.
7. Students will appreciate the ethical issues facing professionals in the life sciences.
|
| BCHM 30700 - Biochemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the chemistry, function, and metabolism of compounds found in the living organism. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BCHM 30900 - Biochemistry Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Experiments that introduce methods for analysis and separation of biological molecules and that illustrate the biochemical and metabolic concepts covered in BCHM 30700. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BCHM 32200 - Analytical Biochemistry II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Modern biochemical techniques for the purification and characterization of biological macromolecules, with a focus on proteins and nucleic acids. This is a project-oriented course where students begin by purifying an enzyme by chromatography and then characterizing various aspects of the enzyme and its gene throughout the semester. Emphasis will be placed on quantitative analysis of properties such as enzymatic activity, molecular interactions, and gene expression as well as the principles of designing assays to measure biochemical phenomena. Use of bioinformatics tools and common computer software for data mining and to facilitate data analysis will be integrated. The course will culminate with preparation of a manuscript-style report describing the enzyme/gene characterization. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BCHM 36100 - Molecules |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A lecture course that relates biochemistry to organic chemistry. Chemical principles relevant to the assembly and function of macromolecules, the logic of biological free energy conversion, and enzyme catalysis are emphasized, all of which provide a foundation for the study of metabolism. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the chemical structures of the building blocks of biological macromolecules, including amino acids, nucleotides, sugars and fatty acids.
2. Demonstrate knowledge of the higher order structures of proteins, nucleic acids and polysaccharides.
3. Understand the principles of enzyme catalysis and regulation.
4. Demonstrate knowledge of lipid membrane structure and function.
5. Understand how energy is harvested and utilized by biological systems.
6. Demonstrate knowledge of analytical and preparative methods that can be applied to biochemistry.
7. Understand the contributions of the discipline to society, including improvements to medicine, agriculture, the economy and the environment.
|
| BCHM 39000 - Professional Development Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The objective of this course is to help biochemistry students with professional development and career planning. Students will learn about career possibilities, interview skills, job search strategies, graduate and professional school applications, resume construction and industrial practices. Intended for juniors. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Students will understand the contributions of our discipline to society, including improvements to medicine, agriculture, the economy and the environment. Students will acquire information literacy: the ability to locate, evaluate, and utilize information in the disciplines of biochemistry and molecular biology that is required for research, data analysis, and communication.
|
| BCHM 40000 - Biochemistry Study Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. Utilized to record credits earned through participation in Purdue study abroad programs with cooperating foreign universities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
|
| BCHM 46200 - Metabolism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A lecture course to provide students with a broad and thorough understanding of core metabolic pathways and how they are resulted. Anabolic and catabolic processes of metabolic pathways will be studied at the biochemical, structural, genetic and molecular levels. Students will learn to appreciate how the various metabolic pathways are integrated and how the fundamental metabolic pathways relate to medicine, agriculture and human disease. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Students will understand the molecular principles of life based on the core disciplines of biology, chemistry and physics. Students will understand the contributions of our discipline to society, including improvements to medicine, agriculture, the economy and the environment.
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| BCHM 46300 - Macromolecular Machines |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A tour of the cell from the perspective of the macromolecules. This course examines how the three-dimensional structures of biological molecules confer cellular function. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Students will understand the molecular principles of life based on the core disciplines of biology, chemistry and physics. Students will communicate scientific knowledge, experiments and conclusions effectively as speakers and writers. Students will acquire information literacy: the ability to locate, evaluate and utilize information in the disciplines of biochemistry and molecular biology that is required for research, data analysis and communication.
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| BCHM 46500 - Biochemistry Of Life Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Major questions in biochemistry and contemporary approaches to these problems. Material covered in class will primarily be derived from primary literature. Students will continue to develop the skills needed to critically read, evaluate, and assimilate the primary scientific literature. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Students will understand the molecular principles of life based on the core disciplines of biology, chemistry and physics. Students will understand the scientific method. They will be able to develop hypotheses, design experiments and critically analyze results to create new knowledge. Students will acquire information literacy: the ability to locate, evaluate and utilize information in the disciplines of biochemistry and molecular biology that is required for research, data analysis and communication. Students will appreciate the ethical issues facing professionals in the life sciences. Students will understand the contribution of our discipline to society, including improvements to medicine, agriculture, the economy and the environment.
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| BCHM 47500 - Honors Course - Upper Division |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Utilized to offer a new honors course for a maximum of three years. Variable title, credit, and instructional type. Course may be repeated for credit if content and titles are different. Offered primarily to third- and fourth-year students. Courses offered must be approved by departmental or program faculty and College of Agriculture Honors Committee. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 12 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
2. Demonstrate the ability to write and speak with effectiveness while considering audience and purpose.
3. Demonstrate knowledge of a range of cultures and an understanding of human values and points of view of other than their own.
4. Demonstrate awareness of civic responsibility to community and society at large.
5. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and professional conduct. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate and text hypotheses, conduct experiments and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
6. Demonstrate ability to apply social, economic, political, and environmental principles to living in a global community.
7. Demonstrate the ability to work effectively as part of a problem-solving team.
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| BCHM 49000 - Undergraduate Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Discussion of individual student's research projects peformed in BCHM 49800, BCHM 49900 or BCHM 57200. Preparation of posters and public seminars based upon research results obtained in BCHM 49800, BCHM 49900 or BCHM 57200.
Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCHM 49500 - Special Assignments |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Special work in biochemistry not included in other courses. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
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| BCHM 49800 - Research In Biochemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Supervised individual research. This course is intended to provide the opportunity for in-depth, independent undergraduate research. The students enrolled in this course will learn how to devise hypotheses, design experiments that test their hypotheses, record their data in laboratory notebooks, critically analyze the results of their analyses, and present their findings to others in written form. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand the scientific method. They will be able to develop hypotheses, design experiments, and critically analyze results to create new knowledge.
2. Students will communicate scientific knowledge, experiments and conclusions effectively as speakers and writers.
3. Students will use scientific instrumentation to evaluate the activity or function of biological macromolecules.
4. Students will demonstrate knowledge of analytical and preparative methods that can be applied to biochemistry.
5. Students will demonstrate knowledge of accepted safe laboratory practices.
6. Students will demonstrate laboratory experience working with a diverse group of individuals as part of a research team.
7. Students will demonstrate the ability to organize and document laboratory procedures and results.
8. Students will describe research projects in an oral presentation that can be readily understood by a general scientific audience.
9. Students will appreciate the ethical issues facing professionals in the life sciences.
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| BCHM 49801 - Head Start To Biochemistry Research |
|
Credit Hours: 0.50 to 2.00. Supervised individual research. Weeks 9-16. This course is intended to provide a brief research experience in preparation for in-depth, independent undergraduate research the following semester. The students enrolled in this course will begin to learn how to devise hypotheses, design experiments that test their hypotheses, record their data in laboratory notebooks, critically analyze the results of their analyses, and present their findings to others in written form. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.500 TO 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand the scientific method. They will be able to develop hypotheses, design experiments, and critically analyze results to create new knowledge.
2. Students will communicate scientific knowledge, experiments and conclusions effectively as speakers and writers.
3. Students will use scientific instrumentation to evaluate the activity or function of biological macromolecules.
4. Students will demonstrate knowledge of analytical and preparative methods that can be applied to biochemistry.
5. Students will demonstrate knowledge of accepted safe laboratory practices.
6. Students will demonstrate laboratory experience working with a diverse group of individuals as part of a research team.
7. Students will demonstrate the ability to organize and document laboratory procedures and results.
8. Students will describe research projects in an oral presentation that can be readily understood by a general scientific audience.
9. Students will appreciate the ethical issues facing professionals in the life sciences.
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| BCHM 49900 - Honors Thesis In Biochemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is intended to provide the opportunity for in-depth, independent undergraduate research. The students enrolled in this course will learn how to devise hypotheses, design experiments that test their hypotheses, record their data in laboratory notebooks, critically analyze the results of their analyses, and present their findings to others in the form of a written thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
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| BCHM 56100 - General Biochemistry I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides upper-division undergraduate and graduate students with basic understanding of biochemical and structural properties of amino acids, nucleic acids, lipids, and carbohydrates. This course allows students to connect the relationship between structure and function of biomolecules. In addition, students learn to understand enzyme properties, enzyme mechanism of action, and enzyme regulation. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand the molecular principles of life based on the core disciplines of biology, chemistry and physics.
2. Students will understand the scientific method. They will be able to develop hypotheses, design experiments, and critically analyze results to create new knowledge.
3. Students will be skilled laboratory scientists. They will perform a wide variety of biochemical and molecular techniques.
4. Students will understand the contributions of our discipline to society, including improvements to medicine, agriculture, the economy and the environment.
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| BCHM 56200 - General Biochemistry II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides upper-division undergraduate and graduate students with an understanding of core metabolic pathways. Anabolic and catabolic processes of metabolic pathways are studied. Biochemical and structural knowledge is used to determine how enzymes and coenzymes are needed to regulate and control metabolic pathways. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand the molecular principles of life based on the core disciplines of biology, chemistry and physics.
2. Students will understand the contributions of our discipline to society, including improvements to medicine, agriculture, the economy and the environment.
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| BCHM 57200 - Advanced Biochemical Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students are strongly encouraged to consult with the instructor before registering for the course. Modern techniques for the isolation, purification, and characterization of biological macromolecules. Advanced techniques of protein and nucleic acid chemistry. Emphasis will be placed on recombinant DNA technology, including the isolation, cloning, and characterization of genes. Specific projects will be designed to meet individual student interests. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BCHM 59300 - Chemistry Of Metabolism |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The course objective is to provide beginning graduate students with an understanding of the organic chemical basis of metabolic transformations. Pathways are not emphasized, but the chemical principles that govern some of the reactions are emphasized. Special emphasis is placed on carbon-carbon bond formation, nitrogen insertion, and the formation of structures with aromatic rings. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCHM 60100 - Critical Analysis Of Biochemical Research Literature I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The objective of this course is to assist students in acquiring the skills needed to read critically, evaluate, and assimilate the primary scientific literature. This objective will be accomplished by instructor-guided discussions of the hypotheses, experimental data, conclusions, and scientific merit of assigned manuscript(s) taken from the fields of biochemistry and molecular biology. Topics for discussion initially will focus on the structure, organization, review process, and ethical issues related to scientific manuscripts. As the semester progresses, discussions will focus on the hypotheses being tested, quality of the data, and validity of the conclusions. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCHM 60200 - Critical Analysis Of Biochemical Research Literature II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Builds on the skills developed in BCHM 601. Students will continue to enhance their analytical skills, and class discussions will be conducted at a more sophisticated level and will go into greater depth. Class discussions will focus more on the analysis and evaluation of current methodologies and hypotheses in the biochemical and molecular biological literature. Students will be evaluated primarily on their preparation and participation in each class discussion. Prerequisite: BCHM 60100. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCHM 63000 - Analytical Biochemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Theoretical and practical aspects of techniques used in the qualitative and quantitative analysis of biological materials. Techniques to be discussed include gas chromatography, combination gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, high speed liquid chromatography, affinity chromatography, electrophoresis, centrifugation, radiochemical procedures, absorption spectroscopy, and fluorescence spectroscopy. Emphasis will be placed on the application of these techniques to the solution of current biochemical problems. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: BCHM 56200. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCHM 64500 - Biochemistry Of Nucleic Acids |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Structure-function relationships in RNA and DNA with emphasis on bacteriophage. Punctuation sequences recognized during transcription and translation; palindromes as substrates for restriction endonucleases and sites of repressor binding. General and site-specific recombination, replication. Molecular cloning in plasmid, cosmid, and phage vectors. Offered in alternate summers. Prerequisite: BCHM 56100 and 56200. Typically offered Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCHM 65900 - Structure, Function Of Proteins |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A critical treatment of structure-function relationships of proteins. Protein purification, amino acid sequence analysis, chemical modifications of proteins, protein folding, active sites, and protein-protein interactions will be discussed. The ways in which the chemical properties of the individual amino acid side chains influence the structures, chemical properties, and enzymatic reactivities of proteins will be emphasized throughout the course. Prerequisite: BCHM 56100 and 56200. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCHM 66000 - Structure, Function Of Nucleic Acids |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A critical treatment of structure-function relationships of nucleic acids. Prerequisite: BCHM 56100 or 56200. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCHM 66300 - Membranes Structure, Function, Control |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A critical introduction to structure and function of biological membranes. Topics include mobilities of membrane constituents, properties of membrane proteins, mechanisms of membrane transport, membrane synthesis and flow, secretion, receptors, and signal transduction. Prerequisite: BCHM 56100 and 56200. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCHM 66400 - Bioenergetics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. (BIOL 60000) Energy transduction in biological membranes: physical chemical foundations; electron transfer, proton translocation; and active transport. Atomic structures of integral membrane protein complexes responsible for respiratory, photosynthetic generation of electrochemical potential; ATPase motor, and structure-based mechanisms. A full year of general biochemistry and at least one semester of physical chemistry are strongly recommended before taking this course. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCHM 66500 - Enzyme Mechanisms |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will build upon the foundations of BCHM 659. Topics include mechanisms of binding, catalysis, and inhibition. Examples used are from the literature to discuss biochemical and molecular biological approaches to studying protein function. Prerequisite: BCHM 65900. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCHM 69000 - Seminar In Biochemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Seminary In Biochemistry. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BCHM 69300 - Molecular Mechanisms Of Signal Transduction |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The molecular basis for the major intracellular signaling pathways of eukaryotes will be covered. Lectures will emphasize the structure, function, and regulation of key proteins involved in reversible protein phosphorylation, calcium mobilization, phospholipid turnover, cyclic nucleotide metabolism, and transmembrane signaling in response to hormone and growth factors. Prerequisite: BCHM 65900 and 66300. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BCHM 69500 - Special Topics In Biochemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Critical examination of developments in specialized fields of biochemistry. Open to candidates for the Ph.D. degree in biochemistry; others by special permission of the professor in charge. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BCHM 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BCHM 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Biochemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BCM 10001 - Introduction To Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to Construction is a survey of the construction industry. It includes the overall construction process from initial concept through start-up of the complete facility, career opportunities in the construction industry, and an introduction to the materials and management systems used in construction, with an emphasis on vocabulary building. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Introduce students to the Building Construction Management (BCM) department.
2. Review the history of the construction management industry through the current trends for the future such as sustainable construction.
3. Evaluate the campus resources available for students’ success.
4. Identify and define materials Construction Standards Institute (CSI) methods and construction vocabulary.
5. Explain the various sectors of the construction industry and career opportunities for the students.
6. Utilize software as it relates to the construction industry.
7. Identify the roles of major players in the construction industry and how they work as a team.
8. Identify the general concepts and applications of Building Information Modeling (BIM) Management to construction plans and specifications.
9. Expose the opportunities for lifelong learning in the construction industry and certification programs.
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| BCM 11200 - Construction Surveying Fundamentals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to basic surveying operations. Development of the surveying skills necessary to measure distances, angles, and elevations to required accuracies. Calculation of tape corrections, bearing, coordinates, traverses, and areas. Emphasis is placed on instrument use and note-keeping techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| BCM 11201 - Construction Surveying Fundamentals |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to basic surveying measurement and computations. Development of the surveying skills necessary to measure distances, angles, and elevations to required construction accuracies by eliminating mistakes and reducing errors. Calculation of corrections, traverse closures, coordinates, areas and construction layout data. Emphasis is placed on proper instrument use and note-keeping techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Introduce the student to the role of surveying on the construction site.
2. Describe the theory of errors in measurement, and identify how it applies to chaining, leveling and angles.
3. Identify the terminology associated with establishing line and grade on a jobsite.
4. Keep accurate, neat, complete, and logical field notes for construction surveying operations.
5. Identify and calculate the corrections made to measurements to obtain horizontal distances.
6. Demonstrate the various methods of measurement to obtain distances, angles, and elevations.
7. Utilize various types of levels, theodolites, and total stations to establish horizontal and vertical control on a jobsite.
8. Evaluate field measurement by the use of traverse computations to determine the precision of the fieldwork.
9. Calculate coordinates of control and calculate field layout data for building points.
10. Locate a building using various methods of layout.
11. Prepare a jobsite site plan.
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| BCM 13000 - Structural Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Not open to building construction management technology students. An introductory study of materials and systems used in structures. The study of materials includes their properties, characteristics, design parameters, and general applications. The study of structures, superstructures, special structures, and construction features. A qualitative approach is taken, with emphasis on vocabulary building. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BCM 17500 - Construction Materials And Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Students acquire basic skills in construction methods, quantity estimating, plan reading, and project documentation through hands-on laboratory experience assembling construction materials. Computer utilization includes word processing, spreadsheets, and computer graphics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lab 1, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify the different types of materials used in construction.
2. Read and interpret construction plans.
3. Participate in the construction activities of wood, steel, masonry and concrete construction.
|
| BCM 21200 - Construction Layout |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of surveying skills relevant to the field of construction. Projects include layout of buildings, route centerlines, indirect determination of elevation and distance, referencing, establishment of grade, topographic mapping, and earthwork computations. Instruments used will include transit, theodolite, automatic level, laser, and EDM. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Determine the accuracy required for specific construction layout activities.
2. Utilize EDMs to measure and lay out distances in construction settings.
3. Calculate and lay out horizontal and vertical curves.
4. Calculate field layout data from coordinates.
|
| BCM 21500 - Mechanical Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of code, design, methods, and materials are applied to plumbing, heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems for buildings. The comprehension of mechanical construction plans and specifications is emphasized through exercises in mechanical estimating. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BCM 21601 - Electrical Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Principles of code and basic concepts in electrical theory, materials, methods, design and estimating are applied to electrical systems for buildings. Comprehension of electrical construction plans and specifications as well as installation exercises are emphasized through lab experiences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate thorough knowledge of all documents normally used in the electrical construction process including plans and specifications.
2. Recognize the applications of commonly used types of electrical materials required in building construction.
3. Interpret and evaluate materials selection, installation methods, and proper sizing and installation techniques using the National Electrical Code.
4. Illustrate the ability to effectively interact with building construction professionals regarding electrical construction.
5. Recall the names, nicknames, applications and rules for commonly used materials in the electrical contracting industry.
6. Construct proper electrical systems schematics.
7. Assemble the correct components and arrange them correctly to demonstrate basic electrical circuit knowledge.
8. Inspect electrical installations and identify rudimentary National Electrical Code violations.
|
| BCM 23000 - Mechanical And Electrical Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Not open to building construction management technology students. An introductory study of piping, HVAC, and electrical systems, and related materials used in buildings. This course is a composite of BCM 23100, 23200, and 23300.Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| BCM 23500 - Construction Materials & Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced study of materials and structural systems used in buildings. The study of materials includes their properties, characteristics, design parameters and applications. A study of structures, superstructures, special structures and construction features.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| BCM 25001 - Construction Project And Administrative Management |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The study of administrative functions and project delivery methods common in the construction industry. Documentation from project startup through closeout will be covered as well as ethics and professionalism and written and oral communications in construction. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Complete American Institute of Architecture (AIA) application for payments.
2. Interpret and prepare requests for information, transmittals, and other construction communication documents.
3. Write a formal business letter and a memo.
4. Prepare and present a project summary report.
5. Investigate use of introductory Internet based project management systems.
|
| BCM 27000 - Materials And Estimates |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of materials, components, manufactured products, connections, details, and assemblies related to estimating construction work. Practice in estimating quantities and listing of work items in standard quantity survey format. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| BCM 27500 - Construction Plans And Measurements |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of graphic communication are applied to drawing and reading construction plans with emphasis on the use of computer-aided design software. Techniques for measuring items of construction work from plans and specifications are also covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture 1, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCM 28500 - Construction Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Principles of statics and strength of materials including properties of materials, forces, equilibrium, stresses, and strains are studied. Emphasis is placed on understanding the behavior of structural components associated with the construction process. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCM 29100 - Building Construction Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Practice in industry and written reports of this practice. Admission to the Building Construction Management Technology Cooperative Education Program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCM 29200 - Building Construction Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Practice in industry and written reports of this practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCM 30101 - Introduction To Construction Company Financial Management |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An introduction to methods for recognizing revenue for long-term construction contracts and each method's impact on financial statements. Includes introduction to analysis of financial statements and their use in developing company budgets, projecting cash needs, pricing construction projects, and forecasting the impact of business decisions on construction company profit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and explain the use of various revenue recognition methods available to the construction contractor.
2. Identify the unique accounts required for percentage of completion revenue recognition, describe what the account represents, and indicate on which statement the account is found.
3. Interpret the outcomes of line-item analysis, vertical analysis, horizontal analysis, and cost-volume-profit analysis utilizing construction company financial statement data.
4. Perform a profit center analysis of an income statement.
5. Prepare an annual budget for a construction company given source documents.
6. Analyze the impact of various decisions on company profits by applying the cost-volume-profit financial analysis technique.
7. Select the appropriate overhead and profit allocation technique given example company cost structures and compute minimum company overhead and profit mark-up rates.
8. Prepare a monthly company budget given the annual budget and other appropriate information.
9. Compare the monthly budget prepared to actual data.
10. Compare and contrast profit and cash flow for the construction company.
11. Prepare a cash flow projection by applying the company monthly budget.
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| BCM 31500 - Mechanical Construction Estimating |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Costs conditioned by the contract documents for building mechanical systems are studied. The course will focus on the methods used to estimate the cost of commercial plumbing, heating, ventilating, and air conditioning systems. The course will utilize computer estimating systems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCM 31600 - Electrical Construction Estimating |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Costs dictated by the contract documents for the electrical systems in residential, commercial, industrial, specialty, and line construction projects are studied. The course will utilize computer estimating systems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Define the conceptual framework of electrical estimating.
2. Define the elements and process of residential and commercial estimating.
3. Perform quantity take off and price out to bid summary of electrical work on a project.
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| BCM 31700 - Mechanical And Electrical Construction Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The principles of project management are applied to case studies of mechanical and electrical construction projects. Topics include estimating, trade coordination, labor productivity, labor relations, scheduling, management of subcontractors and general contractors, document control and administration, contract law, and subcontractor's risk. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the details of construction management as applied to mechanical and electrical specialty contractors.
2. Compare general construction practices to specialty contractors.
3. Introduce higher level thinking related to MEP contractors.
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| BCM 32000 - Introduction To Disaster Restoration And Reconstruction Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory topics in the DRR concentration are discussed; causes of disasters and dimensions of their effects, protocols, equipment, and techniques of restoration and reconstruction, including project and business management practices and imperatives of DRR contractors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCM 32100 - Disaster Restoration And Reconstruction Project Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced topics include the continued development of a student¿s ability to integrate knowledge, skills, and other abilities essential for effective project management in the concentration. Coursework typically includes scenario-driven role playing with chronologically sequential project-level managerial problem-solving exercises. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCM 33000 - Introduction To Demolition And Reconstruction Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the opportunities and challenges in demolition and reconstruction management. Topics include: introduction to industry regulation, project planning, labor and equipment utilization, techniques and technologies, hazardous materials, issues involving historic properties, material reuse and recycling, safety and risk management, estimating and cost control, project feasibility, issues of ethics, and company management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCM 33100 - Advanced Demolition And Reconstruction Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of advanced topics in demolition and reconstruction management to further develop the students's ability to integrate knowledge, skills, and abilities essential for effective project management in the concentration. Emphasis is placed on project level planning, problem solving, and execution. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCM 34000 - Introduction To Healthcare Construction Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the allocation and distribution of construction resources in the healthcare construction sector and an overview of current theories and research. Topics include the demand for health care, health insurance, hospitals and the services of all the possible healthcare professional stakeholders. A thorough understanding of the environment of care and all codes and standards relative to the constructors approach to this complex environment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCM 34100 - Advanced Topics In Healthcare Construction Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of all facilities used in the health-care industry, ranging from hospitals and clinics to nursing homes and laboratories, emphasizing the interrelationship of planning, design, and construction. Topics include infectious materials control, disruption avoidance, rapid technology changes, and advanced/non-typical mechanical and electrical systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Define the constructions process relating to the healthcare built environment.
2. Define the commissioning process.
3. Define terminology, technical resources and best practices of Healthcare Facility Commissioning.
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| BCM 34500 - Scheduling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the planning and control of construction projects. Time schedules for materials, labor, and equipment. Emphasis is on critical path method (CPM) scheduling. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| BCM 35000 - Construction Site Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of material handling principles and their application in preparing a site utilization plan. The selection and use of construction equipment are emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain common construction project planning activities that help decrease duration, reduce cost, improve quality, and ensure safety.
2. Apply material handling principles to analyze the efficiency of construction logical site activities.
3. Compare performance of construction equipment to select the most productive item for the task.
4. Explain logistical administrative procedures that can enhance construction operations.
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| BCM 35501 - Construction Site Supervision |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A study of the required skills, duties, responsibilities, and leadership of construction on-site supervisory personnel and how they related to managing people on a jobsite. Emphasis is placed on understanding the multiple stakeholders, communication, collaboration, planning, and problem solving. This course will examine how the success of overall construction project is directly tied to the skills of key supervisors or superintendents. Typically offered fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the role of the superintendent as the leader.
2. Understand the responsibilities of the on-site members of the construction team.
3. Understand the human factors related to supervising the job.
4. Facilitate standard jobsite meetings and team interactions.
5. Understand a collective bargaining union agreement.
6. Understand jobsite documentation.
7. Understand constructability issues and the required preconstruction planning required of site personnel.
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| BCM 36000 - Residential Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the best building practices in residential construction, based upon green building standards, energy star, and other national programs. Course content includes partial fulfillment of the requirements for the certified green professional designation (CGP) from the National Association of Home Builders. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCM 36100 - Residential Field Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the field supervision practices related to the construction of a residential structure, including coordinating mechanical and electrical system installations. Course content includes partial fulfillment of the requirements for the residential construction superintendent designation (RCS), sponsored by the national Association of Home Builders/Home Builders Institute. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCM 36200 - Construction Competition |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This is a multi-disciplinary course where students from several majors work together as a team, developing a proposal for a construction of development project, which is presented at a student competition. Topics include a variety of project types, including land development, design/build, residential, commercial and heavy highway. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCM 37500 - Estimating |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the methods and procedures used to identify, measure, and value items of construction work. Application of computer software to estimating tasks is featured. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture 1, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Manage the processing of addenda, clarifications, and questions during the bidding phase.
2. Analyze subcontractor and supplier quotes.
3. Define basic principles and data sources for pricing.
4. Estimate costs for direct work that a general contractor might execute.
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| BCM 38000 - Concrete Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of concrete construction, including material composition, behavior and handling of concrete, formwork, and concrete reinforcement. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| BCM 38501 - Soils In Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is a study of the properties of soils as related to construction. Students will be introduced to soil testing and classification, subsurface soil investigation, soil compaction and stabilization, stress distribution in soil, strength, strength of soil, soil consolidation and related structure settlement. Other topics include earth pressure on retaining structures, stability analysis of slopes, and productivity/cost of earthmoving equipment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lab 1, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Introduce students to origin and composition of soils.
2. Identify soil types, structures, and properties related to construction.
3. Conduct soil sieve test, calculate soil particle size distribution, and develop soil gradation curves.
4. Measure soil plasticity, liquid limit, and plastic limit.
5. Classify soils using standard classification systems.
6. Determine soil’s maximum dry density and optimum moisture content and assure compaction quality and efficiency.
7. Choose appropriate equipment for effective soil compaction.
8. Explain soil hydraulic properties, permeability, capillarity and related foundation frost damages.
9. Study earth stress, retaining wall pressure, and slope stability.
10. Illustrate the principles of soil settlement, compressibility and consolidation.
11. Present the methods and procedures for construction site investigation of soils and subsurface conditions.
12. Analyze and use geotechnical reports.
13. Discuss the productivity and costs of earthmoving equipment.
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| BCM 39300 - Building Construction Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Practice in industry and written reports of this practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCM 39400 - Building Construction Practice IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Practice in industry and written reports of this practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCM 39500 - Building Construction Practice V |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Practice in industry and written reports of this practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCM 40000 - Analysis Of Construction Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of construction management techniques studied during a minimum of 10 weeks of work. Prior departmental approval of the type of work is required. A written and oral report to include a description, analysis, and evaluation of management techniques, systems, and controls must be presented during the following academic year to receive credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCM 41200 - Field Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the duties of the field engineer and their applications to projects involving construction surveying techniques, site utilization, and daily scheduling. Field trips required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCM 41700 - Design/Build For Mep Contractors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The student will study, develop, and analyze conceptual design and conceptual estimating of mechanical, electrical, plumbing, fire protection, and specialty systems in construction. The principles of design/build construction will be applied to case studies of actual residential, commercial, industrial, and specialty construction projects. Topics include building systems, criteria and selection, economic feasibility, value engineering, customer control, and value-added construction services. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand how the design/build construction process differs from other contract delivery methods.
2. Analyze and select MEP building systems based upon customer-developed criteria.
3. Develop conceptual estimate of MEP building systems.
4. Examine the economic feasibility of various MEP systems, and be able to present the pros and cons of each system to an owner.
5. Explain the design/build contract and define associated risks.
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| BCM 41900 - Sustainable Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of sustainable construction meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. This includes evaluating the consumption of resources and environmental depletion and degradation; examining subsidiary issues of materials, energy, water, land use, and the integration of the natural and built environments, including an overview of emerging delivery systems for high performance green buildings. The U.S. Green Building Council Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) criteria are discussed in detail. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCM 42100 - Disaster Restoration And Reconstruction Industry Problem Investigation |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A course that develops a student's preparation for an industrial concentration through a faculty and practitioner-guided study and analysis of a current DRR problem. The course culminates in a formal oral presentation and paper whose position is justified on the basis of the study and application of earlier coursework. In addition to faculty oversight, each student is typically guided by a practicing manager of the DRR industry who serves as a mentor to further develop student management potential. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Perform relevant industrially focused research.
2. Effectively communicate the results of research.
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| BCM 43500 - Design/Build |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A study of the design/build project delivery system. Emphasis is placed on comparing and contrasting construction management functions in design/build with those in more traditional forms of project delivery such as general contracting and construction management. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCM 45100 - Computers In Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of software applications for construction management, including applications of Building Information Modeling (BIM) and Virtual Design and Construction (VDC). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCM 45500 - Construction Company Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Business policy and management aspects of construction companies are studied. Included are ethics, public relations, business development, business plans, bonds, insurance, and human resource management considerations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| BCM 45701 - Construction Safety |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course will examine the impact of safety on the construction industry, including in-depth discussions on the application of the Occupational Safety & Health Administration (OSHA) Safety and Health Standards for the construction industry. The emphasis of this course is to provide training for job sited supervisory personnel. This course will also fulfill the requirements for the OSHA 30-Hour Card. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Be familiar with all OSHA standards required for the 20-hour card program.
2. Identify the role of OSHA in the construction industry and examine current issues related to safety.
3. Acquire knowledge of jobsite safety management and company safety risk management.
4. Identify and evaluate jobsite hazards, including abatement strategies and procedures.
5. Complete the requirements for an OSHA 30-hour card in Construction Safety & Health Administration.
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| BCM 46000 - Residential Land Development |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The principles of residential land development are applied to a case study of an actual planned residential project from concept to completion. Topics include subdivision development, planning, estimating, scheduling, construction process management, customer service, cost analysis, proposal writing, and individual and team presentations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCM 46100 - Residential Design Build |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A study of the design/build project delivery system for residential construction, including home design fundamentals, construction methods, disability code requirements, building code requirements. Course content includes partial fulfillment of the requirements for the National Association of Home Builders, Certified Aging-In-Place (CAPS) designation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCM 47500 - Construction Costs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of construction costs, including analysis of field records, job cost accounting, job cost control, and determination of unit prices. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCM 48100 - Highway Construction And Quality Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of methods, materials, equipment, and processes used in constructing, maintaining, repairing, and rehabilitating roadways. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCM 48200 - Steel Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the steel construction process emphasizing how structural members are fabricated, delivered, and erected into buildings and bridges. Field trips required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCM 48701 - Construction Capstone |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides a comprehensive summary of the construction industry. Emphasis is placed on the "big picture" and how the stakeholders, processes, and tasks come together to complete a complex construction project. Skills attained in previous coursework and internships will be used in industry simulations and comprehensive projects. Industry participants will provide real world coursework challenges. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the overall timeline of construction project development from concept through construction to closeout and utilization.
2. Prepare and professionally present projects.
3. Demonstrate project simulation tasks as they relate to a student's specialty areas.
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| BCM 49000 - Construction Experience IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Credit for extensive work experience in the construction industry. The quantity, quality, and variety of the experience are used as a basis for evaluating the amount of credit. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BCM 49200 - Construction Career Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Discussion of current career opportunities and career planning in the construction industry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BCM 49700 - Special Topics In Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 4.00. Hours, subject matter, and credit to be arranged by staff. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BCM 49900 - Special Assignments |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Special assignments for students who wish to undertake individual study on approved topics. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BCM 51000 - Topics In Environmentally Sustainable Construction, Design And Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores environmental sustainability in all its forms, starting with the historical and theoretical basis and continuing through an understanding of sustainable building construction, design, development, and renewable energy strategies/management tools and how these can be applied in practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Recognize human population trends and their effects on associated resource demands.
2. Identify and evaluate energy use trends, including status quo, business-as-usual (BAU) and alternative production and delivery approaches.
3. Interpret and analyze regional and global climate trends and implications, including policy alternatives.
4. Illustrate economic and social drivers, including triple bottom line business practices.
5. Discuss trends and management alternatives in land and ocean ecosystems.
6. Examine food and water security issues including production, management, and distribution alternatives.
7. Distinguish behavior psychology including examination of constraints and opportunities for sustainable practices.
8. Compare market and other incentives designed to stimulate best practices for building design and community planning.
9. Demonstrate knowledge of the conceptual history and controversies involving sustainability.
10. Apply current sustainability principles.
11. Debate common sustainability issues from multiple perspectives.
12. Recognize uncertainty envelopes and constraints on predictive knowledge.
13. Apply best practices in sustainability to their specific field of interest.
14. Employ interdisciplinary approaches to sustainability outside of their own field.
15. Recognize the challenges and opportunities of applying science and technology to governance.
16. Formulate messaging skills needed to deliver scientific information to popular audiences.
17. Practice abstract theoretical evaluation of sustainability challenges and solutions.
18. Employ critical reading and writing skills within scientific, policy and popular media.
19. Prepare action research projects to transform sector-specific practices for sustainability.
20. Construct a broad range of delivery and assessment strategies to support change for sustainability.
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| BCM 51100 - Energy Conserving Building Retrofit |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces energy related reconstruction of buildings with an emphasis on light commercial buildings. Retrofit topics include: Basic thermodynamics, Energy conserving technologies, Impact of site characteristics, Indoor air quality, Water conservation measures, Measuring and benchmarking energy performance, Cost/Benefit Analysis, Financing energy improvements, as well as Building operation and management to reduce energy and water use. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and describe opportunities for energy conservation in existing light commercial buildings through energy related reconstruction activities, commissioning, onsite power generation, as well as building operation and management strategies.
2. Apply basic thermodynamics to energy related retrofit strategies.
3. Identify, classify, and describe techniques and technologies that can be utilized in building envelop, building site, or HVAC systems for energy or water conservation.
4. Apply problem solving and decision making for cost vs. benefit analysis of retrofit strategies.
5. Apply basic energy measurement and benchmarking simulation models.
6. Identify the ways indoor air quality is impacted by ventilation, retrofit product selection and occupant activities.
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| BCM 52000 - Preconstruction Project Management |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Management and control of projects from authorization to start of construction. Project success factors, conceptual and parametric estimating, design planning and management constructability review techniques and value engineering methods. Real estate transactions. Land zoning, platting, development and pro forma calculations. BCM graduate students may register for this course without written departmental department or instructor approval. Non BCM students must obtain written department approval prior to registration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Appreciate the real estate site selection process.
2. Understand the zoning and platting process.
3. Develop an understanding of the real estate transaction process.
4. Compare and contrast project delivery systems.
5. Understand the design process.
6. Identify project success factors.
7. Utilize value engineering and constructability concepts.
8. Understand the role of preconstruction in the project life cycle.
9. Employ early estimating techniques.
10. Analyze projects from a time-value of money perspective.
11. Evaluate the viability of a construction project before authorization.
12. Appreciate roles played by the various participants in the preconstruction process.
13. Ensure adequate risk management measures have been employed.
14. Apply real estate development rules and consider regulatory issues.
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| BCM 52500 - Managing Construction Quality And Production |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced techniques for assessing the success of construction project management including schedule cost, safety and quality measurements. Impacts of pre planning, human factors, and communication systems on quality and productivity. Statistical methods for analysis of construction operations. BCM graduate students may register for this course without written department or instructor approval. Non-BCM students must obtain written department approval prior to registration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Define construction productivity and quality.
2. Understand the project owner's role, the designer's role, and the construction firm's role in construction, productivity and quality.
3. Demonstrate the ability to manage productivity at the following enterprise levels - company, project, and construction site.
4. Demonstrate the ability to manage construction labor productivity, equipment productivity, and subcontractor productivity.
5. Measure construction labor productivity.
6. Understand the impact that changes have on productivity.
7. Quantify lost productivity.
8. Implement a Total Quality Management (TQM) system.
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| BCM 53000 - Construction Operations And Strategic Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of construction company business management for U.S. companies. Executive-level construction functions including strategic planning, organizational structure, and ownership structure including succession planning. BCM graduate students may register for this course without written department or instructor approval. Non-BCM students must obtain written department approval prior to registration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Dept of Bldg & Construct Mgmt
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Undertake company strategic planning.
2. Prepare a company business plan.
3. Create organizational structure.
4. Develop policies and procedures.
5. Manage change.
6. Manage equipment utilization.
7. Ensure contract profitability.
8. Identify and manage other operational concerns.
9. Develop succession plans.
10.Implement succession plans.
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| BCM 53500 - Construction Accounting And Financial Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Accounting techniques, financial methods, and financial management for construction firm management. Analysis techniques for contemporary construction company accounting and finance practice with an emphasis on cash flow analysis and cash management. BCM graduate students may register for this course without written department or instructor approval. Non-BCM students must obtain written department approval prior to registration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and explain the use of various revenue recognition methods available to the construction company.
2. Explain the progress billing terms retainage and front loading and discuss the reasons for and against such practice.
3. Identify the accounts applied and their use when the percentage of completion method of accounting is applied.
4. Explain the difference between underbilling and overbilling, discuss why they occur and their impact on cash flow.
5. Apply the following financial analysis techniques to financial statements: line-item analysis, horizontal analysis, vertical analysis, use-source analysis, ratio analysis, cost-volume-profit analysis, and profit center analysis.
6. Prepare the budgeted income statement and develop rates for overhead and profit mark-up, exercise control over company cost, and prepare a cash plan.
7. Apply time value of money principles to various decision making tools when seeking company and project financing and the acquisition of capital assets.
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| BCM 54000 - Law For Construction Managers |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the legal system and its impact on the construction process. The focus is on the legal obligations, rights and remedies pertaining to the construction company. Topics include bidding, contracts, and construction changes. BCM graduate students may register for this course without written department or instructor approval. Non-BCM students must obtain written department approval prior to registration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Dept of Bldg & Construct Mgmt
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe agency relationships, contracts, torts, professional liability, risk management, indemnification, risk sharing and surety bonds.
2. Explain the concept of the design professional as judge.
3. Recognize the procedures for legally terminating a construction contract.
4. Plan the project with a contract law viewpoint.
5. Comply with the legal requirements for competitive bidding.
6. Create as well as to comply with the rights & duties of the construction contract.
7. Demonstrate the ability to apply construction law concepts to subcontracting, changes, payments, performance problems, defects, subsurface problems, time and claims.
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| BCM 54500 - Construction Management Training And Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Identification, training and development of future company leaders. Mentorship as a required, managerial activity, effective delegation of responsibility, and empowerment of subordinates to take initiative. BCM graduate students may register for this course without written department or instructor approval. Non-BCM students must obtain written department approval prior to registration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Dept of Bldg & Construct Mgmt
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Interpret the role of the training department in meeting an organization's strategic goals.
2. Analyze the broader organizational context and business environment in order to ensure that training meets business needs and achieves stakeholder support.
3. Use effective investigative and analytical methods to advise and assist clients in identifying needs, at organizational levels, to which training is the most appropriate response.
4. Work with stakeholders to design training events (including formal programs) that are grounded in the principles of learning, are accessible, effective and make timely use of available resources.
5. Incorporate new technology as appropriate into both training and learning processes, and the effective management of the training and development function.
6. Carry out appropriate monitoring and evaluation of training programs, and coordinate with stakeholders on any necessary changes to training provision and practice.
7. Explore models and research relating to the core competencies and behavioral characteristics of effective trainers.
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| BCM 55000 - Risk Management In Construction |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of the depth and breadth of risk in construction. Defining key terms and concepts used in various risk management arenas - legal statutes, precedent and case studies relevant to construction risk management, insurance, and surety bonding. Subjects include: contracts, torts, insurance, surety, safety laws, quality, and risk management models. Analysis of case studies to utilize risk management tools and identify issues and possible approaches. Project risk control including management of foreseeable hazards as well as unforeseen conditions. BCM graduate students may register for this course without written department or instructor approval. Non-BCM students must obtain written department approval prior to registration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Overview of risk fundamentals - and how liability drives outcomes.
2. Understanding the relationships between insurance, sureties, contractual risk transfer and risk financing.
3. Understand how safety covers direct employees, other parties, and member of the public.
4. Understand the role of incident investigation, and management of claims of various types.
5. Understand quality and how to deliver acceptable project results.
6. Understand the value of Business Continuity Planning and other Crisis Management methods and tools.
7. Understand the value of corporate compliance programs for satisfaction of regulatory and other legal requirements.
8. Understand standards of care, and their evolutionary nature, compelling "compliance as you go".
9. Ability to critically evaluate existing risk management approaches, and apply risk management models to promote successful project outcomes.
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| BCM 55500 - Construction Leadership And Marketing |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of organizational leadership at the executive level. The goals of this course are to introduce and stimulate thought and discussion of leadership theories, characteristics and behaviors of successful leaders, contextual factors affecting leader effectiveness, dynamics of leader-follower relationships, communication, decision-making and contemporary challenges confronting organizational leaders as well as marketing theory, marketing vs. business development, the marketing process, and an introduction to a construction marketing dashboard. BCM graduate students may register for this course without written department or instructor approval. Non-BCM students must obtain written department approval prior to registration. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Leadership theories.
2. The characteristics and behaviors of successful leaders.
3. Contextual factors affecting leader effectiveness.
4. Dynamics of leader-follower relationships.
5. Communication, decision-making and other key leadership skills.
6. Contemporary challenges confronting organizational leaders.
7. Marketing theory.
8. Marketing vs. business development.
9. The marketing process.
10.Introduction to a Construction Marketing Dashboard.
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| BCM 56000 - Academic Writing Seminar I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Analysis of the requirements of research reports. Emphasis on research methods and concepts, identifying major issues, academic literature reviews, data collection and presentation methods, and selecting a research topic. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Presentation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To increase the student’s skills related to research and academic writing through the introduction of resources available through the Purdue Library System and the Purdue Online Writing Lab (OWL).
2. To demonstrate appropriate samples of academic writing through sample reports on the Purdue College of Technology EPubs.
3. To develop the student’s knowledge and application of PAP version 6 formatting.
4. To advance the student’s expectations of academic writing.
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| BCM 56500 - Academic Writing Seminar II |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Provides a higher level understanding of scholarly writing as it is applied to the individual student’s research. Students also learn to present his or her technical work to an audience in a clear, easily understandable form. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Presentation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate develop of the student’s skills related to academic writing through individual and group exercises related to their individual research.
2. Demonstrate appropriate samples of academic writing through sample reports on the Purdue College of Technology Epubs.
3. Appropriate student knowledge and application of APA version 6 formatting.
4. Advance the student’s expectations of academic writing.
5. Increase the rate of successful completion of the masters program scholarly writing requirements.
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| BCM 57000 - Analysis Of Research In Construction |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of research and evaluation of research reports. Emphasis on understanding the application of business research procedures including fundamental statistical methods in the solution of a construction industry relevant problem. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The student will have the research knowledge and skills required to produce scholarly work for the construction industry.
2. The student will be able to adapt the scientific research model to solve problems in a construction company.
3. The student will be proficient at library usage, EndNote, and citing references using APA format.
4. Students will be able to demonstrate related academic writing through individual and group exercises suitable to their individual research.
5. Students will be able to demonstrate appropriate samples of academic writing though sample reports on the Purdue College of Technology Epubs.
6. Advance the students' expectations of academic writing.
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| BCM 58100 - Workshop In Building Construction Management Technology |
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Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. Advanced study of technical and professional topics. Emphasis is on new developments relating to technical, operational, and training aspects of industry and technology education. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BCM 59000 - Special Problems In Building Construction Management Technology |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Independent study of a special problem under the guidance of a member of the staff. Does not substitute for either M.S. thesis or M.S. project credit. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BCM 59800 - Directed MS Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A formal investigation of a particular problem under the guidance of the advisory committee. Not applicable to a thesis option plan of study. Enrollment during at least two consecutive terms for a total of three credits is required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Research
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BCM 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Research
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BCM 90000 - BCM Student Meeting |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Bldg Construction Mgmt Tech
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BGR BGR - Boilermaker Gold Rush |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: No College Designated
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BGR BGRI - Boiler Gold Rush International |
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0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: No College Designated
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BGR STALI - BGR Sci Team & Ldrshp Inst |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: No College Designated
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BGR TTP - BGR Transfer Transition Prg |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: No College Designated
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BHS 10300 - Freshman Experience In Behavioral Sciences |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This interdisciplinary course provides entering first-year students and transfer students with less than 60 credits an opportunity to become familiar with campus resources, academic life management, and discipline specific career exploration. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| BHS 20100 - Statistical Methods For The Behavioral Sciences |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to descriptive and inferential statistics as applied to the behavioral sciences. Not open to students with credit in PSY 50000. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| BHS 20600 - Infant And Toddler Supervised Experience |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Directed in service teaching for infant and toddler settings. Course will focus on all aspects of planning and guidance of infants and toddlers, addressing overall curriculum, development and observational assessment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. To gain experiential learning with infants and toddlers.
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| BHS 29000 - Topics In Behavioral Sciences |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Variable credit, variable title course for group or individual study. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BHS 48600 - Seminar In Human Development And Disability |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (PSY 48600) The Seminar On Human Development and Disability will expose students multiple perspectives related to the issues in human development and disability related issues. The purpose of the course is to provide an interdisciplinary experience for students preparing for work in the human services specifically with individuals with disability. Students will participate in a seminar originating at the Riley Child Development Center at the Indiana University School of Medicine. Students will participate in seminar presentations provided by pediatricians, psychologists, psychiatrists, social workers, special educators, and occupational therapists. Students will also gain experience in critiquing disability related research in the context of guided class discussions. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| BHS 49000 - Undergraduate Special Topics |
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Credit Hours: 0.00 to 6.00. Individual or group participation in supersived reading, laboratory experiences, field experiences, or research in special areas in Human Development and Family Studies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
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| BIOC B5000 - Introductory Biochemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Structure of carbohydrates, proteins, lipids, and nucleic acids. Basic principles of enzyme catalysis, protein synthesis, intermediary metabolism, and nutrition.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| BIOC B8000 - Medical Biochemistry |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Structure and function of biological molecules, regulation of cellular processing by nutrients and hormones, biochemical and molecular basis of disease.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| BIOC B8030 - Advanced Biochemistry |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Tutorial instruction in biochemistry.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| BIOC B8070 - Protein Structure And Function |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Physical forces stabilizing protein structure; protein folding. Essential features of macromolecular interactions. Introduction to enzyme kinetics and chemical mechanism in enzyme reactions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| BIOC B8100 - Cell Biochemistry And Regulation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental pathways of metabolism, with emphasis on the mechanisms of metabolic regulation. Mechanisms of signal transduction and the control of cellular function by hormones, growth factors, and other extracellular regulators. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| BIOC B8350 - Neurochemistry |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Metabolism of nervous system tissue. Neurochemical techniques.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| BIOC B8360 - Advanced Topics in Neurochemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Selected topics in neurochemistry dealing with specialized functions of the nervous system. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BIOC B8540 - Introduction To Research |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Tutorial and laboratory instruction in biochemistry. Purpose is to introduce students in biochemistry to three different research programs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| BIOC B8900 - Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Seminar.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| BIOL 10000 - Introduction to the Biological World |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of biological organization from molecules through ecosystems. Emphasis on processes common to all organisms and on concepts related to problems of current importance. No credit toward a degree in IU Allied Health. Credit given for only one of the following: BIOL 10000, 25000, or N2000. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| BIOL 10001 - Introduction to the Biological World Laboratory |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory exercises and experiments that illustrate selected principles of biology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| BIOL 10008 - Foundation Of Biology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to core concepts in biology and basic laboratory skills used in the biological sciences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be better prepared to succeed in the introductory biology course sequence.
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| BIOL 10011 - Principles Of The Biomedical Sciences |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students investigate the human body systems and various health conditions including heart disease, diabetes, sickle-cell disease, hypercholesterolemia, and infectious diseases. They determine the factors that led to the death of a fictional person, and investigate lifestyle choices and medical treatments that might have prolonged the person’s life. The activities and projects introduce students to human physiology, medicine, research processes and bioinformatics. This course is designed to provide an overview of all the courses in the Biomedical Sciences program and lay the scientific foundation for subsequent courses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. To build a foundational knowledge of the human body systems and various health conditions.
2. To understand how lifestyle choices and medical treatments impact the life of an individual.
3. To understand the basic principles of human physiology, medicine, research processes and bioinformatics.
4. To apply the information from lectures to activities and projects within this course as well as to the remaining courses in the series.
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| BIOL 10012 - Human Body Systems |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students examine the interactions of body systems as they explore identity, communication, power, movement, protection and homeostasis. Students design data acquisition software to monitor body functions such as muscle movement, reflex and voluntary action, and respiration. Exploring science in action, students build organs and tissues on a skeletal manikin, work through interesting real world cases and often play the role of biomedical professionals to solve medical mysteries. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. To understand the structures, functions and interactions of human body systems.
2. To understand the use of data acquisition software for the purpose of monitoring body functions.
3. To apply research methods, critical thinking skills and problem-solving techniques to case studies as well as to experiments and activities conducted in the classroom.
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| BIOL 10013 - Medical Interventions |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students investigate interventions in the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of disease through the lives of a fictitious family. Course is a “How-To” manual for maintaining overall health and homeostasis. Students learn about diagnosis, disease prevention, screening and evaluating DNA code and body process during organ failure. Students are exposed to interventions related to immunology, surgery, genetics, pharmacology, medical devices and diagnostics. Lifestyle choices and preventive measures are emphasized as well as the roles scientific thinking and engineering design play in the development of interventions of the future. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. To understand the structures, functions and interactions of human body systems.
2. To understand the use of immunology, surgery, genetics, pharmacology, medical devices and diagnostics as related to the processes, prevention, and treatment of disease.
3. To understand the maintenance of overall health and homeostasis in the body and the importance of scientific thinking and engineering design in the development of new intervention methods.
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| BIOL 10014 - Biomedical Innovation |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Capstone course. Application of knowledge and skills to answer questions, solve problems and design innovative solutions for 21st century health challenges. Topics may include clinical medicine, physiology, biomedical engineering and public health. Students complete an independent project and may work with a mentor from a university, health care facility or related industry. Students will present their work to an adult audience including representatives from the local business and health care communities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. To integrate, apply and demonstrate knowledge gained throughout the series of courses through the development and completion of a capstone project.
2. To demonstrate communication skills through interaction with a project mentor and through presentation of the final project to an audience that includes representatives from the local business and health care community.
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| BIOL 10100 - Introductory Biology |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to life sciences for science majors. Molecular and cellular biology, basic chemistry, cell structure and phisiology, cell division, genetics and development. Laboratories include illustration of basic concepts with emphasis on data collection and interpretation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| BIOL 10200 - Introductory Biology |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. Continuation of BIOL 10100. Biology of organisms and populations. Morphology, physiology, and systematics of organisms, evolution, ecology and behavioral biology. Laboratories include survey of representative taxa. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be better prepared to succeed in this course.
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| BIOL 10500 - Medical Terminology |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Emphasis on learning the meaning of the more common word elements associated with medicine and applying the knowledge to define medical terms. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| BIOL 10700 - Freshman Experience In Biological Sciences |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This course consists of lectures by faculty and guest speakers, presentations by students, and class discussions. Students in this course will become familiarized with the diverse fields of biological sciences, and gain knowledge and skills for literature search, critical thinking, problem solving, and oral and written communications. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| BIOL 10800 - Biology Of Plants |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to growth, functioning, structure, heredity, and diversity of plants and their interactions with the environment. Designed for agriculture and prepharmacy majors. Prerequisite: placement at or above MA 15300 (or equivalent). Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| BIOL 10900 - Biology Of Animals |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to the structure, functioning, heredity, development, classification and evolution of animals, and their interactions with the environment. Designed for agriculture and prepharmacy majors and certain options in Allied Health. Prerequisite: placement at or above MA 15300 (or equivalent). Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| BIOL 11000 - Fundamentals Of Biology I |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. This course is designed primarily to provide an introduction to the principles of biology for students in agriculture and health sciences. Principles of biology, focusing on diversity, ecology, evolution, and the development, structure, and function of organisms. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
3. Students demonstrate the ability to discuss ethical issues in the application of biological sciences, and the impact of science on society.
4. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
5. Students demonstrate knowledge of the path leading to specific careers in biology.
6. Students will understand how biochemistry contributes to improvements in human health, industry, and broader scientific understanding.
7. Students will be familiar with the biogenesis, structure, and chemistry of the basic types of macromolecules important in cells: nucleic acids, proteins, and membranes, and with the organic and inorganic molecules important in cellular metabolism.
8. Students will understand the role of macromolecules in cellular processes such as DNA replication, RNA transcription, protein translation, and metabolism.
9. Students will understand the principles of how energy is obtained, stored and used in biological processes.
10. Graduates will understand the chemical and physical principles that govern biochemical and physiological processes.
11. Students will understand the role of evolution of creating and modifying the macromolecular components of the cell, and in creating biological complexity and variability.
12. Graduates will understand how chemical and biochemical processes relate to biological function at the molecular, cellular, organismal, and higher levels.
13. Students who complete the CMD BS program will have a broad understanding of the compositions and formations of cellular structures, the molecular basis underlying cellular processes, and the links between diseases and aberrant gene functions.
14. Students who complete the CMD BS program will have a broad understanding of the principles governing the development of multi-cellular animals and plants.
15. Students will understand ways in which organisms interact ecologically with each other and their environment.
16. Students will understand how evolutionary forces influence organisms to produce adaptations.
17. Students will exhibit proficiency in population and community ecology, animal behavior, and evolutionary mechanisms.
18. Students will exhibit proficiency in population and quantitative genetics.
19. Students will be familiar with taxonomic and phylogenic relationships among organisms.
19. Students can extend basic ecological principles to species and ecosystem conservation.
20. Students will use and understand the scientific method, including how to generate hypotheses and predications, develop an experimental design, collect data, statistically analyze data, and interpret results.
21. Demonstrate an understanding of concepts and theories of genetics.
22. Students will exhibit proficiency in the physiology, biochemistry, and genetics of bacteria including diversity, metabolism, and gene expression regulation as well as key metabolic control mechanisms.
23. Students will be able to demonstrate knowledge of how evolutionary forces impact and shape microbial function and activity.
24. Students will acquire knowledge of disease-causing microorganisms that includes an understanding of humoral, cell-mediated and non-specific immune responses, as well as the molecular basis for bacterial and viral pathogenesis.
25. Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of the scientific method including hypothesis generation and testing, data collection, analysis, and interpretation.
26. Students will demonstrate an understanding of prokaryotic cell structure and the major physiological processes of microorganisms that are critical for metabolism, function, and utilization of ecological niches.
27. Students will demonstrate the ability to measure dynamic changes in living organisms, tissues, and cells.
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| BIOL 11100 - Fundamentals Of Biology II |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. This course is designed primarily to provide an introduction to the principles of biology for students in agriculture and health sciences. Continuation of BIOL 11000. Principles of biology, focusing on cell structure and function, molecular biology, and genetics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
3. Students demonstrate the ability to discuss ethical issues in the application of biological sciences, and the impact of science on society.
4. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
5. Students demonstrate knowledge of the path leading to specific careers in biology.
6. Students will understand how biochemistry contributes to improvements in human health, industry, and broader scientific understanding.
7. Students will be familiar with the biogenesis, structure, and chemistry of the basic types of macromolecules important in cells: nucleic acids, proteins, and membranes, and with the organic and inorganic molecules important in cellular metabolism.
8. Students will understand the role of macromolecules in cellular processes such as DNA replication, RNA transcription, protein translation, and metabolism.
9. Students will understand the principles of how energy is obtained, stored and used in biological processes.
10. Graduates will understand the chemical and physical principles that govern biochemical and physiological processes.
11. Graduates will understand how chemical and biochemical processes relate to biological function at the molecular, cellular, organismal, and higher levels.
12. Students demonstrate knowledge of the path leading to specific careers in biology.
13. Students who complete the Biology Education program will know the general teaching skills expected of a secondary biology teacher, including unit planning, classroom management and instructional techniques.
14. Students who complete the CMD BS program will have a broad understanding of the compositions and formations of cellular structures, the molecular basis underlying cellular processes, and the links between diseases and aberrant gene functions.
15. Students who compete the CMD BS program will have a broad understanding of the principles governing the development of multi-cellular animals and plants.
16. Students will understand ways in which organisms interact ecologically with each other and their environment.
17. Students will understand how evolutionary forces influence organisms to produce adaptations.
18. Students can extend basic ecological principles to species and ecosystem conservation.
19. Students will learn to efficiently communicate scientific information or results from biological investigations using both oral and written methods.
20. Students will use and understand the scientific method, including how to generate hypotheses and predications, develop an experimental design, collect data, statistically analyze data, and interpret results.
21. Demonstrate an understanding of concepts and theories of genetics.
22. Students will acquire knowledge of disease-causing microorganisms that includes an understanding of humoral, cell-mediated and non-specific immune responses, as well as the molecular basis for bacterial and viral pathogenesis.
23. Students will be able to efficiently communicate scientific information or results from biological investigations using both oral and written methods.
24. Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of the scientific method including hypothesis generation and testing, data collection, analysis, and interpretation.
25. Students will demonstrate an understanding of prokaryotic cell structure and the major physiological processes of microorganisms that are critical for metabolism, function, and utilization of ecological niches.
26. Students will demonstrate an in depth knowledge of nervous system function at the systems, cellular and molecular level.
27. Students will demonstrate the ability to measure dynamic changes in living organisms, tissues, and cells.
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| BIOL 11200 - Fundamentals Of Biology |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is designed primarily to provide an introduction to the principles of biology for students pursuing a biotechnology minor. BIOL 11200, 11300 is a two-semester principles of biology sequence that introduces students to the major concepts of the discipline, with emphasis on the experimental and logical basis of the information presented. Biol 11200/11300 includes lectures on diversity and evolution, and on the development, structure, and function of organisms, cell structure, cell function, ecology, genetics, biochemistry, and molecular biology. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BIOL 11300 - Fundamentals Of Biology |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is designed primarily to provide an introduction to the principles of biology for students pursuing a biotechnology minor. BIOL 11200, 11300 is a two-semester principles of biology sequence that introduces students to the major concepts of the discipline, with emphasis on the experimental and logical basis of the information presented. Biol 11200/11300 includes lectures on diversity and evolution, and on the development, structure, and function of organisms, cell structure, cell function, ecology, genetics, biochemistry, and molecular biology. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BIOL 11400 - Freshman Experience |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This is a resource seminar required for all incoming biology majors. It is intended to ease a freshman biology major's entry into the Biological Sciences and Chemistry Section at PU/NC and, in general, the Purdue University system. It introduces the student to some fundamental details such as how to study, time management, academic success strategies, general policies and procedures of the University, and the many resources available at the North Central campus. In addition, it is designed to facilitate a student's learning experience in BIOL 12100, which is the first of four core biology lecture courses required of all biology majors. This course is also open to students majoring in disciplines other than biology which also require BIOL 12100 at PU/NC.
Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| BIOL 11500 - Biology Resource Seminar |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is designed to help integrate new biology students into the Department of Biological Sciences, to help them adjust to university life, and to assist them in developing academic and intellectual survival skills using the medium of introductory Biology courses. The course meets twice a week in groups of 20-25 students. Each section is led by an academic advisor and an undergraduate teaching intern. The class periods have an on-going emphasis on connecting students to one another as resources while learning information, critical thinking skills and problem-solving strategies. Topics include bioethics, time management, available academic resources, biology majors and curricula and career development. Students are exposed to opportunities in undergraduate research, summer internships, the study abroad program, and teaching internships. Throughout the course, students are encouraged to plan their college education rather than merely choose their courses. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Presentation 1, Presentation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Information Literacy, UC-Information Literacy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BIOL 11600 - Laboratory In Biology I: Diversity, Evolution, Behavior And Genetics |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory exercises covering the diversity of organisms on earth, evolutionary mechanisms, ecology, behavior, and genetics. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, TransferIN
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| BIOL 11700 - Principles of Ecology and Evolution |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. Principles of organismic and evolutionary biology; a phylogenetic synopsis of the major groups of organisms from viruses to vertebrates; an introduction to genetic, evolutionary and ecological processes, population biology, community ecology, and behavior. This course is open only to science majors. Prerequisite: placement at or above MA 15300 (or equivalent). Instructor's permission required for non-biology majors. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| BIOL 11800 - Laboratory In Biology II: Development, Structure And Physiology |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Descriptive and experimental aspects of early plant and animal development, gross anatomy, histology, and physiology of selected plant and animal systems. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, TransferIN
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| BIOL 11900 - Principles of Structure and Function |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to the structure and function of biological organisms at the cellular and organismal levels. Principles of cell structure, function and information; energy flow within cells; structure of function of plants and animals; integration of physiological processes; development of plants and animals. This course is open only to science majors. Prerequisite: placement at or above MA 15300 (or equivalent). Instructor's permission required for non-biology majors. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| BIOL 12100 - Biology I: Diversity, Ecology, And Behavior |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Creates a framework for ordering biology by examining the unity and diversity of life on earth with an emphasis on ecology, genetics, population biology, evolution, and behavior. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, GTC-Science, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
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| BIOL 12200 - Laboratory In Biology I: Diversity, Ecology, And Behavior |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Laboratory exercises focusing on the diversity of organisms on earth, the evolutionary mechanisms by which they arose; their ecology, behavior, and genetics. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
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| BIOL 12600 - Human Biology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to scientific inquiry with special emphasis on the structure and function of cells, tissues, organs, and systems of the human biology. Topics relate to fitness, nutrition, health, inheritance, evolution, and ecology. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| BIOL 12700 - Introduction To Human Diseases |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides a basic introduction to common human diseases/conditions affecting the musculoskeletal, nervous, immune and cardiovascular systems. Provides introductory understanding of mechanisms of common prescription and over-the-counter drugs, and drug addiction. Will also provide basic information on the causes, types and treatments of human cancers. Completion of this course will provide a good understanding of human disease processes and improve ability to interact with medical professionals when necessary. Cannot be used as a Group A or B elective for biology majors. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| BIOL 12800 - The Biology Behind Modern Medicine |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the structure and function of the human body with an emphasis on understanding the biological basis of modern medicine. This course may not be used to fulfill requirements for majors in the School of Science, Health Professions, or for admission to Nursing. Each topic covered will include a brief survey of the structure and function of that system, typical problems or diseases of that system, and medical treatments are based on this knowledge. Topics covered include cellular and tissue disorders development and genetic disorders, bone and joint disorders, neuromuscular disorders, neurological/brain injuries and stroke, cardiovascular problems, renal dysfunction, respiratory problems, and digestive system malfunctions. Laboratory exercises emphasize normal functions and tests for each topic or system area. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| BIOL 13100 - Biology II: Development, Structure, And Function Of Organisms |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of development of plants and animals and the relationship between the structure and function of selected systems of these organisms. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| BIOL 13200 - Laboratory In Biology II: Development, Structure, And Function Of Organisms |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Descriptive and experimental aspects of early plant and animal development, gross anatomy, histology, and physiology of selected plant and animal systems. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| BIOL 13500 - First year Biology Laboratory |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Laboratory exercises emphasizing student mastery of basic laboratory skills needed to succeed in the biological sciences; intended for beginning (first-year) biology majors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate the ability to think and function as a scientist.
2. Demonstrate depth in major.
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| BIOL 13600 - Quantitative And Problem Solving Skills |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory exercises emphasizing student mastery of quantitative problem-solving skills needed to succeed in the biological sciences. Intended for beginning (first year) students. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BIOL 13700 - Handling Cells And Tissues, Microscopy |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory exercises emphasizing student mastery handling cells and tissue, and using light microscope needed to succeed in the biological sciences. Intended for beginning (first year) students. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BIOL 13800 - Information And Communication Skills |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory exercises emphasizing student mastery of information and communication skills needed to succeed in the biological sciences. Intended for beginning (first year) students. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BIOL 13900 - Measurements And Basic Solution Chemistry |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory exercises emphasizing student mastery making and recording measurements, as well as, basic solution chemistry needed to succeed in the biological sciences. Intended for beginning (first year) students. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BIOL 14000 - Marine Biology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the science of marine biology. Topics in lecture include coverage of the following marine groups: plant, invertebrates and vertebrates. Additional lectures are provided in marine ecosystems, oceanography and marine resources. Includes a field trip to a marine biological station in Costa Rica. Field trip costs are the responsibility of the student. Available as a free elective. Cannot be used to satisfy Group A or B elective requirements for biology majors. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| BIOL 14500 - Introduction To The Biology Laboratory |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. An exposure to authentic research designed to teach students about laboratory science, while developing necessary skills and concepts to be successful as a biology major. A series of skills and knowledge building exercises will be followed by a transition into independent research projects that culminate in a public presentation of the data in a poster session. Critical thinking in experimental design as well as interpretation and communication of data will be stressed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe and apply the steps of the scientific method, including how to generate hypotheses and predictions, develop an experimental design, collect data, statistically analyze data and interpret results.
2. Experience the process of experimental design and execution.
3. Begin to interpret and analyze primary literature in biology.
4. Communicate scientific information or results from investigations using both oral and written methods.
5. Demonstrate the ability to discuss ethical issues in the application of biological sciences, and the impact of science on society.
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| BIOL 14501 - First Year Biology Laboratory With Neuro Research Project |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This laboratory course has been designed under the goals of the Center for Authentic Science Practice in Education (CASPiE) which aims to expose students to novel research as a means to teach them laboratory science. This course is designed to engage students in authentic research while acquiring necessary skills and concepts to be successful as a biology major. Our topic is Neuroanatomy of Auditory Pathways. We will begin with a series of skills and knowledge building weeks and then transition into independent research projects that culminate in a public presentation of the data in a poster session. In this course, students will learn the fundamentals in neurobiology as well as use sophisticated analysis and instrumentation to answer a research question. Critical thinking in experimental design as well as interpretation and communication of data will be stressed. The goals for this course are to gain a foundation in basic biological measurements and techniques, hone the analytical skills, appreciate the excitement of scientific discovery, and have fun along the way. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
2. Students demonstrate the ability to discuss ethical issues in the application of biological sciences, and the impact of science on society.
3. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
4. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, commuinication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
5. Students will learn to efficiently communicate scientific information or results from biological investigations using both oral and written methods.
6. Students will use and understand the scientific method, including how to generate hypotheses and predictions, develop an experimental design, collect data, statistically analyze data, and interpret results.
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| BIOL 14502 - First Year Biology Laboratory With Micro Research Project |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This laboratory course has been designed under the goals of the Center for Authentic Science Practice in Education (CASPiE) which aims to expose students to novel research as a means to teach them laboratory science. The course is designed to engage students in authentic research while acquiring the necessary skills and concepts to be successful as a biology major. Our topic is Bacterial Adaptations to Osmotic Stress. In this course, students will learn the fundamentals in bacterial genetics as well as use sophisticated analysis and instrumentation to answer a research question. Critical thinking in experimental design as well as interpretation and communication of data will be stressed. The goal for this course is to gain a foundation in basic biological measurements and techniques, hone the analytical skills, appreciate the excitement of scientific discovery, and have fun along the way. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
2. Students demonstrate the ability to discuss ethical issues in the application of biological sciences, and the impact of science on society.
3. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
4. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, commuinication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
5. Students will learn to efficiently communicate scientific information or results from biological investigations using both oral and written methods.
6. Students will use and understand the scientific method, including how to generate hypotheses and predictions, develop an experimental design, collect data, statistically analyze data, and interpret results.
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| BIOL 14600 - Introduction To Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to introduce non-majors to basic concepts in biology including hypothesis testing, biomolecules, cell structure and function, molecular biology and evolution. Emphasis will be placed on how these topics relate to human health and disease and to the health of the environment. Not available for credit toward graduation for majors in the Department of Biological Sciences. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 14700 - The Ins And Outs Of The Human Body |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will provide an overview of the body and discuss various problems that can occur during and after development. We will explore the body when everything works as it should (the ins) and when things do not work (the outs). We will begin with development and work our way through various systems of the body and end with death. During the semester, we will explore the effects of drugs and alcohol on the developing fetus, growth, addictions, mental health topics, cancer, heart problems, blood pressure changes, clues related to death, and many other topics. We will introduce the students to current biological topics and provide some background information on the science related to the topics presented. Our intent is to help the students understand how various treatments and cures bring about a change in the body. In addition, groups will be assigned a topic to research and write a detailed report which will be presented in small group sections. Not available for credit toward graduation for majors in the Department of Biological Sciences. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
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| BIOL 17500 - Flora Of Calumet Region |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Identification and recognition of the flora of the Calumet Region. The emphasis is on field that acquaints the student with the principle plant groups and species of the local flora. The course may not be used to fulfill the general science requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| BIOL 18300 - Professional Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. This course serves to integrate a professional research experience at an approved academic institution or industrial research facility into the Biology academic curriculum. The student must be accepted into an internship or co-op program. To participate in the Co-op program a student also must be accepted by the cooperative education program coordinator of Purdue University. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| BIOL 18400 - Professional Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. This course serves to integrate a professional research experience at an approved academic institution or industrial research facility into the Biology academic curriculum. The student must be accepted into an internship or co-op program. To participate in the Co-op program a student also must be accepted by the cooperative education program coordinator of Purdue University. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| BIOL 19500 - Special Assignments |
|
Arrange Hours and Credit. Reading, discussions, written reports, seminar presentations, and field or laboratory work provided for enrichment in special areas of the biological sciences. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BIOL 19700 - Biology Freshman Honors Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Discussion meetings with Freshman Honors students to cover various aspects of freshman biology, research opportunities in biology, and career choices in biology. Open only to students in the Biological Sciences Honors Program. The credit may be used only toward free electives. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BIOL 20100 - Human Anatomy And Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A survey of normal structure and function of the human organism. The human is treated as an open system with the capacity to transport material, transform energy, and maintain a homeostatic state. The capacities and limitations of the human to cope with changes in the environment are emphasized. All major systems of the human body and their functions are examined in relation to the living organism. Not available for credit toward graduation for majors in the Department of Biological Sciences. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BIOL 20200 - Human Anatomy And Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. BIOL 20200 is the second semester of a two-semester course that includes two 50-minute lectures designed to give the student a basic understanding of the anatomy, organization and function of the human body. To assist the student in mastering the subject matter, there will be introductory lectures on the basic concepts of biochemistry and cell biology before the major topics of the course are dealt with. These topics include the organization of the human body; muscle and bone; the nervous system (including the special senses); the cardiovascular system, respiration; digestion; metabolism; excretion; fluid, electrolyte, and acid-base balance; the endocrine system; reproduction and genetics. The subject matter will be related to relevant questions of clinical or health-related importance. Not available for credit toward graduation for majors in the Department of Biological Sciences. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BIOL 20300 - Human Anatomy And Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A survey of normal structure and function of the human organism. The human is treated as an open system with the capacity to transport material, transform energy, and maintain a homeostatic state. The capacities and limitations of the human to cope with changes in the environment are emphasized. All major systems of the human body and their functions are examined in relation to the living organism. Integrated into the study of the human organism are laboratory exercises that emphasize the essentials of human anatomy and physiology. Not available for credit toward graduation for majors in the Department of Biological Sciences. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
3. Students demonstrate the ability to discuss ethical issues in the application of biological sciences, and the impact science on society.
4. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
5. Students will understand how biochemistry contributes to improvements in human health, industry, and broader scientific understanding.
6. Cellular Processes: Students will understand the role of macromolecules in cellular processes such as DNA replication, RNA transcription, protein translation, and metabolism.
7. Energy: Students will understand the principles of how energy is obtained, stored and used in biological processes.
8. Scope: Graduates will understand the chemical and physical principles that govern biochemical and physiological processes.
9. Scope: Graduates will understand how chemical and biochemical processes relate to biological function at the molecular, cellular, organismal, and higher level.
10. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
11. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
12 Students demonstrate the ability to discuss ethical issues in the application of biological sciences, and the impact of science on society.
13 Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
14 Demonstrate an understanding of concepts and theories of genetics.
15 Students will demonstrate an in depth knowledge of nervous system function at the systems, cellular and molecular level.
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| BIOL 20400 - Human Anatomy And Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Continuation of BIOL 20300. Not available for credit toward graduation for majors in the Department of Biological Sciences. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
3. Students demonstrate the ability to discuss ethical issues in the application of biological sciences, and the impact of science on society.
4. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
5. Students will understand how biochemistry contributes to improvements in human health, industry, and broader scientific understanding.
6. Cellular Processes: Students will understand the role of macromolecules in cellular processes such as DNA replication, RNA transcription, protein translation, and metabolism.
7. Energy: Students will understand the principles of how energy is obtained, stored and used in biological processes.
8. Scope: Graduates will understand the chemical and physical principles that govern biochemical and physiological processes.
9. Scope: Graduates will understand how chemical and biochemical processes relate to biological function at the molecular, cellular, organismal, and higher level.
10. Students will demonstrate the ability to discuss ethical issues in the application of biological sciences, and the impact of science on society.
11. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
12. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
13. Demonstrate an understanding of concepts and theories of genetics.
14. Students will demonstrate an in depth knowledge of nervous system function at the systems, cellular and molecular level.
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| BIOL 20500 - Biology For Elementary School Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Unifying concepts of biology taught with materials appropriate for future elementary school teachers. Does not satisfy requirements for College of Science Majors. Not available for credit toward graduation for majors in the Department of Biological Sciences. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| BIOL 20600 - Biology For Elementary School Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of BIOL 20500. Does not satisfy requirements for College of Science Majors. Not available for credit toward graduation for majors in the Department of Biological Sciences. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| BIOL 21000 - Field Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is offered for non-biology majors. It consists of a weeklong workshop at an off-campus field site. Activities will include field identification of animals and plants, a series of lectures by the course instructor and local experts, trips to local natural areas, and class discussions at the workshop site. Topics may include, but are not limited to, basic ecological and evolutionary principles, environmental ethics, local geology and ecology, natural resource management, habitat restoration and conservation, land use, and human impacts on the environment. It is expected that students will acquire a minimal degree of environmental literacy, including and understanding of some of the most fundamental ecological principles, and an appreciation of human connectedness to other living species and the non-living environment. This course cannot be counted toward Bachelor of Science degree in Biology. Typically offered Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| BIOL 21100 - The Social Impact Of The Biological Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to basic concepts, experimentation, and information found within the biological sciences. Emphasis is placed upon the role of biology within the social framework. Relationships between this discipline and common social problems are explored, including those that deal with conservation ecology. Does not satisfy requirements for College of Science Majors. Not available for credit toward graduation for majors in the Department of Biological Sciences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
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| BIOL 21200 - The Social Impact Of The Biological Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of BIOL 211. (It is not necessary for this course to be preceded by BIOL 211.) Does not satisfy requirements for College of Science Majors. Not available for credit toward graduation for majors in the Department of Biological Sciences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 21300 - Human Anatomy And Physiology I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An introduction to human anatomy and physiology. Topics include: the basic structural and functional organization of the human body, cellular anatomy and physiology, body tissues, the integument, and the skeletal, muscular and nervous systems. Lecture material is reinforced and expanded upon in laboratory studies of gross anatomy, histology and physiology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
|
| BIOL 21400 - Human Anatomy And Physiology II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A continuation of BIOL 21300. Topics include: structure and function of the special senses and the endocrine, cardiovascular, lymphatic, immune, respiratory, digestive, urinary and reproductive systems; basic hematology, fluid and electrolyte balance and acid-base balance. Lecture material is reinforced and expanded upon in laboratory studies of gross anatomy, histology, and physiology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
|
| BIOL 21500 - Basic Human Anatomy |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to anatomy using cadavers and anatomical models for investigations. Emphasis is given to the interrelationships of bones, muscles, nerves, and blood vessels from a regional approach. Specifically designed for students for whom BIOL 20300-20400 is not accepted. Prerequisite: placement at or above MA 15300 (or equivalent). Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| BIOL 21600 - Basic Mammalian Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to physiology with emphasizing homeostasis and interrelationships of body functions: cells to systems. Includes selected functional anatomy. Specifically designed for students in IU Allied Health programs, nursing, and physical education for whom BIOL 20300/20400 is not accepted. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BIOL 21700 - Intermediate Ecology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Ecological principals of populations, communities and ecosystems; interaction of biotic and abiotic factors regulating population and community structure; case studies, field studies, and simulation models of life history attributes, competition, predation, parasitism, and mutualism. This course is open only to science majors. Instructor's permission required for non-biology majors. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BIOL 21800 - Genetics and Molecular Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The course will cover the principles of classical and molecular genetics. Mendelian inheritance, linkage, gene interaction and chromosomal aberrations, nucleic acids structure, gene function (replication, transcription and translation), mutation and repair, regulation of gene expression, genetic engineering. The laboratory experiments include: linkage mapping in Drosophila and fish, cell division and chromosome aberrations in plants, DNA extraction, electrophoresis, restriction enzyme analysis, gene isolation by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). This course is open only to science majors. Instructor's permission required for non-biology majors. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BIOL 21900 - Principles of Functional Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course will cover selected topics in both plant and animal physiology: photosynthesis; respiration; nutrition; solute and water transport; plant and animal hormones; neural control in animals; osmoregulation; and reproduction. Some of the laboratory time will be devoted to small group discussions. This course is open only to science majors. Instructor's permission is required for non-biology majors. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BIOL 22000 - Microbiology for Allied Health Professionals |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The biology of microorganisms (bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, and algae( and their interactions with humans. Emphasis on microbes with medical and/or public health significance. Specific areas of study include characteristics, metabolism and genetics of bacteria; host-parasite interactions; factors affecting human health and disease states; principles of disinfection and sterilization; epidemiology of infectious disease with emphasis on transmission, prevention, and treatment; and nosocomial infection risks and preventi on. This course is designed for nursing and Allied Health students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BIOL 22100 - Introduction To Microbiology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The isolation, growth, structure, function, heredity, identification, classification, and ecology of microorganisms; their role in nature; and significance to man. Not available for credit toward graduation for majors in the Department of Biological Sciences. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
3. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
4. Macromolecules: students will be familiar with the biogenesis, structure, and chemistry of the basic types of macromolecules important in cells: nucleic acids, proteins, and membranes, and with the organic and inorganic molecules important in cellular metabolism.
5. Cellular Processes: students will understand the role of macromolecules in cellular processes such as DNA replication, RNA transcription, protein translation, and metabolism.
6. Energy: Students will understand the principles of how energy is obtained, stored and used in biological processes.
7. Evolution: Students will understand the role of evolution of creating and modifying the macromolecular components of the cell, and in creating biological complexity and variability.
8. Scope: graduates will understand how chemical and biochemical processes relate to biological function at the molecular, cellular, organismal levels.
9. Students will understand how evolutionary forces influence organisms to produce adaptations.
10. Students will exhibit proficiency in the physiology, biochemistry, and genetics of bacteria including diversity, metabolism, and gene expression regulation as well as key metabolic control mechanisms.
11. Students will be familiar with taxonomic, ecological, and phylogenetic relationships among microorganisms including biogeochemical nutrient cycling, microbial diversity, and the biotechnological application of microbes to address environmental and energy problems.
12. Students will be able to demonstrate knowledge of how evolutionary forces impact and shape microbial function and activity.
13. Students will acquire knowledge of disease-causing microorganisms that includes an understanding of humoral, cell-mediated and non-specific immune responses, as well as the molecular basis for bacterial and viral pathogenesis.
14. Students will be able to demonstrate technical competency in basic microbiological laboratory techniques and common molecular biology techniques that exploit the use of microbes.
15. Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of the scientific method including hypothesis generation and testing, data collection, analysis, and interpretation.
16. Students will demonstrate an understanding of prokaryotic cell structure and the major physiological processes of microorganisms that are critical for metabolism, function, and utilization of ecological niches.
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| BIOL 22200 - Aids Online International |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a general education, online course that uses a multidisciplinary approach to provide students with a basic, yet comprehensive overview of HIV/AIDS, along with the impact of this disease on community and global health. The course uniquely integrates the biology of HIV/AIDS (40% of course content) with its origin, spread, history, transmission, prevention, and treatment (60% of course content). Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| BIOL 22300 - Anatomy And Physiology Practicum I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is designed for students transferring to PU/NC with credit for BIOL 20300. It will give the student the additional anatomy and physiology background and the one additional credit hour required for BIOL 21300 at the North Central campus.
Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| BIOL 22400 - Anatomy And Physiology Practicum II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is designed for students transferring to PU/NC with credit for BIOL 20400. It will give the student the additional anatomy and physiology background and the one additional credit hour required for BIOL 21400 at the North Central campus.
Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| BIOL 23000 - Biology Of The Living Cell |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to modern cell biology for students who may not have taken a previous college course in biology. All students with the appropriate prerequisites are welcome, and this course will be of special interest to students from engineering, chemistry, physics and computer science. This course will provide a solid foundation in modern cell biology concepts for engineers and students from other disciplines. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
3. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
4. Students will be familiar with the biogenesis, structure, and chemistry of the basic types of macromolecules important in cells: nucleic acids, proteins, and membranes, and with the organic and inorganic molecules important in cellular metabolism.
5. Students will understand the role of macromolecules in cellular processes such as DNA replication, RNA transcription, protein translation, and metabolism.
6. Students will understand the principles of how energy is obtained, stored and used in biological processes.
7. Graduates will understand the chemical and physical principles that govern biochemical and physiological processes.
8. Students will understand the role of evolution of creating and modifying the macromolecular components of the cell, and in creating biological complexity and variability.
9. Graduates will understand how chemical and biochemical processes relate to biological function at the molecular, cellular, organismal, and higher levels.
10. Demonstrate proficiency with professional skills by practicing biologists including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
11. Students who complete the CMD BS program will have a broad understanding of the compositions and formations of cellular structures, the molecular basis underlying cellular processes, and the links between diseases and aberrant gene functions.
|
| BIOL 23100 - Biology III: Cell Structure And Function |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to modern cell biology through an examination of the physical and chemical properties that lead to an understanding of the molecular basis for cell function. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
3. Students will understand how biochemistry contributes to improvements in human health, industry, and broader scientific understanding.
4. Students will be familiar with the biogenesis, structure, and chemistry of the basic types of macromolecules important in cells: nucleic acids, proteins, and membranes, and with the organic and inorganic molecules important in cellular metabolism.
5. Students will understand the role of macromolecules in cellular processes such as DNA replication, RNA transcription, protein translation, and metabolism.
6. Students will understand the principles of how energy is obtained, stored and used in biological processes.
7. Graduates will understand the chemical and physical principles that govern biochemical and physiological processes.
8. Students will understand the role of evolution of creating and modifying the macromolecular components of the cell, and in creating biological complexity and variability.
9. Graduates will understand how chemical and biochemical processes relate to biological function at the molecular, cellular, organismal, and higher levels.
10. Demonstrate proficiency with professional skills by practicing biologists including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
11. Students who complete the CMD BS program will have a broad understanding of the compositions and formations of cellular structures, the molecular basis underlying cellular processes, and the links between diseases and aberrant gene functions.
|
| BIOL 23200 - Laboratory In Biology III: Cell Structure And Function |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Laboratory exercises designed to illustrate the properties, functions, and growth of prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells and to introduce the student to modern experimental methods used to study cells and their separated components. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 23800 - Biology In Society I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Does not satisfy requirement for School of Science majors. An introduction to the basic and underlying principles of modern biology and the relevance of these principles to human life. This includes an understanding of principles affecting living organisms, human biology, and the environment. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| BIOL 23900 - Biology In Society II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Does not satisfy requirement for School of Science majors. A continuation of the first semester. An introduction to the basic and underlying principles of modern biology and the relevance of these principles to human life. This includes an understanding of principles affecting living organisms, human biology, and the environment. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| BIOL 24100 - Biology IV: Genetics And Molecular Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the principles of classical genetics and to molecular genetics. Topics covered are transmission of the genetic material (both in eukaryotes and prokaryotes); changes in the genetic material, structure, and function of the genetic material; and the manipulation of genetic material (recombinant DNA technology). Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students will understand the role of macromolecules in cellular processes such as DNA replication, RNA transcription, protein translation, and metabolism.
3. Students will understand the role of evolution of creating and modifying the macromolecular components of the cell, and in creating biological complexity and variability.
4. Graduates will understand how chemical and biochemical processes relate to biological function at the molecular, cellular, organismal, and higher level.
5. Students who complete the CMB BS program will have a broad understanding of the compositions and formations of cellular structures, the molecular basis underlying cellular processes, and the links between diseases and aberrant gene functions.
6. Students who complete the CMB BS program will have a broad understanding of the principles governing the development of multi-cellular animals and plants.
7. Students will exhibit proficiency in population and quantitative genetics.
8. Students will demonstrate an understanding of concepts and theories of genetics.
9. Students will demonstrate an understanding of laboratory skills used in genetics.
10. Students will exhibit proficiency in the physiology, biochemistry, and genetics of bacteria including diversity, metabolism, and gene expression regulation as well as key metabolic control mechanisms.
|
| BIOL 24200 - Laboratory In Biology IV: Genetics And Molecular Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Experiments in classical and modern genetics and exercises to acquaint the students with basic techniques in molecular biology. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 24300 - Introductory Cell Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Lecture emphasizes the unity of cellular processes among all living organisms. Topics covered include: molecular mechanisms regulating cellular activities involved in ion and solute transport; organelle biogenesis; protein trafficking and vesicular transport; structure and function of cell cytoskeleton; cell signaling, cycle and cycle control; and cancer biology. The laboratory complements lecture with experiments that incorporate procedures and techniques used in research, medical, biotechnology, and pharmaceutical laboratories. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| BIOL 24400 - Genetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of genes and genomes with emphasis on data analysis and problem solving; topics include patterns of inheritance, the relationship of DNA and phenotype, genome structure and engineering, the nature of heritable changes, and genes in population.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| BIOL 24401 - Genetics Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Experiments in microbial, plant, and animal (including human) genetics, emphasizing molecular approaches; exercises include molecular cloning and DNA manipulation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| BIOL 25000 - Women And Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Not non-majors. An examination of modern concepts in biology. The scientific method will be examined and feminist criticisms of science will be discussed. The topics of reproduction and development, heredity and ecology will be used as focal points for an in-depth discussion of the conceptual framework of biology and feminist criticism thereof. Cannot be used for Group A or B elective for Biology majors. Credit given for only one of the following: BIOL 10000, 25000 or N2000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BIOL 27000 - Cell Structure And Function |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The underlying principle of BIOL 27000 is that an accurate understanding of cells relies on the ability to describe the workings of the cell's components in quantitative, spatial or systems terms. The course begins with a treatment of the physical properties of eukaryotic cells and their components. We then proceed to how these components and the rules that govern them give rise to more complex cellular systems. The course is divided into three main subject areas: 1) First Principles, a review of relevant physical principles of thermodynamics and descriptions of the major classes of macromolecules of the cell; 2) Synthesis and bioenergetics, a treatment of how cells synthesize macromolecules and construct organelles, how they harvest energy from the environment, and how they couple energetically favorable to unfavorable events; 3) Cellular systems, which includes signal transduction, the cell cycle, the cytoskeleton and cell motility, and cell-cell interaction. An extensive course web site provides support for lectures, study aids, and updated course information. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 27100 - Laboratory In Cell Structure And Function |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Students are introduced to the molecular biology of the eukaryotic cell. In the first section students study topics in protein biology and biochemistry such as protein structure, function, isolation, molecular evolution, and the detection and molecular basis of human disease. Techniques used for these experiments include electrophoresis, chromatography, and the Western blot procedure. In the second section students localize enzymes in plant and animal cells, perform cell fractionation procedures, and study the properties of specific cell-surface receptor. Experiments of the properties and structure of DNA are presented in the final section of the course. These exercises stress the organization and complexity of the genome, gene function and regulation, and the structure of the eukaryotic chromosome. Techniques include restriction nuclease mapping and basic DNA cloning techniques. Students also carry out an independent research project of their own design. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 28000 - Genetics And Molecular Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Course covers basic principles of molecular and classical genetics and introduces topics in current genetics research. Molecular genetics includes DNA structure and function, the organization of chromosomes, RNA function, the genetic code, mutations on the molecular level including transposable genetic elements. Coverage of genetic engineering DNA technology, cloning techniques and applications of recombinant technology both in diagnostic and industry. Basic regulatory mechanisms in eukaryotes and prokaryotes, as well as current developments (cancer genes, imprinting, etc.) are also discussed. Topics in classical genetics include: Mendelian transmission genetics, independent segregation, linkage and gene mapping, pedigree analysis, sex linkage, sex determination, and gross chromosome abnormalities. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 28100 - Laboratory In Genetics And Molecular Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Experiments performed range from exercises in classical transmission genetics to molecular genetics and recombinant DNA techniques. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 28400 - Professional Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. This course serves to integrate a professional research experience at an approved academic institution or industrial research facility into the Biology academic curriculum. The student must be accepted into an internship or co-op program. To participate in the Co-op program a student also must be accepted by the cooperative education program coordinator of Purdue University. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BIOL 28600 - Introduction To Ecology And Evolution |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Evolutionary processes and ecological principles associated with individuals, populations, communities, and ecosystems. Topics include genetic drift, natural selection, adaptation, life tables, population dynamics, competition, predation, biodiversity, and ecological stability, with emphasis on natural systems. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
3. Students demonstrate the ability to discuss ethical issues in the application of biological sciences, and the impact of science on society.
4. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
5. Students demonstrate knowledge of the path leading to specific careers in biology.
6. Students will understand how biochemistry contributes to improvements in human health, industry, and broader scientific understanding.
7. Energy: Students will understand the principles of how energy is obtained, stored and used in biological processes.
8. Scope: graduates will understand the chemical and physical principles that govern biochemical and physiological processes.
9. Evolution: Students will understand the role of evolution of creating and modifying the macromolecular components of the cell, and in creating biological complexity and variability.
10. Scope: graduates will understand how chemical and biochemical processes relate to biological function at the molecular, cellular, organismal, and higher levels.
11. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
12. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
13. Students demonstrate the ability to discuss ethical issues in the application of biological sciences, and the impact of science on society.
14. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
15. Students demonstrate knowledge of the path leading to specific careers in biology.
16. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
17. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
18. Students demonstrate the ability to discuss ethical issues in the application of biological sciences, and the impact of science on society.
19. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
20. Students demonstrate knowledge of the path leading to specific careers in biology.
21. Students will understand ways in which organisms interact ecologically with each other and their environment.
22. Students will understand how evolutionary forces influence organisms to produce adaptations.
23. Students will acquire knowledge of the ways in which animals communicate with each other.
24. Students will exhibit proficiency in population and community ecology, animal behavior, and evolutionary mechanisms.
25. Students will exhibit proficiency in population and quantitative genetics.
26. Students will be familiar with taxonomic and phylogenetic relationships among organisms.
27. Students can extend basic ecological principles to species and ecosystem conservation.
28. Students will experience working with organisms in natural settings.
29. Students will learn to efficiently communicate scientific information or results from biological investigations using both oral and written methods.
30. Students will use and understand the scientific method, including how to generate hypotheses and predictions, develop an experimental design, collect data, statistically analyze data, and interpret results.
31. Students will be familiar with taxonomic, ecological, and phylogenetic relationships among microorganisms including biogeochemical nutrient cycling, microbial diversity, and the biotechnological application of microbes to address environmental and energy problems.
32. Students will be able to demonstrate knowledge of how evolutionary forces impact and shape microbial function and activity.
33. Students will be able to efficiently communicate scientific information or results from biological investigations using both oral and written methods.
34. Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of the scientific method including hypothesis generation and testing, data collection, analysis, and interpretation.
|
| BIOL 28700 - Organisms And Populations |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Laboratory and field exercises focused on organismal biology. After two one-week labs on organismal diversity, the lab is structured as a series of three-week modules each incorporating literature review, hypothesis design and testing, and statistical methods in data analysis and interpretation. The modules cover physiology, behavior, population dynamics and community interactions. Designed for biology majors and well qualified non-majors. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 28800 - Introductory Field Ecology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This laboratory course is designed to provide non-biology majors with a field experience in ecology. Topics may include, but are not limited to: field identification of animals and plants, basic ecological and evolutionary principles, environmental ethics, local geology and ecology, natural resource management, habitat restoration and conservation, land use, and human impacts on the environment. This course cannot be counted toward a Bachelor of Science degree in Biology. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| BIOL 28900 - Honors Laboratory In Organisms And Population |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Laboratory and field exercises focused on organismal biology. The course consists of three five-week modules, each incorporating literature review, hypothesis design and testing, data analysis and interpretation. The modules cover population genetics, physiology and animal behavior. Designed for honors biology majors and well qualified non-majors. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 29000 - Methods In Biological Research |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to research-oriented techniques; pH, spectrophotometry, microbiological techniques, microscopy, chromatographic techniques, and electrophoresis. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 29300 - Sophomore Seminar: Planning Your Future In Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Biology 29300 is a one-credit course designed for sophomores in the Department of Biological Sciences. This course will help students maximum the remainder of their undergraduate career. The course will cover biology career information and suggestions for professional development. Students will learn about the various disciplines that make up modern Biological Sciences. Students will learn about opportunities in undergraduate research and tour a research laboratory. In-depth presentations from biology alumni from a variety of fields are featured. Assignments include a Plan of Study, a resume, and a written paper evaluating the career path of one alumni speaker and describing the student¿s response to the presentation. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 29400 - Biology Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Supervised individual research performed by freshman and sophomores. Project must be approved by the Honors Committee, Department of Biological Sciences. Honors Research Program students should register for BIOL 49900. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
3. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
4. Students demonstrate knowledge of the path leading to specific careers in biology
|
| BIOL 29500 - Special Assignments |
|
Arrange Hours and Credit. Reading, discussions, written reports, or laboratory work selected for enrichment in special areas of the biological sciences. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BIOL 30100 - Human Design: Anatomy And Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of human function, emphasizing physiology of body tissues and systems. Relevant aspects of anatomy and histology are also included. Use of examples from current medical practice encourages application of knowledge to predict symptoms of disease and rationale for treatment. Topics covered include histophysiology of cells and tissues, nerve and muscle physiology, the nervous system, and cardiovascular dynamics. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
3. Students demonstrate the ability to discuss ethical issues in the application of biological sciences, and the impact of science on society.
4. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
5. Students demonstrate knowledge of the path leading to specific careers in biology.
6. Macromolecules: Students will be familiar with the biogenesis, structure, and chemistry of the basic types of macromolecules important in cells: nucleic acids, proteins, and membranes, and with the organic and inorganic molecules important in cellular metabolism.
7. Cellular Processes: Students will understand the role of macromolecules in cellular processes such as DNA replication, RNA transcription, protein translation, and metabolism.
8. Energy: Students will understand the principles of how energy is obtained, stored and used in biological processes.
9. Scope: Graduates will understand the chemical and physical principles that govern biochemical and physiological processes.
10. Scope: Graduates will understand how chemical and biochemical processes relate to biological function at the molecular, cellular, organismal, and higher levels.
11. Students who complete the CMD DS program will have a broad understanding of the compositions and formations of cellular structures, the molecular basis underlying cellular processes, and the links between diseases and aberrant gene functions.
12. Students will demonstrate an in depth knowledge of nervous system function at the systems, cellular and molecular level.
13. Students will demonstrate the ability to measure dynamic changes in living organisms, tissues, and cells.
|
| BIOL 30200 - Human Design: Anatomy And Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of BIOL 30100. (It is helpful but not essential for this course to be preceded by BIOL 30100.) Topics covered include body fluids and renal function, respiration, endocrine systems, the gastro-intestinal system, exercise physiology, reproduction, and immunity. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
3. Students demonstrate the ability to discuss ethical issues in the application of biological sciences, and the impact of science on society.
4. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
5. Students demonstrate knowledge of the path leading to specific careers in biology.
6. Macromolecules: Students will be familiar with the biogenesis, structure, and chemistry of the basic types of macromolecules important in cells: nucleic acids, proteins, and membranes, and with the organic and inorganic molecules important in cellular metabolism.
7. Cellular Processes: Students will understand the role of macromolecules in cellular processes such as DNA replication, RNA transcription, protein translation, and metabolism.
8. Energy: Students will understand the principles of how energy is obtained, stored and used in biological processes.
9. Scope: Graduates will understand the chemical and physical principles that govern biochemical and physiological processes.
10. Scope: Graduates will understand how chemical and biochemical processes relate to biological function at the molecular, cellular, organismal, and higher levels.
11. Students who complete the CMD DS program will have a broad understanding of the compositions and formations of cellular structures, the molecular basis underlying cellular processes, and the links between diseases and aberrant gene functions.
|
| BIOL 30300 - Birds Of Northwest Indiana |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to the structure, function, ecology, behavior, conservation, and classification of birds. It includes both field and laboratory aspects, and will provide a working knowledge of birds native to Northwest Indiana. This hands-on course is designed for non-scientists, teachers, and bird enthusiasts in general. No advanced training is required for this course. Typically offered Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| BIOL 30400 - Major Ideas In Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Major ideas in biology such as immunization, spontaneous generation, inheritance, evolution, genetic engineering and ecology will be examined. Students will analyze the methodology and results that lead to understanding of these ideas. Small group discussion, oral presentations and written papers will all be used to study the impact of these ideas on other areas such as economics, politics, or religion. Cannot be used as a group A or B elective for a biology major. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BIOL 30600 - The Biology And Controversy Of Medical Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides a detailed introduction to the field of medical ethics, where the class will explore ethical issues in health care, the role of modern technology in medical ethics, moral responsibility and basic biology behind issues of health, disease, life and death. This course includes a service learning component, where the student will explore current ethical issues in community-based health care environments. This course is designed for science and non-science students. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| BIOL 30700 - Plant Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an intermediate-level course in plant biology. Understanding of basic concepts in biology is required. Topics may include but are not limited to plant cells, genome, gene expression, water transport, solute translocation, photosynthesis, carbohydrate, lipid and protein metabolisms, nutrient assimilation, plant growth, hormones, flowering and defense. Applications to agriculture, biotechnology, ecology, forestry and other related areas will also be included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the drug design and evaluation process.
2. Describe the modes of drug delivery and physiological processing of a drug.
3. Describe how each disease state relates to a disruption of homeostasis and normal physiological function.
4. Differentiate between various disease states at the cellular and system level.
5. Examine the mechanism of action of common drugs and possible side effects related to the mechanism of action.
6. Compare common drugs (pharmacological agents) classes utilized to treat each disease states.
|
| BIOL 31100 - Introduction To Evolution |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of evolution as a basic concept of the biological sciences; an examination of current scientific methods of experimentation within the area, as well as evidences for, and possible mechanisms of, evolutionary change.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| BIOL 31200 - Great Issues Genomics And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course will revolve around genomics, the science and technology involved in determining the sequence of the entire DNA complement in an organism. Almost everyone has heard of the human genome project, but fewer are aware of the spectacular technical progress in this field and the fact that many thousands of genomes have been sequenced. Until recently, most of these have been microorganisms, but technological and computational progress has made it progressively easier and cheaper to sequence the genomes of higher organisms. This field may have more of an impact on your future lives than almost any other field of the life sciences - mostly because it touches on all areas of study. The course will focus on the impact that genomes will have in selected areas. It will begin with a basic understanding of the science and technology that gave rise to our current capabilities in sequencing and the fact that technology continues to provide greater capacity and cheaper prices. You will soon see that every field in the College of Science is well represented in the science and technology. We will then go on to see how genomics influences many topics that affect our daily lives and can possibly provide answers to some critical questions (or at least pose better questions): What is the basis of personalized medicine? What does genomics tell us about the genealogy of mankind? What impact will genomics have on our future food supply and our ability to feed a population of 9 billion people? What is the human microbiome and what does that mean to me? Similarly, what is the gut microbiome, the mouthmicrobiome, etc? What impact will genomics have on the development of alternative energy sources, especially biofuels? In every area, we will discuss the scientific challenges, but also the ethical and societal implications. In most cases, there is no one right answer, but a series of choices that can be guided by ethical considerations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate the ability to discuss ethical issues in the application of biological sciences, and the impact of science on society.
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| BIOL 31500 - Developmental Anatomy |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Comparative study of the vertebrate embryology and adult anatomy of selected vertebrates, including humans. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BIOL 31600 - Basic Microbiology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of microbial structures, metabolism, genetics, classification, growth and control of growth, the role and significance of microbes to humans and the environment. Bacteria, fungi, protozoa and viruses are covered. Emphasis is on the bacteria. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| BIOL 31700 - Addiction: Biology, Psychology, and Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. It is an interdisciplinary, introduction course taught by a team from the Biology and Psychology Departments. The course will focus on using the processes of addiction to alcohol, marijuana, nicotine, and psychomotor stimulants to teach the basics of biological and psychological science. Example topic areas include neurological/brain function, impact on cognitive function, biochemistry, genetics, immunology, emotion, and motivation, learning and memory, physiology and pharmacology, and the psychosocial aspects of addictions.
. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BIOL 32020 - Biology Of The Immune System |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exposes students to the basic principles of immunology; teaches them to use those principles to understand the cause of immunological disease, and the basis of vaccines and immunotherapy; and, provides them with sufficient information to understand the principles and challenges of gene therapy, and the application of genomics to future drug development. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the basic function of the immune system.
2. Recognize cells and elements of the innate and adaptive immune responses.
3. Explain the role of chemical mediators on the immune system.
4. Relate vaccination to the development of immunity.
5. Explain the effects of immune disorders, including autoimmune diseases and immunodeficiency.
6. Relate the concept of autoimmunity to tissue transplantation and rejection.
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| BIOL 32200 - Microbiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the microbial world -acellular and cellular. Classification, structure, function, growth, isolation, ecology, immunology, their role in nature, and their impact on human health.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| BIOL 32300 - Microbiology Laboratry |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An introduction to microbiological applications - identification, isolation, and growth of microorganisms, including modern methods for identifying pathogen microbes.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| BIOL 32400 - Natural History of the Smoky Mountains |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Learn about air quality, fire management practices, the reintroduction of native species and the elimination of exotic ones. You'll have the opportunity to conduct a wildlife census, and assist park personnel with a resource management project such as reestablishing a native meadow or ridding a stream of invasive milfoil. Special courses on trees, salamanders, stream ecology, and geology round out the week. This week of in-depth study and first-hand field experience is perfect for classroom teachers, naturalists or anyone interested in learning more about the natural world. A pre-trip and post-trip session at Purdue University North Central is required.
. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| BIOL 32500 - Natural History of North West Indiana |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course consisting of field trips and lectures will discuss many aspects of ecosystems of the region. Some of the topics to be covered include geological history, glaciation, human settlement and impact, the Dunes and other ecosystems, amphibians, reptiles, mammals, birds, insects, plants and conservation issues. This course fulfills the requirement for a non-lab science elective for non-science majors and is ideal for anyone interested in the ecology of Northwest Indiana.
. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| BIOL 32600 - Heredity: A Human Perspective |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advances in genetics will be examined using diverse topics such as cloning and alteration of human genes and/or embryos, genetic screening and genetic manipulation of other organisms. Students will gain understanding of basic methods utilized by geneticists and learn to critically analyze published data. Reading the discussions related to ethical, social, political and economic issues will help assess the impact of current developments in genetics. Research on a selected topic leading to an oral presentation and a term paper will provide opportunities for synthesis. Some hands-on laboratory experience will also be an integral part of this course. Cannot be used as a group A or B elective for a biology major. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BIOL 32700 - Biology Of Aging |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course presents a basic understanding of how the human body ages from the biological standpoint. The student will gain an understanding of biological and physiological changes associated with aging in various organ systems. Discussions of potential intervention strategies and ways to extend the quality of life during aging will be presented. The course is primarily geared toward the student interested in obtaining a certificate in gerontology; it cannot be used as a biology elective for biology majors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BIOL 32800 - Principles Of Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course is designed to provide students with an introduction to physiology with an emphasis on cellular mechanisms that underlie anatomical and physiological adaptations used by animals to survive in their habitat. Topics covered will range from cellular respiration to the physical limits of animal performance as we deconstruct and then reconstruct the body to examine how animals can live in extreme environments. Goals for this course are for students to gain a foundation in basic physiological principles, to learn about the integrative nature of the systems of animals, and to appreciate how and why animals have evolved and strategies to help them survive in their unique environment. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To learn the integrative nature of the functioning of different cells, tissues, organs, and organ systems in maintaining adequate conditions for the proper functioning of vertebrate animals.
2. To learn the detailed mechanisms underlying the function of selected physiological systems from the level of the macromolecules to the system as a whole (ex. Cardiovascular system).
3. To appreciate the conserved nature of the fundamental functioning of cells and systems across many different animals from invertebrates to vertebrates.
4. To gain practical experience with some selected systems in the laboratory.
5. To learn how to design and execute independent experiments and take the results from those experiments and analyze and orally present them to the class.
6. To learn how to work as part of a collaborative team.
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| BIOL 33000 - Biostatistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Biological applications of statistical principles and procedures. Topics include basic concepts of statistics and probability, sampling and experimental design, data collection, and various analytical methods to analyze the data collected. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| BIOL 33300 - Ecology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Adaptations of living organisms to environment; natural selection and evolution of species; ecological interactions at organism, population and community levels; dynamics of populations and communities; ecosystem structures and functions; and human impacts on ecosystems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| BIOL 33400 - Clinical Pathophysiology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A functional study of pathophysiology of major physiological systems of a human with special emphasis on clinical applications for baccalaureate nursing and allied health professionals. Major topics to be covered include fluid and electrolyte balance, medical genetics, and the pathophysiology of the cardiovascular, respiratory, digestive, hepatic, endocrine, immune, renal, and neural systems. Typically offered Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BIOL 33500 - Animal Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Instinct vs. learning; genetics and development of learning; neurobiology; behavioral ecology; habitat selection, mating systems, foraging behavior; sociobiology and human behavior. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BIOL 33600 - Animal Behavior Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Discussion of methods for collecting and assessing behavioral data; experiments examining learning, thermoregulation, foraging, and habitat use. Experiments will be conducted as group projects. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BIOL 33900 - Social Issues In Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is required for biological science teaching majors only. Contemporary social issues in biology will be discussed in this course. Topics may include, but not limited to, religious conflicts of evolution, ethics of biological research and practice, and issues of human nutrition, substance abuse, sex education, and family planning. Cannot be counted for biology elective credits. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| BIOL 34000 - Human Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. A study of human physiology for students entering health oriented fields. The following systems will be examined: nervous, muscular, circulatory, respiratory, urinary, digestive, and endocrine. Emphasis on the relationship of function to structure at various levels of organization. Attention will be drawn to homeostatic mechanisms and intersystem interactions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| BIOL 34200 - Biological Science Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Students will do a practicum in an area related to their field of interest. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| BIOL 34500 - Vertebrate Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Vertebrate diversity and the manner in which species are designed for their particular lifestyles; the relatedness and origins of the major vertebrate taxa; the basic vertebrate body plan; adaptations for feeding and locomotion; natural history of selected vertebrates, current conservation issues regarding vertebrates. Field experiences will include two weekend day trips. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BIOL 34900 - Environmental Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines current major environmental issues through an investigation of the biological and political aspects of human population growth, degradation of natural resources, and environmental regulations. Cannot be used as a Group A or B elective for biology majors. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BIOL 35000 - Introduction To Plant Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Basic physiological processes and their relationship to plant structure and function. Laboratory experiments provide personal experience with a broad range of physiological phenomena. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 35700 - Introductory Animal Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A system analysis of animal physiology. With emphasis on mammals, the operation of systems such as respiratory, cardiovascular, neuromuscular, and endocrine will be considered. Interactions between components of individual systems as well as intersystem interaction is discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| BIOL 36700 - Principles Of Development |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course deals with the process by which genes in a fertilized egg control cell behavior in the embryo and so determine the nature of the animal or plant. The emphasis is on early development and the laying down of body plan and organ systems in various model systems (Drosophila, nematode, Arabidopsis, zebrafish, mouse, chick, and frog). Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
3. Students demonstrate the ability to discuss ethical issues in the application of biological sciences, and the impact of science on society.
4. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
5. Students demonstrate knowledge of the path leading to specific careers in biology.
6. Students who complete the CMD DS program will have a broad understanding of the compositions and formations of cellular structures, the molecular basis underlying cellular processes, and the links between diseases and aberrant gene functions.
7. Students who complete the CMD BS program will have a broad understanding of the principles governing the development of multi-cellular animals and plants.
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| BIOL 36701 - Principles Of Development Lab |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This laboratory will offer students the experience working with different model systems to observe developmental processes, examine key regulatory gene expression, and manipulate gene functions used in different biochemical, molecular and genetic approaches. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
3. Students demonstrate the ability to discuss ethical issues in the application of biological sciences, and the impact of science on society.
4. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
5. Students demonstrate knowledge of the path leading to specific careers in biology.
6. Students who complete the CMD DS program will have a broad understanding of the compositions and formations of cellular structures, the molecular basis underlying cellular processes, and the links between diseases and aberrant gene functions.
7. Students who complete the CMD BS program will have a broad understanding of the principles governing the development of multi-cellular animals and plants.
|
| BIOL 38100 - Cell Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Details of cell structure and function, biochemical aspects of energy and information flow in eukaryotic and prokaryotic cells, cellular differentiation and function of specialized eukaryotic cells. Course open only to science majors. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| BIOL 38199 - Professional Practice 3-Session Co-Op I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Professional Practice students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 38200 - Laboratory In Cell Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Experimental methods in cell biology with emphasis on biochemical methods for exploring cell structure and function. Cell division and differentiation will also be addressed. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BIOL 38299 - Professional Practice 3-Session Co-Op II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 38399 - Professional Practice 3-Session Co-Op III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 38500 - Introduction To Ecology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to ecological processes and the dynamics of communities and populations of ecosystems. Biological, physical, and behavioral adaptations and interactions affecting ecosystem change or stability, including competition, predation, mutualism, and parasitism. Typically offered Summer Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| BIOL 38600 - Professional Practice IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. This course serves to integrate a professional research experience at an approved academic institution or industrial research facility into the Biology academic curriculum. The student must be accepted into an internship or co-op program. To participate in the Co-op program a student also must be accepted by the cooperative education program coordinator of Purdue University. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BIOL 39000 - Research Methods In Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Independent laboratory work with a variety of research-oriented techniques, with emphasis on quantitative results consistent with the precision of the method, ph, buffer preparation and properties, radiation measurement and properties, quantitative and qualitative chromatography on paper and ion exchange resins, colorimetric analysis of individual components and mixtures, differential centrifuging, microscopy, electrophoresis, cell and particle counting. (Credit will not be given for both BIOL 290 and 390.). Typically offered Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 39300 - Preparing For Your Future In Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Biology 39300 is a one-credit course for junior and seniors in the Department of Biological Sciences. This course will help students begin to prepare for life after Purdue. Students will learn about interviewing, job searching, graduate and professional school searching, resumes, industrial practices, and how to evaluate job/school offers. Construct a polished image on top of your solid biology foundation! Get the job or get admitted to the school you want. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 39500 - Special Assignments |
|
Arrange Hours and Credit. Reading, discussions, written reports, seminar presentations, and field or laboratory work provided for enrichment in special areas of the biological sciences. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BIOL 39600 - Premedical Planning Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. This course is designed for sophomore and junior students who are planning to attend medical school. The course offers information and advice on the MCAT, the application process, the personal statement, the interview, and letters of recommendation. Students in the course will also formulate an alternative career plan. The course meets the first 10 weeks of the semester. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BIOL 39699 - Professional Practice Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BIOL 39700 - Introduction To Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Intended to provide an understanding of research at both a theoretical and practical level so that students may evaluate whether they might wish to conduct research themselves and whether they might wish to pursue a career related to research. Lectures, discussions, tours of research laboratories, and the writing of a paper that critically evaluates an original research paper. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 39800 - Biology Teaching |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Supervised teaching experience for juniors. Must have approval of course instructor in advance. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BIOL 40200 - Biogeography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will provide students with a broad perspective of world-wide distribution of organisms over space and time. Students will discuss observed distribution patterns of select species, genera, families, and other groups. Biogeography is a highly integrative science that draws on information from many fields including ecology, taxonomy, geological history, and evolutionary biology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1) Expose students to plant and animal distributions on a world-wide scale.
2) Explain the reasons behind global distribution of plants and animals, and discuss these observations.
3) Integrate and reinforce concepts from multiple lower division courses.
|
| BIOL 40300 - Social Implications In Natural Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental concepts of the various sciences, their interrelatedness; differences between science and other disciplines; concepts relating to the physical environment, social environment, food and nutrition; physiological and psychological effects of drugs, etc. Value-clarification methods and classroom materials appropriate for use in science teaching. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 40400 - Human Gross Anatomy |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. An in-depth examination of human gross anatomy. The details of human anatomy are revealed by the dissection of a cadaver under the close supervision of the instructor. Students in this course are also required to be undergraduate teaching assistants in BIOL 21300. This course is recommended for biology majors in the pre-professional curricula.
Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| BIOL 40500 - Conservation Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Modern principles of biological conservation. Evaluation and conservation of biological species and their habitats. Role of human activities in species and habitat conservation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| BIOL 40700 - Capstone Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This is a synthesis course which is designed to allow a student the opportunity to utilize all his/her biological experience and general education skills (represent views clearly and cogently, analyze, think critically, and formulate reasoned conclusions) to solve real world problems within the areas of the biological sciences. This course is also used by the faculty to assess and improve the curricular components of the biology degree program. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| BIOL 40800 - Laboratory In Biotechnology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course emphasizes modern laboratory techniques of biochemical and molecular analysis of biological systems. Students are exposed to a wide variety of experimental and analytical techniques, their theory, and their application to biological problems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| BIOL 41000 - Human Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Emphasis on homeostatic regulation of important human physiological systems including nervous, endocrine, cardiovascular, renal, respiratory and reproductive systems. Typically offered Spring Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| BIOL 41100 - Laboratory In Molecular Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is divided into two major sections. In the first section, students will study topics dealing with protein biology and biochemistry such as enzyme action and isolation, molecular evolution, and the detection and molecular basis of human disease. Techniques that will be used for these experiments include electrophoresis (both native and SDS denatured), chromatography (affinity and gel filtration), peptide mapping analysis, and the Western blot procedure. In the second section of the course, students will perform experiments that deal with DNA structure and function. These experiments stress the organization and complexity of the prokaryotic and eukaryotic genomes, gene function and regulation, and the structure of the eukaryotic chromosome. Techniques that will be used in this section include restriction nuclease mapping, isolation of organelles, gene cloning, and Southern blot hybridization procedures. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 41200 - Climate Change And The Environment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The objective of this course is to provide an understanding of the patterns, drivers and consequences of climate change in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems and the impacts on human society. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understanding of what drives climate.
2. Understanding of how climate changed in the past and how ancient climates can be reconstructed.
3. Understanding of what are the important questions currently being asked about future climate changes and their significance to the global community.
|
| BIOL 41300 - Aquatic Ecology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide students with the basic understanding of freshwater and marine aquatic environments with emphasis directed toward freshwater systems. The relationships between the chemical make-up of the system, the physical movements of the water, the geology of the sediments and the biology of the various systems will be examined. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe water with regard to its physical and chemical properties.
2. Describe how natural lakes were formed and the role of morphometry in lake ecology.
3. Explain the hydrological cycle on a global basis as it affects distribution and movement of water.
4. Explain water balance in lakes, streams, and soil.
5. Explain the role of energy in stratification, turnover, and productivity.
6. Explain nutrient balance in aquatic systems.
7. Describe the role of nutrients of the watershed in the productivity of an aquatic ecosystem.
8. Explain the light in productivity of aquatic environments.
9. Explain the interaction of producers, consumers, and decomposers in an aquatic ecosystem.
10. Describe the seasonal changes in populations.
|
| BIOL 41400 - Invasive Species Ecology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide students with an up-to-date perspective on invasive species. Part one will cover characteristics of invasive species and the ecological and evolutionary processes that occur when non-native species are introduced into new habitats. There will also be a review of past and present pathways that have led to the introduction and spread of invasives. Part two will cover invasive species control and management. Course literature will be a mix of recent peer-reviewed articles, reports and landmark papers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Have a thorough understanding of the ecological and evolutionary consequences of species invasions, and the factors influencing their establishment.
2. Understand the complex challenges associated with trying to minimize the impact and spread of invasive species.
3. Be familiar with many of the Great Lakes invasive species and their impacts.
4. Be able to critically examine and discuss the scientific literature.
5. Be able to present cogent and well-supported scientific arguments in both oral and written formats.
|
| BIOL 41500 - Introduction To Molecular Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to modern molecular biology techniques and how they are used to address current topics in gene regulation. Emphasis will be placed on experimental procedures and model systems, such as site-directed mutagenesis of isolated genes and their subsequent introduction into prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells. Topics will address the molecular control mechanisms associated with DNA replication, RNA transcription, RNA processing, and differential gene expression. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 41600 - Viruses And Viral Disease |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The objective of this course is to provide students with an introductory understanding of viruses and their impact on human health. The course will be divided into two sections. During the first section, we will discuss the cellular and organismal events that occur following virus infection, including viral entry, replication, modulation of cell biology by viral proteins, the host immune response to infection, evasion of the immune response by viruses, and resulting virus-induced disease. The emphasis of this first section will be on the general strategies used by viruses to establish and maintain infection in a population. In the second section, we will discuss in relative detail our current understanding of select important human viruses including influenza, HIV, smallpox, the herpesviruses, and tumor-causing viruses. The objective of this section will be to understand how the unique aspects of each virus's biology affect the outcome of infection with these pathogens. In addition to virus-associated diseases, we will discuss potential ways that viruses may provide symbiotic benefits to their hosts and thereby shape the course of human evolution. Throughout the course, we will emphasize societal and political aspects of virology and virus-derived technologies, including vaccine development, the use of viruses as gene therapy vectors, and the threat of viral bioterror of bio-error. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 41700 - Laboratory In Biotechnology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the laboratory techniques commonly used in the study of both nucleic acids and proteins. This course is intended to expose students to the theory and application of a wide variety of techniques ranging from DNA cloning and analysis to protein expression and characterization. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| BIOL 41800 - Drugs And Disease |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides students the opportunity to learn about common diseases in the United States and the current drugs utilized to treat various disease states. The students will have the opportunity to apply what they have learned about cells and targets to the design and targeting for specific drugs and the mechanism of action. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the drug design and evaluation process.
2. Describe the modes of drug delivery and physiological processing of a drug.
3. Describe how each disease state relates to a disruption of homeostasis and normal physiological function.
4. Differentiate between various disease states at the cellular and system level.
5. Examine the mechanism of action of common drugs and possible side effects related to the mechanism of action.
|
| BIOL 42000 - Eukaryotic Cell Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Composition, structure, regulation, and growth of eukaryotic cells. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution,
biological techniques, data collections and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
3. Students demonstrate the ability to discuss ethical issues in the application of biological sciences, and the impact of sicence on society.
4. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems,
interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
5. Students demonstrate knowledge of the path leading to specific careers in biology.
6. Students will understand how biochemistry contributes to improvements in human health, industry, and broader scientific understanding.
7. Macromolecules: Students will be familar with the biogenesis, structure, and chemistry of the basic types of macromolecules important in
cells: nucleic acids, proteins, and membranes, and with the organic and inorganic molecules important in cellular metabolism.
8. Cellular Processes: Students will understand the role of maacrmolecules in cellular processes such as DNA replication, RNA transcription,
protein translation, and metabolism.
9. Scope: graduates will understand the chemical and physical principles that govern biochemical and physiological proceses.
10. Scope: graduates will understand how chemical and biochemical processes relate to biological function at the molecular, cellular,
organismal, and higher levels.
11. Students who complete the CMD BS program will have a broad understanding of the compositions and formations of cellular structures, the
molecular basis underlying cellular processes, and the links between diseases and aberrant gene functions.
|
| BIOL 42300 - Physical Principles Of Biological Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to inorganic chemistry of cellular activity including the biochemical functions of common and trace metals in cell function. Topics include: principles of coordination chemistry, its effects on ionic complexes with functional groups of proteins and nucleic acids, reactivity of metal ion complexes, and reaction mechanisms of specific metalloenzymes. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| BIOL 42600 - Senior Capstone |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students will meet two hours a week to discuss current issues in biology and give presentations. This course will integrate material learned in previous biology courses to round out the academic experience of graduating seniors and provide a final opportunity for the department to assess student achievement. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| BIOL 42800 - Biology Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Guest speakers, faculty and students will present current topics in biology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| BIOL 43100 - Geobiology And Evolution |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Environmental and climatic changes have continued throughout earth's history. This course will examine the physiological, evolutionary, and ecological adaptations of representative organisms existing in geological time divisions and the effects of biological organisms in shaping conditions on earth over time. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| BIOL 43200 - Reproductive Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an integrated approach to examining how tissues interact to regulate reproductive processes. Each section begins by describing fundamental commonalities of a reproductive event in a variety of species. This is followed by an emphasis on the difference in the details of that event among species. Students will be strongly encouraged to initiate and participate in discussions related to course topics during class. To gain a deeper understanding of physiological processes, students are asked to select a current research article related to reproductive physiology. Students are then required to present an analysis of article to the class in a formal presentation. Some of the topics to be covered in lecture include ovarian and testicular function, the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis, fertilization, establishment of the placenta, maternal support of pregnancy, parturition, and lactation. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 43300 - Introduction To Population Genetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory and essential background in population genetics. By incorporating examples from many biological disciplines (human genetics, medical evolution, human evolution, and endangered species), it should make the theory of population genetics relevant to students in any field of biology. Topics will also include a review of mathematical modeling and probability theory, as well as modern molecular tools being applied in population genetic studies. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| BIOL 43400 - Marine Community Ecology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Lecture involves a survey emphasizing tropical marine communities including coral reefs, mangrove estuaries, turtle grass, and hard and soft substrate interidal communities. Community processes such as predation, competition, mutualism, zonation and behavior are discussed as well as physical-chemical factors such as tides, currents, waves and salinity. Course includes a required field trip to a marine biological station over spring break for the lab portion. Student required to pay for expenses associated with field trip. Prerequisite for field trip: swimming/snorkeling ability; use of scuba gear is optional. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BIOL 43600 - Neurobiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will cover key aspects in molecular, cellular, and developmental neurobiology. Topics include: Cell biology of neurons and glia, electrophysiological properties of neurons, electrical and chemical signaling between neurons, synaptic integration and plasticity, development and regeneration of the nervous system, nervous system diseases. Up-to-date research findings and techniques will be included. A basic knowledge of cell biology and protein structure and function is strongly recommended. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 43700 - General Microbiology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An examination of microbial diversity which emphasizes the interrelationship between bacteria and their environments. Special emphasis is given to metabolic diversity, control of microbial growth and interactions of pathogenic microorganisms with their hosts. The laboratory is designed to complement the lecture and emphasizes pure culture techniques, isolation and identification of unknown organisms, measurement and control of microbial growth and studies of human commensal organisms. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BIOL 43800 - General Microbiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of microbial diversity that emphasizes the interrelationship of bacteria and their environments. This includes aspects of cell composition, metabolism, and growth of microorganisms. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
3. Students demonstrate knowledge of the path leading to specific careers in biology.
4. Students will exhibit proficiency in the physiology, biochemistry, and genetics of bacteria including diversity, metabolism, and gene expression regulation as well as key metabolic control mechanisms.
5. Students will be familiar with taxonomic, ecological, and phylogenetic relationships among microorganisms including biogeochemical nutrient cycling, microbial diversity, and the biotechnological application of microbes to address environmental and energy problems.
6. Students will be able to demonstrate knowledge of how evolutionary forces impact and shape microbial function and activity.
7. Students will be able to efficiently communicate scientific information or results from biological investigations using both oral and written methods.
8. Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of the scientific method including hypothesis generation and testing, data collection, analysis, and interpretation.
9. Students will demonstrate an understanding of prokaryotic cell structure and the major physiological processes of microorganisms that are critical for metabolism, function, and utilization of ecological niches.
|
| BIOL 43900 - Laboratory In General Microbiology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Includes enrichment cultures to isolate microorganisms, studies of cell composition, measurements of cell growth, and examination of enzyme regulation. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 44000 - Herpetology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The evolution, paleontology, taxonomy, morphology, physiology, ecology, and geographic distribution of amphibians and reptiles. Museum techniques, biosystematics, preservation, and caring for specimens are included. Field work emphasizes collection and identification of Indiana species. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| BIOL 44100 - Biology Senior Seminar In Genetics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This is a required course for genetics majors. It provides exposure to current research in genetics and molecular biology via invited faculty speakers. Students enrolled in the course who have actively participated in research also give a presentation on their own work. Other students are assigned to review current literature in one aspect of the semester's topic. The topic selected for review is in an area of current research in genetics and may vary from year to year. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 44200 - Ecology Of Shallow Lakes |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. This course will focus on the ecology of shallow lakes which are the most common lake type throughout much of the Midwest and the United States as a whole. The course will introduce the student to the ecology of shallow lakes with particular emphasis on how the abiotic features of lakes are important determinants of the structure of their biological communities. The dynamic nature of lakes will be stressed with a focus on seasonal changes in the chemical and physical characteristics that impact food web structure over time. Laboratories will focus on learning field techniques for sampling and identifying organisms from plankton to aquatic plants to fish. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1) Expose students to the ecologies of small lakes, which is different than that of other larger bodies of water.
2) Introduce students to the relationship between biotic and abiotic components.
3) Explain to students the chemical and physical changes that occur seasonally in these bodies of water.
4) Increase the experiential learning component (e.g. field study) by increasing lab exposure.
|
| BIOL 44201 - Introductory Module: Protein Expression |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This is a project-oriented course designed to give the student exposure to laboratory research through a series of five-week modules. During this five-week introductory module, the students will learn the basics of expression, isolation, and characterization of recombinant proteins in E. coli using SDS-PAGE and Western blotting. In the first half of the course, students work initially with one recombinant DNA construct and then are given a second construct to use to identify the protein expressed. *Note: additional hours as needed for particular experiments. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn principles and basic lab techniques related to protein works such as: Bradford Assay, SDS-PAGE, Western Blot and GST affinity purification.
2. At the beginning, students will review their knowledge on over-expression of protein using recombinant DNA cloning in E. coli and other expression systems.
3. During the course, experimental design, result analysis and troubleshooting area also emphasized.
4. Students will have the real lab experience when they design and perform the final project by their own.
|
| BIOL 44202 - Animal Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This is a project-oriented course designed to give the student exposure to laboratory research through a series of five-week modules. This module involves measurements of respiratory, cardiovascular, neural and renal function. When appropriate measurements are made in both rats and humans. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To conduct both animal and human physiological experiments and to learn how to deal with the complexities inherent in live animal experiments.
2. To appreciate the advantages and limitations involved in both human and animal experiments.
3. To learn basic surgical anatomy and surgical anatomy and surgical procedures.
4. To gain an appreciation for the accurate measurement, analysis, evaluation and interpretation of physiological results.
5. To gain some practice in presenting and explaining results to a group.
|
| BIOL 44203 - Bacterial Synthetic Biology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will provide an introduction to state-of-the-art bacterial molecular genetics using the intestinal bacterium Escherichia coli as a model cell. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
2. Students who complete the CMD BS program will have a broad understanding of the compositions and formations of cellular structures, the molecular basis underlying cellular processes, and the links between diseases and aberrant gene functions.
3. Demonstrate an understanding of concepts and theories of genetics.
4. Demonstrate an understanding of laboratory skills used in genetics.
5. Students will exhibit proficiency in the physiology, biochemistry, and genetics of bacteria including diversity, metabolism, and gene expression regulation as well as key metabolic control mechanisms.
6. Students will be able to demonstrate technical competency in basic microbiological laboratory techniques and common molecular biology techniques that exploit the use of microbes.
|
| BIOL 44204 - Laboratory In Animal Cell Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. In this five-week module, students will gain experience in the basic principles of mammalian cell culture and gene transfer technologies. This is an alternate year course, offered in odd numbered years. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
3. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
4. Students demonstrate knowledge of the path leading to specific careers in biology.
5. Students will understand how biochemistry contributes to improvements in human health, industry, and broader scientific understanding.
6. Cellular Processes: Students will understand the role of macromolecules in cellular processes such as DNA replication, RNA transcription, protein translation, and metabolism.
7. Scope: Graduates will understand how chemical and biochemical processes relate to biological function at the molecular, cellular, organismal, and higher levels.
8. Students who complete the CMD BS program will have a broad understanding of the compositions and formations of cellular structures, the molecular basis underlying cellular processes, and the links between diseases and aberrant gene functions.
9. Students will understand how evolutionary forces influence organisms to produce adaptations.
10. Students will learn to efficiently communicate scientific information or results from biological investigations using both oral and written methods.
11. Students will use and understand the scientific method, including how to generate hypotheses and predictions, develop an experimental design, collect data, statistically analyze data, and interpret results.
12. Demonstrate an understanding of concepts and theories of genetics.
13. Demonstrate an understanding of laboratory skills used in genetics.
14. Students will be able to demonstrate technical competency in basic microbiological laboratory techniques and common molecular biology techniques that exploit the use of microbes.
15. Students will be able to efficiently communicate scientific information or results from biological investigations using both oral and written methods.
16. Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of the scientific method including hypothesis generation and testing, data collection, analysis, and interpretation.
|
| BIOL 44205 - Introduction To LabVIEW |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00.This is an introductory course for LabVIEW programming. During this five-week module students will learn proper data acquisition techniques and be introduced to the fundamentals of the LabVIEW graphical programming environment. Through LabVIEW, students will learn the tools to develop programs capable of acquiring, processing, analyzing, saving and displaying data for engineering and scientific applications. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students demonstrate profiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation,
communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
3. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scentific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology,
and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
4. Students demonstrate knowledge of the path leading to specific careers in biology.
|
| BIOL 44207 - Exploration Of Protein Structure |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00.This module is a hands-on exploration of the principles of enzyme structure. Students will use computers to retrieve and inspect protein structures from publicly available databases. Through the performance and analysis of sequence structural alignments, students will explore the relationship between primary, secondary and tertiary structures and the final active form of a protein. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students demonstrate profiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation,
communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
3. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scentific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology,
and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
4. Students demonstrate knowledge of the path leading to specific careers in biology.
|
| BIOL 44208 - DNA Sequencing Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. In this lab module pairs of students prepare, run, and detect DNA sequencing ladders on miniaturized fast-running sequencing gels. Sequencing reactions are prepared from single-stranded and double-stranded DNA templates. The theory of DNA sequencing is taught, and experience is gained in manually reading the sequence from the sequencing ladders consisting of A, T, G and C lanes. Students learn how to connect to the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) and do BLAST sequence comparisons of the sequences that they read with DNA sequences in the national database GenBank. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
3. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
4. Students will understand how biochemistry contributes to improvements in human health, industry, and broader scientific understanding.
5. Demonstrate an understanding of laboratory skills used in genetics.
|
| BIOL 44209 - Exploring The Living Cell |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. In this five-week module, students will learn how to observe and analyze cellular structure and dynamic behavior of living cells. We will utilize live cell imaging techniques to visualize molecules, cellular structures and organelles by use of fluorescence dyes and marker proteins tagged with green fluorescent protein (GFP) and other color florescent proteins. Specimens may include whole live organisms and cultured cells, as well as live tissues and organs from animal and plant systems. Students will observe the cytoskeleton and organelles in growing cells, perform bimolecular fluorescence complementation (BiFC) analysis to see molecular interactions in the live cell and monitor protein and organelle behavior during mitosis. Live specimens will be observed under stereo-dissecting, conventional, and confocal fluorescence microscopes. Images will be acquired, digitized, and analyzed by computational programs. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
3. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. The skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
4. Students who complete the CMD BS program will have a broad understanding of the compositions and formations of cellular structures, the molecular basis underlying cellular processes, and the links between diseases and aberrant gene functions.
5. Students who complete the CMD BS program will have a broad understanding of the Principles governing the development of multi-cellular animals and plants.
6. Students will demonstrate the ability to measure dynamic changes in living organisms, tissues, and cells.
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| BIOL 44210 - Introduction To DNA |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. In this five-week module, students will learn a survey of the major web databases for accessing DNA sequences and genomes. How to search sequences, how to make alignments, and other very basic bioinformatics. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
3. Students demonstrate the ability to discuss ethical issues in the application of biological sciences, and the impact of science on society.
4. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. The skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
5. Students demonstrate knowledge of the path leading to specific careers in biology.
6. Demonstrate an understanding of concepts and theories of genetics.
7. Demonstrate an understanding of laboratory skills used in genetics.
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| BIOL 44211 - Laboratory In Anatomy And Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This module will study various organs, and also discuss diseases associated with it. The heart, brain, kidney, stomach, liver etc. will be studied in detail using histology, dissection, and instrumentation. Emphasis will be placed on problem solving using various case studies. The students will be required to give presentation. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students demonstrate profiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation,
communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
3. Students demonstrate the ability to discuss ethical issues in the applicaation of biological sciences, and the impact of science on society.
4. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scentific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology,
and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
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| BIOL 44212 - Microscopy And Cell Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. In this five-week module, students will learn how to prepare specimens for viewing by fluorescence microscopy. Specimens include mammalian tissue culture cells and zebrafish embryos. The emphasis will be on the staining of the cytoskeleton in these preparations, utilizing antibodies and fluorescence probes. The specimens will be viewed by wide-field and confocal laser scanning fluorescence microscopy. Images will be acquired, processed and analyzed by modern computational methods. Students will learn the basics of cell culture, immunocytochemistry, fluorescence microscopy, digital image processing and data analysis. At the end of the course, students prepare a PowerPoint presentation of their images and data . Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate profiency with skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation,
communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
2. Students demonstrate the ability to discuss ethical issues in the application of biological sciences, and the impact of science on society.
3. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in
biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
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| BIOL 44214 - Microbial Pathogenesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Successful infection by a pathogen often is mediated by the targeting of host cellular processes by virulence proteins. The identification of host pathways modulated by the pathogen is critical in the study of the pathogenic mechanisms, thus the design of any therapeutic intervention. One of the methods to identify these pathways is the use of yeast two-hybrid system. In this lab module, you will learn the principles of this powerful and widely used method. The experiments will allow you to understand the rationales of the procedures and to obtain hands-on experience in the screening process. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
3. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
4. Students demonstrate knowledge of the path leading to specific careers in biology.
5. Students who complete the CMD BS program will have a broad understanding of the compositions and formations of cellular structures, the molecular basis underlying cellular processes, and the links between diseases and aberrant gene functions.
6. Students will be able to demonstrate knowledge of how evolutionary forces impact and shape microbial function and activity.
7. Students will acquire knowledge of disease-causing microorganisms that includes an understanding of humoral, cell-mediated and non-specific immune responses, as well as the molecular basis for bacterial and viral pathogenesis.
8. Students will be able to demonstrate technical competency in basic microbiological laboratory techniques and common molecular biology techniques that exploit the use of microbes.
9. Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of the scientific method including hypothesis generation and testing, data collection, analysis, and interpretation.
10. Students will demonstrate an understanding of prokaryotic cell structure and the major physiological processes of microorganisms that are critical for metabolism, function, and utilization of ecological niches.
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| BIOL 44215 - Multidisciplinary Design Of Systems And Devices For Physiology Measurements |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. This physiology laboratory course will provide an opportunity for undergraduates from the College of Science (Department of Biology) to collaborate with students in other colleges (Agriculture, Education, Engineering, Health and Human Science & Technology) to experience and learn how to operate effectively as part of an interdisciplinary team to address physiological problems in the cardiovascular system, respiratory system and in biological transport. Specifically it will emphasize how these teams can use information, tools, techniques and theories from their disciplines to solve problems that are beyond the scope of any single discipline. In this process, the students will develop an appreciation of both engineering design and the classic hypothesis-driven experimental science as tools to solve complex real-world problems. This course will promote effective communication, systems thinking, laboratory skills, self-management and professional ethics. Students will learn to measure and quantify biological changes, analyze data (including statistical analysis) and interpret its meaning as it applied to the larger physiological question at hand. These skills will be necessary for teams to efficiently function in an interdisciplinary setting both in future courses and more importantly when they enter the workforce. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
3. Students demonstrate the ability to discuss ethical issues in the application of biological sciences, and the impact of science on society.
4. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
5. Students demonstrate knowledge of the path leading to specific careers in biology.
6. Student will demonstrate an in depth knowledge of nervous system function at the systems, cellular and molecular level.
7. Students will demonstrate the ability to measure dynamic changes in living organisms, tissues, and cells.
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| BIOL 44300 - Structure And Function In Bacteria |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An examination of unique aspects of bacterial catabolism, mechanisms of pathogenesis, and the functions of cell structures and morphogenesis in survival. Emphasis is on the experimental approaches used to elucidate these processes. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BIOL 44400 - Human Genetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intermediate-level survey course of human genetics with a balanced review of both Mendelian and molecular aspects. Review of current development and application of DNA technology emphasized. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BIOL 44500 - Aquatic Biology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the roles of physical and chemical factors, predation, and competition in determining the abundance of freshwater organisms and regulating the productivity of lake ecosystems. Laboratories emphasize field work and group or individual projects at the Crooked Lake Biological Station. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| BIOL 44600 - Molecular Bacterial Pathogenesis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will focus on the interface of classical cell biology and microbiology, with emphasis on the exploitation of mammalian host cell by medically relevant pathogens, such as Yersinia, Salmonella, and Listeria. This course will cover the molecular mechanisms of infectious diseases. It will introduce modern cellular microbial strategies for studying the complex interaction between pathogens and their host cells. Topics and readings will be prepared from the most current literature. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BIOL 44900 - Environmental Microbiology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the various ways in which microbes interact with other organisms and their environment. The course will consider a diverse array of topics across a wide range of aquatic and terrestial ecosystems - including biofilms, thermal vent communities, and other extreme habitats - with a coverage of both pathogenic and nonpathogenic microbes. Current issues in microbial diversity, biodegradation, and bioremediation will also be discussed. The laboratory activities are designed to give students hands-on experience with current problems in microbial ecology. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| BIOL 45500 - Animal Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of physiology illustrated by invertebrate and vertebrate systems. Respiration, ion and water balance, temperature regulation, and nervous systems. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
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| BIOL 45600 - Laboratory In Animal Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory experiments are designed to illustrate the principles of systems physiology. The course emphasizes the basic principles of physiology, the laboratory methods to study these principles, and the quantitative analysis of data. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
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| BIOL 46000 - Herpetology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the biology of the amphibians and reptiles, including discussion and study of the evolutionary history, ecology behavior, physiology, and distribution of amphibians and reptiles. Special attention will be given to the identification of amphibians and reptiles found in northern Indiana. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Categorize the taxonomic relationships within the classes Amphibia and Reptilia: orders, major families, and local genera.
2. Relate the physiology and reproductive biology of amphibians and reptiles to their ecology.
3. Identify local species of the classes Amphibia and Reptilia.
4. Effectively communicate scientific knowledge in written and oral forms.
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| BIOL 46100 - Animal Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An exploration of how animals survive, adapt, and respond to environmental changes. Topics covered will include learning, mechanisms of animal behavior, foraging, anti-predatory behavior, aggression and other social behaviors, signaling, and communication. Examples from the Kingdom Animalia will include vertebrate, invertabrate and companion animals. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Distinguish components of behaviors that are innate or learned.
2. Evaluate hypothesises that provide proximate and ultimate explanations of behaviors.
3. Integrate knowledge of neuromuscular physiology with expressions of behavior.
4. Justify the contribution of behavior to increases in evolutionary fitness.
5. Effectively communicate scientific knowledge in written and oral forms.
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| BIOL 46200 - Evolution Of Human Mating Systems |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An exploration of the morphological, physiological, behavioral, and genetic traits important to humans in mate choice. Topics covered will include signs used by males and females to choose mates, the importance of hormones mate choice, pheromonal communication systems and mate choice, and mate choice by gays and lesbians. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand factors that cause the evolution in human mating systems.
2. Consider and critique processes that alter human mating systems.
3. Predict the consequences of changes in human mating systems.
4. Understand the implication of sexual selection on human physiology, behavior, and morphology.
5. Apply critical thinking skills to reading of the scientific literature.
6. Effectively communicate scientific knowledge in written and oral forms.
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| BIOL 46600 - Developmental Biology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The lectures and laboratories focus on what happens during the development of an organism and how we know what happens from experimental results. During the first half of the course, students spend time becoming familiar with the embryology of animals and plants by doing laboratory exercises in their lab manual. They also become adept working with chick embryos and Wisconsin Fast Plants because these are the two developing systems most students use to do their lab projects during the second half of the course. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| BIOL 47700 - Phycology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of algae with emphasis on identification, morphology and ecology of fresh water species. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| BIOL 47800 - Introduction to Bioinformatics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (C S 47800 and STAT 47800) Bioinformatics is broadly defined as the study of molecular biological information, targeting particularly the enormous volume of DNA sequence and functional complexity embedded in entire genomes. Topics will include understanding the evolutionary organization of genes (genomics), the structure and function of gene products (proteomics), and the dynamics of gene expression in biological processes (transcriptomics). Inherently, bioinformatics is interdisciplinary, melding various applications of computational science with biology. This jointly taught course introduces analytical methods from biology, statistics and computer science that are necessary for bioinformatics investigations. The course is intended for junior and senior undergraduates from various science backgrounds. Our objective is to develop the skills of both tool users and tool designers in this important new field of research.
Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
2. Students demonstrate the ability to discuss ethical issues in the application of biological sciences, and the impact of science on society.
3. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
4. Students demonstrate knowledge of the path leading to specific careers in biology.
5. Evolution: Students will understand the role of evolution of creating and modifying the macromolecular components of the cell, and in creating biological complexity and variability.
6. Students will use and understand the scientific method, including how to generate hypotheses and predictions, develop an experimental design, collect data, statistically analyze data, and interpret results.
7. Demonstrate an understanding of laboratory skills used in genetics.
8. Students will be able to demonstrate knowledge of how evolutionary forces impact and shape microbial function and activity.
9. Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of the scientific method including hypothesis generation and testing, data collection, analysis, and interpretation.
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| BIOL 48100 - Eukaryotic Genetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course presents the fundamental concepts of classical and modern molecular genetics in eukaryotic systems, using examples from the model genetic organisms, yeast, Drosophila, Caenorhabditis, Arabidopsis, maize, mice and humans. These concepts are applied to solving problems of genetic analysis. Recent advances in developmental, cancer, and behavioral genetics and genomics, and applications of genetic technology, are used to demonstrate the impact that modern genetics makes at the cutting edge of biological research. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BIOL 48300 - Great Issues: Environmental And Conservation Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Concerned with the application of ecological principles to environmental issues, the course introduces fundamental ecology, emphasizing the interplay of theoretical models, natural history, and experimentation. New research developments are stressed, with the outlook for application to environmental management and restoration. Whole-biosphere issues, such as the loss of biological diversity, frame a focus at the population level to understand local and global extinction and community stability. In-depth case studies of endangered ecosystems (both temperate and tropical), with computer modeling, field trips, and discussions of policy formulation, demonstrate the range of tools and information necessary to accomplish coexistence of humans with the rest of nature. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| BIOL 48700 - Professional Practice V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. This course serves to integrate a professional research experience at an approved academic institution or industrial research facility into the Biology academic curriculum. The student must be accepted into an internship or co-op program. To participate in the Co-op program a student also must be accepted by the cooperative education program coordinator of Purdue University. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| BIOL 48800 - Biological Sciences Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Directed in-service training with off-campus employers that may include but are not limited to government agencies, private industry, and community organizations. Can be repeated up to a total of 3 credits under the direction of the academic advisor. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
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| BIOL 48900 - Biological Sciences Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 12.00. Students will do research in the area of biological sciences with a primary investigator. They will contribute to ongoing research while learning current research techniques. They will analyze data and determine course of actions to be taken in their experiments. During this process the students will develop critical thinking, oral and written communication skills. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BIOL 49100 - Senior Biology Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students critique and discuss seminar presentations. Each student must select a topic and give an oral presentation on it. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| BIOL 49200 - Mycology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course provides a detailed introduction to the field of mycology, where the class will learn basics of mycology to include common contaminants as well as pathogenic fungi. This course is designed for science students who will gain skills in laboratory identification of fungal and yeast elements. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| BIOL 49300 - Introduction To Ethology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (PSY 49400) Animal and human behavior is presented from an ethological perspective. Emphasis is on observation and description of natural behaviors, motivation, the behavioral aspects of ecology, the evolution of behavior, and the domestication of animals. Several representative groups of wild and domesticated species will be discussed and illustrated with slides and films with respect to individual and social behavior, predator-prey relationships, etc. Field trips will augment classroom work. A critical examination of popular books in ethology will be made against the background of this course. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BIOL 49400 - Biology Research |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Supervised individual research performed by juniors and seniors. Project must be approved by the Honors Committee, Department of Biological Sciences. Honors Research Program students should register for BIOL 49900. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
3. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
4. Students demonstrate knowledge of the path leading to specific careers in biology.
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| BIOL 49500 - Special Assignments |
|
Arrange Hours and Credit. Readings, discussions, written reports, seminar presentations, and field or laboratory work provided for enrichment in special areas of the biological sciences. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BIOL 49600 - Biology Honors Tutorial |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Selected readings, discussions, and written reports under the guidance of a faculty tutor. Submission of honors tutorial petition and consent of faculty tutor and Honors Committee. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BIOL 49700 - Biology Honors Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Required of all students participating in honors research. Discussions and presentations of research, including seminars by those students who are completing their honors research thesis. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
3. Students demonstrate the ability to discuss ethical issues in the application of biological sciences, and the impact of science on society.
4. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
5. Students demonstrate knowledge of the path leading to specific careers in biology.
6. Students will understand how biochemistry contributes to improvements in human health, industry, and broader scientific understanding.
7. Macromolecules: students will be familiar with the biogenesis, structure, and chemistry of the basic types of macromolecules important in cells: nucleic acids, proteins, and membranes, and with the organic and inorganic molecules important in cellular metabolism.
8. Scope: graduates will understand the chemical and physical principles that govern biochemical and physiological processes.
9. Evolution: students will understand the role of evolution of creating and modifying the macromolecular components of the cell, and in creating biological complexity and variability.
10. Scope: graduate will understand how chemical and biochemical processes relate to biological function at the molecular, cellular, organismal, and higher levels.
11. Students who complete the CMD BS program will have a broad understanding of the compositions and formations of cellular structures, the molecular basis underlying cellular processes, and the links between diseases and aberrant gene functions.
12. Students who complete the CMD BS program will have a broad understanding of the principles governing the development of multi-cellular animals and plants.
13. Students will understand ways in which organisms interact ecologically with each other and their environment.
14. Students will understand how evolutionary forces influence organisms to produce adaptations.
15. Students will acquire knowledge of the ways in which animals communicate with each other.
16. Students will exhibit proficiency in population and community ecology, animal behavior, and evolutionary mechanisms.
17. Students will be familiar with taxonomic and phylogenetic relationships among organisms.
18. Students can extend basic ecological principles to species and ecosystem conservation.
19. Students will learn to efficiently communicate scientific information or results from biological investigations using both oral and written methods.
20. Students will use and understand the scientific method, including how to generate hypotheses and predictions, develop an experimental design, collect data, statistically analyze data, and interpret results.
21. Demonstrate an understanding of concepts and theories of genetics.
22. Demonstrate an understanding of laboratory skills used in genetics.
23. Students will exhibit proficiency in the physiology, biochemistry, and genetics of bacteria including diversity, metabolism, and gene expression regulation as well as key metabolic control mechanisms.
24. Students will be familiar with taxonomic, ecological, and phylogenetic relationships among microorganisms including biogeochemical nutrient cycling, microbial diversity, and the biotechnological application of microbes to address environmental and energy problems.
25. Students will be able to demonstrate knowledge of how evolutionary forces impact and shape microbial function and activity.
26. Students will be able to demonstrate technical competency in basic microbiological laboratory techniques and common molecular biology techniques that exploit the use of microbes.
27. Students will be able to efficiently communicate scientific information or results from biological investigations using both oral and written methods.
28. Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of the scientific method including hypothesis generation and testing, data collection, analysis, and interpretation.
29. Students will demonstrate an understanding of prokaryotic cell structure and the major physiological processes of microorganisms that are critical for metabolism, function, and utilization of ecological niches.
30. Students will demonstrate an in depth knowledge of nervous system function at the systems, cellular and molecular level.
31. Students will demonstrate the ability to measure dynamic changes in living organisms, tissues, and cells.
|
| BIOL 49800 - Biology Teaching |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Supervised teaching experience for juniors and seniors. Must have approval of course instructor in advance. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BIOL 49900 - Biology Honors Thesis Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Research under the guidance of a scientist. Submission of honors tutorial petition and consent of faculty tutor and Honors Committee. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
3. Students demonstrate the ability to discuss ethical issues in the application of biological sciences, and the impact of science on society.
4. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
5. Students demonstrate knowledge of the path leading to specific careers in biology.
|
| BIOL 50000 - Modular Upper-Division Laboratory Course |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This is a project-oriented course designed to give the student exposure to laboratory research through a series of five-week modules. The student must complete the introductory five-week module or have consent of instructor before taking the other modules. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BIOL 50100 - Field Botany |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Field botany is the study of plants in a landscape context. Major course themes include plant identification; plant community analysis and classification, focusing on major plant community types in northeast Indiana; an introduction to basic concepts of geology, hydrology, and soil science as they relate to the distribution and maintenance of plant communities, and a module on habitat preservation and restoration. The course includes two required Saturday field trips. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BIOL 50200 - Conservation Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An investigation of the foundations of conservation biology and emergent topics within the field: conservation ethics, the Endangered Species Act, island biogeography, effective population size, minimum viable populations, edge effects, managing for threatened species, and refuge design. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BIOL 50500 - Biology Of Invertebrate Animals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the invertebrate animals, their morphology, physiology, ecology, and phylogeny. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
|
| BIOL 50600 - Human Molecular Genetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A molecular characterization of the human genome; cloning human disease genes; the molecular basis of human genetic disorders that are due to biochemical defects and chromosomal abnormalities; molecular approaches in diagnosis of human disorders; mapping of human genes; and gene therapy. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BIOL 50700 - Principles Of Molecular Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Molecular aspects of structure and function of nucleic acids and proteins, including recombinant DNA research. Prokaryotic and eukaryotic molecular biology are given equal weight. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
|
| BIOL 50800 - Recombinant DNA Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic principles of genetic engineering; gene cloning with various vectors. Techniques include isolation of DNA, use of restriction endonucleases, separation of DNA fragments, transformation of E coli with recombinant DNA, detection of DNA sequences in Southern blot hybridization. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| BIOL 50900 - Molecular Biology And Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Up-to-date recombinant DNA methods will be covered; how molecular biology methods have enhanced our understanding of basic biological functions and structures; the applicability of molecular biology in pharmaceuticals, vaccine production, agriculture, bioremediation, and synthesis of commercial products. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BIOL 51100 - Introduction To X-Ray Crystallography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EAPS 51100) Analysis of two- and three-dimensionally ordered structures by optical, electron, and X-ray diffraction methods. Geometry of diffraction. Detection of diffraction. Intensity of diffracted waves. Symmetry of crystals. The phase problem. The heavy atom method. Isomorphous replacement. Direct methods. Molecular replacement. Helical diffraction. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 51300 - Functional Human Anatomy |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An advanced course in human anatomy and morphology, with an emphasis on analysis of human structure and correlations with biomechanical function. Each region of the body is considered in detail, morphologically analyzed, and portfolios developed. Surface features and the functional role of structures identified are related to normal and pathological conditions. Measurements of individuals are used in analysis and prediction of functional limitations. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| BIOL 51500 - Molecular Genetics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 (West Lafayette) 3.00 (Fort Wayne) A molecular approach to the problems of structure, duplication, mutation, and phenotypic expression of generic material. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 51600 - Molecular Biology Of Cancer |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A detailed course examining the molecular mechanisms controlling the growth of animal cells. Emphasis will be placed on current experimental approaches to defining the molecular basis of growth regulation in developing systems and the uncontrolled proliferation of cells in metabolic disorders, such as cancer. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 51700 - Molecular Biology: Proteins |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Principles of protein three-dimensional architecture. The molecular and structural basis of protein folding, function, and evolution. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 51810 - Biomedicine |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. To develop an understanding of the application of the principles of natural sciences, especially biology and physiology, to modern medicine through evaluation of preclinical research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Provide upper level undergraduate and graduate students with a strong foundation in biomedicine that can be used in preparation for medical or graduate school curricula.
|
| BIOL 52000 - Contemporary Parasitology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide students, in the various disciplines, with information on parasites that will augment their training to pursue more advanced areas in medicine, allied health, animal, and environmental sciences. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BIOL 52410 - Bacterial Diversity And Systematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will address modern techniques in prokaryotic identification and phylogenetic analysis. Molecular methods in culture-dependent and culture-independent prokaryotic identification will be discussed and students will learn how to integrate such results into a large phylogenetic context. Advanced characterization of several prokaryotic phyla will also be discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Knowldge of prokaryotic diversity and how it related to phylogenetic relationships.
2. Ability to identify microorganisms through modern molecular techniques.
3. Development of library research skills in order to provide a detailed report on a specific prokaryotic phylum.
4. Development of presentation skills including public speaking and the use of software programs such as MS PowerPoint.
|
| BIOL 52500 - Principles Of Neurobiology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A survey of fundamental topics in the physiology of the nervous system including a discussion of excitable membranes, the physiology and pharmacology of electrical and chemical synapses, and the organization and function of vertebrate and invertebrate nervous systems. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| BIOL 52710 - Comparative Biomechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of how organisms function mechanically in their environment. Main focus is how the physical properties of solids and fluids govern and function in plants, invertebrates, and vertebrates. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Knowledge of how the physical principles of fluids and solids apply to organism form and physiology.
2. Development of critical thinking skills through reviews of primary literature.
3. Development of written communication skills through critical reviews and homework assignments.
|
| BIOL 52900 - Bacterial Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A detailed consideration of the central metabolic routes, their role in generation of energy and key intermediates, and the conversion of those intermediates to small molecule building blocks. Regulatory mechanisms will be stressed. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 53000 - Introductory Virology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Detection, titration, and chemistry of viruses; viral host interactions: bacteriophage-bacterium, animal virus-animal cell, plant virus-plant cell; tumor viruses: infection and transformation. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BIOL 53100 - Parasitology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Arthropod, protozoan, and helminth parasites, their morphology, life histories, host-parasite relationships, and control. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 53300 - Medical Microbiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Host-parasite relationships. Immunology. Bacteria and viruses associated with infectious diseases. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 53400 - Laboratory In Medical Microbiology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Properties of microorganisms associated with infectious diseases. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
|
| BIOL 53700 - Immunobiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Readings and discussion in the structural, cellular, and genetic basis of the immune response. Biology 420 recommended as a pre-requisite. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 53800 - Molecular, Cellular, And Developmental Neurobiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Molecular mechanisms of neural cell biology and development are considered. Topics and readings are drawn from the current primary literature. Biology 420 recommended as a pre-requisite. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 54000 - Biotechnology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines research, techniques, and applications for several technologies situated at currently recognized biological frontiers, including recombinant DNA technology, hybridoma technology, protein engineering, agricultural research, and microbiological engineering. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| BIOL 54100 - Molecular Genetics Of Bacteria |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced bacterial genetics, with emphasis on the use of genetics as a powerful and creative intellectual activity that enables us to discover biological functions and to construct new organisms by the manipulation of DNA. Major topics include: mutations, genetic selections, recombination, regulatory mechanisms, and genomic evolution. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 54200 - Modular Upper-Division Laboratory Course |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. This is a project-oriented course designed to give the student exposure to laboratory research through a series of 5-week modules. The student must complete the introductory 5-week module or have the consent of the instructor before taking the other modules. Topics may include animal cell culture, cloning and blot analysis, DNA fingerprinting, analysis of nucleic acid sequences, animal physiology, bacterial genetics, advanced neurophysiology, chromatin structure, eukaryotic gene expression, genomics, yeast molecular biology, and molecular virology, etc. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicng biologists, including experimental design and execution,
biological techniques, data collection and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
3. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems,
interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and iinterpreting data in a meaningful way.
4. Students will demonstrate the ability to measure dynamic changes in living organisms, tissues, and cells.
|
| BIOL 54300 - Population Ecology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Interaction that determine the dynamics, abundance, and persistence of natural populations. Topics include competition, predation and disease, metapopulations, computer simulation and data analysis, discussions of classical and current literature. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BIOL 54400 - Principles Of Virology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the molecular biology of animal, plant, and bacterial viruses. Interaction of viruses and the host cell, viral replication, mechanisms of viral pathogenesis, immunology, chemotherapy, viral genetics, oncology, and vaccines. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BIOL 54900 - Microbial Ecology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A study of microbial interactions with other organisms and the environment. Aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems as well as interactions between nonpathogenic microbes and plants and animals will be discussed. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 55000 - Plant Molecular Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comprehensive study of plant molecular biology and plant molecular genetics. Topics will include the structure and expression of plant nuclear, chloroplast, and mitochondrial genomes, and plant viruses. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 55001 - Eukaryotic Molecular Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a general survey course intended for advanced undergrads and beginning grad students. The course will draw upon examples from the plant, animal, and fungal kingdoms, and will familiarize students with the basic principles of molecular biology analyses as they apply to eukaryotic organisms. By the end of the course students should have knowledge of these molecular processes and should be able to design and analyze experiments dealing with these topics. This is not a first course in molecular biology. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Have knowledge of molecular processes.
2. Be able to design and analyze experiments dealing with these topics.
|
| BIOL 55600 - Physiology I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. General and comparative physiology. Principles of physiology. Nerve and muscle, temperature regulation, ion and water balance. The critical evaluation of original research papers. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| BIOL 55700 - Physiology II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the human cardiovascular, pulmonary, blood, and gastrointestinal systems. Higher neuronal functions and intersystem interactions will be discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
|
| BIOL 55900 - Endocrinology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of hormone function. Consideration will be given to the role of hormones in growth, development, metabolism, homeostasis, and reproduction. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 56100 - Immunology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the basic principles and experimentation in cellular and humoral immunology. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
|
| BIOL 56200 - Neural Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (SLHS 50700, PSY 51200) Overview of the structure and function of neural systems including those involved with motor, somatosensory, visual, auditory, learning, memory, and higher cortical processes. Molecular and cellular aspects of neural function are integrated with discussion of relevant neuroanatomy. Background in cell biology, psychobiology, physiology or anatomy is recommended. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students demonstrate proficiency with professional skills needed by practicing biologists, including experimental design and execution, biological techniques, data collection, and documentation, communication of results, and responsible conduct of science.
3. Students demonstrate the ability to discuss ethical issues in the application of biological sciences, and the impact of science on society.
4. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
5. Students demonstrate knowledge of the path leading to specific careers in biology.
|
| BIOL 56400 - Molecular Genetics Of Development. |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course examines the genetics and developmental bases as well as phenotypes of 40 genetic disorders. Chromosomal, single gene, complex and developmental genetic disorders are studied in detail. Emphasis is placed on molecular techniques and understanding current primary literature. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BIOL 56500 - Immunobiology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A survey course in laboratory experiments and demonstrations using classical immunological techniques and modern immunoassays with up-to-date technological equipment. The laboratory supplements the lecture portion of BIOL 53700 but is not required. Typical assays include immuno-double diffusion Ouchterlony methodology, immunofluorescence identification of cell surface antigens, cytokine and mitogen stimulated proliferation of immune cells, ELISA assays, and PAGE with Western blotting. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BIOL 56600 - Developmental Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 (West Lafayette, Fort Wayne, IUPUI, North Central)
4.00 (Calumet) Principles of development with emphasis on concepts and experimental evidence for underlying mechanisms, including molecular, cellular, and supracellular approaches. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 56700 - Laboratory In Developmental Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Descriptive and experimental study of the development of animals. Laboratories do not necessarily follow lecture material. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 56800 - Regenerative Biology And Medicine |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the mechanisms of natural regeneration (regenerative biology) and the application of these mechanisms to the development of therapies to restore tissues damaged by injury or disease (regenerative medicine). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BIOL 57100 - Developmental Neurobiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The major phases of nervous system development beginning with neurolation and neurogenesis and ending with the onset of physiological activity will be studied in a variety of animals, mainly avians and mammals (including man). Neural developmental disorders and behavioral ontogeny will also be considered. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BIOL 57300 - The Molecular Biology Of Animal Cells |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Structure and organization of the genome, chromatin structure, the expression and regulation of genes. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 57900 - Fate Of Chemicals In The Environment |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An investigation of the fate and transport of chemicals in the environment, including air, soil/sediment, and water. Special consideration will be given to the degradation of chemicals by microorganisms and to methods to maximize their activities (bioremediation). Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BIOL 58000 - Evolution |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of evolution as a basic concept of the biological sciences; an examination of current methods of experimentation within the area, as well as evidences for the possible mechanisms of evolutionary change. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 58010 - Teaching Evolution: Online Course |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Evolution is one of the most important and most widely misunderstood concepts in science. Teaching Evolution is an online course to help you deepen your understanding of evolutionary concepts, develop instructional strategies, and address obstacles in the teaching of evolution. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The nature of scientific processes.
2. The value and limitations of scientific process.
3. The scientist’s use of terms such as fact, law, theory, and hypothesis.
4. How multiple forms of evidence are used to test theories.
5. Applications of scientific processes in different situations.
6. How and why evolution is a cornerstone of biology.
|
| BIOL 58200 - Ecotoxicology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An investigation into the effects of environmental pollutants on ecosystem structure and function. The fate of pollutants in the environment is considered as it relates to the direct and indirect effects of chemicals on biota. Also considered are regulatory aspects of ecotoxicology. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
|
| BIOL 58500 - Ecology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Ecological processes and dynamics of populations, communities, and ecosystems; physical, physiological, behavioral, and population genetic factors regulating population and community structure; case studies; field studies, and simulation models of life history attributes, competition, predation, parasitism, and mutualism. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 58600 - Topics In Behavior And Ecology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In-depth examination of topics in ecology and behavior not treated extensively in other courses (e.g., behavioral ecology of reproduction, foraging ecology and behavior, and the behavioral ecology of defense against predators). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BIOL 58700 - Biogeography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the principles of biogeography. Distribution patterns, the role of history, the interactions of genetics and ecology in development of the species range, the species equilibrium theory, and the evolutionary biogeography of communities and regional biotas. Typically offered Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| BIOL 58705 - Animal Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will be a broad-scaled analysis of animal communication. Topics will include the physics of sound- and light-signal production, propagation and reception of signals, the use of communication as a means of information transfer, and the evolution of signaling systems. Mathematical principles are covered (e.g. in the evolution of signals), so some background in mathematics (e.g. calculus or algebra and introductory physics) is helpful. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand ways in which organisms interact ecologically with each other and their environment.
2. Students will understand how evolutionary forces influence organisms to produce adaptations.
3. Students will acquire knowledge of the ways in which animals communicate with each other.
4. Students will exhibit proficiency in population and community ecology, animal behavior, and evolutionary mechanisms.
5. Students will be familiar with taxonomic and phylogenetic relationships among organisms.
6. Students will learn to efficiently communicate scientific information or results from biological investigations using both oral and written methods.
7. Students will use and understand the scientific method, including how to generate hypotheses and predictions, develop an experimental design, collect data, statistically analyze data, and interpret results.
8. Students will demonstrate an in dept knowledge of nervous system function at the systems, cellular and molecular level.
|
| BIOL 58800 - Plant Ecology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The physico-chemical and biotic environment affecting plants in nature; basic ecological principles; ecosystems: productivity and management; evolutionary ecology: succession, reproductive ecology, genecology, antibiosis in plants, ecological methods. Applications to agronomy, forestry, wildlife management, outdoor recreation, and other land-use interests. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| BIOL 59100 - Field Ecology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A field course in ecology that stresses natural history and testing ecological theory under natural conditions. Group and individual projects include observational and experimental approaches. Emphasis is on the study of plant and animal species interactions in terrestrial (including montane and coastal) and aquatic habitats. Issues in community, population, behavioral, and conservation biology are addressed. Several all-day Saturday and two weekend field trips. Offered in alternate years. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 59200 - The Evolution Of Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An investigation of behaviors as adaptations: specializations of sensory and motor mechanisms involved in behavior; animal communication systems; behavioral ecology; patterns of social behavior as solutions to ecological problems, such as predator avoidance and resource exploitation. Emphasis will be on theoretical principles; examples will be broadly comparative, ranging from microorganisms to mammals. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 59500 - Special Assignments |
|
Arrange Hours and Credit. Special work, such as directed reading, independent study or research, supervised library, laboratory, or field work, or presentation of material not available in the formal courses of the department. The field in which work is offered will be indicated in the student's record. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture 1, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BIOL 59700 - Sex And Evolution |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Covers various theoretical and empirical aspects of sexual reproduction from an evolutionary perspective. Topics include: Why did sexual reproduction evolve? What different modes of reproduction exist? How is the sex of an individual determined in different organisms? What sex ratio should exist in different species? What is sexual selection, and how does it influence male and female characteristics in various species? How does sexual selection influence human social behavior?. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 59900 - Quantitative Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to give upper-division biological sciences and biomedical engineers the ability to quantitatively understand the physical and chemical factors that are responsible for living systems. Normal relationships, both empirical and theoretical, will be covered primarily. This foundation in normal physiological systems is complemented by subsequent topics on system pathologies. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students demonstrate subject-matter competency, including the mastery of biological theories.
2. Students demonstrate skills in critical thinking. These skills include understanding scientific methods, solving biology-related problems, interpreting and analyzing primary literature in biology, and interpreting data in a meaningful way.
3. Students will demonstrate an in depth knowledge of nervous system function at the systems, cellular and molecular level.
|
| BIOL 60000 - Bioenergetics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. (BCHM 66400) Energy transduction in biological membranes: physical chemical foundations; electron transfer, proton translocation; and active transport. Atomic structures of integral membrane protein complexes responsible for respiratory, photosynthetic generation of electrochemical potential; ATPase motor, and structure-based mechanisms. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: BCHM 56100, BCHM 56200 and CHM 37300. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 60100 - Graduate Seminar In Biological Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A one-credit course that provides graduate students with opportunities to: (1) explore original research and peer-reviewed literature in the life sciences, (2) better grasp the depth and implications of recent scientific advances through discussion with students and faculty, and (3) gain written and verbal communication skills through their presentation of topics of current scientific interest. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
|
| BIOL 60200 - Cellular Neurobiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers principles of neurophysiology and cell, molecular and developmental neurobiology for graduate students from a wide range of disciplines. Course material will involve lectures and assigned textbook readings, homework problems and in-class discussions based on selected readings of the primary literature, and computer-based simulations of neurophysiology. Grades will be based on participation in class discussions, graded homework sets and exams (a midterm and a final exam). Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To acquire knowledge pertaining to cellular neurobiology with a strong focus on the empirical evidence (methods and experiments) underlying the facts as they are currently understood in cellular, molecular and developmental neurobiology.
2. To communicate this knowledge in both oral and written forms.
3. To consider the ethical implications of recent advances in neural stem cell research.
|
| BIOL 61100 - Crystallography Of Macromolecules |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The special techniques required in the structure determination of biological macromolecules. Symmetry of macromolecules. Data collection and processing. The isomorphous replacement technique. The molecular replacement technique. Use of anomalous dispersion. Restraint and constraint refinement. Computational techniques. Prerequisite: BIOL 51100. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 62000 - Advanced Topics In Eukaryotic Cell Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of current areas of cell biological research, including the cytoskeleton, the regulation of the cell cycle, and the functions and dynamics of membrane-bound organelles. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 64700 - Membrane Protein Structural Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course focuses on the structural basis of the functions and dysfunctions of diverse membrane proteins, analyzed by X-ray, electron microscopy, and spectroscopy. The functions include transport, biogenesis, and transmembrane signaling. Unique problems associated with the structure analysis of integral membrane proteins are discussed. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 65001 - Techniques In Molecular Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Techniques in Molecular Biology will introduce graduate students to the theory and practice of many commonly used methods. Emphasis will be placed on understanding the theoretical basis for these techniques, their utility in various circumstances, and their limitations. Although taught as a lecture, students should be able to take this knowledge back to the laboratory to help them in their research efforts. The course will be as close as possible to a laboratory experience without being in an actual laboratory setting. This course is designed to prepare students for other in-depth 600-level scientific courses, for their rotations, and for future laboratory work. Exams will be “experimental” in nature (e.g., “design and experiment to do something…” or “in this type of situation, which technique/vector/etc. would best be used, and why…”). Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students are expected to learn the theoretical basis for many commonly used molecular biology techniques. An emphasis is placed on how correctly to use these techniques in real-life laboratory situations, and the limitations of each technique.
|
| BIOL 65200 - Advanced Ecology Discussion |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Weekly meetings to discuss and evaluate seminal papers in the fields of evolutionary, population, and community ecology. During the last week, students will critically evaluate a contemporary paper on a topic related to the "classic" papers discussed during the semester. Students will have a choice among papers submitted by participating faculty members; their critique will be assessed on content, originality, rigor, and clarity. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 65300 - Advanced Evolution Discussion |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Weekly meetings to discuss and evaluate seminal papers in the fields of evolution and population biology. During the last week, students will critically evaluate a contemporary paper on a topic related to the "classic" papers discussed during the semester. Students will have a choice among papers submitted by participating faculty members; their critique will be assessed on content, originality, rigor, and clarity. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 66200 - Seminar Methods And Professional Development I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An introduction for incoming graduate students to methods of seminar presentation and critique and to various guidelines for professional development during their graduate school experience. Topics include research laboratory safety (REM), how to give a talk, acclimating to graduate studies (especially time management), how to select a major professor and an advisory committee, how to prepare for qualifying exams, Purdue University guidelines for responsible conduct of research, how to organize a poster presentation, how to negotiate with mentors, and expectations for success. The course also serves to socialize the incoming cohort of students among themselves and with more senior students in the broad range of research disciplines available. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 66300 - Seminar Methods And Professional Development II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is a continuation of BIOL 66200 and expands the introduction for incoming graduate students to methods of seminar presentation and critique and to various guidelines for professional development during their graduate school experience. Topics include seminar topic selection and 20-minute seminar design, tutorials on electronic services at the PU Library and Citation Management programs, and evaluating classmate presentations. Using the skills learned the previous semester, each student is required to make a 20-minute PowerPoint presentation to the class, based on a pre-approved topic of their choice. The speaker is asked questions and the presentation receives written evaluations by all members of the class. Each student practices with the course instructor prior to the public presentation. The course also continues to socialize the incoming cohort of students among themselves and with more senior students in the broad range of research disciplines available. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 68100 - Advanced Eukaryotic Genetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for graduate students who wish to refresh their knowledge of the fundamental principles of eukaryotic transmission and molecular genetics, to explore new and developing areas of genetic research in depth, and to learn of genetic tools that can be applied within their own research. Lecture materials will be supplemented with class discussions of primary literature. Topic areas comprise epigenetic phenomena, developmental genetics, and systems biology. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BIOL 69100 - Biological Research Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Open to graduate students in the Department of Biological Sciences and designed primarily for students in their first year of graduate study. The course consists of two laboratory assignments, each of which lasts about two months. Students may take one or two of these per semester. During each laboratory assignment, the student will be exposed to methods, equipment, and experimental procedures currently in use in a particular departmental research laboratory selected by the student and through arrangement with the professor in charge of that laboratory. Admission by consent of the departmental Graduate and Advanced Studies Committee. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BIOL 69500 - Special Assignments |
|
Arrange Hours and Credit. Special work, such as directed reading; independent study or research; supervised library, laboratory, or field work; or presentation of material not available in the formal courses of the department. The field in which work is offered will be indicated in the student's record. Primarily for Ph.D. candidates. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BIOL 69600 - Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Each semester there are several separate seminar offerings. They will likely be on the following topics: biochemistry, crystallography, ecology and population biology, genetics, mechanisms of development, microbiology, neurobiology, and plant physiology. The student's record will indicate the specific seminars in which he/she has participated. Oral presentations required. At least two credits are required of Ph.D. candidates. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BIOL 69700 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. The frontiers of biology. Critical examination of developments in the various specialties represented by the members of the department. Currently advanced work in the following and related fields can be offered: molecular genetics; structure and biosynthesis of biologically significant molecules, including the use of X-ray diffraction; the nature of biological specificity and enzyme catalysis; the fine structure and chemistry of subcellular particles, cells, and tissues; microbial and plant metabolism; comparative biochemistry; genetics and physiology of viruses, bacteria, fungi, protozoa, helminths, and cells of higher forms of life; the genetics, structure, development, and physiology of plants and animals, including endocrinology and work physiology; neurobiology, ecology, systematics, and evolution of microorganisms, plants, and animals; host-parasite relationships including immunology; and the teaching of biology. The field in which work is offered will be indicated in the student's record. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BIOL 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BIOL 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Biological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BIOL B1000 - People and the Life Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory course designed for students not majoring in science. Emphasizes human and social aspects of biology: reproduction, development, genetic counseling, immunology, evolution, biodiversity, ecology, and environmental concerns.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL B3000 - Vascular Plants |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. This is a remarkably well organized and informative course with excellent and caring AIs. The professor received the 2001 Senior Class Award for Teaching Excellence in Biology and Dedication to Undergraduates. Vascular plants are
commonly known as the "higher plants" and are the dominant plants in the world today, those that we constantly see around us in the natural world and those that we cultivate and use for landscaping, house plants and food. Course focuses on the major kinds or groups of extant vascular plants and studies in detail and from an evolutionary perspective the morphologies, life cycles, identification, classification, and economic importance of these groups. laboratory sessions and one spring field trip provide hands-on experience in analyzing plant structures, using identification keys, preparing and working with herbarium specimens, and reconstructing phylogenetic relationships among plant groups with and without computer assistance. In a semester-long lab project, the life cycle of a fern is examined from the sowing of spores to fertilization in gametophytes and the early development of sporophytes. The course progresses from groups most like the earliest evolved land plants to the most recently evolved major group, the angiosperms or flowering plants that dominate most of the earth's land surface today. Approximately the first third
of the course deals with the earliest evolving extant vascular plants (the whisk ferns, clubmosses, spike mosses, quillworts, horsetails, and ferns), concluding with the more primitive lineages of seed-producing plants (the gymnosperms such as the cycads, Ginkgo, and pines). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL B3640 - Summer Flowering Plants |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. For those desiring a broad, practical knowledge of common wild and cultivated plants. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL E1110 - Basic Biology By Examination I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Credit by examination for demonstrating an understanding of basic facts and concepts of the lecture content of BIOL L1110. Credit not given for both L1110 and E1110. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| BIOL G9010 - Advanced Research |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Available to graduate students who have completed all course requirements for their doctorates, have passed doctoral qualifying examinations, and have the requisite number of degree credit hours. This course provides the advanced research student with a forum for sharing ideas and problems under the supervision of a senior researcher. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BIOL H1000 - Humans And Biology World-Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Principles of biological organization, from molecules through cells and organisms, with special reference
given to humans. Credit given for only one 100-level biology.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL K1010 - Concepts Of Biology I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00 or 5.00. An introductory course emphasizing the principles of cellular biology; molecular biology; genetics; and plant anatomy, diversity, development, and physiology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL K1020 - Honors Concepts Of Biology I |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. An introductory honors course emphasizing the principles of cellular biology; molecular biology; genetics; and plant anatomy, diversity, development, and physiology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BIOL K1030 - Concepts Of Biology II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00 or 5.00. An introductory biology course emphasizing phylogeny, structure, physiology, development, diversity, and behavior in animals, and evolution and ecology of plants and animals. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL K1040 - Honors Concepts Of Biology II |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. An introductory biology course emphasizing phylogeny, structure, physiology, development, diversity, evolution and behavior in animals. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BIOL K2950 - Special Assignments |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Special work, such as directed readings, laboratory or field work, or presentation of material not available in the formal courses in the department. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BIOL K3120 - Immunology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of molecular and cellular immunology, abnormal immune responses, and immunology reactions used in diagnosis.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL K3130 - Immunology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Experimental examination of the immune response. Use of the antigen-antibody reaction for diagnostic purposes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL K3220 - Genetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of genetics at the molecular, cellular, organismal, and population level. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL K3230 - Genetics Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Applied principles of genetics using organisms of increasing complexity, from viruses to the fruit fly. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL K3240 - Cell Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of the structure and activity of eukaryotic cells and subcellular structures. Emphasis is on regulation of and interactions among subcellular events such as protein targeting, transmembrane signaling, cell movement, and cell cycle. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL K3250 - Cell Biology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Experiments on the molecular and biochemical basis of organization and function of eukaryotic cells. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL K3310 - Embryology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The development of animals through differentiation of cells, tissues, organs, and organ systems will be examined. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL K3320 - Plant Growth And Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of growth and developmental patterns in plants as affected by growth regulators, age, heredity, photoperiod, and environmental factors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL K3330 - Embryology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Processes of animal development are examined in a series of classical and modern experiments using cell, tissue and embryo culture, drug treatments, and microscopic techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL K3380 - Introductory Immunology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of basic immunology with an emphasis on the cells and molecules underlying immunological mechanisms. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL K3390 - Immunology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Demonstration of immunological principles by experimentation. Exercises include cells and factors of the innate and the adaptive immune systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL K3410 - Principles Of Ecology And Evolution |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the basic concepts of the interrelation of living organisms and their environment. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL K3420 - Ecology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Experiments in the laboratory and field to illustrate the principles and techniques of ecology. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL K3500 - Comparative Animal Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comparative examination of principles of animal physiology from molecular to organismal levels using homeostasis, regulation, and adaptation as central themes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL K3560 - Microbiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to microorganisms: cytology, nutrition, physiology, and genetics. Importance of microorganisms in applied fields including infectious disease. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL K3570 - Microbiology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Laboratory experiments and demonstrations to yield proficiency in aseptic cultivation and utilization of microorganisms; experimental investigations of biological principles in relation to microorganisms. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL K4110 - Global Change Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of how the earth's environment has changed over its history and in-depth study of how the changing environment, including global warming, affects the ecology of various organisms. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL K4160 - Cellular Molecular Neuroscience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide an in-depth analysis of topics within the field cellular and molecular neuroscience. It will cover invertebrate and vertebrate neurobiology, cell and molecular biology of the neuron, neurophysiology, neuroanatomy, developmental neurobiology, regeneration and degeneration, learning and memory, and will include comparisions of neural mechanisms throughout the animal kingdom. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BIOL K4830 - Biological Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Chemistry of biologically important molecules including carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids. Special emphasis on chemistry of intermediary metabolism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL K4840 - Cellular Biochemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis on selected topics in cellular biochemistry including nucleic acid : protein interactions, protein : protein interactions, protein synthesis, biogenesis of membranes, and signal transduction. Current techniques for studying these processes in higher eukaryotes will be discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL K4900 - Capstone In Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Faculty-directed or approved independent library research on an area of public, scientific interest or a community service activity in local industry, government, schools or other public science-related groups or organizations. Topics for independent research and a list of service opportunities are available in the Department of Biology Office. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BIOL K4930 - Independent Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A course designed to give undergraduate students majoring in biology an opportunity to do research in fields in which they have a special interest. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BIOL K4940 - Senior Research Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A formally written report describing the results or accomplishments of K493. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L1000 - Humans and the Biological World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. This course is a non-major's introductory biology five-credit hour lecture/lab course. The course is a survey course introducing general topics in biology. Topics include the chemical and molecular structure of biological material, the biology of plants, genetics, evolution and human biology.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L1010 - Introduction to Biological Sciences I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00 or 5.00. Fundamental principles of biology for students considering a biology major or students with high school science background. Principles of genetics, evolution, systematics, diversity, and ecology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L1020 - Introduction to Biological Sciences II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00 or 5.00. Fundamental principles of biology for students considering a biology major or students with high school science background. Principles of cell structure and function, bioenergetics, organismal morphology and physiology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L1040 - Introductory Biology Lectures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L1050 - Introduction to Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Integrated picture of manner in which organisms at diverse levels of organization meet most problems in maintaining and propagating
life. Credit given for only one 100-level biology course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L1070 - Biological Concepts |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Introduction to critical thinking and basic concepts in biology. Topics include chemical basis for life, the study of cell structure and function, genetics, and ecology. This course is a prerequisite for upper-level biology courses. Credit given for only one of the following: L100, L104, L107, L108, Q201.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L1080 - Environment and Life |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Consideration of the interactions between humans and the other biological and physical components of the environment. Topics include ecological principles, biosphere, pollution, population, natural resources, conservation, toxicity, and disease. Credit given for only one of the following: L100, L104, L107, L108, Q201.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L1090 - Environment And Life Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. You will be introduced to some basic lab equipment and the methods governing the discovery of scientific knowledge. The laboratory exercises will give you an opportunity to participate in scientific inquiry, understand the empirical basis of scientific theories, and develop skills in using scientific equipment, collecting data and analyzing results. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L1120 - Foundations Of Biology: Biological Mechanisms |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. For biological and other science majors. Preference will e given to freshmen and sophomores. Integrated picture of manner in which organisms at diverse levels of organization meet problems in maintaining and propagating life. Credit given for only one of the following: L1000, L1040, L1120, E1120 or Q2010. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L1130 - Biology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Laboratory experiments in various aspects of biology, with a focus on investigative logic and methods. Introduces aspects of cell biology, genetics, and evolutionary biology. Should not be taken during first semester of residence unless credits have been earned for both E1110 and E1120. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L1500 - Biology Freshman Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An exploration of a topic of current biological interest. Topics may vary with instructor. Open to non-science majors.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L2000 - Environmental Biology And Conservation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An interdisciplinary examination of environmental problems. Class may include lectures, films, fieldwork, and laboratory methods including computer simulations. Fieldwork, if undertaken, may include trips to local industries with pollution controls in place, trips to examine local habitats, or other appropriate activities. Not open to students who have had E 162, L 350, or L 473. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| BIOL L2010 - Ecological Principles |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A course in the basic principles of ecology and their application. Students will study techniques used to evaluate habitat. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L2110 - Molecular Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Structure and function of macromolecules (DNA, RNA, and protein), including chemical and physical properties, and roles they play in cellular metabolism. The synthesis of those macromolecules (DNA replication, transcription and translation) reviewed in detail. Genetic engineering and regulation of gene expression discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L2200 - Biostatistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of statistics intended to equip students with skills needed to understand and draw statistical inferences from biological data. Will include data reduction, probability, hypothesis testing, correlation, regression, and analysis of variance. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L2700 - Humans and Microorganisms |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Beneficial and harmful activities of algae, bacteria, fungi, protozoa, viruses. Element cycles, production of fermented foods and dairy products, food poisonings, industrial fermentations, and antibiotics. Water and sewage microbiology. Microbial diseases and immunization problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L3030 - Field Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course designed to acquaint the student with the living organisms of an area and their interactions with the physical environment. The class will consist primarily of a period of intensive, extended field study in an area remote from the local campus. Orientation and evaluation sessions will be held prior to and following the field experience. Not distribution satisfying. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BIOL L3040 - Marine Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory lecture course for majors and non-majors involving the study of principles, concepts, and techniques of marine and estuarine biology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L3080 - Organismal Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Structural and functional aspects of regulative processes in animals; detection of the environment, integrative functions, reproduction. Laboratory deals with representative experiments on animal physiological processes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L3110 - Genetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Principles underlying the heritability of traits will be covered prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms (i.e. bacteria, plants, and animals). The dynamics of genes in individuals and populations, as well as environmental influences upon these, will be addressed. Further understanding of these issues will be drawn from the study of model organisms and genome projects. The focus of the course will be on understanding and integrating genetic concepts in the diagnosis and treatment of human disease. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L3120 - Cell Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. The goal of this course is to help you identify and think better about questions in cell biology that are interesting to you. My best guess is that we will choose to focus our attention on some combination of the following, interrelated topics: cancer, control of the cell cycle, and signal transduction. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L3130 - Cell Biology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theories and techniques of modern cell biology, including experiments on cell respiration and photosynthesis, analysis of signal transduction pathway using yeast two hybrid system, protein purification using expression vectors, and cell transformation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L3140 - Genetics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Basic principles of classical, population, and molecular genetics with emphasis on gene transmission and expression, linkage and crossing-over, the nature of the hereditary material, and gene action and regulation. Attention to human and applied genetics. Credit not given for both L314 and L364.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L3170 - Developmental Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. This course emphasizes analysis of developmental processes that lead to the construction of the whole organism from a single cell, the fertilized egg. The course is designed to present the basic principles of animal development. We will not study the complete embryology of any one organism; rather, we will consider examples of developmental processes in many different organisms in order to gain an understanding of fundamental cellular, genetic, and molecular mechanisms that underlie development in all animals. In L317 we will address questions in development from multiple points of view; we will consider embryological mechanisms at the cellular and molecular level, and we will also consider how aspects of life history and evolution impinge on our understanding of developmental biology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L3180 - Evolution |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Provides a rigorous exploration of the theory of evolution-the conceptual core of biology. Topics include origins and history of life; the interplay of heredity and environment in shaping adaptation; molecular, behavioral, and social evolution; patterns of speciation, extinction, and their consequences; methods for inferring evolutionary relationships among organisms. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L3190 - Genetics Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An experimental lab course that provides hands-on experience with the genetic systems of three organisms: E.coli (a bacterium), yeast (a simple eukaryotic organism), and the fruit fly, Drosophila (a multicellular organism). All three organisms are used in research labs throughout the world as model systems. The course
offers students the basic techniques used for genetic analysis that are unique to each organism with the emphasis on genetic principles. The course covers the following genetic methods and principles: mutant isolation, omplementation analysis, tetrad analysis, conjugation, transduction, sex-linkage, linkage analysis, recombination/mapping of
mutant phenotypes.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L3210 - Principles of Immunology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to molecular aspects of Immunology. Focus on various components and functions of the Immune system. Immunological techniques, and investigative approaches. Immunological studies of diseases. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L3230 - Molecular Biology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Manipulation and analysis of genes and gene products. Gene amplification, cloning, Southern blots and DNA sequence analysis. Column chromatography and gel electrophoresis of nucleic acids and proteins. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L3330 - Environmental Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the basic biological, chemical and geological principles that relate to current environmental issues with emphasis on mankind¿s impact. Topics include ecological principles, population, resources, pollution and regulation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Richmond
|
| BIOL L3400 - Biological Basis of Sex Differences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Do females and males differ from each other, and if so, how and why are they different? This course will introduce students to approaches used to study the biological mechanisms that contribute to male-female differences in anatomy, physiology, and behavior. The course will address both functional (evolutionary/ecological) and mechanistic (developmental/physiological) explanations for sex differences. Questions addressed will include the following: Why did sex evolve? What evolutionary mechanisms led to differences between the sexes? How does breeding ecology (e.g. number of mates, care of offspring) influence sex differences? How is sex determined? What role do hormones play in sex differences? Are there sex differences in the brain, and if so, how do they arise and are they related to sex differences in behavior? Is there a biological basis of sexual orientation? The course will emphasize comparative approaches, and we will address many of these questions in organisms ranging from yeast to humans. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L3450 - Vertebrate Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A general overview of the biology of vertebrate animals including aspects of their evolutionary history, taxonomy, anatomy, physiology, ecology, behavior and natural history.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L3500 - Environmental Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on principles of ecology
starting with the physical environment and working up levels of
organization from organisms to whole ecosystems. The second half
focuses on global environmental problems including global warming,
world population, loss of biodiversity, acid rain and global
contamination. It concludes with discussion and solutions to global
problems.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L3640 - Principles Of Genetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of genetic mechanisms and processes, recombination, genetic interaction, gene regulation and evolution. Emphasis varies with instructor as indicated by subtitles. Credit not given for both L3640 and L3690 or S3060. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| BIOL L3670 - Cell Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to biochemical structure and metabolic activities of plant, animal, and microbial cells; physiology of membranes; locomotion and response; growth, division, and differentiation of cells. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L3690 - Heredity, Evolution and Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An understanding of important biological concepts can be a powerful intellectual tool when applied to questions about human origins and behavior. This course is designed to present relevant concepts in an understandable way to students who are not majoring in biology and may not have a science background. The course touches on a wide range of biological levels of organization, from molecules and basic cellular processes to genetics, evolution, human behavior and hominid origins. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L3700 - Plants, Animals, and Civilization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The principal domesticated plants and animals from prehistoric times to the present, with consideration of their origin, spread, and relationship to development of civilization and to present problems of hunger. Not open to students who have had B368. Note: L370 will not count toward a Bloomington or Kokomo biological science degree. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L3760 - Biology Of Birds |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The course is a four-credit lecture/lab course intended for biology majors. The course provides a general overview of avian systematics, distribution, evolution, ecology, and behavior; emphasis is placed on avian physiology, migration and orientation, territoriality, communication, and reproductive behaviors. Field trips concentrate on visual and auditory identification of local birds, interpretation of behavior and interactions between birds, and field study research methods. Labs focus on the study of taxonomy, topography, feather structure, plumages and molts, sexual dimorphism, and anatomy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L3910 - Special Topics In Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BIOL L4030 - Biology Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| BIOL L4100 - Topical Issues In Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Topics not related extensively in other courses. The Topic will vary depending on the instructor and the student needs. May be repeated once with a different topic for a maximum of 6 credit hours. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| BIOL L4520 - Capstone In Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. An integrative experience for biology majors.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BIOL L4730 - Ecology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Distribution and abundance of organisms, interactions of organisms, and the environment at levels of individual, population, and community. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L4740 - Field and Laboratory Ecology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to field and lab techniques for studying ecology from individuals to ecosystems. Emphasis on applying these techniques to a variety of group research projects. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L4770 - Computers In Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Applications of mini-, micro-, and mainframe computers to biological work. Lecture and computer operation. Not concerned with computer programming.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L4900 - Individual Study |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 12.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BIOL L4980 - Internship in Professional Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Designed to provide an opportunity for students to receive credit for selected career-related work. Evaluation by employer and faculty sponsor on a satisfactory/non-satisfactory basis. Not distribution satisfying.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL L4990 - Internship in Biology Instruction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An internship for biology majors desiring college teaching experience. Students will be provided training in lecture-laboratory presentations. Each student will present lectures and laboratories that will be videotaped for subsequent analysis and follow-up suggestions for improvement.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL M2550 - Microbiology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Audio-tutorial laboratory of exercises and demonstrations to yield proficiency in principles and techniques of cultivation and utilization and microorganisms under aseptic techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BIOL M4300 - Virology Lecture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Viruses of plants, animals (including humans), and bacteria; emphasis on molecular biology of viral systems. Viruses and human disease such as cancer and AIDS; viruses and their evolution. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL N1000 - Contemporary Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected principles of biology with emphasis on issues and problems extending into everyday affairs of the student. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL N1070 - Exploring The World Of Animals |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course introduces students to animals and their native environments. It surveys individual ecosystems and highlights the interactions, features, and characteristics of the animals found there. Examples of discussion topics include unique features of animals, animal relationships, societies and populations, exotic species, and behavior, including mating, communication, feeding and foraging, and migration. Environmental issues including the effects of pollution on ecosystems are also discussed. Not equivalent to K103. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL N1080 - Plants, Animals And The Environment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide students and future K-8 teachers with a background in the general biology concepts of plants, animals and the environment which are the backbone of Indiana science standards. Through a combination of lectures, laboratories, and field trips, students will gain a basic understanding of plant and animal structure going from the cellular to the systemic level. Plant and animal interactions, diversity in plants and animals, the basic structure of ecosystems, biogeochemical cycles, phylogeny, evolution, and basic microscopy will be central themes during the semester. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
|
| BIOL N1200 - Topics In Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BIOL N1900 - The Natural World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Introduces students to the method and logic of science, and helps them understand the importance of science to the development of civilization and the contemporary world. Provides a context within which to evaluate the important scientific and technological issues of modern society. Interdisciplinary elements. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL N2000 - The Biology Of Women |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the biological basis for bodily functions and changes that take place throughout the life of females. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL N2120 - Human Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. First course in a two-semester sequence in human biology with emphasis on anatomy and physiology, providing a solid foundation in body structure and function. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL N2130 - Human Biology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Accompanying laboratory for N212. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL N2140 - Human Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of BIOL N2120. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL N2150 - Human Biology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Accompanying laboratory for BIOL N2140. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL N2170 - Human Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Lectures and laboratory work related to cellular, musculoskeletal, neural, cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, renal, endocrine, and reproductive function in humans. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL N2220 - Special Topics In Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A variable topics course dealing with current topics in biology. In a given semester, a topic such as disease, genetics, the environment, etc., will be dealt with as a separate course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BIOL N2250 - Urban and Suburban Gardening |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Course is intended for both biology and non-biology majors. Designed to expand understanding of the science and techniques of gardening with emphasis on healthy soil and its impact on plant growth. After completing the course, students will be able to describe what makes plants grow and what makes plants grow healthy. No gardening experience is required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn more about the unique environment in urban and suburban gardening.
2. Apply biological and earth science knowledge to gardening.
3. Develop basic techniques in plant propagation.
4. Examine the effects of fertilizer, light, water and other factors on the growth and quality of gardening products.
5. Recognize the impact of gardening on the environment.
6. Better understand urban and suburban gardening in the context of global environmental changes in central Indiana.
|
| BIOL N2510 - Introduction To Microbiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. The isolation, growth, structure, functioning, heredity, identification, classification, and ecology of microorganisms; their role in nature and significance to humans. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL N2610 - Human Anatomy |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Lecture and laboratory studies of the histology and gross morphology of the human form, utilizing a cell-tissue-organ system-body approach. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL N3220 - Introductory Principles Of Genetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic principles of plant and animal genetics. Emphasis on transmission mechanisms as applied to individuals and populations. For students in health and agricultural sciences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL Q2010 - Biological Sciences for Elementary Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. An introduction to the basic principles and practice of biology designed especially for prospective elementary teachers. All major areas of biology are considered, with a concluding emphasis upon the relations between various organisms and their environment. Students are expected to bring together their previous experiences with lecture/text and hands-on lab exercises to develop a sound understanding of the way that the biological world functions. Specific mention is made of situations they will likely encounter in their future teaching. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL T1000 - Biology for Elementary Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00 or 5.00. Principles of biology with discussions dealing with levels of biological organization, human systems, cells, genetics, and diversity of life. Laboratory and/or demonstrations clarifying lecture material and relating it to practical problems of the classroom. Credit not allowed toward a biology major.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL T1010 - Introduction To Biotechnology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An introduction to the field of biotechnology. Topics will include molecular foundations of biotechnology, cloneing, transgenic organisms. Genetic engineering, genomics, microarray, analysis, proteinomics and bioinformatics. Issues of ethics in the emerging field will also be addressed. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL V1000 - Human Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Survey of structure and function of body systems. Emphasis on health, nutrition and disease. Designed for non-majors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| BIOL V2000 - Heredity And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to principles of human heredity and genetic expression. Genetic
diseases, history and use of prenatal diagnostic technologies and ethical dilemmas posed by these advances. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| BIOL Z3170 - Introductory Developmental Biology Lecture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of developing systems. Embryology and organogenesis.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL Z3180 - Developmental Biology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A laboratory about developing organisms, with special emphasis on embryology and organogenesis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL Z3730 - Entomology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The anatomy, physiology, behavior, taxonomy, and evolution of insects. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOL Z3830 - Laboratory In Entomology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Laboratory and field studies of methods of collecting, preserving, and studying insects. Intensive study of insect classification. Preparation of an insect collection required. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| BIOP A6100 - Research In Biophysics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.0 to 15.00 Research In Biophysics. Typically offered Fall, Spring, Summer.
1.000 TO 15.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Research
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BIOP A6120 - Special Problems In Biophysics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 15.00. Teaching, laboratory, or tuturial assignments. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 15.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BIOS S5270 - Introduction To Clinical Trials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Prepares biostatisticians for support of clinical trial projects. Topics: fundamental aspects of the appropriate design and conduct of medical
experiments involving human subjects including School of Science 553 ethics, design, sample size calculation, randomization, monitoring, data collection analysis and reporting of the results.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BIOS S5460 - Applied Longitudinal Data Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Covers modern methods for the analysis of repeated measures, correlated outcomes and longitudinal data. Topics: repeated measures ANOVA, random effects and growth curve models, generalized estimating equations (GEE) and generalized linear mixed models (GLMMs). Extensive us of statistical software. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BIOS S5980 - Topics In Biostatistical Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Directed study and reports for students who wish to undertake individual reading and study on approved topics. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BIOS S6120 - Modern Statistical Learning Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will cover the topics pertaining to the modern methods of high-dimensional data analysis. Prerequisite: STAT 52500. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BIOS S6270 - Statistics In Pharmaceutical Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of the drug development process, including the various phases of development from pre-clinical to post-marketing. Topics: statistical issues in design, study monitoring, analysis and reporting. Additional topics may include regulatory and statistical aspects of population pharmacokinetics and real world applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BIOS S6360 - Advanced Survival Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discusses the theoretical basis of concepts and methodologies associated with survival data and censoring, nonparametric tests, and competing risk models. Much of the theory is developed using counting processes and martingale methods. Material is drawn from recent literature. Prerequisite: STAT 62800. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BIOS S6460 - Advanced Longitudinal Data Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Presents classical and modern approaches to the analysis of multivariate observations, repeated measures, and longitudinal data. Topics include the multivariate normal distribution, Hotelling’s T2, MANOVA, the multivariate linear model, random effects and growth curve models, generalized estimating equations, statistical analysis of multivariate categorical outcomes, and estimation with missing data. Discusses computational issues for both traditional and new methodologies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BIOS S6980 - Topics In Biostatistical Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Topics in Biostatistical Methods. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BITN 20000 - Principles Of Biotechnology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Scope, history, and contemporary issues in biotechnology, the basics of the structure and synthesis of biomolecules, the central dogma, and genetic manipulation will be reviewed. The course will also cover the legal and ethical issues relevant to regulated industries and will cover career potential and paths in the biotechnology industry. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BITN 21000 - Business And Regulatory Practices |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will present an overview of the general operating procedures of the biotechnology industry. Covered will be the regulatory bodies impacting the industry and the guidelines for validating, monitoring and documenting industry regulatory compliance. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BITN 22000 - Cell Culture And Fermentation |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The laboratory course will cover media construction, sterile technique, and nutritional requirements of prokaryoyic and eukaryotic cells. Students will cultivate a number of cell types using the bioreactor and recover and analyze product. Documentation of process and instrument qualification will be emphasized. Typically offered Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BITN 23000 - Analytical Methods In Biotechnology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The lab course will illustrate the applications of microscopy, enzyme assays, protein characterization, spectrophotometry, chromatographic methodologies, separation techniques, bioassays and other analytical methods commonly employed in the biotechnology industry. Typically offered Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BITN 24000 - Protein Purification And Formulation |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An in depth review of protein properties accompanied by exercises used to separate, purify and assay protein products will be presented. Methods for preparing protein products for the distribution, including freeze-drying, precipitation, and crystallization will be illustrated. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BITN 25000 - Biotechnology Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. An intensive, hands on experience in an industrial laboratory related to the cassette specialization. Reinforcement of principles of business and regulatory practices and biotechnology methods, and experience in manufacturing processes in the industrial setting will be included. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BME 19500 - Selected Topics In Biomedical Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 4.00. Specialized topic areas in BME for which there are not specific courses, workshops, or individual study plans, but having sufficient student interest to justify the formalized teaching of a course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain knowledge of topics relevant to the practice and research in Biomedical Engineering.
|
| BME 20100 - Biomolecules: Structure, Function, And Engineering Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Classes of molecules (biomolecules) such as sugars, lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids that form the cellular components of living organisms. Explores the chemistry behind the structure and function of these important classes of biological molecules. Hydrogen-bonding, hydrophobic forces, electrostatis interactions along with other weak interactions discussed with reference to their importance in biomolecular systems in an engineering context. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify biomolecules and explain their structure and function.
2. Describe the basic chemistry of biomolecules.
3. Recognize the connection between structure, function, and properties of biomolecules.
4. Explain how biomolecules may be engineered and used in living systems.
|
| BME 20400 - Biomechanics Of Hard And Soft Tissues |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Covers the mechanics of biological materials, with applications in the musculo-skeletal system, nerves, spinal cord, and vascular tissue, down to the level of the cell. Topics include center of mass, moment of inertia, basic understanding of stresses, strains, and deformations, axial elements, pressure vessels, beams, torsion, viscoelasticity, and thermal stress. Case studies and problem solving sessions used to emphasize the unique biological criteria which must be considered when mechanically analyzing both soft and hard tissues. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BME 20500 - Biomolecular And Cellular Systems Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introductory laboratory experience focused on engineering concepts and practices in the analysis of biomolecules and cells. Topics include fundamental quantitative techniques of analysis, methods of isolation, identification, and quantification of biomolecules and cells, and analysis of integrated biosystems. Concludes with student-driven design project. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Independently describe the theoretical basis of, and put into practice, fundamental analytical tools and techniques used in the isolation, characterization, and quantification of biomolecules and cells.
2. Collect, record, process, statistically analyze and report experimental data related to the analysis of biomolecules and cells in an accurate and understandable manner.
3. Conceptually design a simple analytical method and/or tool for solving a medically-relevant problem based upon detection/analysis of a specific biomolecular or cellular related abnormality.
|
| BME 20600 - Biomechanics And Biomaterials Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Provides hands-on training in engineering and biological principles of biomaterials and biomechanics. Topics include evaluation and interpretation of experimental results, modeling and testing of tissue and body mechanics, and interactions of living (e.g., tissue/cell) and nonliving (e.g., biomaterial) systems. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Independently employ fundamental analytical tools and techniques used in the analysis of mechanical properties of tissues and biomaterials, cellular interactions with biomaterials, and finite element analysis.
2. Collect, record, process, statistically analyze, and report experimental data related to the analysis of mechanical testing and cellular interactions with biomaterials.
3. Theoretically design advice and/or method for solving a biomechanical or medically relevant problem.
|
| BME 22200 - Biomeasurements |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The foundations of circuit theory are developed. Electrical circuits are used in the context of biomedical applications including transducers, electrodes and the amplification and filtering of clinically relevant bioelectric signals. Laboratory exercises develop technical skills in the design and analysis of analog electrical circuits, signal processing and digital data acquisition and their safe use for biomeasurments. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Solve problems using basic principles, conventions, and procedures involving voltages, currents, and power.
2. Describe circuit elements using their i-v relationships including resistors, dependent sources, capacitors, and inductors.
3. Solve problems using Ohm's Law, Kirchhoff's Voltage Law, Kirchhoff's Current Law.
4. Solve problems using basic techniques such as current division, voltage division, node-voltage analysis, mesh analysis, and superposition.
|
| BME 24100 - Introduction To Biomechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course combines didactic lecture and laboratory and will introduce the student to the principles of biomechanics in the context of the musculoskeletal system. Topics include: fundamental concepts of mechanics, force systems and couples (including muscle and joint forces), free body diagrams, stress analysis and failure of materials (including analysis of bone strength), mechanical behavior of soft tissues, dynamics of particles and rigid bodies (including analysis of gait), and impulse (including analysis of injury). Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BME 25600 - Physiological Modeling In Human Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the physiology and medicine underlying practical problems in biomedical engineering, especially with respect to medical device development. Engineering skills taught and practiced within the context of human disease, injury, and illness on extended problem sets which include mathematical modeling and problem solving with appropriate documentation. Main physiological systems of focus are cardiovascular, pulmonary, and renal, and common afflictions thereof. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand the physiology and medicine underlying practical problems in biomedical engineering, especially with respect to medical device development.
2. Students will understand the process of mathematical modeling of human anatomy and physiology, including technical description of objectives, methods, results, and conclusions from modeling exercises.
|
| BME 29000 - Frontiers In Biomedical Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course introduces the rapidly emerging field of biomedical engineering by exposing students to a wide range of research activities in the Weldon School and to a variety of experimental learning opportunities. Topics addressed include career paths, professional development opportunities, and career development skills including creating a plan of study, informational and job interviewing, writing a resume, technical writing, preparing effective oral presentations, and peer-editing. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
A student who successfully fulfills the course requirements will have demonstrated:
1. an ability to independently acquire knowledge from a variety of sourced.
2. an ability to communicate effectively in written form.
3. an ability to identify and describe contemporary issues impacting Biomedical Engineers.
4. and an ability to identify and pursue a career development pathway that is relevant to their personal identity and their training as Biomedical Engineers.
|
| BME 29500 - Selected Topics In Biomedical Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Specialized topic areas for which there are no specific courses, workshops, or individual study plans, but having sufficient interest to justify the formalized teaching of a course. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BME 29600 - Biomedical Engineering Projects |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Individual research projects to be approved by the supervising faculty member before registering for the course. An approved written report is required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BME 30100 - Bioelectricity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of bioelectricity of the mammalian nervous system and other excitable tissues. Passive and active forms of electric signals in both the single cell and cell-cell communication, tissue and systematic bioelectricity, mathematical analysis including Nernst equation, Goldman equation, linear cable theory, and Hodgkin-Huxley Model of action potential generation and propagation. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BME 30400 - Biomedical Transport Fundamentals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental concepts and principles of momentum, heat, and mass transport phenomena in the context of biomedical applications. Integrated biological topics include transport of physiological fluids (e.g. blood), mass transport (e.g. oxygen and nutrients), forced convection (e.g. hemodialysis) and unsteady-state molecular diffusion (e.g. drug delivery mechanisms). Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand, model, and solve problems using the principles of Conservation of Momentum, Mass, and energy
2. Perform macroscopic and microscopic thermal energy, mass, and momentum, balances
|
| BME 30500 - Bioinstrumentation Circuit And Measurement Principles |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction of laboratory instruments used to measure physiological events. Stimulation and conduction of electric signals within the nervous system and other excitable tissues are demonstrated. Fundamental circuit elements and concepts include resistance, capacitance, inductance, op-amps, impedance, voltage, current, power, and frequency. Fundamental analog measurement concepts include adequate bandwidth and amplitude and phase linearity. An integrative two-week design project addresses the practical aspects of quantitative physiological measurements. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Employ circuit models and analysis techniques to understand, interpret, and predict bioelectric system behaviors.
2. Conduct, observe, and document laboratory experiments to test hypotheses and predictions.
3. Design bioinstrumentation systems with adequate bandwidth, amplitude linearity, and phase linearity to faithfully record a physiological event.
4. Recognize the economics, the ethical considerations, and regulatory and societal environment integral to the design of biomedical bioinstrumentation.
|
| BME 30600 - Biotransport Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Practical experience with transport principles related to physiological systems is presented through inquiry-based modules. Modules contain elements of computer simulation, experimental design, implementation, and data analysis and address biomedical applications. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Use theoretical equations from fluid, heat, and mass transport to describe, model, analyze, and explain biomedical data.
2. Design experiments to investigate biomedical transport phenomena, collect relevant data, and compile a comprehensive report that clearly demonstrates the findings and implications of the data.
3. Work in a term to simulate and experimentally model biomedical transport, and use peer-and self-reviews to describe how each team member contributed to group efforts.
|
| BME 32200 - Probability And Applications In Biomedical Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Probability theory and statistical methods are developed for life science applications. Analytical tools such as hypothesis testing, estimation of moments, sampling theory, correlation and spectral analysis are developed and applied to identifying underlying processes in biological systems, developing realistic models of physiological processes, designing experiments, and interpreting biological data. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BME 33100 - Biosignals And Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course applies mathematical analysis tools to biological signals and systems. Frequency analysis, Fourier and Laplace transforms, and state equations are used to represent and analyze continuous and discrete-time biosignals. Classic feedback analysis tools are applied to biological systems that rely on negative feedback for control and homeostasis. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| BME 33400 - Biomedical Computing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores computational approaches to analyzing biological data and solving biological problems. Students will fit and interpret biological data, apply probabilistic and differential equation modeling techniques to biological processes, and assess numerical tools for biomedical applications. Special attention is given to the built-in analysis functions of MATLAB. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| BME 35200 - Cell And Tissue Behavior And Properties |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will explore the biological principles of cellular/tissue behaviors and properties. Topics include: fundamental concepts of cellular structure and tissue organization, biomolecular elements and their properties, cell shape, cell adhesion and migration, mechanotransduction, pattern formation in embryos, and stem cell and tissue regeneration. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| BME 35400 - Problems In Cell And Tissue Behavior And Properties |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course develops quantitative biomechanical methods to analyze cell/tissue behavior and properties and to solve biomechanical engineering problems. Topics include: bioviscoelasticity, failure, filament dynamics, membrane dynamics, biofluid dynamics, cellular dynamics, and tissue dynamics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| BME 38100 - Implantable Materials And Biological Response |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. BME 381 combines biomaterials, their biological response, and interactions between implantable materials and biological systems. Materials science of implantable materials; overview of implantable biomaterials and interactions between implants and biosystem; in vitro and in vivo biocompatibility tests; and specific examples on implant-tissue interactions, biocompatibility, and evaluation tools are presented. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| BME 38199 - Professional Practice Co-Op I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Professional Practice students only. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BME 38299 - Professional Practice Co-Op II |
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Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Professional Practice students only. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BME 38300 - Problems In Implantable Materials And Biological Response |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. BME 383 is a corequisite course to BME 381, supplementing the basic science of BME 381 with quantitative, analytical examples and problems related to fundamental engineering principles in implantable materials. Topics include: microstructure, phase transformation, processing and design issues related to major engineering materials used for implantation purposes. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BME 38399 - Professional Practice Co-Op III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Professional Practice students only. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BME 39000 - Professional Development And Design In Biomedical Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to a diverse spectrum of current topics relevant to the technical, professional, and career aspects of Biomedical Engineers. The course topics will focus on the early stages of the design process (e.g. need identification, problem formulation, innovation and idea generation), professional communication skills (e.g. written and oral reporting and documentation), and ethics of biomedical design and research (e.g. ethical codes and decision making, animal care and use in research and testing, authorship and intellectual property, social and environmental impact of design). Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
A student who successfully fulfills the course requirements will have demonstrated:
1. An ability to identify medical needs relevant to Biomedical Engineering solutions, an understanding of realistic constraints which impact biomedical engineering design
2. An understanding of ethical and professional responsibilities which impact design
3. An understanding of the need for a multidisciplinary team to solve biomedical engineering design projects.
4. An ability to independently acquire knowledge from a variety of sources including biology and medicine as well as other engineering disciplines.
5. An ability to communicate effectively in written form and evaluate written reports
6. An ability to identify a career development pathway that is relevant to their personal identity and training as Biomedical Engineers.
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| BME 39500 - Selected Topics In Biomedical Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Specialized topic areas for which there are no specific courses, workshops, or individual study plans, but having sufficient student interest to justify the formalized teaching of a course. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BME 39699 - Professional Practice Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BME 40100 - Mathematical & Computational Analysis Of Complex System Dynamics In Biology, Medicine, & Healthcare |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to analysis of complex system dynamics that appear in biology, medicine, and healthcare. Key topics include nonlinear dynamical concepts associated with phase plane, bifurcation, stability diagram, oscillation, and chaotic systems along with concepts from discrete systems and stochastic processes. These topics are taught within the context of mathematical and computational models related to both non-communicable diseases (i.e. cancer) and communicable diseases (i.e. HIV/AIDS). Courses projects are drawn from recent literature. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Graphically, analytically, and numerically analyze nonlinear dynamical models and numerically analyze discrete-event and stochastic models of biological, medical, or healthcare systems.
2. Describe possible behaviors of a given system, including how a system may be manipulated within the inherent boundaries.
3. Present, in oral and written format, an analysis and critique of the application of dynamical modeling of a biological system to solve or understand an engineering problem.
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| BME 40200 - Senior Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course explores career and professional topics in Biomedical Engineering. Topics include resume writing, interviewing, and professional conduct; post-graduate education and life-long learning; and industrial, clinical, and research opportunities in Biomedical Engineering. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BME 40400 - Ethics For Biomedical Engineers |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course explores ethical issues in biomedical engineering practice, including professional ethics, medical ethics, the ethics of human and animal subject use in biomedical research, and the impact of biomedical engineering solutions on society and the environment. The BMES Code of Ethics will be presented and discussed. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BME 40500 - Biomedical Engineering Design Project |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Design and management of biomedical engineering projects. Teams design and implement a solution to a biomedical engineering problem utilizing skills gained in previous course work. Oral and written presentation of design and demonstration of function are required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BME 41100 - Quantitative Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course applies systems theory and explores feed forward and feedback control in the context of physiological systems. Control, frequency response, and linear systems concepts are applied to action potential generation, motor control, heart rate regulation, and other physiological processes. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BME 44200 - Biofluid And Biosolid Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores fluid and solid mechanics in the context of the human circulatory system. Principle equations are derived from differential analysis of fluid flow, and models of characteristic flow conditions are fully analyzed. Biosolid mechanics, vessel biomechanics, and hemodynamic analysis of the circulation system will also be discussed. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BME 46100 - Transport Processes In Biomedical Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores engineering principles in mass and other transport processes in biological systems. Topics covered include diffusion, convection, reaction kinetics, transport in porous and fluid mediums, etc. Mathematical models of transport are developed and applied to biomedical problems and physiological systems such as the kidney/renal and oxygen/arterial systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
After completion of this course students should be able to:
1. Apply and solve mass diffusion equations.
2. Apply and solve heat transfer equations.
3. Understand and apply conservation of mass and energy balance.
4. Understand and apply basic principles of thermodynamics.
5. Use appropriate boundary condition to heat and mass transfer problems.
6. Apply diffusion and transport equations to biological processes.
7. Describe transport processes in physiological systems such as the renal system in the kidney, using engineering principles & mathematical analysis of transport.
8. Use numerical methods to solve differential equations in transport.
9. Apply conservation principles to transport processes.
10. Understand and apply models of transport and enzyme kinetics.
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| BME 48800 - Preliminary Senior Project Design |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The preliminary stages of design are completed during these lab hours. Students will work with their teammates to develop a problem statement with appropriate technical specifications, complete the relevant literature and market analysis, derive and justify a preliminary design, and outline a plan to successfully complete the project. The resulting preliminary design is presented and evaluated through an oral presentation and a written report. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Students will have demonstrated the ability to:
1. Integrate and apply knowledge and skills obtained in earlier course work with new concepts and practices essential to the design and testing of a system or device to meet desired needs.
2. Implement the engineering design process and project management within the context of relevant design constraints.
3. Effectively communicate skills in oral and written form, both individually and as part of a team.
4. Explain/discuss realistic design constraints, including regulatory issues, societal influences, and ethical and professional responsibilities of biomedical engineers, as related to the engineering design process.
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| BME 48900 - Senior Design Project Lab |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The biomedical engineering design process is completed starting from a preliminary system design. Student will work with their teammates to implement (e.g. build, test, iterate and evaluate) a solution to address a biomedical engineering problem statement and meet the technical specifications set forth. The resulting project design is presented and evaluated through an oral presentation, laboratory demonstration, and a final written document. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Students will have demonstrated the ability to:
1. Integrate and apply knowledge and skills obtained in earlier work with new concepts and practices essential to the design and testing of a system or device to meet desired needs.
2. Implement the engineering design process and project management within the context of relevant design constraints.
3. Effectively communicate skills in oral and written form, both individually and as part of a team.
4. Explain/discuss realistic design constraints, including regulatory issues, societal influences, and ethical and professional responsibilities of biomedical engineers, as related to the engineering design process.
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| BME 49000 - Professional Elements Of Design |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course advances and enhances design tools, concepts, and knowledge relevant to biomedical engineering design. Students work individually and in small teams to investigate the topic within the context of their specific senior design project in preparation for their lab. Topics include project management, human and animal subjects, ethics, regulatory affairs, literature and patent searching, and entrepreneurship. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Students will have demonstrated the ability to:
1. Effectively communicate skills in oral and written form, both individually and as part of a team.
2. Explain/discuss realistic design constraints, including regulatory issues, social influences, and ethical and professional responsibilities of biomedical engineers, as related to the engineering design process.
3. Generate and justify solutions to a medical and/or biological problems that addresses customer needs and realistic constraints.
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| BME 49100 - Biomedical Engineering Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course prepares students for engineering practice through a major design experience, encompassing conceptualization, requirements generation, and system and detailed design. Essential design constraints will be reviewed and applied including: safety, economics, and manufacturability. The course encompasses lectures, case studies, team formation, project assignments and generation of initial design. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BME 49200 - Biomedical Engineering Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course continues the design experience from BME 491 with verification, validation, and re-design of student projects. Regulatory and ethical design constraints will be discussed. Oral presentation and report writing are required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BME 49500 - Selected Topics In Biomedical Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Specialized topic areas for which there are no specific courses, workshops, or individual study plans, but having sufficient student interest to justify the formalized teaching of a course. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BME 49600 - Biomedical Engineering Design Projects |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individual research projects to be approved by the supervising faculty member before registering for the course. An approved written report is required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 6 times or for a maximum of 18 credits
|
| BME 49700 - Directed Readings In Biomedical Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individualized reading course supervised by an appropriate faculty member. Approval for each reading course must be obtained from the department prior to registration. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 6 times or for a maximum of 18 credits
|
| BME 49800 - Biomedical Engineering Projects |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Individual research projects to be approved by the supervising faculty member before registering for the course. An approved written report is required.
. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BME 52100 - Biosensors: Fundamentals And Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ABE 56000) An introduction to the field of biosensors and an in-depth and quantitative view of device design and performance analysis. An overview of the current state of the art to enable continuation into advanced biosensor work and design. Topics emphasize biomedical, bioprocessing, environmental, food safety, and biosecurity applications. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| BME 52800 - Measurement And Stimulation Of The Nervous System |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ECE 52800) Engineering principles addressing questions of clinical significance in the nervous system: neuroanatomy, fundamental properties of excitable tissues, hearing, vision, motor function, electrical and magnetic stimulation, functional neuroimaging, disorders of the nervous system, development and refinement of sensory prostheses. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The abiilty to design and utilize models of neural systems to explain or predict physiologic behavior.
2. The ability to verbally present information related to measurement of the nervous system.
3. A systems-level understanding of the organization and operation of vision, audition, and motor function.
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| BME 54000 - Biomechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of engineering mechanics to the study of normal and diseased musculoskeletal systems, including bone and soft tissue biology, musculoskeletal statics and dynamics, mechanical properties of biological tissues, and structural analysis of bone-implant systems. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BME 55100 - Tissue Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (BMS 52300) Integrates the principles and methods of engineering and life sciences toward the fundamental understanding of structure-function relationships in normal and pathological mammalian tissues, especially as they relate to the development of biological substitutes to restore, maintain, or improve tissue/organ function. Current concepts and strategies, including drug delivery, tissue and cell transplantation, bioartificial organs, and in vivo tissue regeneration are introduced, as well as their respective clinical applications. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| BME 55300 - Biomedical Optics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Optical methods applied to address biological and biomedical problems. The course includes two parts: fundamentals of optical microscopy and advanced techniques that are currently used to probe and/or manipulate cell and tissue samples. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BME 58100 - Fundamentals Of MEMS And Micro-Integrated Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ECE 52600) Key topics in micro-electro-mechanical systems (MEMS) and biological micro-integrated systems; properties of materials for MEMS; microelectronic process modules for design and fabrication. Students will prepare a project report on the design of a biomedical MEMS-based micro-integrated system. Offered in alternate years.
Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BME 58300 - Biomaterials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discussion of principles of biomaterial design, synthesis, and evaluation for various tissues/organs of the body, including orthopaedic/dental, cardiovascular, kidney, liver, lung, skin, nerve, and brain. Topics include fundamentals of materials science and engineering integrated into biology for the better regeneration of tissue. Offered in alternate years. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
|
| BME 59500 - Selected Topics In Biomedical Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course is designed primarily for specialized topic areas for which there is no specific course, workshop, or individual study plan, but having enough student interest to justify the formalized teaching of a course. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BME 60000 - Mentoring For Combined Degree (MD/PhD) Students in BME |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Specialized course for M.D./Ph.D. students that is intended to maintain communication and orientation to the BME graduate program during the first two years of the combined degree program when students are completing medical school requirements on the Indianapolis campus. Requirements include attendance at one or more BME seminars on the West Lafayette campus; at least two research planning sessions with BME faculty members, BME graduate program coordinator, or assistant head; and participation in one additional graduate program activity. Permission of department required. Prerequisite is admissions to the Combined MD/PhD Degree program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BME 62600 - Engineering Nanomedical Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Doctoral level course dealing with engineering design of nanomedical devices for drug/gene delivery. The course covers medical needs for nanomedicine; uses of nanomaterials, biomarkers and targeting strategies; uses of bionanotechnology instrumentation for characterization of nanomedical systems and their interactions with cells; drug/gene delivery methods; biodistribution and nantoxicity issues; FDA regulations and cGMP (current Good Manufacturing Practices) bionanomanufacturing principles. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to describe general problems and approaches to the design of engineered nanomedical systems.
2. Students will be able to explain the basic concepts of design of integrated nanomedical systems for diagnostics and therapeutics.
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| BME 63000 - Introduction To Biomedical Imaging Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ECE 62000) Overview of biomedical imaging systems and analysis. Examination of various imaging modalities, including X-ray, ultrasound, nuclear, and MRI. Microscopy including how images are formed and what types of information they provide. Image analysis techniques, including analysis of cardiac ultrasound, mammography, and MRI functional imagery. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: ECE 63700 with minimum grade of D-. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BME 65800 - Cell And Tissue Culture: Techniques And Application Module |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. (BMS 63500) This intensive laboratory module is designed to provide students from various disciplines
(e.g., life science and engineering) with practical, hands-on experiences in the area of cell and tissue culture. Students are taught the principles of culturing cells and tissues in vitro and have the opportunity to apply state-of-the-art culturing techniques to both 2-dimensional and 3-dimensional culture systems. Specific methodologies focus on both qualitative and quantitative analysis of fundamental cell behavior, including proliferation, differentiation, migration, and adhesion.
Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BME 69000 - Seminar In Biomedical Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Seminar course covering a broad range of current research topics spanning Biomedical Engineering. Seminar presentations by representatives from industry and faculty from Purdue University and other external institutions. Required of Biomedical Engineering graduate students at Purdue; M.S. and Ph.D. students must complete two and four semesters (respectively) prior to graduation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BME 69500 - Advanced Topics In Biomedical Engineering |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course is designed primarily for specialized topic areas for which there is no specific course, workshop, or individual study plan, but having enough student interest to justify the formalized teaching of an advanced course. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BME 69600 - Advanced Biomedical Engineering Projects |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Individual research projects to be approved by the supervising faculty member before registering for the course. An approved written report is required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BME 69700 - Directed Reading In Biomedical Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individualized reading course supervised by an appropriate faculty member. Approval for each reading course must be obtained from the department prior to registration. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BME 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BME 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
Department: Biomedical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BME C1980 - Cooperative Education Practice I |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's academic program and intended career with a business, industry, or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the practice is required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Coop, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BME C2980 - Cooperative Education Practice II |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's academic program and intended career with a business, industry, or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the practice is required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Coop, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BME C3980 - Cooperative Education Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's academic program and intended career with a business, industry, or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the practice is required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Coop, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BME C4960 - Cooperative Education Practice IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's academic program and intended career with a business, industry, or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the practice is required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Coop, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BME C4980 - Cooperative Education Practice V |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's academic program and intended career with a business, industry, or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the practice is required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Coop, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BME I1980 - Career Enrichment Internship I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's readiness for entering an initial or a second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Internship, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BME I2980 - Career Enrichment Internship II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's readiness for entering an initial or a second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Internship, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BME I3980 - Career Enrichment Internship III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's readiness for entering an initial or a second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BME I4960 - Career Enrichment Internship IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's readiness for entering an initial or a second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BME I4980 - Career Enrichment Internship V |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's readiness for entering an initial or a second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BMET 10500 - Introduction to Biomedical Electronic Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students will dive into the field without getting wet. To explore BMET, participants will monitor BIOMEDTALK, an e-mail chat group used by Biomedical Electronics Technicians as a forum for discussion of equipment-related issues and concerns. Students will discuss and research posted topics. Samples of topics posted in the past include hospital cell phone use and medical equipment interference from children's toys and games. Included in this course will be a visit to area hospital BMETs. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| BMET 20900 - BMET Microprocessor Applications |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. This course will explore fundamental microprocessor theory and applications in health care technology. Hardware and software in specific equipment will be discussed. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| BMET 22000 - Applied Human Biology for BMET |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course presents the human biology, anatomy, physiology, and medical terminology essential for biomedical equipment technicians and the devices involved in patient care. Focus is on the vocabulary necessary for effective medical communication skills in the hospital environment as part of the health care team. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| BMET 24000 - Introduction to Medical Electronics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of human anatomy and physiology and introduction to physiological measurements, including cardiovascular, pulmonary, and applicable pressure and temperature measurements. Operation of common biomedical electronic equipment is demonstrated. On-site hospital visits expose students to modern monitoring and intensive-care biomedical equipment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| BMET 29000 - Biomedical Equipment Technician Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Practice working in industry as a BMET. Students work on a variety of medical equipment and job tasks. Students receive some training in the form of inservice and orientation programs. An employer evaluation, student report, and a minimum of 180 work hours are required. Students may need to successfully complete a criminal background check. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Experience the BMET workplace for a minimum of 12 hours per week.
2. Explore a wide variety of technology used in the support of patient care including infusion pumps, monitoring systems, surgical technology, defibrillators, ventilators and imaging equipment.
3. Explore the flow of medical equipment from purchase, incoming inspection, patient use, cleaning, preventative maintenance, repair and disposal.
4. Receive hospital based training in infection control and protocols for sterile areas.
5. Perform both preventative maintenance procedures and simple repairs.
6. Function effectively as a member of the BMET department
7. Provide proper documentation requirements for workplace activities.
8. Function effectively as a member of the healthcare team in the clinical setting as prescribed in the professional code of ethics.
9. Write a reflective paper describing the clinical experience.
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| BMET 29900 - Biomedical Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Hours and subject matter to be arranged by staff. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BMET 31000 - Introduction To Radiography System |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The fundamentals of diagnostic radiography equipment will be explored. The principles of an x-ray system will be explained including the x-ray generation, image formation and film processing. Focus will be on safety and quality. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| BMET 32000 - Biomedical Electrical System I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Hands-on study of medical instrumentation. Topics will include: LASER's, surgical microscopes, electrosurgical equipment, IV and PCA pumps, anesthesia delivering equipment, patient monitors, infection control and safety, NIBP equipment, defibrillators, an overview of imaging equipment and computer applications in medicine. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| BMET 32500 - Healthcare Devices And Systems |
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Credit Hours: 3.0. Hands-on exploration of the professional practice of the support of technology involved in patient care. Topics will include patient monitoring equipment, IV and PCA pumps, surgical equipment, infection control and safety, life support equipment, and an overview of imaging modalities. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify best practices of the profession within the hospital environment.
2. Practice infection control.
3. Identify hospital safety policies.
4. Define patient safety issues.
5. Identify the components of bedside monitors including non-invasive blood pressure devices.
6. Identify the major components of defibrillators and be able to evaluate the device for proper performance.
7. Identify the major components of anesthesia systems.
8. Identify the major components of ventilator systems.
9. Define an incubator’s components and functions.
10. Identify the major components of imaging systems including x-ray and ultrasound.
11. Identify the major components and functions of lasers.
12. Identify major components of IV and PCA pumps.
13. Identify and define proper electrosurgical device performance.
14. Analyze and troubleshoot systems encountered in the BMET environment.
15. Research the purpose and function of an unfamiliar piece of equipment or technology.
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| BMET 33000 - Electronics For Clet |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides a study of devices, circuits, computers, test equipment, transducers, and sensors which are specific to the clinical laboratory. This course includes the analysis of applied electronics circuits incorporated in the evironment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BMET 36000 - Applied Human Biology For The Clinical Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an overview of human structure, function, and chemistry as they relate to the clinical laboratory environment. The class emphasizes the study of bodily fluids and commonly analyzed tissues under both normal and disease conditions. Fluids studied include blood components, urine, spinal fluid, and joint fluid. This class will also discuss medical terminology as well as the medical communication skills required to interface with hospital staff. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| BMET 37000 - Safety And Regulations in the Clinical Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course studies the codes and standards of the College of American Pathologists (CAP), the Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendment (CLIA), and other governing bodies. In addition, this course investigates the prevention and control of chemical, electrical, biological, and radiological human hazards. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| BMET 38000 - Clinical Laboratory Equipment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the theory of clinical laboratory instrumentation and the function, utilization, and problem-solving skills necessary for the support of laboratory equipment. Instruction emphasizes devices used for hematology, clinical chemistry, and microbiology. These devices include centrifuges, blood cell analyzers, immunochemistry analyzers, coagulation analyzers, and blood gas and co-oximetry meachines. The course also presents fundamental pneumatics as a basis for clinical lab equipment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| BMET 39900 - Biomedical Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Hours and subject matter to be arranged by staff. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BMET 42000 - Technology And Special Patient Populations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on special patient populations in the clinical environment and the equipment that supplements their care. Groups would include neonates, cardiac intensive care patients, surgical patients and trauma. Emphasis is placed on medical needs and the related technologies. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| BMET 44000 - Codes, Regulations And Patient Safety |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores applicable NFPA 99, JCAHO, CLIA, FDA and other regulatory agencies and their regulations governing medical equipment in the clinical environment. Case studies will be used to provide examples of interpretation and application. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| BMET 47000 - Special Topics In BMET |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will focus on the most current topics in the biomedical community. Nationally recognized experts will present facts and discuss trends. Current journal articles and research will support the presentations. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BMET 49000 - Project Planning And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students are expected to prepare an individual design in collaboration with industry and/or the clinical setting. This course will introduce the applications of project management to the student's design. Topics include project scope, scheduling, resource limitations, stakeholder interactions, delivery and quality assurance. Prerequisites: Three 300 or 400 level BMET courses. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| BMET 49100 - BMET Senior Project |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Extensive individual design and/or evaluation performed in collaboration with faculty and health care team members. Relation to the clinical environment required. Written and oral presentations of results are required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| BMET 49300 - Ethics And Professionalism For BMET |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students will explore ethical, social, political, legal and ecological issues that practicing BMET's may encounter. Particular emphasis will be placed on patient safety and privacy issues. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand an institution’s need for a Code of Conduct and their need to adhere to a given code. As well, the student will demonstrate knowledge of a professional code of ethics.
2. Recognize contemporary professional, societal and global issues in case studies and course projects.
3. Demonstrate a clear understanding of the need for diversity and Sexual Harassment Awareness in a professional environment.
4. Demonstrate the ability to analyze and suggest solutions to professional ethical dilemmas.
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| BMET 49900 - Biomedical Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Hours and subject matter to be arranged by staff. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BMS 11500 - Anatomy For VT-DL |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. This course is the first of two courses in the distance learning program that presents an introduction to the study of the major body systems and topographic relationships of the major domesticated species, with emphasis on the carnivore. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Obtain a basic understanding of principles that will assist with comparing anatomical structures of the domesticated animals.
2. Develop a mental structural image of the dog in order to facilitate positioning and orienting the animal for diagnostic procedures and to aid in evaluating the diagnostic imaging results obtained by such procedures.
3. Be able to identify anatomical structures on dissected specimens, skeletons, radiographs, and anatomical models.
4. Be able to integrate the anatomical differences and similarities of the common domesticated species studies in this course.
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| BMS 11600 - Anatomy II VT-DL |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. This course is the second of two courses in the distance learning program that presents an introduction to the study of the major body systems and topographic relationships of the major domesticated species, with emphasis on the carnivore. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| BMS 13500 - Physiology For VT-DL |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is the first of two courses in the distance learning program that presents an introduction to general physiology of the mammalian body systems and the general physiological process with emphasis on domestic animals. This course will address the functions of the different systems and homeostasis; the functions of the cell; the different compartments and solute transport; blood and defense; general functions of the nervous system, reflexes and special senses; the function of the nerve and muscle; cardiovascular system; and digestive system. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| BMS 13600 - Physiology For Vet Tech II - DL |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is the second of two courses in the distance learning program that addresses the functions of the kidney and its role in regulation of extracellular volume and acid-base; respiration, mechanics of respiration and its control, transport of gases and hypoxia; physiology of the endocrine system, functions of the gonads, fertilization, pregnancy, parturition and lactation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| BMS 23100 - Anatomy For Veterinary Technicians |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Gross and microscopic study of body systems and topographic relationships in major animal species. Laboratory consists of dissection as well as study of living animals. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BMS 23200 - Physiology For Veeterinary Technicians |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Basic mammalian physiology, which covers general physiological processes with emphasis on domestic animals. Laboratory experiences and demonstrations form a major part of the laboratory instruction. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| BMS 23300 - Introduction To Pharmacology For Veterinary Technicians |
|
Credit Hours: 0.50. This course introduces the concepts and terminology of pharmacology including basic terminology, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics. Typically offered Spring.
0.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain what the different types of drugs names are
2. Recognize the characteristics of different solid and liquid dosage formulations
3. Explain the significance of the terminology used in drug references to describe drugs
4. List and describe the criteria for acceptable extra-label use of drugs
5. Describe the difference between OTC and prescription drugs
6. Explain the factors that affect movement of drug molecules throughout the body
7. Describe the requirements for prescriptions and drug labels
8. Describe the characteristics of each route of drug administration
9. Accurately read and write abbreviations commonly used in drug orders
10. Explain physiological factors that change the way drugs move through the body
11. Describe regulations and warnings surrounding dispensing containers
12. Describe factors that alter the way drugs are absorbed, distributed, metabolized, & excreted
13. Describe reasons and procedures for handling and storing drugs
14. Explain the interaction between drugs & receptors & how that produces cellular effects
15. Describe legal requirements for dispensing and storage of controlled substances
16. Describe how pharmacokinetics & pharmacodynamics impact every drug treatment
17. Describe special storage and handling requirements for cytotoxic and hazardous drugs
18. Describe the issues surrounding and guidelines required for acceptable drug compounding
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| BMS 23400 - Clinical Physiology For Veterinary Technicians |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will provide the physiological basis for clinical functions and medical interventions of the animal. The course is designed to: 1. Complement and expand students’ understanding of concepts taught in the general physiology course (BMS 23200, Physiology for Veterinary Technicians); 2. Emphasize how understanding basic physiological concepts can help in solving clinical cases; 3. Promote critical thinking, team work, communication skills and problem solving. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Define basic physiological terms related to the cases presented.
2. Describe basic physiological concepts related to each case.
3. Apply understanding of basic physiological concepts to sort out pathophysiology and solve clinical cases.
4. Explain how knowledge of physiology helps in understanding why particular treatments are used for treating clinical cases.
5. Describe how treatments help to restore the basic physiology of organ system and the animal as a whole.
6. List his/her contribution that helped his/her team in problem solving clinical cases
7. Be able to obtain, evaluate, and use information to solving clinical cases.
8. Be able to effectively communicate peers, clinicians, and clientele.
9. Be able to function as part of a team.
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| BMS 23500 - Pharmacology VT-DL |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is the first of two courses in the distance learning program that presents an introduction to the principles of pharmacy and pharmacology for the veterinary technician. Emphasis will be placed upon key concepts of how drugs work, terminology commonly used with therapeutic agents, important mechanisms and side effects of commonly used veterinary drugs, and dosage calculations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| BMS 23600 - Pharmacology II VT-DL |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is the second of two courses in the distance learning program that presents an introduction to the principles of therapeutics and pharmacology for the veterinary technician. Emphasis will be placed upon key concepts of how drugs work, terminology commonly used with therapeutic agents, important mechanisms and side effects of commonly used veterinary drugs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| BMS 24100 - Pharmacology For Veterinary Technicians |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. An introduction to the principles of pharmacy and pharmacology. Emphasis will be placed on pharmaceutical calculations, acquisition of a working vocabulary, classification of drugs, general indications for classes of drugs, and the major types of adverse reactions that may occur. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BMS 30000 - Physiology Of Domestic Animals |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The functions of the various systems and organs of the body will be studied, with emphasis being placed on those most pertinent to domestic animals. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BMS 33100 - Pharmacology For Veterinary Technicians |
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Credit Hours: 1.50. This course introduces the concepts of drugs used in the different body systems. Mechanisms of action, side effects, and therapeutic applications are presented. Typically offered Fall.
1.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify, describe the mechanisms of action, and describe the major side effects, contraindications or warnings for common veterinary drugs used to treat diseases of the GI tract.
2. Identify, describe the mechanisms of action, and describe the major side effects, contraindications or warnings for common veterinary drugs used to treat diseases of cardiovascular system.
3. Identify, describe the mechanisms of action, and describe the major side effects, contraindications or warnings for common veterinary drugs used to treat diseases of the respiratory tract.
4. Identify, describe the mechanisms of action, and describe the major side effects, contraindications or warnings for common veterinary drugs used to treat diseases of the endocrine systems.
5. Identify, describe the mechanisms of action, and describe the major side effects, contraindications or warnings for common veterinary anti-inflammatory drugs.
6. Identify, describe the mechanisms of action, and describe the major side effects, contraindications or warnings for common veterinary drugs used to treat diseases/conditions of the nervous system.
7. Identify, describe the mechanisms of action, and describe the major side effects, contraindications or warnings for common veterinary anti-parasitic drugs.
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| BMS 46400 - Clinical Pharmacology And Toxicology For Veterinary Technologists |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. The common toxicants and advanced topics on the drugs most commonly encountered in veterinary medicine. Emphasis is on mechanisms, indications, contraindications, and proper applications and handling of these drugs. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Appropriately use and understand common terminology used in toxicology and clinical toxicology.
2. Describe the medical rationale and specific drugs used as emetics, cathartics, and other compounds used to decrease animal exposure to ingested toxicants.
3. Ask the appropriate questions during a history to help better identify toxicosis cases and to identify potential sources for intoxication.
4. Describe the mechanism of action for commonly encountered drug toxicants, herbal/diet supplement intoxications, household toxicants, insecticides, rodenticides, herbicides, toxic plants, and toxic animal envenomation.
5. Describe the general presenting clinical appearance and any key clinical signs characteristic of common veterinary toxicants
6. Describe the diagnostics and treatment protocols used for common veterinary toxicants.
7. Identify means by which clients/animal owners can reduce the risk of intoxicant of animals by toxicants.
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| BMS 51000 - Human Anatomy For Biomedical Scientists And Engineers |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to the regional study of the human body (lower limb, upper limb, abdomen, pelvis, thorax, head, and neck). Supplemented by observations and demonstrations of prosected cadaver materials, radiographs, osteology, and surface anatomy. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BMS 51700 - Problems In Basic Medical Sciences |
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Credit Hours: 0.50 to 8.00. Studies or investigations in the various disciplines of the basic medical sciences of man and domestic animals for advanced undergraduate and beginning graduate students. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BMS 52000 - Systemic Mammalian Physiology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The first of two courses offered to graduate students and advanced undergraduate students. It covers the general physiological processes of mammals with special emphasis on domestic animals. These processes are presented as interactions between large populations of cells, organs, organ systems, and the integrated functions of an entire animal. This course covers the nervous system, musculoskeletal system, circulatory system, and the regulation of body fluids. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BMS 52100 - Systemic Mammalian Physiology II |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. Comparative mammalian (domesticated and human) physiology, with emphasis upon principles, concepts, and mechansims of the cardiovascular, respiratory, renal, endocrine, and reproductive systems. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lab 1, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BMS 52400 - Introduction To Confocal Microscopy And Image Analysis |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to the principles of confocal microscopy and rudiments of image analysis. Confocal microscopy can be used in biological and nonbiological systems and is, therefore, an interdisciplinary tool in the modern research laboratory. The three-dimensional reconstruction of images allows discovery of complex structures. Deals with fluorescence excitation and emission, optical design, basic image analysis principles, and application areas for which the technology has been targeted. The student will have a good understanding of the application and use of the technology by the end of the course. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BMS 52500 - Principles Of Neuroanatomy |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides an introduction to neuroanatomy. Topics cover fundamental aspects of mammalian nervous system structure at gross and microscopic levels. Logical principles of neural circuits and their specificity will be examined by example, and their overall functionality will be explored within the context of respective systems. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BMS 52700 - Practical Laboratory For Confocal Microscopy And Image Analysis |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory will complement lecture course. Students will learn to operate image collections software on two different confocal microscopes. They will learn single-color fluorescence collection and observe dual- and three-color collection. They will perform Z-axis collections and create reconstructed 3-D images, rotations, and displays. They will perform rudimentary image analysis of 2-D images and will learn how to prepare basic fluorescence samples and collect fluorescent images on two different confocal systems. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BMS 52800 - Avian Physiology |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. (ANSC 53500) A study of the basic principles of physiology and functional anatomy of birds. Topics include the following systems: muscular, nervous, cardiovascular, respiratory, digestive, lymphoid, endocrine, and reproductive. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| BMS 59800 - Introduction To Research In Basic Medical Sciences |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Introduction to research in pharmacology and physiology under the direction of a member of the departmental graduate faculty. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BMS 60200 - Special Topics In Basic Medical Sciences |
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Credit Hours: 0.50 to 8.00. Advanced studies of organismic, cellular, and molecular processes in the basic medical sciences of man and domestic animals. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.500 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BMS 63100 - Flow Cytometry: Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A thorough excursion into the theory of flow cytometry. An understanding of what the technology is, how it operates, and where the applications exist. Covers optical systems, including filters, light excitation and emissions, fluorescent dyes and fluorescent molecules, electronics including detection systems, signal processing, data analysis, and computer applications. A discussion of lasers and other light sources, as well as quality control. Overview of the application areas in medical sciences, biological research, and other possible areas of use. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BMS 63500 - Cell And Tissue Culture: Techniques And Application Module |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. This intensive laboratory module is designed to provide students from various disciplines (e.g., life science and engineering) with practical, hands-on experiences in the area of cell and tissue culture. Students are taught the principles of culturing cells and tissues in vitro and have the opportunity to apply state-of-the-art culturing techniques to both 2-dimensional and 3-dimensional culture systems. Specific methodologies focus on both qualitative and quantitative analysis of fundamental cell behavior, including proliferation, differentiation, migration, and adhesion. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BMS 69200 - Seminar In Basic Medical Sciences |
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Credit Hours: 0.00 or 1.00. Oral presentation of assigned or selected topics pertaining to physiology and pharmacology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BMS 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BMS 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BMS 80100 - Comparative Anatomy I |
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Credit Hours: 3.50. Mammalian body systems and topographic relationships of carnivores using the canine and feline species as the basic model for dissection. Typically offered Fall Summer.
0.000 OR 3.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BMS 80200 - Comparative Anatomy II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Body systems and the topographic relationships of the major domestic species using the basic canine model as the basic model for dissection. Typically offered Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BMS 80300 - Topographical Anatomy Of The Dog And Cat |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Consists of seven one-hour lectures and/or discussion periods and seven three-hour laboratory sessions. Course material is based upon clinical conditions of dogs and/or cats that have an anatomical basis or emphasis. Laboratory sessions include topographical anatomy, multimedia learning aids and dissection of the head, neck, viscera, and legs. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BMS 80400 - Topographical Anatomy Of The Horse |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Consists of seven one-hour lectures and/or discussion periods and seven two-hour laboratory sessions. Course material is based upon clinical conditions of the horse that have an anatomical basis or emphasis. Laboratory sessions include topographical anatomy, multimedia learning aids and dissection of the head, neck, viscera, and legs. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BMS 80500 - Topographical Anatomy Of Production Animals |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Consists of seven one-hour lectures and/or discussion periods and seven three-hour laboratory sessions. Course material is based upon clinical conditions of production animals (pigs, cows, or sheep) that have an anatomical basis or emphasis. Laboratory sessions include topographical anatomy, multimedia learning aids, and dissection of the head, neck, viscera, and legs. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BMS 80600 - Clinical Anatomy Of Exotic Pets |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Consists of seven one-hour lectures and/or discussion periods and seven three-hour laboratory sessions. Course material is based upon clinical conditions of rats, mice, hamsters, guinea pigs, fish, etc., that have an anatomical basis or emphasis. Laboratory sessions include dissection, anatomical models, radiographs, and live animal examination. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BMS 80700 - Principles Of Cell And Tissue Design I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Structural and molecular basis of cellular processes, which are the foundation of fertilization, embryogenesis, histogenesis, and basic tissue specialization in domesticated animals. Structure and function of macromolecules and organelles, which mediate signal transduction and differentiation. The principles and concepts derived are applied to the study of the musculoskeletal, defense, respiratory, and circulatory systems, as models of signal transduction, differentiation, and integration within a whole animal. Typically offered Fall Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BMS 80800 - Principles Of Cell And Tissue Design II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of BMS 80700. Structural and molecular basis of cellular processes that are the foundation of fertilization, embryogenesis, histogenesis, and basic tissue specialization in domesticated animals. Structure and function of macromolecules and organelles that mediate signal transduction, differentiation, and integration within a whole animal. Typically offered Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BMS 81100 - Systemic Mammalian Physiology I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. General physiological processes of mammals with special emphasis on domestic animals; normal interactions between large populations of cells, organs, organ systems, and integrated functions of an entire animal. Homeostatic mechanisms, physiology of body fluids and blood formed elements, muscle, and digestive systems. Typically offered Fall Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BMS 81200 - Systemic Mammalian Physiology II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Comparative mammalian (domesticated and human) physiology, with emphasis upon principles, concepts, and mechanisms of the cardiovascular, respiratory, renal, endocrine, and reproductive systems. Typically offered Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lab 1, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BMS 81300 - Principles Of Pharmacology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. Introduction to pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics, ethical dimensions of drug use in veterinary medicine, and drug categories that integrate well with other first-year subjects (e.g., drugs that alter endocrine/reproductive function). Emphasis is placed on general principles and prototypical drugs. Typically offered Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BMS 81400 - Basic And Applied Pharmacology I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. BMS 81400 follows BMS 81300 and includes the study of drugs with actions related to the nervous system and the immune system at large, anticancer drugs, antiviral drugs, and drugs targeted to organ specific pathologies - e.g. cardiac, intestinal, pulmonary, and renal pathologies. Typically offered Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BMS 81500 - Veterinary Neuroscience |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Provides an introduction to neuroscience and its diagnostic application in veterinary medicine. Students will acquire terminology describing the anatomy and basic physiology that characterize neural systems. Integration of function/structure relationships are introduced in lectures, laboratories, by reference to case studies, and by problem solving. Typically offered Fall Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BMS 81800 - Basic And Applied Pharmacology II And Principles Of Toxicology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A continuation of BMS 81400. Includes the study of drugs with actions related to the nervous system, and chemotherapeutic agents (including antibacterial, antifungal, and antiparasitic drugs). Principles of toxicology are introduced. Typically offered Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BMS 81900 - Endocrine And Neural Basis Of Seasonal Activities Of Birds And Mammals In The Wild |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This one-credit elective course will be offered to first and second year veterinary students annually (third year students may also take it). The course will explore the physiological basis of seasonal activities of mammals and birds in the wild. An emphasis will be placed on the neural and endocrine changes that are associated with the seasonal and cyclical activities including breeding, hibernation, migration, etc. Typically offered Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Basic Medical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
The student will be exposed to the several activities of mammals and birds in the wild and understand the influences of environmental factors and cues on such activities. Importantly, the student will learn the endocrine and neural pathways that mediate the dictates of the environment.
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| BSS B1300 - Introduction To Behavioral And Social Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will be introduced to disciplines that strive to understand human beings as social entities, will learn to consider humans from multiple perspectives, and understand research methodologies important for answering Behavioral and Social Science questions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BTNY 11000 - Introduction To Plant Science |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An introduction to the major groups in the plant kingdom, their origin, classification, and economic importance. The areas of anatomy, morphology, cytology, physiology, biochemistry, molecular biology, genetics, and ecology will be explored as they relate to plant sciences and agriculture. Course may also be offered for dual credit with cooperating Indiana high schools upon documented approval by the Department of Botany and Plant Pathology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Concurrent Credit
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge skills, technology, and professional conduct.
2. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate and test hypotheses, conduct experiments and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
3. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
4. Demonstrate the ability to write and speak with effectiveness while considering audience and purpose.
5. Demonstrate the ability to work effectively as part of a problem-solving team.
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| BTNY 20100 - Plants And Civilization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course, intended primarily for non-majors, covers the history of agriculture, with focus on the centers of origin of our major food, fiber, and medicinal plants, and their historical, cultural, and economic relevance. The course also surveys the biology of crop plants, with respect to taxonomy, anatomy, cell structure, physiology, development, and genetics. Discussions also center on the roles plant biotechnology may play in sustainable agriculture and in helping to alleviate problems caused by overpopulation and ecological stress. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BTNY 20400 - Crop and Weed Identification |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. (AGRY 20400) The identification by sight of plant mounts and seeds of over 200 crops and weeds is taught. The first eight weeks, which covers restricted weeds, prohibited noxious weeds, common weeds, and seed diseases, can be taken for one credit; the last eight weeks covers cereals, grass and legume forages, and legume crops. The list of species to be studied for two credits is obtained from the Intercollegiate Crops Judging Manual. The species to be covered for one credit include the above-listed weeds and additional weed specimens pertinent to the weeds contest. The use and origins of the species are discussed briefly. Suggested course in preparation for AGRY 30500 Seed Analysis and Grain Grading. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lab 1, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BTNY 20500 - The Spring Flora Of Indiana |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Students will be introduced to the diversity of plants in Indiana. Students will collect plants on field trips and will take them back to the laboratory for identification. Lectures accompanying these laboratories will cover basic plant morphology (necessary for keying out plants) and basic principles of plant evolution and ecology. Several day-long field trips will be made to a number of state parks in Indiana to sample different plant communities (e.g., the dwarf shore flora of Lake Michigan, bogs, prairies, hardwood forests, aquatic habitats, etc.). Typically offered Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| BTNY 20700 - The Microbial World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course delivers a broad synthesis of microbiology, discussing all taxa of the microbial world. The course also discusses a wide range of subjects related to microbiology, including medical microbiology, but it has a strong emphasis on the botanical and environmental sciences. One particular characteristic that separates it from other microbiology courses is the reduced emphasis upon bacteriology, with discussions of the protists and viruses and, especially of the fungi, occurring in greater detail than the other general microbiology courses available. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge skills, technology, and professional conduct.
2. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate and test hypotheses, conduct experiments and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
3. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
4. Demonstrate the ability to write and speak with effectiveness while considering audience and purpose.
5. Demonstrate the ability to work effectively as part of a problem-solving team.
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| BTNY 20900 - Plant Diversity |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will learn how to identify the major divisions of the plant kingdom, from green algae to flowering plants, based upon their morphological characteristics. Students will also learn how the evolutionary relationships among these divisions are determined using traditional and modern approaches. An emphasis will be placed on plants that grow in Tippecanoe County and surrounding counties. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge skills, technology, and professional conduct.
2. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate and test hypotheses, conduct experiments and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
3. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
4. Demonstrate the ability to write and speak with effectiveness while considering audience and purpose.
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| BTNY 21000 - Introduction To Plant Science |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. An introduction to the major groups in the plant kingdom, their origin, classification, and economic importance. The areas of anatomy, morphology, cytology, physiology, biochemistry, molecular biology, genetics, and ecology will be explored as they relate to plant sciences and agriculture. Course may also be offered for dual credit with cooperating Indiana high schools upon documented approval by the Department of Botany and Plant Pathology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| BTNY 21100 - Plants And The Environment |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Plants are essential to environmental and human health, and the issues related to these interactions have received much public attention. This course provides the scientific basis for issues-related topics such as the impact of plants on biodiversity; how plants affect and are affected by global climate changes and pollution; the role of plants as invasive species; ways in which plants can help solve environmental problems; and the consequences of human manipulation of plants (e.g. genetic engineering, bioremediation) on plant communities and ecosystems.
. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BTNY 27500 - Honors Course - Lower Division |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Utilized to offer a new honors course for a maximum of three years. Variable title, credit and instructional type. Course may be repeated for credit if content and titles are different. Offered primarily to first-and second-year students. Courses offered must be approved by department or program faculty, and College of Agriculture Honors Committee. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall, Spring, Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 12 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Learning Outcomes will be determined by the instructor to meet a level of academic rigor consistent with the honors level given the specific course content and may also include: Critical Thinking, Communication, Cultural Understanding, Civic Responsibilities, Professional Preparation, Scientific Principles, Social Science Principles, and/or Teamwork.
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| BTNY 30100 - Introductory Plant Pathology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic principles of plant pathology, including etiology, symptomatology, control, and epidemiology of representative diseases of plants. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BTNY 30200 - Plant Ecology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Offered in odd-numbered years. This course will provide an introduction to the broad field of plant ecology. Through lectures and lab assignments, students will gain an in-depth understanding of ecological concepts regarding the occurrence and distribution of plant species and populations. Students will also gain insights into the application of these concepts to the conservation and management of plant species and populations. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BTNY 30400 - Introductory Weed Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the scientific principles underlying weed control practices; emphasis is on the ecology of weeds and control in crop associations. It is recommended that this course be followed by BTNY 50400. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BTNY 30500 - Fundamentals Of Plant Classification |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The principles of classification of seed plants, with emphasis on methods of identification in laboratory and field. Requires class trips. Students will pay individual lodging or meal expenses when necessary. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BTNY 31600 - Plant Anatomy |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. The internal structure of seed plants. Description and recognition of cell and tissue types, tissue systems, and their interrelations in vegetative and reproductive structures. Developmental changes of the plant body from embryo to mature plant and from meristems to mature tissues. Experimental approaches where relevant to structure-function relationships and to development will be introduced. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BTNY 35000 - Biotechnology In Agriculture |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (HORT 35000) A study of the methods used to produce genetically modified organisms, primarily using gene transfer technology, and the application of these organisms in agriculture. The uses of microbes, plants, and animals in agricultural biotechnology are examined. Social, economic, and ethical issues related to biotechnology are discussed. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BTNY 39000 - Selected Topics In Plant Science |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course deals with special topics in botany not covered in regular undergraduate coursework. Credit depends upon work done. May be repeated once for credit. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
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| BTNY 40000 - Botany And Plant Pathology Study Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. Utilized to record credits earned through participation in Purdue study abroad programs with cooperating foreign universities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
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| BTNY 42000 - Plant Cellular And Developmental Biology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will focus on the fundamentals of plant cellular and developmental biology. Topics to be covered include: the structure and function of plant organelles and membranes; the cell cycle; DNA, RNA and protein synthesis; the secretory pathway, and the cellular basis of development and whole plant morphogenesis. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BTNY 44300 - Arthropods And Diseases Of Turfgrass |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (ENTM 44300) This course is designed to introduce students to the biology, ecology, and management of arthropods and diseases associated with turfgrass ecosystems. The course is divided into two discrete segments with a focus on arthropods during the first half of the semester and diseases during the second half of the semester. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BTNY 44600 - Integrated Plant Health Management For Ornamental Plants |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ENTM 44600) Principles and practices for diagnosing and managing diseases, insects, and abiotic disorders of woody and herbaceous ornamental plants and turf. Designed for those students in urban forestry, horticulture, and turf management who want a one-semester course on integrated plant health management. A course in plant pathology is recommended, but not required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and professional conduct.
2. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
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| BTNY 47500 - Honors Course - Upper Division |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Utilized to offer a new honors course for a maximum of three years. Variable title, credit and instructional type. Course may be repeated for credit if content and titles are different. Offered primarily to third-and fourth-year students. Courses offered must be approved by department or program faculty, and College of Agriculture Honors Committee. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall, Spring, Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 12 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Learning Outcomes will be determined by the instructor to meet a level of academic rigor consistent with the honors level given the specific course content and may also include: Critical Thinking, Communication, Cultural Understanding, Civic Responsibilities, Professional Preparation, Scientific Principles, Social Science Principles, and/or Teamwork.
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| BTNY 49700 - Undergraduate Seminar |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Problem-based seminar drawing on students' experience in undergraduate research. Preparation of seminar and poster presentations based on problem analysis relevant to careers in plant biology, environmental plant science, and crop protection. Instruction on problem analysis, scientific writing, and presentation skills are combined with career development activities, including invited speakers from industry, academia, and government. With prior approval and in consultation with the instructor, a student may substitute a problem based on study abroad, an undergraduate course project, or supervised internship or other supervised work-related experience. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BTNY 49800 - Research In Plant Science |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Supervised individual laboratory or field research. A written report of work accomplished will be required. May be repeated once for credit. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
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| BTNY 49900 - Thesis Research |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Thesis research. Admission to the honors program. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
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| BTNY 50400 - Advanced Weed Science |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasizes the mode and mechanism of herbicide action and herbicide interaction with plants, and the biology and ecology of weedy plants. Offered in odd-numbered years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BTNY 50500 - Advanced Biology Of Weeds |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of weed biology and ecology, with focus on reproduction and ecophysiology, population dynamics, community ecology, and ecosystem level phenomena. Instruction will emphasize the development and refinement of critical thinking skills. Offered in even-numbered years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BTNY 51700 - Diseases Of Agronomic Crops |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This five-week miniclass teaches students the disease cycles and principles and practices for identifying and managing diseases of agronomic crops. The course is designed for students in plant protection, agronomy, entomology, and other areas who desire an intensive study of diseases of agronomic crops grown in Indiana. Primary emphasis is given to symptomatology, etiology, and disease management through in-depth study of major diseases affecting corn, soybeans, small grains, and forage crops. Special emphasis is placed on the practical aspects of IPM management systems. Weeks 11-15. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BTNY 52500 - Intermediate Plant Pathology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the biological and pathological characteristics of major causal agents; concepts of epidemiology and disease assessment; physiology, genetics, and molecular biology of host-pathogen interactions; disease management practices; and methods of disease diagnosis. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BTNY 53500 - Plant Disease Management |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the current principles, strategies, and technologies used in plant disease control. Emphasis is placed on the integration of various technologies and strategies for efficacious, environmentally sound management principles for specific types of plant diseases. Major topics include plant disease management through regulatory procedures, pathogen exclusion, pathogen eradication, environmental modification, host modification, host resistance, cultural practices, host protectants, plant disease forecasting, and the epidemiological basis of disease management strategies. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BTNY 55000 - Biology Of Fungi |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Lectures cover general features of fungi, unique characteristics of major fungal groups, fungal interactions with other organisms, and principles of fungal genetics. Lab exercises include examination of representative species from major groups of fungi and classical and molecular manipulations of fungi. (Offered in odd-numbered years.). Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BTNY 55200 - Molecular Approaches In Plant Biology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This is mainly a laboratory exercise course designed to help students to be more familiar with common molecular techniques used in plant pathology studies. Techniques will include DNA/RNA isolation, hybridization, sequence analyses, various PCR reactions, library construction and screening, protein isolation, and plant transformation. Lectures will cover basic principles and applied aspects of molecular studies in plant pathology, and recent advances in genomics and proteomics techniques. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To understand the basic principles of common molecular and genomic techniques.
2. To become familiar with the application of common molecular and genomic approaches in the field of plant biology/pathology.3)To obtain laboratory experience of performing common techniques used in molecular biology.
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| BTNY 55300 - Plant Growth And Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (HORT 55300) Topics include seed dormancy, cell expansion and plant growth, pattern formation, phase transition, flowering, pollination and fertilization, seed development, fruit development, and senescence. This course is the second in a series of team-taught courses in the core curriculum of the Purdue Plant Biology Program. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BTNY 55500 - Aquatic Botany |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course has required class trips. Students will pay individual lodging or meal expenses where necessary. The study of algae and higher plants of the aquatic environment with emphasis on identification, morphology, ecology, role as pollutants, physiology, and control. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identification and characteristics of aquatic plants and algae.
2. Ecological adaptations of aquatic plants and algae.
3. Roles of aquatic plants and algae in the natural environment.
4. Impacts of pollution and other perturbations on aquatic plant and algal communities.
5. Human uses of aquatic plants and algae. 6) Management of aquatic plants and algae.
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| BTNY 55600 - Aquatic Plant Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This five-week miniclass is designed to teach students the principles and practices for identifying and managing the algae and aquatic plants that inhabit Midwestern ponds and lakes. The majority of the course involves control practices and includes the option of taking the test to become certified in aquatic pesticide application (category 5). The establishment and maintenance of aquatic plants in constructed wetlands and water gardens are also covered. (Offered in alternate years.) (Course meets during weeks 1-5.). Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BTNY 55800 - Pathogens Of Plants |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Plant pathology is the science of plant diseases and of the microorganisms that cause them and of our attempts to manage plant diseases. The ultimate goal of plant pathologists is to reduce the losses caused by diseases, thereby, increasing both the quality and quantity of the world food supply. Plant diseases are caused by the same types of microorganisms that cause disease in animals and humans and, as such, many of the principles that apply to human and animal medicine apply to plant diseases. It is the objective of this course to introduce students to the major types of plant pathogens (plant pathogenic bacteria, viruses, nematodes, and fungi), their basic biology and examples of the types of diseases they cause. It will be expected that students have knowledge in plant pathology. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Upon completion of this course the students will be able to:
Describe the characteristics of plant pathogenic bacteria, fungi, viruses, and nematodes and to distinguish between these pathogens.
Describe the methods that each pathogen group utilizes for reproduction, spread, infection of hosts, disease induction in hosts, and long term survival.
Classify plant pathogens in current taxonomic schemes.
Describe the disease cycles for plant pathogens covered in the course.
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| BTNY 59000 - Special Problems |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Open to graduate students and qualified undergraduates who desire to study special problems in plant science not covered in regular coursework. Credit dependent upon work done. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BTNY 59500 - Research Methods |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Various and current research methods, ranging from computer application packages to molecular biological techniques, are taught in modular form with each module consisting of 16 hours within a two-week period. Each module will provide an introduction to the method followed by hands-on laboratory experience. Hours will be arranged to accommodate course conflicts. Enrollment is limited to six students per module. Modules offered vary among semesters. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| BTNY 60500 - Diagnosis Of Plant Diseases |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Symptomatology and diagnosis of diseases of field crop, vegetable, fruit, ornamental, and tree plants. Emphasis is on the collection and study of diseases in field, greenhouse, and storage. Prerequisite: BTNY 30100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BTNY 61300 - Advanced Plant Pathology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course makes an exhaustive attempt to dissect the nature of plant disease and resistance mechanisms in plants. Special emphasis is placed on emerging concepts and paradigms that underlie a wide variety of plant-pathogen interactions, and how the knowledge gleaned from these studies is being used to devise effective and environmentally safe strategies of plant protection. It is expected that students have knowledge in genetics, molecular biology, biochemistry, and plant pathology. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Students will become well versed in both the fundamental and contemporary aspects of plant pathology. They will learn about the most recent developments and trends in the field of plant-pathogen interactions and how these advances impact ideas and approaches for designing sustainable plant protection strategies. Science students will be required to prepare and lead discussions on papers that establish key milestones in plant pathology, this course will help arouse curiosity in them and stimulate critical thinking. In addition, they will be able to apply to their own research the concepts/paradigms they learn in the class.
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| BTNY 64000 - Metabolic Plant Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (AGRY 64000, BIOL 64000, HORT 64000) Topics include photosynthesis, respiration, carbohydrate and lipid metabolism, and nitrogen, sulfur, and secondary metabolism. This course is the third in a series of core courses in the Purdue Plant Biology graduate curriculum. Prerequisite: (BIOL 55100 or HORT 55100), (BTNY 55300 or HORT 55300), BCHM 56100, and 56200. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BTNY 66000 - Scientific Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a course on coping with publication in professional journals. It covers the full range of activities involved in carrying a piece of original research to completion as a primary research article in a refereed journal. Emphasis is on principles of clear and concise technical reporting. Topics include: research and writing goals; journals' policies; data presentations; effective style; organizing, writing, revising, and processing manuscripts; proofreading; peer review; ethics; and grant proposals. Students will use their own data to prepare a manuscript as if for publication. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| BTNY 69000 - Departmental Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Reports and discussion of research and current topics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BTNY 69700 - Seminar In The Plant Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Advanced study of contemporary topics in plant biology, plant pathology, and weed science. Graduate students enrolled will receive training and experience in preparing and presenting seminars. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BTNY 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BTNY 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Botany and Plant Pathology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BUFW A5120 - Financial Accounting Theory And Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines a broad range of accounting topics, including issues related to income measurement and revenue recognition, accounting for current and non-current assets, liabilities, leases, pensions, income taxes, stockholders' equity, accounting changes, earnings per share and cash flows. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| BUFW A5240 - Decision Making And Economic Environment In A Global Economy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The theory of consumer behavior, theory of production, and factor markets are examined in microeconomics. National income accounts, inflation, unemployment, macroeconomic policy are examined in macroeconomics. Emphasis will be on global economic and trade issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| BUFW A5330 - Accounting Function |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of the basic concepts and functions of the financial and managerial accounting systems of businesss enterprises. Provides an understanding of the financial accounting cycle, with particular emphasis on how financial accounting information is used by investors and creditors. Presents basic managerial accounting techniques and indicates how managerial accounting information can be used by managers to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of a businesss organization. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUFW D5420 - Strategic Cost Managment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course focuses on "strategic" cost management practices including capital budgeting, activity-based management, target costing, the just-in-time philosophy, quality costs, theory of constraints, and performance measures for automated factories. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUFW D5500 - Accounting And Control for Healthcare |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discussions of carious healthcare issues in relation to accounting and financial practice. Topics include DRGs, HMOs, health insurance plans, hospital comptrollership, specific costs (e.g., nursing), and ethical tradefoos. A seminar format will be used. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUFW D5800 - Topics In Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In-depth study of current and emerging issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BUFW D5860 - Independent Study In Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. For students engaged in special research projects in accounting. Arrangements for project supervision must be made prior to registration. Credits are determined by the extent of project undertaken. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUFW E5400 - Microeconomic Analysis And Decision Making |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of microeconomic theory to managerial decision-making. Topics include pricing decisions, product mix, location decisions, input mix, decisions under uncertainty, and the impact of government policy on business decisions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUFW E5500 - Business Conditions Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory of income, employment, money, and interest rates. Analysis of the impact of current and alternative fiscal and monetary policies on business. Students will prepare a forecast of macroeconomic conditions for the 12-month period following the end of the semester. Research papers on macroeconomic issues will usually be required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUFW E5520 - Public Policies Toward Business |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discussion of the porper role for government in a primarily private enterprise system. Topics include economic analysis of U.S. antitrust laws, public utility regulation, and environmental/consumer protection. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUFW E5800 - Topics In Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In-depth study of current and emerging issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BUFW E5860 - Independent Study In Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. For students engaged in special research projects in economics. Arrangements for project supervision must be made prior to registration. Credits determined by the extent of the project undertaken. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BUFW F5420 - Financial Analysis And Decision Making |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course covers topics in corporate finance. The primary focus of the course is on the use of financial concepts to develop strategies that maximize firm value. The course examines topics that help students understand how firm value is determined. It also provides students with an understanding of global finance environment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUFW F5610 - Topics In Economic Education I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. An overview of the economic concepts included in the Master Curriculum Guide for Teachers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BUFW F5620 - Topics In Economic Education II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. The ananlysis and development of economics teaching strategies for precollage teachers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BUFW F5630 - Topics In Economic Education III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. A review and analysis of current economic issues and related concepts for precollege economics curriculum development. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BUFW F5750 - Topics In Finance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In-depth analysis of topics of interest. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BUFW F5760 - Independent Study In Finance |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. For students engaged in special research projects in finance. Arrangements for project supervision must be made prior to registration. Credits are determined by the extent of project undertaken. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUFW F5870 - Portfolio Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis on portfolio theory and capital market theory. Portfolio theory concerns the construction of the optimal portfolio once individual assets have been analyzed. Capital market theory concerns the valuation of capital assets. Includes study of Beta theory and the efficient market hypothesis. Each theory is applied to financial and tangible investments. Research paper required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BUFW F5890 - Topics In Business Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In-depth analysis of topics of interest. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BUFW F5900 - Independent Study In Law |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. For students engaged in special research projects in law. Arrangements for project spuervision must be made prior to registration credits are determined by the extent of project undertaken. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BUFW G5130 - Personnel Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the organization and administration of the personnel function. Deals with the relation of the personnel department to operating departments. Appraisal of personnel practices and policies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUFW G5450 - Collective Bargaining |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis on the negotiating process, the structure of bargaining, and the issues involved in the bargaining process. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUFW G5810 - Topics In Behavioral Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In-depth study of current and emerging issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BUFW G5910 - Independent Study In Behavioral Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. For students engaged in special research projects in behavioral studies. Arrangements for project supervision must be made prior to registration. Credits are determined by the extent of project undertaken. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BUFW H5090 - Research Methods In Business |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Research needs and applications in business from the viewpoint of the decision-maker. Emphasis on research design, methods of data collection, sampling, and analysis and interpretation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUFW H5110 - Master's Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Arranged. In-depth research in any business discipline. Formal defense of thesis proposal and thesis required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Research
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUFW M5260 - Opportunity Recognition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is intended to provide the core skills needed for the identification of opportunities that can lead to successful entrepreneurial high technology ventures. Emphasis is placed on the special requirements for creating and executing strategy in a setting of rapid technological change and limited resources. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
Upon completion of the course, the student should have developed the following skills:
1. The ability to assess and predict customer needs in markets that may not yet exist.
2. The ability to create and execute marketing, technology development and strategic plans that integrate technological development with evolving customer requirements.
3. An understanding of how the confluence of technological innovation, marketing, market forces and venture finance drives new technology ventures.
|
| BUFW M5280 - Corporate Entrepreneurship |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will review the role of corporate entrepreneurship in building and sustaining innovation and competitve strategies within organizations, the role of corporate culture in driving internal entrepreneurial activities and the impact of leadership styles towards successful, intrapreneurial-driven companies. Typically offer Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUFW M5290 - New Venture Financing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will teach students how to prepare for the Venture Capital world of equity investment and growth. Students will be required to work on a real world Intellectual Property (IP). Develop market ready documentation and present their product in a national or international venture capital competition. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUFW M5400 - Data Analysis And Management Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examine the design of formal mathematical model-building in support of business decision making. Develop deterministic models and stochastic models (e.g., inferential statistics) to assist management improve both the efficiency and effectiveness of decision making. An independent project (experiential exercise), encompassing conceptual modeling through formal solution and implementation is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUFW M5420 - Leadership And Management Of People In Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course builds on the concepts and methods of psychology; sociology, and business management to give students an appreciation of behavior and management within complex organizations. Topics include globalization, ethical issues, diversity, problem solving, communication, motivation, leadership, organizational culture, personal growth, individual and group behavior, managing conflict and change, and team management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUFW M5520 - Management Of Information Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a comprehensive study of the strategic role of information technology (IT) in contemporary organizations and society. Topics covered include structures, issues and trends in IT, impact of IT on corporate environment and IT management strategies to achieve competitive advantage in an increasingly dynamic global business environment. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUFW M5530 - Topics In Information Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In-depth study of current and emerging issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BUFW M5540 - DSS/Expert System |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigation of the concepts and development of decision support systems and expert systems for business applications where such information systems can assist managers in objectively generating and assessing decision alternatives. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUFW M5570 - Topics In Quantitative Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. In-depth analysis of topics of interest. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BUFW M5600 - Marketing And Customer Relationship Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course is a study of how market-driven organizations strengthen their competitive advantage by creating value for customers. It focuses on the role of marketing and its relationship to other business functions; marketing analysis, planning and implementation in changing domestic and global markets; building customer relationships, and ethical decision-making. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUFW M5650 - Topics In Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In-depth study of current and emerging issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BUFW M5660 - Independent Study In Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. For students engaged in special research projects in marketing. Arrangements for porject supervision must be made prior to registration. Credits are determined by the extent of project undertaken. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BUFW M5700 - Operations And Supply Chain Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a study of how best to design, supply and run organizational process to create good and services in a dynamic and competitive global environment. Topics covered include the use of contemporary tools and techniques in product and process design; facility location and layout; scheduling; project, supply chain, quality, inventory, and materials management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUFW M5750 - Topics in Operations Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In-depth study of current and emerging issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUFW M5760 - Independent Study In Operations Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. For students engaged in special research projects involvingt use and/or application of quantitative methods to managerial problems. Arrangements for project supervision must be made prior to registration. Credits are determined by the extent of project undertaken. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUFW M5880 - Strategic Management Of Global Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focus on strategic global management encompassing three tracks: how a domestic firm enters a foreign market, how to manage a foreign operation, and how to manage a multinational operation. Emphasis on analysis of different economic, political and clutlral environments, and integration of global dimesnions of marketing, accounting, finance andhuman resource management. Extensive use of team projects and in-class presentations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUFW M5900 - Strategic Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comprehensive, integrated approach to the analysis and understanding of strategic management and competitiveness in the global economy. It focuses on the development of effective organizational strategies. Topics include external and internal environments of business, strategy implementation, strategic leadership, corporate entrepreneurship and goverance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUFW M5920 - Communication, Team Building, Ethics And Regulatory Environment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced treatment of micro and macro areas of organizational studies, concentrating on increasing organizational effectiveness while behaving in an ethical manner. emphasis will be on interpersonal relations, communication, and teamwork in our dynamic and increasingly diverse environment. The impact of external regulatory environment is also considered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUFW X2950 - Practicum In Business |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 or 1.00. Practical problems/projects in area business and nonprofit organizations. May be repeated up to four times. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 4 times
|
| BUFW X3800 - Professional Practice In Business |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 or 1.00. A supervised cooperative education experience integrating academic studies with relevant work experience. Alternates a semester of full time study with a semester of full time employment. Maximum of 3 credits may be applied toward graduation. Cannot be substituted for required course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| BUFW X3810 - Professional Practice In Business |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 or 1.00. A supervised cooperative education experience integrating academic studies with relevant work experience. Part time employment concurrent with study. Maximum of 3 credits may be applied toward graduation. Cannot be substituted for required course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| BUFW X5010 - Essentials Of Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Upon completing this course, students should be knowledgeable in the basic procedures inherent in analyzing, recording, classifying, and reporting the economic transactions that occur in the firm. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUFW X5020 - Basic Finance |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The course is designed to provide basic information regarding corporate finance and will prepare students for higher level courses in finance. Topics covered include time value of money, capital budgeting, capital structure, dividend policy, basics of financial markets, and short-term financial management. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUFW X5030 - Introduction To Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Brief overview of microeconomic topics include comparative advantage, diminishing returns, supply, and demand. Market price determination is examined with emphasis on elasticity in the determination of total revenue changes as price changes. Measurement of economy's aggregate output, price level and employment are macroeconomic topics covered. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUFW X5040 - Ethics And Regulatory Environment |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is a study of how organizations include ethics and regulatory environment in their decision making. It focuses on the development of effective strategies which include long term ethical, socially responsible behavior. Topics include organizational culture and ethical values, legal and business ethics, and government regulations. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUKD C5110 - Organizational Development And Change |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Today's business environment forces executives to use every tool at their disposal to create and maintain an effective and adaptable organization. A major source of effectiveness and adaptability is the way in which the company's efforts are organized-its systems, structures, management process, rewards and strategies. The primary job of senior management today is to design, build, and operate organizations that function effectively. With these needs in mind, T591/W516 helps students to: (1) understand the basic components of the organization and how they interrelate as a system, (2) learn tools for diagnosing organizational performance problems, and (3) practice applying organization design concepts to solve performance problems. For KD OnLine MBA students enrolled in Year Two, Pre-Fall Intensive.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUKD C5200 - Quantitative Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. In this course, we enhance the student?s statistical and mathematical modeling skills covering the following topics: (1) probabilistic decision making, (2) regression analysis, (3)forecasting (4) simulation with @RISK (5) optimization modeling with the EXCEL Solver, (6) making decisions when multiple objectives are involved, and (7) using neutral networks to improve forecasting. Applications from all major functional areas will be discussed. For KD Online MBA students enrolled in Year One, Fall Quarter.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUKD C5210 - Managerial Accounting Information Decision-Making |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Management Accounting Information Decision-Making.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUKD C5300 - Economics For Managers |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Economic decision making in the business firm, the strategic interaction of business firms in industries, the purchasing and behavior of individual consumers and consumers as a group, and the influence of public policy on market outcomes. Development of a fluency with the language of economics and a strong ?economic intuition,? understanding of selected economics-based decision-making tools and the impact and interaction of the structure of an industry on competition, analysis of intra-industry rivalry, and improved understanding of public policy issues. Emphasis on the logical foundations of economic analysis and managerial decision making. Will promote understanding and application of various quantitative measures.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUKD C5400 - Financial Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Financial Management.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUKD C5600 - Strategic Management And Business Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Strategic Management And Business Planning.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUKD C5700 - Strategic Marketing Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00.Strategic Marketing Management.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUKD C5800 - Operations Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Operations Management.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUPA A5160 - Federal Estate And Gift Taxation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Tax treatment of wealth transfers at death (the estate tax) and during lifetime (the gift tax), with emphasis on estate planning. Also includes an examination of the income taxation of estates and trusts. Prerequisite: BUPA A5150. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUPA A5220 - Federal Taxation Of Partnerships And LCC |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Tax aspects of the definition, formation, operation, liquidation, and termination of partnerships and limited liability companies. Prerequisite: BUPA A5150. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUPA A5230 - Business Information Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Business Information Systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUPA A5510 - Tax Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. Covers how to access the primary and secondary sources of tax law, including the Internal Revenue Code, regulations and other administrative pronouncements and judicial decisions. Explains the research process and the use of research tools to locate sources of tax law. Utilizes both paper products and electronic (internet) resources. Emphasizes how to read and interpret source materials. Tax research assignments stress writing skills and the need for effective communication of research findings. Prerequisite: BUPA A5150. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUPA A5540 - Income Taxation Of Trusts And Estates |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. Analyzes the income taxation of trusts and estates and their creators, beneficiaries and fiduciaries, including computation of fiduciary accounting income, distributable net income and taxable income, taxation of simple and complex trusts, computation of income in respect of a decedent, preparation of the decedent's final income tax return and the returns of trusts and estates from inception through termination. Prerequisite: BUPA A5150. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUPA D5900 - Ind Study International Business |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. For advanced MBA students engaged in special study projects. Course admission and project supervision is arranged through the MBA Office and the student's faculty advisor. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUPA S5300 - Business Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Business Analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS A1000 - Basic Accounting Skills |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The course covers the process of recording economic events that underlie financial statements. The basics of generally accepted accounting principles are introduced as they affect financial statements. The fundamental aspects of managerial accounting are related to planning, controlling, and decision making in business organizations. Different cost definitions are developed and cost-volume-profit analysis is introduced as an important financial planning and control skill. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS A1860 - Accounting And The Business Environment (Nonmajors) |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed from the user?s perspective to help students understand the basics of financial and managerial accounting and how accounting is useful to external and internal decision makers. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Richmond
|
| BUS A2000 - Foundations Of Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. The course addresses the role of accounting in society and business, with a special emphasis on fundamental concepts and the basic design of accounting systems. This course is intended for non-business majors who are interested in learning about how accounting affects their lives and businesses. Credit not given for both BUS A2000 and either BUS A2010 or BUS A2020. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS A2010 - Introduction To Financial Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to concepts and issues of financial reporting for business entities; analysis and recording for business entities. Required for business majors and others who expect to take more than one semester of accounting. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS A2020 - Introduction To Managerial Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to concepts and issues of management accounting; budgeting, variance analysis, cost determination, and standard costs. Required for all business majors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS A2050 - Introduction To Financial Accounting-Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Concepts and issues associated with corporate financial reporting; particular emphasis is placed on understanding the role of financial accounting in the economy, how different accounting methods affect financial statements, and developing a basis for life-long learning.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS A3020 - Tax Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Emphasizes development of communication skills through writing exercises related to tax research. In addition, covers how to access the primary and secondary sources of tax law, including the Internal Revenue Code, regulations and other administrative pronouncements, and judicial decisions. Explains the research process and the use of research tools to locate sources of tax law. Utilizes both paper products and electronic (Internet) resources. Emphasizes how to read and interpret source materials. Tax research assignments stress writing skills and the need for effective communication of research findings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| BUS A3100 - Management Decisions And Financial Reporting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a one-semester course, primarily intended for finance majors, that covers all the traditional intermediate accounting topics. The course provides students with a thorough understanding of the theoretical foundations underlying financial reporting, the rules used by accountants to measure the effects of business decisions and to report the effects to external parties, the use of judgment in financial reporting, and the transformation of cash flow decisions into accrual-based and cash-based financial statements. Students are expected to develop technical, analytical, and interpretive skills related to economic transactions and accrual-based financial statements. Accounting students should take A311 and A312 to satisfy accounting major requirements. Credit not given for both A310 and A311 or A312.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Richmond
|
| BUS A3110 - Intermediate Accounting I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theoretical framework and application of generally accepted accounting principles to the preparation of financial statements, with emphasis upon the assets and liabilities of an enterprise. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS A3120 - Intermediate Accounting II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of the work begun in A311. Theoretical framework and application of generally accepted accounting principles to the preparation of financial statements, with emphasis upon owners' equity and special topics such as earnings per share, pensions, leases, income tax allocation, and cash flow statement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS A3140 - Financial Statement Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of financial statements to provide basis from which informed decisions concerning investments, financing opportunities, and appropriate financing instruments can be made. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUS A3170 - Computer Based Accounting System |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course presents a framework for students to help them think in innovative ways about providing accounting user support through the use of technology. The focus of the course is on understanding organizations (their activities, processes, and objectives) in order to understand how technology can be used as an enabler of organization activities and objectives. Topics covered include modeling business processes, revenue and expenditure cycles, information systems architecture, systems analysis and design, internal control systems, and EDP controls. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUS A3180 - Fraud Examination I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of fraud examination including identifying the nature and types of fraud, creating systems to prevent fraud, and investigating and resolving fraudulent activities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUS A3250 - Cost Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Conceptual and procedural aspects of management and cost accounting. Product costing, cost control over projects and products; decision-making emphasis; profit planning; quantitative modeling; and computer applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS A3280 - Introduction To Taxation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comprehensive study of the federal income tax structure. Individual taxation will be emphasized with an exposure to business taxation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS A3310 - Taxation Of Business Entities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the income taxation of business entities including C corporations, partnerships, S corporations, limited liability companies, and some overlapping material of individual taxation. This course will include the basic topics of tax research, gross income, business deductions, property transactions, and special entity formation rules. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUS A3320 - Taxation Of Individuals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Federal individual taxation will be emphasized with an exposure to business taxation. Basic tax concepts will be examined through discussions on filing status, exemptions, gross income, exclusions, deductions, employee, expenses, alternative minimum taxes, tax credit, and computations leading to the preparation of individual tax returns. Open to majors and non-majors. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUS A3350 - Acctg Gov & Not-For-Profit Ent |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to fund accounting for governmental units, colleges/universities, hospitals, voluntary health and welfare, and other not-for-profit organizations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS A3360 - Internship in Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Qualified students approved by the accounting faculty may be placed with cooperating firms to receive experience in accounting. Work experience is supervised by faculty; research and written reports are required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BUS A3370 - Computer-Based Accounting Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Impact of modern computer systems on analysis and design of accounting information systems. Discussion of tools of systems analysis, computer-based systems, and internal controls and applications. Focus on microcomputer use. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS A3390 - Advanced Income Tax |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comprehensive study of the federal income tax structure with emphasis on taxation of business and tax- planning for individuals. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS A3750 - Internal Auditing - Enterprise Risk Management And Controls |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces basic concepts of internal auditing, emphasizes business process controls, discusses basic internal controls and how they relate to common business processes, discusses how information technology relates to audit procedures and reports, covers the internal auditor’s role in monitoring corporate controls, and involves hands-on experience with audit software. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| BUS A3800 - Profesional Practice In Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Professional work experience in cooperating firms and organizations. Cannot be substituted for required course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Richmond
|
| BUS A4130 - Governmental And Not-For-Profit Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Financial management and accounting for nonprofit seeking entities; state, municipal, and federal governments; schools, hospitals, and philanthropic entities. Includes study of GAAP for these entities promulgated by the FASB and GASB. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| BUS A4220 - Advanced Financial Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and problems of business combinations, foreign currency transactions, and partnerships. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Richmond
|
| BUS A4240 - Auditing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Public accounting organization and operation; review of internal control systems, verification of balance sheet and operating accounts; the auditor's opinion. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS A4250 - Contemporary Accounting Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analyzes and evaluates the rationale for and implications of underlying financial accounting procedures and concepts. Extensive consideration is given to the effects of alternative accounting principles on the measurement of a firm's earnings and financial position. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS A4340 - Professional Aspects-Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Develop student ethical awareness with respect to the accounting code of professional ethics and business. Development of a framework to assist in solving ethical dilemmas. Case studies involving analysis of financial accounting and corporate reporting issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUS A4370 - Advanced Managerial Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Strategic cost management practices including activity-based management, activity-based budgeting and activity-based costing, target costing, theory of constraints, quality costs, the cost of capacity, the balanced scorecard, and performance measures for automated factories. Learn enhanced problem solving skills and tools, increased critical thinking skills, and improved presentation and speaking skills. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
|
| BUS A4390 - Advanced Auditing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of audit skills in planning, account analysis, workpaper techniques. Issues of legal liability. Case studies involving various audit issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| BUS A4410 - Special Topics In Assurance Services |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Develops professional skills of entry level accountants through case studies in assurance and other related services. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUS A4900 - Independent Study In Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Cannot be substituted for required course(s). Supervised individual study and research in student's special field of interest. Written report required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BUS A5010 - Financial Accounting And Reporting |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50 to 3.00. Develops concepts and procedures essential for the preparation and interpretation of general purpose financial statements directed to users external to the enterprise. Critical analysis of contemporary financial accounting and reporting issues. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.500 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS A5160 - Federal Estate and Gift Taxation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Tax treatment of wealth transfers at death (the estate tax) and during lifetime (the gift tax), with emphasis on estate
planning. Also includes an examination of the income taxation of estates and trusts.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS A5240 - Managing Accounting Information For Decision Making |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Managing Accounting Information For Decision Making. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS B1900 - Human Behavior And Social Institutions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Develops insights into human nature, the nature of social institutions, the social processes that shaped the world of the twenty-first century. In an interdisciplinary way, introduces the distinctive perspectives of the social sciences, emphasizing frameworks and techniques used in explaining causes and patterns of individual and institutional behavior. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BUS B3990 - Business And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Major ethical theories are examined, providing a basis for analyzing ethical behavior in the business environment. Such issues as economic competition, discriminatory practices, manipulation of power, environmental conservation, and organizational cultures are investigated. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS D3000 - International Business Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Economic and cultural environments for overseas operations. Governmental policies and programs that affect international business. International dimensions of marketing, finance, accounting, taxation, and human resources with emphasis on management decisions and implementation. No credit for both D300 and D320. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS D3010 - The International Business Environment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Economic environment for overseas operations. Governmental policies and programs that affect international business. Economic and political philosophies around the world; patterns of government-business relationships. Economic development and business activities in differing political and cultural environments. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS D3020 - International Business: Operation Of International Enterprises |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. International dimensions of marketing, finance, accounting, taxation, and personnel with an emphasis on management decisions and implementation. Analytical framework for decision making in a multinational context. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS D4900 - Special Studies In International Business |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Supervised individual study and research in student's field of interest. Written report required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BUS D5900 - Independent Study In International Business |
|
Credit Hours: 1.0 - 6.0. Independent Study In International Business. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BUS D5940 - International Competitive Strategy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. International Competitive Strategy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS F1510 - Personal Finances Of The College Student |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is an introduction to the basic planning tools and concepts for college-age financial literacy. Emphasis on financial decisions and challenges facing a typical college student. Topics include careers, goal setting, budgeting, tax planning and credit, including options for financing higher education. Foundation of the Financial Literacy Curriculum. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Richmond
Learning Objectives:
1. Measure risk and return and explain the trade-off between risk and return in personal finance decisions.
2. Calculate the value of various personal financial assets.
3. List the primary sources of income and expenses in creating personal financial statements and in making investment decisions.
4. Estimate personal cash flows to distinguish between value-creating and value- destroying investments.
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| BUS F1520 - Basic Financial Planning And Investment |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to the basic planning tools and concepts for financial literacy into adulthood and retirement. Emphasis on analyzing, selecting and managing investments over a lifetime. Topics include, time value of money, financial statements, retirement objectives, and investing in various financial assets. Part of the Financial Literacy Curriculum. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Measure risk and return and explain the trade-off for investment decisions.
2. Understand time value of money concepts.
3. List the primary sources of income and expenses in creating corporate financial statements and in making investment decisions.
4. List the primary financial characteristics of stocks, bonds, mutual funds and REITs.
5. Evaluate stocks, bonds, mutual funds and REITs as part of a portfolio.
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| BUS F2000 - Foundations of Financial Management (Nonmajors) |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to introduce the student to the basic decision models of financial management and to prepare the student to take an active role in financial decision-making in their workplace.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS F2510 - Managing Personal And Financial Risk |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to the basic planning tools and concepts for effective risk management. Emphasis on determining, analyzing and managing lifestyle and career factors contributing to financial risk. Exploration of uses, suitability and advantages of various insurance products for major risks. Part of the Financial Literacy Curriculum. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the trade-off for insurance decisions.
2. Explain the trade-off in purchasing versus owning a home or car.
3. List the primary financial characteristics of home, auto, personal, life, and disability insurance.
4. Evaluate decisions in making insurance choices for home, auto, personal, life, and disability insurance.
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| BUS F2550 - Topics In Finance |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Variable topic, variable credit course in Finance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BUS F2600 - Personal Finance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Financial problems encountered in managing individual affairs; family budgeting, installment buying, insurance, and home ownership. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Introduce and broaden the concept of personal finance and increase one's understanding of the process of accumulating and protecting personal wealth.
2. Learn and understand investment alternatives and how strategies develop as life situations mature.
3. Gain an understanding of retirement planning and how to effectively transfer wealth.
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| BUS F2610 - Basics Of Personal Investments |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of the risk and return characteristics of investments that typically fit the requirements and limitations of individual investors. Investment strategies and goals of the individual are examined in order to determine the feasibility of practical application. No credit for juniors or seniors in the School of Business. Report required. No credit toward a B.S. or A.B.S. in Business.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS F3000 - Introduction To Financial Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Broad survey of finance for non-School of Business students. Topics include the determinants of interest rates and the time value of money; the sources and uses of financial information; the structure, role, and regulation of financial markets; monetary policy; the pricing of risk in financial markets; goals of investors; and how firms manage their financial affairs, including planning, budgeting, and decision making.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| BUS F3010 - Financial Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of the essentials of corporate finance needed to compete effectively in an increasingly global environment. Topics include time value of money, forecasting, stock and bond analysis, project analysis, cost of capital, short term asset analysis, global financial markets, and ethical considerations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS F3020 - Financial Decision Making |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of financial theory and techniques of analysis in the search for optimal solutions to financial management problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS F3030 - Intermediate Investments |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is part of the finance core. Provides a rigorous treatment of the core concepts of investments for finance majors. Covers equity securities, fixed income securities, derivative securities, and international investments. Makes extensive use of spreadsheet modeling to implement financial models. Serves as a foundation for all 400-level finance electives. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Richmond
|
| BUS F3040 - Honors Financial Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course provides a conceptual framework of a firm’s investment, financing, and dividend decisions; includes working capital management, capital budgeting, and capital structure strategies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| BUS F3050 - Intermediate Corporate Finance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Part of the finance core. Rigorous treatment of the core concepts of corporate finance for finance majors. Covers capital budgeting, the valuation of firms, and capital structure and payout policies. Makes extensive use of spreadsheet modeling to implement financial models. Serves as a foundation for all 400-level finance electives. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
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| BUS F3080 - Risk Management And Insurance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students develop a broad understanding of the world of risk management and insurance world. Learn basic fundamental knowledge, concepts, and principles of this industry. Plus understand the activities they engage in and whey they do so. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| BUS F3090 - Retirement Plan Fundamentals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Understand basic concepts, terminology, and procedures involved in the retirement planning industry in the United States. Also understand the dynamic and highly regulated processes of pension plan administration. Course covers the material included on exam for the nationally recognized certificate in Retirement Plan Fundamentals. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| BUS F3100 - Financial Statement Analysis-Finance Perspective |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of financial statements to provide basis from which informed decisions concerning investments, financing opportunities, and appropriate financing instruments can be made. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| BUS F3450 - Money, Banking and Capital Market |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of the interrelated financial systems of central banks, private banks, and other sources and users of financial capital. Theoretical, empirical, policy and institutional issues are analyzed using economics and finance. Topics include the theory of money demand and supply, monetary policy and central banks, interest rate determination, financial intermediaries and international financial markets. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
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| BUS F3500 - Futures and Options Market |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to futures and options contracts. Theory of contract prices, market structure, and funding mechanisms. Hedging, arbitrage, and speculation in contracts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUS F3710 - Finance: Integrated Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The finance component provides an introduction into basic principles and perspectives of financial thought. Covered topics include the time value of money, risk and return, interest rates and debt risk, capital budgeting, cost of capital, security pricing, and basic investment concepts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS F4020 - Corporate Financial Strategy and Governance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced treatment of corporate financial management. Covers all major areas of crporate financial decisions: capital budgeting, dividends, capital structure, cash-flow projections, mergers, and acquisitions. Makes extensive use of spreadsheet modeling. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| BUS F4200 - Equity And Fixed Income Investments |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A detailed examination of the management of equity and fixed income investment policies, analyzing securities, and constructing portfolio strategies for individuals and institutions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS F4460 - Banking and Financial Institutions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Management policies and decisions including asset, liability, and capital management within the legal, competitive, and economic environment. The main topics are (i) the economic role of financial intermediaries--with an emphasis on commercial banks; (ii) The management of financial intermediaries; (iii) The regulation of commercial banks and other financial institutions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS F4540 - Current Topics In Banking |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Understand, examine, and analyze banks and other financial institutions in their current operating environment through the use of case studies and other materials. Focus on regulations, economic factors, and bank consumer issue and operations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| BUS F4800 - Professional Practice In Finance |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Application filed through the coordinator of internships Work experience in cooperating film or agencies. Comprehensive written report required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| BUS F4900 - Independent Study In Finance |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Cannot be substituted for required course(s). Supervised individual study and research in student's special field of interest. Written report required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| BUS F4940 - International Finance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to international capital budgeting and cash management,investing, multinational transfer pricing, exchange rate risk, hedging techniques, international trade practices, and other issues that will provide an overview of global financing practices. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
|
| BUS F4970 - Bank Simulation Course |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Student teams operate competing commercial banks over a two year period under simulated economic conditions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUS F5090 - Financial Analysis For Corporate Decisions |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. Emphasizes the application of discounted cash flow analysis in typical capital budgeting situations. Capital budgeting issues such as inflation effects, divisional projects, uncertainty resolution, capital rationing, and international projects are examined. The special case of project financing is also studies in both domestic and international settings. The course employs various computer models to aid the analysis of projects under alternative economic scenarios. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS F5170 - Venture Capital And Entrepreneurial Finance |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. The analysis process of evaluating smaller, high potential investment opportunities where the investor plans to take an active role. Stresses the tools and concepts needed to evaluate the market, the technology, the management terms, and internal operations, resulting in a valuation and offer. Guest speakers and case studies are used. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS F5200 - Asset Valuation And Strategy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50 to 2.00. An introduction to the basic theories for valuing equity, fixed income, and derivative securities. Covered in the equity arena are the Capital Asset Pricing Model, Index Models, Arbitrage Pricing Theory, and empirical tests of these models. The price/yield relationship and term structure of interest rates are discussed in the fixed income portion of the course. Options and forward pricing models and basic risk management techniques also are presented. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 TO 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS F5230 - Financial Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Financial Management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS F5250 - Corporate Financial Risk Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. Explores the measurement and control of firm’s financial risk. Areas examined are exchange rate risk, interest rate risk, and commodity price risk. Risk management tools analyzed include forwards, futures, options, swaps, and newly-developed over-the-counter products. The role of corporate insurance is also discussed. The course will be useful to students interested in pursuing either corporate finance or investments careers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS F5280 - Fixed Income Investments |
|
Credit Hours: 1.5. Fixed Income Investments. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS F5290 - Equity Markets |
|
Credit Hours: 1.5. Equity Markets. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS F5400 - The Firm In The Capital Market |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50 to 2.00. Examines the implications of capitol market pricing for establishing corporate financial policy. The concepts of agency relationships, information asymmetry, and financial contracting provide a framework for analyzing financial decisions such as capital structure, dividends, share repurchase, managerial incentives, and the organizational form. Differences in institutional features are used to explain international patterns in corporate financing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 TO 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS F5480 - Corporate Governance And Restructuring |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. Examines the role and effectiveness of corporate governance mechanisms in aligning the incentives of managers with those of shareholders. A framework for valuing acquisitions, recapitalizations, and leverage buyouts is developed and applied. Offensive and defensive strategies in the market for corporate control such as tender offers, proxy fights, selective repurchases, poison pills, and employee stock ownership plans are studied. Applied to both international and domestic settings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS F5700 - International Financial Markets |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. International Financial Markets is meant to provide an introduction to the financial environment of globally operating companies and financial institutions. This course covers the international interaction of financial markets, the trading environment and basic financial techniques from an integrated analytical and decision making perspective by extending financial concepts and instruments such as forwards and swaps. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS G3000 - Introduction To Managerial Economics And Strategy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Applications of concepts developed in microeconomic theory as regards the solution of business problems. Development of a conceptual framework for business decision-making under conditions of uncertainty. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS G3040 - Managerial Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Develop understanding how events affect businesses; Master fundamental econoomic principles; build analytical skills required for managerial decision making. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS G5020 - Managerial Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.5. Managerial Economics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS G5110 - Microeconomics For Managers |
|
Credit Hours: 1.5. Microeconomics For Managers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS G5120 - Macroeconomics For Managers |
|
Credit Hours: 1.5. Macroeconomics For Managers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS G5950 - Country Analysis And International Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. Designed to introduce the business manager to various business and economic environments around the world. The growth strategies of East Asia and Latin America, as well as Western economies will be compared and analyzed. The problems and prospects of transitional East European economies will also figure prominently in the discussion. The issues will include the role of the private vs. public sector, problems of international competitiveness, the role of foreign debt, cultural factors, and macroeconomic policy making. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS H3200 - Systems Of Health Care Delivery |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the foundations and historical precedents for the current health care system in the United States. It also covers the structures, processes, and policies for delivering health care services, and briefly reviews alternative systems used in other countries. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS H3520 - Health Care Financial Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course that includes an overview of financial statements, costing of health care services, breakeven analysis, pricing decisions, budgeting, cost control, and basic financial management concepts such as time value analysis and financial risk. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS H4110 - Management Of Long-Term Care Facilities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers organization and management of long-term care facilities,
with particular emphasis on skilled care nursing homes. Topics include community and client exchanges, the legal and regulatory environment, financing and reimbursement, clinical organization and
processes of care delivery, and managing the organization. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS I5470 - Strategic Marketing Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Strategic Marketing Management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS I5480 - Operations Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Operations Management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS J1000 - Introduction To College And Business Careers |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An orientation to the college environment and to the different careers in the field of business. Students will develop the skills needed to be successful college students and will be introduced to various business career options. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUS J2000 - Business Degree Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. One time seminar which pre-business students must attend before being admitted into the bachelor's degree program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
PU Fort Wayne
|
| BUS J3000 - Business Forum: Management Of Diversity In Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 or 1.00. A survey course which focuses on the ethics, legal implications, and benefits arising from diversity in the management of organizations. Particular focus will be on the socio-legal aspects of handicap, gender, race, cultural differences, creed and places of national origin and their impact on the business enterprise. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| BUS J4010 - Administrative Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The capstone business course integrating, via case analysis, functional areas of study into a comprehensive real-world experience. Emphasis on critical thinking, analysis, strategic planning, and implementation of astute, ethical plans to gain a competitive advantage in the global marketplace. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS J4020 - Administrative Policy: Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Administration of business organizations: policy formulation, organizations, methods, and executive control. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| BUS J4040 - Business And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines major ethical theories as a basis for analyzing ethical behavior in the business environment. Investigates such issues as economic competition, discriminatory practices, manipulation of power, environmental conservation, and organizational cultures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS J4110 - Analysis of Business Decisions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Strategy is about determining and implementing a course of action to accomplish objectives to effectively compete and create sustainable competitive advantages for the organization in the marketplace. In this course students will make business decisions over multiple time periods ' and examine their impact on the organization's qualitative and quantitative performance. The course is composed of two essential elements: 'knowing' and 'doing'. The 'knowing' involves the strategic concepts, techniques, and models applicable to strategic and functional management to help students make intelligent choices among the options available to the organization and its competitors. The student will learn these through assigned readings and discussions. The 'doing' involves active participation in a total enterprise strategic management simulation. A team will determine the organization's objectives and goals, evaluate business situations, make decisions for the various functional areas, and examine the outcomes from these decisions as the team competes with other firms in the industry.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| BUS J5010 - Developing Strategic Capabilities |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50 to 3.00. A comprehensive analysis of the total enterprise from the general manager’s perspective. It provides an exposure to the fundamental concepts and models involved in the determination of a firm’s strategic direction at both the corporate and business levels. In addition, it focuses on the management of the strategic process by integrating material from the functional area courses. Students will be provided with the skills necessary to read changes in the environment, anticipate competitive forces in the environment, and develop strategies to take advantage of those forces. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS J5060 - Leadership And Ethics In The Business Environment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Corporate actions are increasingly subject to media, public, and governmental scrutiny. The nature of the constantly changing relationship between business and its major constituencies is the focus of J5060. The ethical political, economic, social, and technological considerations of various managerial decisions are investigated. The role of ethical leadership and how it relates to corporate purpose and responsibility will be a major theme of J5060. Issues affecting business organizations are examined from a number of perspectives. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS J5220 - Strategic Management Technology And Innovation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. New technologies redefine business and industry practices daily. Technology, innovation, and strategy have become intertwined as precursors to competitive advantage. Firms realize the importance of developing technological capabilities and organizational learning. This course examines the interrelationship of these concepts and explores how managers influence them to improve their firm’s strategic position. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS K2000 - Computer Literacy Concepts For Business |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 or 1.00. Orientation to microcomputer hardware, software markets and operating systems of DOS and WINDOWS. Emphasis on end-user computer responsibilities for managers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUS K2010 - The Computer In Business |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the role of computers and other information technologies in business (with emphasis on microcomputer applications). Provides instruction in both functional and conceptual computer literacy. Experimental exercises include learning a Windows-based spreadsheet (Excel), a relational database (Access), electronic mail, and Internet navigation tools. These hands-on labs emphasize application of these learned skills to solve a variety of business problems. The lectures focus on the use and application of technology (hardware, software, storage/multimedia, Internet history, Internet in business, database management systems, and security/privacy of data in this information age).
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS K2110 - Spreadsheets For Business |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Orientation to spreadsheet design and use from end-user/manager perspective. Topics include cell addressing through macro development. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUS K2120 - Introduction To Database Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Orientation to Data Base Design from end-user/manager perspective. The distinction between "Flat-file" and "Relational" Data Base Management Systems is explored with the commercial software packages MS-Access. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUS K2130 - Internet Access & Data Analysis for Business |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Provide conceptual foundations on Internet/WWW technologies, and creation and management of business web sites. The hands-on topics include web browsers, search engines and creation and maintenance of business web pages using popular web authoring tools and HTML. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUS K3010 - Enterprise Resource Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will provide an overview of EPR systems. Topics will include principles of ERP, evolution of ERP and business process management and ERP project planning and implementation. Will also include latest development in ERP application and exposure to ERP software. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS K3020 - Introduction to Management Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory management science; a forecasting component comprises approximately 25 percent of the course. Topics to be covered include multiple regression, smoothing techniques, linear programming, integer programming, statistical decision theory, simulation, and network analysis; coverage may also include inventory theory, Markov processes, and goal programming. Heavy emphasis will be placed on the application of these topics to business decision making using computers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS K3120 - Decision Modeling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will learn how to develop and to solve different types of decision models that can aid in solving business and industry related problems in areas such as finance, marketing, and operations. Microsoft Excel will be used to develop the Models. Topics that will be covered in the course include linear, integer, nonlinear, and network models, sensitivity analysis, project management, simulation, forecasting, and decision analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Richmond
|
| BUS K3210 - Management Information Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to information systems and technology and their role in the modern business enterprise. Topics include computer based information systems; managers' role in use, acquisition and control of information systems and technology for a competitive advantage; ethical use of information; global information systems; and emerging information technologies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS K3270 - Deterministic Models In Operations Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Philosophy and techniques of operations research and management science as they relate to business decision making. Topics include behavioral model building, optimization techniques, sensitivity analysis, and dynamic analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUS K3350 - Information Systems Analysis And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In-depth treatment of the theory and practice of management information systems including information requirements analysis, design methodology, and system implementation considerations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| BUS K4090 - E-Business |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The internet has facilitated new business models and raised new legal and policy issues (e.g., copyright, intellectual property rights, taxation, etc.). This course provides an overview of electronic business through an understanding of the concepts, applications, strategic opportunities, technologies, and cultural and ethical issues that surround the emergence of global electronic commerce. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUS K4900 - Independent Study In Decision Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Supervised individual study and research in student's special field of interest. Written report required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BUS K5010 - Quantitative Tools for Business |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Fulfills the statistics prerequisite for entering MBA students. A pass-fail, self-paced review covering the
proper use and interpretation of essential statistical techniques in business situations. Provides a working knowledge of probability, quality control procedures, and regression analysis, with emphasis on solving problems using Microsoft Excel. This course will use Excel and assumes you have had some exposure to elementary statistics such as means (averages) and histograms. It also assumes you already know the basics of Microsoft Excel: how to select ranges, enter formulas and sort
data.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS K5030 - Statistical Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Basic statistical skills for advanced work in the functional areas of business administration. Descriptive statistics, probability distributions, sampling and estimation, and hypothesis testing. Use of standard computer programs to solve problems.Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS K5100 - Advanced Decision Models |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. This course is concerned with optimization modeling. Topics covered are optimal product mix, project scheduling, aggregate planning, financial models, capital budgeting, optimal portfolio mix and multiple objectives optimization. This is an ADC course administered entirely through Oncourse, but it is not self-paced. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS K5160 - Quantitative Decision Models |
|
Credit Hours: 1.5. Quantitative Decision Models. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS L1000 - Personal Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Effects of law on everyday lives. May include such topics as family law; criminal offenses and traffic violations; personal injury and property damage claims; employee rights; landlord-tenant law; consumer rights; debt collection; selected real and personal property issues; wills and estates; selected contract law issues; and forms of business organization (partnership, proprietorship, and corporation). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS L2000 - Elements Of Business Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces various legal rules governing contracts, their formation, performance, breach, and legal and equitable remedies. The primary focus will be on legal and equitable remedies. The primary focus will be on legal rules applicable to business. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS L2010 - Legal Environment Of Business |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis on understanding the nature of law through examining a few areas of general interest such as the duty to avoid harming others (torts), the duty to keep promises (contracts), and government regulation of business. Credit not given for both BUS L2010 and BUS L2030. Not offered on Indianapolis campus. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS L2030 - Commercial Law I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Includes the nature of law, torts, contracts, the sale of goods, and the legal regulation of business competition. The purpose of this course is to examine the legal framework for business activity and to explore how to manage that framework in a rapidly changing legal environment. The areas of the law studied include contracts, torts, employment law, intellectual property, forms of business enterprises, and the legal regulation of business competition. Credit not given for both BUS L2010 and BUS L2030. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS L2040 - Commercial Law I:Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An honors course includes the nature of law, torts, contracts, the sale of goods, and the legal regulation of business competition. The purpose of this course is to examine the legal framework for business activity and to explore how to manage that framework in a rapidly changing legal environment. The areas of the law studied include contracts, torts, employment law, intellectual property, forms of business enterprises, and the legal regulation of business competition. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| BUS L3030 - Commercial Law II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphases on Uniform Commercial Code (sales, negotiable instruments and secured transactions), business organizations and relationships, bankruptcy, and the law of ownership, custody, and possession. Required for business B.S. majors in the accounting concentration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS L3120 - Ethical Responsibility Of Business |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to help students develop their abilities to identify and address real world ethical dilemmas. The course is case-based, with discussions focusing primarily on ethical situations that confront individuals engaged in business. Topics covered include honesty, privacy, diversity/discrimination, harassment, free speech, whistle-blowing, intellectual property rights, ethics in finance, ethics in marketing, corporate social responsibility, globalization, ethics in finance, ethics in marketing, corporate social responsibility, globalization, and ethics in international business. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS L3500 - Online Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Online law focuses on the management of legal problems that arise from the use of the Internet and other interactive computer networks. The goals of the course are to increase students' awareness of the legal issues that arise in a variety of online contexts, familiarize students with the legal frameworks that are evolving in the U.S. and other legal systems to resolve those issues, and guide students in strategies for managing the legal risks inherent in communicating and doing business online. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| BUS L4060 - Employment Problems And The Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines current legal problems in the area of employment. Topics include race and sex discrimination, harassment, the Americans with Disabilities Act, employment at will, privacy issues such as drug testing, and limits on monitoring and testing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| BUS L5120 - Law And Ethics In Business |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Law And Ethics In Business. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS M2000 - Marketing And Society: Roles And Responsibilities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is offered for students pursuing a Certificate in Business. The course will acquaint the student with basic marketing concepts, terminology and applications. The use of marketing in a variety of industries will be explored. The course will also aid the student in becoming a more aware and intelligent consumer. Assignments and assessment will occur primarily through Oncourse, a web-based educational support system. Lectures may be delivered via classroom, television, or the web. This course will not be counted towards a business degree or minor.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS M2010 - Marketing For The Small Business |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of marketing management as it applies to the small business. Gain an understanding of traditional and non-traditional marketing techniques. Determine best marketing plan for different types of ventures. This course is required for the Certificate in Small Business Management. No credit toward a B.S. in business. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUS M2260 - Personal Selling Technique |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed in response to the developing need to have a sales related course designed for non-business majors. It is recognized that people in every profession have to communicate ideas, plans, proposals, etc. in a persuasive manner. Five basic areas will be covered in the course: 1) the selling process, 2) the investigative stage, 3) the demonstration of capability stage, 4) the commitment stage, and 5) the designing of sales models to improve performance results.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| BUS M3000 - Introduction To Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of the market economy and marketing institutions in the United States. Decision making and planning from the manager's point of view; impact of marketing actions from the consumer's point of view. No credit toward a degree in business. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS M3010 - Introduction To Marketing Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of marketing management in a dynamic competitive environment and tolls for decision-making, from both the firm's and the consumer's viewpoint. Application to global markets and other business disciplines. Provides a firm foundation marketing theory and marketing lexicon. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS M3030 - Marketing Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on the role of research in marketing decision-making. Topics include defining research objectives, syndicated and secondary data sources of marketing information, exploratory research methods, survey research design, experimental design, and data analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS M3040 - Honors Marketing Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Marketing planning and decision making examined from the firm’s and the consumer’s points of view; marketing concept and its company-wide implications; integration of marketing with other functions. Market structure and behavior and their relationship to marketing strategy and implementation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
|
| BUS M3710 - Marketing: Integrated Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Marketing planning, strategies and decision-making examined from the organizational and customers’ perspectives; marketing concept and its implications throughout the value chain, including marketing’s relationship to other functional areas within the firm. Market structure and consumer behavior and their relationship to marketing strategy and implementation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS M4010 - International Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Covers world markets, their respective consumers, and their political/economic marketing environments. Examines the marketing issues required to meet the product, promotion, price, and distribution demands of a world market. Although the course has a global orientation, issues specific to exporting are discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS M4020 - Marketing Channels |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Marketing channels analyzed as organized behavior systems. Focuses on the institutional structure, relationships, and functions of channels of distribution. Franchising, vertical integration, and vertical channel agreements also are emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| BUS M4050 - Consumer Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Behavior of the buyer relevant to marketing decision. Logic of market segmentation and recognition of customer heterogeneity. Buyer behavior analyzed in terms of customer's decision-making process, and models of individual and aggregate behavior. Specific attention to consumer behavior in retail markets and procurement behavior in industrial markets. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS M4070 - Business-To-Business Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Business student of senior standing. Problems, activities, and decision methods involved in the marketing of goods and services by business to business. Demand estimation, pricing, promotion distribution systems, and role of non-consumer buyers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS M4080 - Quantitative Methods For Marketing Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of key quantitative tools to marketing management problems. Emphasis given to application of quantitative methods to basic marketing problems and the role of quantitative methods in marketing management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUS M4110 - Transportation Carrier Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the carrier-shipper marketing interface with concentration on the variables of rates, service, and government regulations. Modal coverage from an integrated marketing viewpoint. An advanced course that exposes students to
market-rate considerations, carrier financial problems, operational factors, and marketing opportunities. Functional analysis of all major transportation modes. Identification of major issues, analysis of alternatives, and discussion of probable future outcomes.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS M4120 - Physical Distribution Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Management of product distribution systems within an organization. Traffic, inventory control, warehousing, and other activity centers are analyzed for improvement and related to overall systems performance. Order entry and the customer service variables of order-cycle time and reliability are examined in relation to the sales function. Includes analysis of the impact of physical distribution decisions on other functional areas.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS M4150 - Advertising And Promotion Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic concepts applicable to the use of advertising and sales promotion. Addresses the overall planning, management, and integration of the firm's promotional strategy. Public policy aspects and the role of advertising in marketing communications as they may relate to different cultures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS M4190 - Retail Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Major management problems in retail institutions. Treatment of retail/marketing strategy design and problems related to financial requirements, buying, inventory, pricing, promotion, merchandising, physical facilities, location, and personnel. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS M4200 - New Product Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the marketing of new products from idea generation through commercialization. Emphasis is on creativity, while at the same time discussing the practical aspects of marketing management necessary to improve the product's probability of success. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUS M4260 - Sales Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Management of the field sales force. Basic sales management concepts including organization and staffing, allocation of effort, control, and evaluation. A portion of the course is devoted to the special problems of selling in the non-consumer market. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS M4500 - Marketing Strategy And Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Ideally taken during student's last semester. Provides a capstone to marketing course sequence by drawing on and integrating concepts previously studied. Focuses on management decision problems in marketing-strategy design and the application of analytical tools for optimizing marketing decisions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-New Albany
|
| BUS M4800 - Professional Practice In Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Application filed through Professional Practice Program Office. Work experience in cooperating firm or agencies. Comprehensive written report. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Coop, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
|
| BUS M4900 - Special Studies-Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Supervised individual study and research in student's special field of interest. Written report required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BUS M5010 - Strategic Marketing Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Core course to offer all managers a broad strategic perspective on the importance of markets and marketing in the successful management of a firm. Topics include: The role of marketing in a successful managed firm, strategic market analysis and planning, pricing, distribution and promotion of goods and services and making sound market related decisions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS M5030 - Applied Marketing Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Applied Marketing Research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS M5260 - Internet Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will provide students with the tools to complete more effectively the new digital economy. Course content will include assessing new market opportunities, developing integrated online/offline marketing strategy, designing Internet-based marketing programs & understanding the keys to success in building and nurturing customer relationship via internet based market ting programs. Internet marketing strategies and programs will be compared and contrasted to traditional marketing w/an emphasis on the marketing challenges the cybermarketplace provided. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS P2000 - Foundations of Operations and Supply Chain Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to introduce the student to the basic ideas and concepts that make up the field of operations and supply chain management and to prepare the student to take an active role in operations decision-making in the workplace. The course will acquaint the student with basic operations management concepts and terminology.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS P3000 - Introduction To Operations Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Offered for students with a formal minor in business. The operations function is concerned with the
activity associated with the production of goods and services. Provides an overview of operating decisions and practices in both manufacturing- and service-oriented firms. While no attempt is made to cover any particular area in depth, standard terms and concepts required to communicate effectively with operating personnel are introduced. No credit toward a degree in business. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| BUS P3010 - Operations Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the principles of production and operations management that provides an integrated overview of the role of the operations function in gaining competitive advantage in a global environment. Topics include demand forecasting, product design, process materials management, planning and control, scheduling, and project management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS P3040 - Honors Operations Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey course concerned with the production and distribution of goods and services. Part of the Integrative Core, along with F304 and M304. Examines how a firm produces and delivers its goods and services, with consistent and acceptable levels of quality, in a cost-effective manner. The discussion covers a wide range of interrelated issues including quality and process improvement, forecasting, planning, resource management, customer service, scheduling, and layout and process design. A semester-long, team project is the primary activity used to integrate the three core courses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS P3200 - Supply Chain Management: Sourcing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Sourcing/ purchasing has become a major source of economic benefit to most firms. This course is a comprehensive look at this important area of supply chain management. The course examines the purchasing function in industrial firms. Topics include sourcing (domestic and international), specifications, and standards; contract and pricing practices; negotiation; quality assurance and reliability; inventory management; value analysis; capital equipment buying; make-or-buy decisions; evaluation of purchasing performance; and ethics.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS P3300 - Project Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will introduce the student to the full range of project management topics, concerns, problems, solution methods, and decision processes. These areas include: project selection, project organizational structures, negotiation, project planning, project scheduling and resource loading, project budgeting, project monitoring and control, project auditing, and project termination. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS P3710 - Operations And Supply Chain Management Integrated Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 Concerned with the processes by which organizations produce and create goods and services, with consistent and acceptable levels of quality, in a cost-effective manner. A wide range of interconnected issues are covered, such as product development, quality and process improvement, forecasting, production planning, managing resources, customer service, scheduling, and layout process design. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS P4210 - Operations Planning And Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design of information, planning, and control systems for allocating resources and scheduling activities in manufacturing firms. Topics include operations information systems, forecasting, aggregate output planning, inventory control, materials requirements planning, and scheduling. (Irregular Offering). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUS P4290 - Supply Chain Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on the study of the processes by which products are created and delivered to customers. The course emphasizes the process flow method using three measures of process achievement: throughput (the rate of product delivery), flowtime (the time it takes to deliver that product), and inventory. Topics include Little's Law, the uses of inventory, the importance of time-based competition, process analysis, and bottleneck analysis. Computational analysis using simulation is emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS P4300 - Total Quality Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces students to concepts of total quality management. Methods and application of quality control techniques commonly used in manufacturing and service organizations are presented. Research and theory relevant to quality concepts such as the economics and measurement of quality, the evolution of total quality managment, team building and employee empowerment, vendor relations, elementary reliability theory, customer relations and feedback, quality assurance systems, statistical quality control, preventive maintenance programs, and product safety and liability are discussed.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS P4900 - Independent Study In Operations Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Supervised individual study and research in student's special field of interest. Written report required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| BUS P5010 - Operations Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The management of operations in manufacturing and service firms using strategic and tactical skills. Topics include process analysis work force issues, materials management, quality and productivity, strategic planning and relevant analytical techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS P5090 - Supply Chain Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. This course is divided into two main parts. Three-quarters of this class is designed to help students begin to understand how to develop and manage efficient and effective physical distribution and logistics system. Students taking this course will learn the fundamentals of successfully exploiting supply chains by carefully coordinating distribution tasks, controlling resources (especially inventory), and leveraging technology (principally information systems). The overall goal of this part of the course is to introduce and familiarize you with the basic concepts and skills necessary for supply chain management as a manager, analyst, or consultant. The remaining quarter of this course focuses on Sourcing (also called purchasing) and how to conduct successful negotiations. Instructional tools include lectures, readings, and a group negotiation project. The course content covers both quantitative and qualitative materials. During the term we will also consider physical distribution and sourcing issues in parts of the world with underdeveloped infrastructure. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS P5270 - Operations Processes I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. Operations Processes I. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS P5280 - Operation Processes II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. Operations Processes II. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS P5610 - Supply Chain Management And Technologies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. The overall goal of this course is to introduce and familiarize you with the concepts and skills necessary for supply chain management as a consultant, analyst, or manager. In this course, we will identify the major issues in supply chain management to better understand their performance. We will study the basic tools for supply chain management in production planning and inventory control, order fulfillment, and multi-stage/multi-location coordination. We will also consider the growing role of information systems in supply chains and devising supply chain strategy. During the course we will also consider issues related to the implementation of supply chain improvements. We will use a variety of instructional tools including lectures and case discussions. The course content covers both quantitative and qualitative materials. The cases will feature a range of companies and leading edge as well as traditional distribution and logistics issues. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS R3050 - Introduction To Real Estate Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. For students who may take additional real estate courses. Topics include real estate law, brokerage, property management, appraising, mortgage finance, and investment analysis. Emphasis on the analytical techniques applicable to real estate. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS R4400 - Real Estate Appraisals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Methods of appraising real property, with emphasis on income property; covers relevant concepts and analytical techniques. Course content is similar to that which a professional appraiser must learn. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS S2250 - Business Telecommunications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces students to a wide range of telecommunications technologies, including local area networks, wide area networks, and the Internet, as well as to the uses of these technologies in the organization. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS S3020 - Management Information Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of management information systems (MIS) within a business context with emphasis on end-user computing. Covers MIS theory and practice as they relate to management and organization theories; current trends in MIS; managerial usage of information systems; computer hardware, software, and telecommunications; information systems for marketing, finance, accounting, and other business areas; systems development process; and the role of microcomputers. Provides experiential learning by exposure to various decision-support tools for microcomputers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS S3050 - Business Telecommunications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces students to a wide range of telecommunications technologies, including local area networks, wide area networks, and the Internet, as well as uses of these technologies in the organization. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS S3070 - Data Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Improves students' understanding of, and develops their skills in, the design and implementation of business databases using modern database management systems. Covers data structures and the conceptual, logical, and physical design of databases, as well as database implementation and general issues in business data management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS S3100 - Systems Analysis And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of an organization and the subsequent design of computer systems to meet business requirements are at the heart of the computer information systems (CIS) field. This is the first in a two-course sequence with BUS S410 that addresses the multiphased process for developing information systems. Courses follow the system's development life cycle, although alternative methodologies are also covered. This first course covers the phases from information systems planning through the specification of structured system requirements in functional form (i.e., logical system design) and concentrates on methods, techniques, and tools used to determine information requirements and to document these requirements in a thorough and unambiguous form. Also introduces computer-aided software engineering (CASE) technology. Students learn the discipline of systems analysis and logical design through a hypothetical case situation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS S5550 - Information Technology For Managers |
|
Credit Hours: 1.5. Information Technology For Managers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS S5560 - Information Technology For Managers Part II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. In this course, students will be introduced to key concepts and ideas in information technology. Special emphasis will be given to addressing these ideas from a managerial perspective. This course is designated an ADC course by the School of Business and will be delivered to remote learning sites. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS W1000 - Principles Of Business Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. An introduction to functional areas of business, tracing the evolution of business, business forms, the role of government and society, relationships between administrators and employees, ethical issues, and the globalization of world markets. Ideal for pre-business students or students of any major desiring a basic understanding of business. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS W2000 - Introduction To Business And Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Business administration from the standpoint of the manager of a business firm operating in the contemporary economic, political, and social environment. No credit for Kelley Business students when taken concurrently with or after the integrative core.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS W2010 - Small Business Management Capstone |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of concepts studied in previous courses in the Certificate in Small Business Management. A business plan or project will be used in a simulated real world environment to clarify the concepts presented in previous required courses. This course is required for the Certificate in Small Business Management. No Credit toward B.S. in Business. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUS W2040 - Social,Legal And Ethical Implications Of Business |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The interaction of business and society beyond objectives of profit maximization. Issues addressed include the interplay of social, political, legal, economic, global and ethical variables as they influence the firm and it's conduct of business operations. Such analysis will stress the historical, current, and projected role of business in society. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUS W2110 - Contemporary Entrepreneurship |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey course designed to enable students to explore the vast opportunities of entrepreneurship. Multidisciplinary approach that examines the macro- and microconditions that encourage entrepreneurship. Course objectives are (1) to learn the basic concepts of entrepreneurship; (2) to understand the human side of entrepreneurship; and (3) to encourage entrepreneurial thinking by the student and enable the student to evaluate the personal prospects for entrepreneurship. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS W2120 - Explore Entrepreneurship |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to expose you to the basic concepts and language of contemporary entrepreneurship. A primary objective of this course is to encourage entrepreneurial thinking and enable you to evaluate your personal prospects for entrepreneurship. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS W3010 - Principles Of Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to synthesize knowledge of principles and functions of management: planning, organizing, staffing, directing, controlling, and decision making. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS W3110 - New Venture Creation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Primarily for those interested in creating a new business venture or acquiring an existing business. Covers such areas as choice of a legal form, problems of the closely-held firm, sources of funds, preparation of a business plan, and negotiation. (Irregular Offering). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS W3120 - Entrepreneurship |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. New venture creation; business planning and it's formalization; corporate and social entrepreneurship. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUS W3200 - Leadership And Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will explore the inter-related areas of business leadership and business ethics. We will examine examples of leadership and ethical crises, how organizations and their systems shape leadership effectiveness and ethical considerations, and relate these ideas to events taking place in the real-world. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| BUS W4040 - Social, Legal, And Ethical Implications Of Business Decisions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Covers topics in corporate social responsibility and the social control of business; the major ethical theories relevant to determining that responsibility; and applications of those theories in areas such as financial management, competition, marketing, advertising, the environment, employer-employee relations, and the international arena. The course addresses some of the major questions about the ethical responsibilities of businesses. Should a business just look out for its “bottom line,” or should it look out for its employees, customers, community, and environment too? When a business operates in a foreign country, is it morally obligated to pay wages that would be considered fair in America, or is it enough to abide by local laws and regulations? And how can the ethical point of view shed light on disasters such as the Challenger explosion? Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUS W4080 - Practicum In Small Business |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of theory, knowledge, and techniques learned in previous business courses in analyzing actual business problems and in offering recommendations for their solutions. Students are assigned to small businesses in the local or nearby communities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Richmond
|
| BUS W4300 - Organizations And Organizational Change |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis and development of organization design and change in order to increase organizational effectiveness. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS W4800 - Professional Practice In Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Application filed through Professional Practice Program Office. Provides work experience in cooperating firm or agencies. Comprehensive written report required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Richmond
|
| BUS W4900 - Independent Study-Business Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Supervised individual study and research in student's special field of interest. Written report required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| BUS W4940 - Seminar In Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Open to seniors in Division of Business as well as selected juniors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS X1000 - Business Administration: Introduction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Business administration from the standpoint of the manager of a business firm operating in the contemporary economic, political, and social environment. No credit for Kelley School of Business students when taken concurrently with or after the integrative core. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS X1030 - Business Learning Community |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00-3.00. This course is designed to assist students to be successful at the university and to develop skills and competencies that will enable a student to perform well in courses offered by the Kelley School of Business. Each Learning Community has an instructional team that is led by a faculty member and includes a student mentor, an academic advisor, and a librarian. The instructional team structures the learning environment to provide participants with as much academic support as possible. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS X1050 - Business Administration Introduction - Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Business administration from the standpoint of the manager of a business firm operating in the contemporary economic, political, and social environment. No credit for Kelley School of Business students when taken concurrently with or after the integrative core. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS X2020 - Technology: Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students cover the same basic material as in X201; but they are pushed to go a bit farther with more challenging projects. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS X2030 - Independent Study In Community Service Learning |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Independent study course for students intending to apply to Kelley School of Business and have 26-56 credit hours. Students will participate in an on-line library research program, survey and analyze written works on business ethics and social responsibility and participate in a group social learning project that involves multiple visits to elementary schools. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS X2040 - Business Communications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and practice of written communication in business; use of correct, forceful English in preparation of letters, memoranda, and reports. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS X2200 - Career Perspectives |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Assists students in constructing their academic programs and postcollege plans. Students are involved in group interaction with managers, senior executives, faculty, junior or senior student mentors, alumni, and community leaders. Students use data from tests and exercises to consider career options as they relate to such topics as globalization, total quality management, workforce diversity, leadership theory, and volunteerism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS X2930 - Honors Seminar in Business |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. For students in Business Honors Program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BUS X3000 - Career Planning For Non-Business Majors |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course will provide non-business majors with the strategies and tools necessary to explore careers, prepare for the job or internship search, and/or to identify graduate school options. Topics include, but will not be limited to, resumes and job search document preparation, job search strategies, and assistance identifying career options. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| BUS X3020 - Communication Core II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Emphasizes development of communication skills through writing exercises related to tax research. In addition, covers how to access the primary and secondary sources of tax law, including the Internal Revenue Code, regulations and other administrative pronouncements, and judicial decisions. Explains the research process and the use of research tools to locate sources of tax law. Utilizes both paper products and electronic (Internet) resources. Emphasizes how to read and interpret source materials. Tax research assignments stress writing skills and the need for effective communication of research findings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS X3100 - Business Career Planning And Placement |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Assists students in obtaining positions consistent with career goals. Career planning, organized employment campaign, job application methods, interview, initial conduct on job. Includes addresses by prominent business persons. Also open to juniors and seniors of other schools. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS X3200 - Business Career Planning And Placement |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Assists students in obtaining positions consistent with career goals. Covers career planning, self-assessment, career options, organized employment campaigns, interviewing techniques, employment communications, alternate job search strategies, and career management. Involves in-depth work with resume software, electronic mail, and other communication tools. Session with corporate managers describing work issues and training programs. Also open to seniors in schools other than business. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| BUS X3900 - Integrative Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Integrative Experience is a unique learning experience that integrates knowledge and skills from three critical functions of the business enterprise: finance, marketing and operations. Managers of firms and organizations big and small need to understand the interrelated dynamics of all three functions in order to be successful, highly valued managers (and for their firms to be successful, highly valued enterprises). An integrated business simulation is the primary tool used to analyze, integrate, and synthesize the management of a business in a team environment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
|
| BUS X3930 - Honors Seminar in Business |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. For students in the Business Honors Program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BUS X3940 - Practicum In Business |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Laboratory experience of learning with and from practicing entrepreneurs. Shadowing and co-investing experiences with the clientele of the northeast Indiana Innovation Center and the Center for Enterpreneurial Excellence. Experience in taking vision to reality. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| BUS X4100 - Business Career Planning & Placement |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Obtaining positions consistent with career goals. Career planning, organized employment campaign, job application methods, interviewing, and initial conduct on the job. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS X4200 - Business Career Planning And Placement |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Develops written and verbal career communication skills using career planning and job search concepts as the vehicle. Communication tools used include work processing, electronic data bases, self-assessment, E-mail, networking, interviewing presentations, simulations, resume preparation software, and employment correspondence. Exploring career options is addressed by business managers. Assists in employment tool creation for lifelong planning. Offered in the fall semester only. Required of all senior level business majors. Required of non-business majors using Business Placement services. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
|
| BUS X4800 - Professional Practice In Business Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Undergraduate students with two years of college-level German skills may apply and interview for this internship program. Following selection into the program, students will be assigned to an internship position with a company in Germany for 8-10 weeks during the summer. Requirements include two on-campus orientation sessions during spring semester, a two-day orientation upon arrival in Germany, successful completion of the internship, and a written report to be submitted by October 1 of the following fall. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BUS X4870 - Seminar In Business Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Instruction of an interdisciplinary nature for student groups involved in university-related non-profit ventures. Interested groups must be sponsored by a School of Business faculty member and must obtain approval for the seminar from the Undergraduate Policy Committee. May be repeated up to a maximum of 8 credits. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| BUS X4930 - Honors Seminar In Business |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Open to students in the School of Business Honors Program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| BUS X5110 - Seminar In Management Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 1.0 - 3.0. Seminar In Mgmt Issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BUS X5180 - Business Of Life Sciences I: Trends |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. The basic focus of this course is the enumeration and analysis of key trends shaping the future of life sciences companies-demographics, globalization, regulation, cost controls, mergers and acquisitions, scientific discovery, technological innovation, etc. The life sciences industries will be impacted by many factors in expected, unexpected and subtle ways. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS X5220 - Enterprise Lectures |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50 to 3.00. Required lecture series and case competition for Evening MBA students to support enterprise experience. Introduction to the enterprise curriculum through industry speakers and an applied focus to management problems. Students also gain knowledge of industry-specific career tracks. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS X5730 - Exp Course For MBA Program |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exp Course For MBA Program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| BUS X5760 - Kelley International Perspect Field Study |
|
Credit Hours: 1.5. Kelley International Perspect Field Study. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS X5770 - Strategic Client Project Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 1.5. Strategic Client Project Practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS Z2000 - Introduction To Human Resources Practices |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide a basic overview of human resources practices and principles which all managers need to be aware of in today?s business environment. Specifically, we will focus on employment laws and trends which affect firms of all sizes, as well as managerial practices which can positively impact an organization.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS Z3010 - Organizational Behavior And Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Nature of human behavior in organizations as a function of the individual, the groups within which one interacts, and the organizational setting. Emphasis on applications of behavioral science concepts and findings to individual behavior and organizational performance. Credit not given for both Z300 and Z301.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS Z3020 - Managing And Behavior In Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to organizational behavior and management systems, the history and functions of management, and the dynamic environment under which organizations operate. Topics include types of organizations, measures of organizational effectiveness, individual and group behavior, leadership, motivation, and strategies for developing teamwork. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS Z3040 - Honors: Managing Behavior In Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The main purpose this course is to provide students with the tools necessary to manage people in a wide variety of contexts. The course will enable students to identify and appropriately respond to the most common managerial challenges. Our primary objective is to facilitate the development of management-related knowledge and skills that will be immediately applicable in positions students are likely to hold early in their careers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS Z3110 - Leadership And Ethics In The Business Environment |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50 to 3.00. This course will explore the inter-related areas of business leadership and business ethics. We will examine examples of leadership and ethical crises, and investigate the ethical, political, economic, and social considerations of various leadership decisions. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.500 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS Z3120 - Human Resources And Negotiations |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50 to 3.00. This course is designed to provide students with critical management tools, including general principles of human resources management, as well as negotiation skills, which will improve their interpersonal skills, as well as their knowledge of the current legal environment in which they must effectively operate. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.500 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS Z3130 - Employee Benefits |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. No longer considered as 'fringe' employee benefits are an integral part of an employee's total compensation package. At the same time they represent a substantial investment for employers and require diligence in funding and maintenance. This class is geared to provide the human resources major with a more in-depth understanding of some of the laws, trends, and financial implications of employee benefits in the private sector.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS Z3400 - Introduction To Human Resources |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to Human Resources. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| BUS Z4040 - Effective Negotiations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exposure to the concepts of negotiations in both the national and international environments, including negotiation strategies and tactics, influence, third-party intervention, audience effects, nonverbal communication, and ethical and cultural aspects. Case studies, simulations, and guest speakers will be used throughout the course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS Z4400 - Personnel: Human Resources Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Nature of human resource development and utilization in the American society and organization; government programs and policies, labor force statistics; personnel planning, needs forecasting; selection, training and development of human resources, integration of governmental and organizational programs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS Z4410 - Wage And Salary Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of problems faced by modern managers of compensation systems. In-depth look at the role of company, government, union, and employee in the design and administration of total compensation systems. Describes current wage and salary systems and their advantages and disadvantages. Integrates theory and practice through case analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS Z4430 - Developing Employee Skills |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on skills related to the acquisition and/or identification of knowledge, skills, and abilities among job applicants or current employees. Students will learn how to identify individuals who currently possess the knowledge; skills and abilities (KSAs) required to be effective members of contemporary organizations. In addition to skills associated with the staffing function (e.g. employment interviewing) students will address issues related to employee training and development. Students will learn how to identify specific training needs and to formulate and implement programs designed to address observed (KSA) deficiencies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
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| BUS Z4440 - Personnel Research and Measurement |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Personnel research through review and evaluation of contemporary studies in appropriate journals; opportunity to master personnel-measurement techniques, job analysis, evaluation; wage curve computation; predictor validation; morale measurement; personnel auditing. (Irregular Offering). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| BUS Z4800 - Professional Practice In Human Resource Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Provides work experience in a cooperative firm or agency. Comprehensive written report required. Grades of S or F are assigned by faculty. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
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| BUS Z4900 - Independent Study in Personnel Management and Organizational Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Supervised individual study and research in student's special field of interest. Written report required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| BUSM 10000 - Management Lectures I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An introduction to and survey of the field of management. Exposure to the different functional areas of management will be stressed. Focus will be on the individual development of the student in regard not only to future professional employment but also to his or her educational planning. Required for freshman mangement students. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Effectively use relevant vocabulary pertaining to higher education.
2. Apply time management techniques to one’s own life.
3. Explain the guidelines for course selection.
4. Apply plan of study concepts and techniques to one’s own major.
5. Demonstrate ability to research career information.
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| BUSM 10100 - Introduction To Business |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the internal operations and external environment of contemporary business. Consideration is also given to the social economic role of business in our society. The basic business functions and role of management are also discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain business activities and how they impact our everyday lives.
2. Explain basic business concepts, theories and techniques and how they apply in our local, national and internal affairs.
3. Discuss how a company’s policies and decisions affect its corporate social responsibility.
4. Identify three basic strategies of international business.
5. Identify various leadership styles.
6. Explain the function of balance sheets, income statements, and statements of cash flow.
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| BUSM 10500 - Quantitative Methods For Business |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Quantitative techinques applied in business situations that are essential to business activities. Topics covered include finance charges and compound interest, patrol, tax deductions, depreciation, descriptive statistics and graphical analysis. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Calculate percentages.
2. Calculate ratios.
3. Calculate and interpret rates of growth.
4. Solve simple time-value-of-money problems in the context of business decisions.
5. Calculate and interpret descriptive statistics.
|
| BUSM 19000 - Freshman Level Problems In Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Investigation into a specific topic area of Management. Arrange with instructor before enrolling. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be exposed to new topics in management. This is a variable title course and specific course objectives will be set by the professor relevant to the particular subject area.
|
| BUSM 22500 - Fundamental Managerial Statistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The foundation for statistical decision making. Topics include: probability theory, descriptive statistics, estimation, and statistical inference with managerial applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Summarize data with frequency distributions and graphic presentation.
2. Calculate and interpret descriptive statistics for central tendency, dispersion and location utilizing raw data and grouped data.
3. Define and interpret probability, including joint, Marginal and conditional probabilities.
4. Construct and interpret tree diagrams and contingency tables.
5. Utilize discrete and continuous probability distributions to determine probabilities.
6. Apply the central limit theorem to determine probabilities of sample means.
7. Calculate and interpret point estimates and construct confidence intervals.
8. Conduct Hypothesis tests for means and proportions using small and large samples.
9. Conduct Hypothesis tests for two means and two proportions using small and large samples.
10. Utilize linear regression to estimate and predict variables.
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| BUSM 29000 - Problems In Management |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 4.00. Arrange with instructor before enrolling. Investigation in a specific management field. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be exposed to new topics in management. This is a variable title course and specific course objectives will be set by the professor relevant to the particular subject area.
|
| BUSM 30100 - Management Career Lectures |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Workshops and lectures involving students in the decision-making process for career planning. Visiting executives discuss career opportunities in their fields. Emphasis is on future academic planning, exploring careers, search strategy, interviewing, career progression, and other career and academic issues. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Self-assess and express your occupational qualifications including educational background, work experience, strengths and weaknesses, accomplishments, skills, abilities, interests, values and personal qualities.
2. Implement targeted career search strategies by locating and utilizing available resources, networking, and researching prospective employers.
3. Develop effective career correspondence (resumes, cover letter, references and follow up).
4. Display and practice successful interview techniques.
|
| BUSM 30500 - Business Statistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to business statistics as related to facilitating managerial decision making. Topics include descriptive statistics, probability models, estimation, hypothesis testing, and regression analysis. Students use software to do their own analyses. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn about business statistics as they relate to facilitating managerial decision making, through topics such as descriptive statistics, probability models, estimation, hypothesis testing, and regression analysis.
|
| BUSM 30600 - Management Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Use of optimization, simulation, and decision theory models to support management decision making. Emphasis on modeling and interpreting results for managerial applications of linear and integer programming models, network problems, simulation models, and decision analysis. Computer applications are stressed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn management decision making through optimization, simulation, and decision theory models, by modeling and interpreting results for managerial applications of linear and integer programming models, network problems, simulation models, and decision analysis.
|
| BUSM 33010 - Non Profit Organizational Structures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the role and responsibilities of positions and structures including the role of volunteers in non-profit organizations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will know the various organizational structures of non-profit entities.
|
| BUSM 33300 - Total Quality Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the management culture, philosophy, practices, and processes necessary to develop a total quality orientation. The course bridges quantitative, behavioral, and strategic concepts for designing organizations to be dynamic, integrated systems whose outputs are monitored for quality and continuously improved. Not open to students with credit in IET 37800. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Effectively define and use Quality Management concepts and techniques.
2. Demonstrate the ability to apply the basic tools of TQM to business problems.
3. Develop and improve problem solving skills and apply them to quality issues and problems. Also, explain different quality methods/techniques.
4. Demonstrate the ability to work as part of a team.
5. Discuss the guidelines for implementing TQM and managing change in work organizations.
6. Present the international and cultural elements of TQM and its history.
|
| BUSM 35400 - Legal Foundations Of Business I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination and study, for management students, of the nature and place of law in our society, both national and international, the social and moral bases of law enactment, regulation of business, legal liability, enforcement procedures, and the legal environment for managers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Recognize ethical dilemmas, the stakeholders involved, the consequences of different decisions on these stakeholders, and apply an ethical model to propose and defend a resolution
2. Students will identify business practices that demonstrate social responsibility.
3. Students will produce quality business documents that are clear and concise.
4. Students will demonstrate critical thinking skills by analyzing problems and recommending appropriate solutions.
|
| BUSM 36000 - Production And Operations Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course concerning the management of production, distribution and service system operations. Topics covered include design of products, processes and facilities, planning, scheduling, and controlling inventory and quality. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Define the term productivity and explain why it is important to organizations and to countries.
2. Describe averaging techniques, trend and seasonal techniques, and regression analysis, and solve typical problems in Forecasting.
3. Define reliability, perform simple reliability computations and explain the purpose of redundancy in the system.
4. Discuss ways of defining and measuring capacity.
5. Formulate a linear programming model from a description of a problem, solve simple linear programming problems, and interpret computer solution of linear programming problem.
6. List and explain the elements of the quality control process and explain how control charts are used to monitor a process.
7. Explain what aggregate planning is and prepare aggregate plans and compute their costs.
8. Describe the basic EOQ model, the economic run size model, and the quantity discount model and solve typical problems in inventory management.
9. Explain what scheduling involves and the importance of good scheduling.
10. Give a general description of PERT/CPM techniques and analyze networks with deterministic and probabilistic times and solve typical problems.
|
| BUSM 36100 - Business Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The operations function in a business enterprise. Topics include measuring capacity and productivity, product and process design, facility location and layout, inventory and scheduling. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain in one’s own terms, the key elements in a process, distinguish key supply chain processes, and identify trends in process management.
2. Distinguish the basic types of processes.
3. Explain the role of demand management and forecasting in an organization, describe the demand management process, and distinguish independent demand and derived demand.
4. Identify the components of time series data and compute a simple time series forecast.
5. Calculate various metrics to measure forecast accuracy and compute a tracking signal for measuring the performance of a forecasting model.
6. Identify three factors significant to product and service design.
7. Apply a break-even analysis for new product/service justification.
8. Construct a simple line balance and a forward schedule using a GANTT chart.
9. Describe continuous improvement and the costs of poor quality performance.
10. Describe simple tools of quality management processes.
11. Calculate process capability.
12. Construct control charts for common process metrics and identify when a process is not in control.
13. Compute the economic order quantity and the economic production quantity.
14. Utilize a spreadsheet model to determine an appropriate order quantity.
15. Describe an ABC inventory classification system.
16. Construct an appropriate aggregate plan.
17. Construct schedules that compare capacity utilization in service enterprises and the demand management techniques that can level demand and improve capacity utilization.
18. Conduct a work flow analysis for a simple process.
19. Determine the critical path of a project.
|
| BUSM 36300 - Total Quality Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Building upon basic statistical principles, this course covers the topics of acceptance sampling, control charts, capability, experimental design and regression analysis. Not open to students with credit in IET 35500. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn and apply the statistical tools of total quality techniques.
|
| BUSM 36400 - Emerging Issues In Total Quality Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topical coverage will change as the field of quality management evolves. Issues such as Just in Time, Taguchi methods, Ishikawa, Ohno, Shingo and Toyota systems will be studied. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be exposed to emerging issues in the field of quality management and will apply those concepts in a practical setting.
|
| BUSM 38000 - International Business |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the nature of international business. The course addresses the international business environment, including economic, political, legal, and social aspects. The assessment of international opportunities and risk is also addressed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. To gain an appreciation and better understanding of the importance of world trade to the global economy.
2. To be able to identify global and international business issues and propose appropriate solutions.
3. To understand how business functions differ in the international environment.
4. To understand the impact of current events, cultural and geopolitical barriers to global and international business.
|
| BUSM 38300 - Practicum In Quality Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is run in conjunction with the Small Business Institute of the Department of Management. Students will design and help implement quality management systems and concepts in an actual business. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will design and help implement quality management systems and concepts in an actual business.
|
| BUSM 39000 - Junior Level Problems In Management |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 4.00. The Accounting Internship provides work experience in businesses or other institutions. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be exposed to new topics in management. This is a variable title course and specific course objectives will be set by the professor relevant to the particular subject area.
|
| BUSM 39100 - Internship In Business |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Students work in a business organization in an organized and supervised situation, designed to provide experience and challenge in a business situation. Students are evaluated by the organization supervisor and the academic coordinator. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will apply theoretical concepts to a real world internship experience.
2. Students will enhance their ability to work in the field by actively participating in a real world work environment.
3. Students will demonstrate enhanced learning and knowledge of their program of study.
4. Students will demonstrate that they have met the expectations of the employer and served as a goodwill ambassador for the University.
|
| BUSM 40010 - Non Profit Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course includes principles of non-profit management as well as the roles and responsibilities of a non-profit board of directors, and become acquainted with the fundamentals of the programming and budgeting process. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand operating principles of managing non-profit organizations.
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| BUSM 41400 - Non Profit Grant Writing And Fund Raising |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The purpose of the course is to prepare students to write grants for non-profit organizations and methods of basic fund raising and become acquainted with the fundamentals of the programming and budgeting process. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be prepared to perform basic fund raising functions and write grants for non-profit organizations.
|
| BUSM 45000 - Strategic Management: Capstone |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An extensive study of management problems in business at policy-making levels; primarily for students majoring in management. Should be taken only in last semester of senior year. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain types, concepts, and tools of strategy and strategic management.
2. Develop a strategic plan.
3. Report and present an analysis of a strategically-run global company using professional, clear, and persuasive communication
4. Demonstrate critical thinking skills by analyzing problems and recommending feasible solutions.
|
| BUSM 46500 - Forecasting For Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course examining the statistical techniques of forecasting. Emphasis is placed on time-series data and computer based methods of estimation and testing of marketing and financial data will be studies. Not open to students with credit in ECON 46500. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Follow a systematic process to generate a forecast.
2. Evaluate the efficiency and accuracy of forecasting models.
3. Apply moving average and exponential smoothing techniques to time series data.
4. Generate a forecast from a multiple regression model.
5. Apply an ARIMA-type forecasting model to time-series data.
|
| BUSM 48900 - International Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores how differences in cultural core values shape behavior and attitudes of workers, managerial colleagues, and negotiating partners. Special attention is directed towards the importance of culture in managerial decision making. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. An appreciation for cultural differences found throughout the world.
2. A working knowledge of the dominant theoretical frameworks that provide cross-cultural understanding and facilitate better international management behavior.
3. A better understanding of how to motivate, lead, communicate, negotiate, and settle disputes in a multicultural setting.
4. A better appreciation of how strategies vary internationally, and the workings of effective global alliances.
5. Analytical skills and an ethical framework useful for managerial decision-making in the global environment.
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| BUSM 49000 - Problems In Industrial Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Investigation in a specific management field. Arrange with instructor before enrolling. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be exposed to new topics in management. This is a variable title course and specific course objectives will be set by the professor relevant to the particular subject area.
|
| BUSM 49500 - Internship in Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. A special course in selected areas of management, designed to provide practical field experience under professional supervision in selected situations related to the student's area of specialization. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will apply theoretical concepts to a real world internship experience.
2. Students will enhance their ability to work in the field by actively participating in a real world work environment.
3. Students will demonstrate enhanced learning and knowledge of their program of study.
4. Students will demonstrate that they have met the expectations of the employer and served as a goodwill ambassador for the University.
|
| BUSM 49900 - Undergraduate Research In Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will work with a faculty member on research project in their major. They will contribute to ongoing research while learning current research techniques in management. During this process the students will develop critical thinking and oral and written communication skills. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will work on a theoretical or applied research project.
2. Students will write up the results of the study in a professional format.
3. When feasible, students will submit and present their work at a research conference.
|
| CAND 49900 - NSE Enrollment Record |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. NSE Enrollment Record. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CAND 90000 - IU Degree Candidate |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CAND 99100 - Candidate |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Candidate status. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
|
| CAND 99200 - Degree Only |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Degree only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
Course Attributes: Less Than Half Time Enrollment
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
|
| CAND 99300 - Exam Only |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Exam only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
Course Attributes: Less Than Half Time Enrollment
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
|
| CAND 99400 - Graduation Only |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
|
| CDFS 21100 - Development And Growth Of Children |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the growth and development of children from birth through adolescence. Emphasis on physical growth, emotional and social behavior, cognitive and language development within contexts of family, school, and peer groups. Focus on observational methods. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| CDFS 25500 - Introduction To Couple And Family Relationships |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides further understanding of family relations for those unmarried, those contemplating marriage, or for those married, and for prospective marriage counselors. A functional approach to the interpersonal relationships of courtship, marriage, and family. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
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| CDFS 31200 - Adult Development |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An in-depth study of developmental processes from the transition to adulthood through old age. Particular emphasis is placed on understanding the influence of contexts on adult development. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify normative and non-normative changes from young to old age in the physical, cognitive, and emotional domains.
2. Develop skills for interviewing adults of varying ages.
3. Identify and apply how current issues in the field of adult development affect individuals’ lives.
4. Acquire a framework for assessing the connections between interpersonal development and the larger social context.
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| CDFS 31300 - Adolescent Development |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of the normative developmental issues and concerns of the adolescent, with some attention given to problem behavior. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Critically evaluate popular conceptions of adolescence and adolescents.
2. Compare and contrast theoretical perspectives on normative development during adolescence.
3. Identify the diversity in the developmental pathways during adolescence.
4. Acquire a framework for assessing the connections between interpersonal development and the larger social context.
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| CDFS 33200 - Stress Points In Contemporary Families |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines theoretical perspectives related to family stress and resilience and connects these perspectives to empirical work on family dynamics and dysfunction across the lifespan. Problems associated with family formation, parent-child relations, family care giving, and families in remarriage as well as contemporary family relations thought to be challenges themselves such as divorce, incest, and family violence are explored. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe theory and research concerning family stress, coping and social support.
2. Describe theory and research concerning internal family functioning and interaction.
3. Apply theories of family stress and family processes to shifts in family structure and functioning in diverse contexts.
4. Describe professional applications and issues relating to crises or special issues in family life.
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| CDFS 33400 - Aging And The Family |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Aging in the family context: roles, relationships, and conditions of life in the family during later stages; intergenerational relations; policy and practice issues. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe family ties and family processes in middle and late adulthood.
2. Recognize diversity in family ties across the life course.
3. Identify reciprocal exchanges between older and younger family members.
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| CDFS 39000 - Special Topics In CDFS |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Supervised readings, discussion, lectures and/or research on special topics in family and individual development. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Research
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
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| CDFS 58600 - Seminar In Human Development And Disability |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The Seminar on Human Development and Disability will expose students to multiple perspectives related to the issues in human development and disability related issues. The purpose of the course is to provide an interdisciplinary experience for students preparing for work in the human services. Each class has a variety of professionals present on a topic they have expertise in (i.e. Autism, diagnostics, speech disabilities) and allows students to gain more in-depth knowledge about each topic and ask questions. There will be three scheduled field trips to allow students field experience in a human service agency including Riley Child Development Center in Indianapolis, IN., First Steps in Crown Point, IN., and Opportunity Enterprises in Valparaiso, IN will be visited during the afternoon hours for two of the scheduled meeting days. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. The course will extend the students’ knowledge of human development specifically in the context of disability.
2. The course will provide students with knowledge related to the interdisciplinary approach required to work with individuals with disability.
3. The course will provide students with the opportunity to interact with researchers and professionals from multiple disciplines who work with individuals having disabilities.
4. The course will provide students with exposure to interdisciplinary research related to disability and the critical evaluation of that research.
5. The course will provide students with structured experiential activities designed to familiarize them with human service practice and research.
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| CDFS 59000 - Special Problems |
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Credit Hours: 0.00 to 5.00. Special subjects for investigation and experiment according to the individual student's interest and need. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| CDFS 60100 - Advanced Child Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an overview of foundational and current developmental research on changes that occur within the individual throughout infancy, childhood, and early adolescence. Emphasis is given to processes and mechanisms that have been proposed to explain developmental changes. This course includes attention to social and cultural contexts within which individuals develop. Prerequisite: Graduate level course work in Child Development or Psychology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| CDFS 60200 - Advanced Family Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Integrative and comprehensive assessment of both classic and recent contributions in the field of family studies. Other topics include major theory and research, historical, current, and future critical issues in family studies. Prerequisite: 12 hours of social sciences including six hours of advanced undergraduate courses preparing student for the study of the family. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| CDFS 60300 - Theories Of Family Therapy |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the history of family therapy, major family therapy theorists, and therapy treatment modalities. Prerequisite: Graduate level course work in Child Development. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| CDFS 61500 - Research Methods In Child And Family Study |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Basic research methods employed in the study of children and families are examined, including quantitative and qualitative designs, data collection, analysis, and interpretation. In the laboratory component, students are afforded supervised practice in the application of various methods using selected statistical analysis programs. Prerequisite: Graduate course in Statistics. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| CDFS 61800 - Program Development And Evaluation |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The course will acquaint students with the life cycle of interventions deployed by a variety of organizations including human services, public administration, and non-profits. Program development emphases include needs assessment, the replication of evidence-based practice, theory of change and the use of logic methods, and grant writing. Program evaluation emphases include theoretical approaches to evaluation, the use of data and measures, and exposure to both formative and summative approaches to program evaluation . Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will demonstrate an understanding of the process of program development in the context of publicly and privately funded social interventions.
2. Students will demonstrate an understanding of the process of program evaluation in the context of publicly and privately funded social interventions.
3. Students will become acquainted with the design of intervention programs designed to address social need.
4. Students will become acquainted with how to approach the funding of intervention programs.
5. Students will become acquainted with how to design an evaluation for intervention programs.
6. Students will become acquainted with the concept of evidence-based practice related to intervention programs.
7. Students will understand the ethical considerations in the context of program evaluation.
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| CDFS 65700 - Social Constructionist Family Therapies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigation of theory, research, and practice of constructivist and social constructionist family therapies. Readings include a wide range of original work by major theorists, such as White, deShazer, and Anderson & Goolishian. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| CDFS 66000 - Family Therapy Skills |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Training of basic family therapy skills. Procedures are applied in practice groups and analogue situations. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| CDFS 66300 - Structural And Strategic Family Therapies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigation of theory, research, and practice of structural and strategic family therapies. Readings will include a wide range of the original works of major theorists such as Erickson, Minuchin, Haley, Watzlawick, and Palazzoli. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| CDFS 66500 - Transgenerational And Specialized Family Therapies |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigation of theory, research, and practice of transgenerational and specialized family therapies. Readings will include a wide range of original works of the major theorists. Prerequisite: CDFS 60300. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| CDFS 66700 - Practicum In Marriage Counseling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Supervised counseling experience in working with premarital and marital problems. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| CDFS 66900 - Practicum In Family Therapy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Supervised counseling experience in family therapy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Practicum
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| CDFS 67100 - Sex Therapy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of the literature, research, and theories related to therapeutic interventions for sexual concerns in relationships. Particular attention is given to systemic approaches and to the relationship between marital and sex therapy. Prerequisite: CDFS 67000. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| CDFS 67800 - Externship In Marriage And Family Therapy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00 (West Lafayette) 3.00 to 9.00 (Calumet) Supervised clinical experience in marriage and family therapy at an approved externship site. Depending on the number of credit hours for which one is registered, will require 8-24 clinic hours and 3-9 experiential hours per week. Prerequisite: CDFS 66700, 66900. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Practicum
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| CDFS 68000 - Professional Issues For Child And Family Specialists |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Professional issues involved in working with children and families. Questions of ethics, legal relationships, and value problems may be pursued, as may such pragmatic inquiries as the role of professional organizations and labor unions in these fields. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| CDFS 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| CE 11500 - Engineering Drawing I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. (ME 11500) A technical drawing course covering engineering geometry, orthographic projection, auxiliary views, dimensioning, and tolerance using sketching techniques, and 2-D CAD. Credit is not allowed for both CE 11500 and ME 11500. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Construct orthographic projections and section views of objects.
2. Understand the basic concepts of computer aided drafting using AutoCAD software.
3. Identify the basic commands and concepts of CAD Software.
4. Produce a drawing using CAD.
5. Demonstrate the ability to operate CAD system.
6. Construct general engineering drawing using standard specifications and practices.
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| CE 11600 - Engineering Drawing II |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. (ME 11600) A continuation of the technical drawing course covering 3-D parametric modeling, part assembly modeling, and detail and assembly drawings. Credit is not allowed for both CE 11600 and ME 11600. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn to use a 3-D parametric solid modeling system (Pro/E).
2. Design and produce 3-D solid models and the respective engineering drawings using CAD (Pro/E).
3. Learn to understand and interpret engineering drawings.
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| CE 19100 - Civil Engineering Practice I |
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Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and written reports of this practice. For cooperative program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
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| CE 20000 - Fundamentals Of Surveying |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic surveying operations and computations; theories of errors and their analysis; fundamental concepts of horizontal, vertical, and angular measurement; horizontal and vertical control systems; traverse computations; location of man-made structures; use of topographic maps. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
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| CE 20100 - Surveying And GIS |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and practice of land surveying. Fundamentals of observing distances, elevations, and angles. Analysis of errors in surveying measurements. Computation of irregular areas. Circular and parabolic curves. Earth-work estimates. Computer applications, photogrammetry, geographic information systems (GIS) and global positioning systems (GPS) technologies.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| CE 20300 - Principles And Practice Of Geomatics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Basic surveying measurements and computations for engineering project control, mapping, and construction layout; theory of observational errors and error propagation; fundamental concepts of horizontal and vertical control systems; use of topographic maps and plan-profile sheets; computation of horizontal and vertical curves; introduction to computer tools used in Civil Engineering. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CE 20400 - Civil Engineering Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to the use, specification, and test common civil engineering construction materials such as steel, aluminum, aggregates, portland cement concrete, asphalt cement concrete, constituents of masonry, fiber reinforced plastics (FRP’s), and timber. Practical behaviors of these materials systems will be emphasized. An understanding of these behaviors will be approached through examination of the materials’ microstructural characteristics. This course will provide introductory details of composites. Lab work: Tensile Testing structural metal specimens, Torsion testing of structural metals, Charpy Impact test, Sieve and specific gravity analysis of portland cement concrete (PCC) aggregates, PCC mixing and initial tests, PCC 7 day compression test, PCC tensile strength (split cylinder and 3 point bend), asphalt binder test, PCC 28 day compression test, Asphalt mixing, gyratory compaction and specific gravity tests, Tensile testing of composite materials, Sample preparation and microscopic evaluation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn how to use, specify and test common civil engineering construction materials such as steel, aluminum, aggregates, cement concrete, and asphalt testing.
2. Students will understand the materials behaviors through examining microstructural characteristics.
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| CE 21000 - Introduction To Geomatics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic surveying operations and computations; theories of errors and their analysis; fundamental concepts of horizontal, vertical, and angular measurement; horizontal and vertical control systems; traverse computations; location of man-made structures; use of topographic maps; computation of horizontal and vertical curves. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| CE 22200 - Life Cycle Engineering And Mangement Of Constructed Facilities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The objective of this course is to introduce concepts relating to the engineering and construction of facilities throughout their life cycle. Topics that will be explored include the nature of the construction industry, construction contracts, legal and management organization of construction companies, basics of the design and construction process, as well as an introduction to the role estimating and project scheduling. Cost, time, safety and quality concepts of construction management relationships will also be discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Work with construction schedules and determine which activities are critical to the timely completion of the project.
2. Identify different types of construction contracts and specifications.
3. Calculate the productivity of construction equipment as well as the costs associated with construction equipment and construction labor.
4. Calculate the peak financial requirement for a given project based on project revenue and expenses.
5. Understand the importance of safety on the construction site.
6. Understand the principles involved in estimating and controlling costs on a construction project.
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| CE 23100 - Engineering Materials I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Nature and performance of materials under load. Structure of materials. Elastic, inelastic, and time-dependent behavior. Influences of composition and processing upon material properties. Composite materials particulate systems. Chemical effects on materials. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CE 25000 - Statics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (M E 250) Forces and couples, free body diagrams, two- and three-dimensional equilibrium of a particle and rigid bodies. Principles of friction, centroids, centers of gravity, and moments of inertia. Virtual work, potential energy, and static stability of equilibrium. Internal forces, shear and bending moment diagrams. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| CE 25100 - Dynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (M E 251) Kinematics of particles in rectilinear and curvelinear motion. Kinetics or particles, Newton's second law, energy and momentum methods. Systems of particles, Kinematics and plane motion of rigid bodies, forces and accelerations, energy and momentum methods. Introduction to mechanical vibrations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| CE 25200 - Strength Of Materials |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (M E 252) Plane stress, plane strain, and stress-strain laws. Applications of stress and deformation analysis to members subjected to centric, torsional, flexural, and combines loading. Introduction to theories of failure, buckling, and energy methods. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| CE 27000 - Introductory Structural Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Loads; structural forms; analysis of axially loaded members, flexural members, torsional members; combined loading conditions; buckling. Basic behavioral characteristics of structural elements and systems illustrated by laboratory experiments. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
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| CE 27100 - Basic Mechanics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Loads; structural forms; analysis of axially loaded members, flexural members, torsional members; combined loading conditions; buckling. Basic behavioral characteristics of structural elements and systems illustrated by laboratory experiments. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| CE 27101 - Basic Mechanics I (Statics) |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ME 27100) Review of vector algebra and equilibrium. Hydrostatics, virtual work, static stability, friction. First and second moments of areas, volumes, and masses, center of gravity. Credit is not allowed for both CE 27101 and ME 27100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Solve particle equilibrium problems in two dimensional space.
2. Solve particle equilibrium problems in three dimensional space.
3. Solve problems involving Moment of a force about a point or axis and problems involving couples of forces.
4. Solve rigid body equilibrium problems in two dimensional space.
5. Solve rigid body equilibrium problems in three dimensional space.
6. Determine the centroids and centers of gravity of two and three dimensional objects.
7. Analyze equivalent forces of distributed loads on beams.
8. Analyze trusses by the methods of joints and by the method of sections.
9. Draw shear-force and bending-moment diagrams in beams.
10. Analyze parabolic and catenary cables.
11. Solve engineering problems involving static and kinetic friction.
12. Determine the area and mass moments of inertia.
13. Solve equilibrium problems using Method of Virtual Work and Potential Energy Method.
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| CE 27300 - Mechanics Of Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of stress and strain, Mohr's circle, equations of equilibium and compatibility; stres-strain laws; extension torsions, bending and deflection of beams, buckling of columns, elastic stability and strain energy, Castigliano's Theorem, pressure vessels, selected topics. Typically offered Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
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| CE 27301 - Mechanics Of Materials Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This lab will demonstrate the basic principles of strength of materials. Students will conduct tension tests, torsion tests, and learn to use strain gages with data acquisition systems to conduct experiments such as finding modulus of elasticity and Poisson's ratio, stress concentration, principal stress, and strain and deflection of beams. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the stress-strain relationships.
2. Understand and determine the Young’s Modules (or Modulus of Elasticity) of various engineering materials such as steel, aluminum, and brass.
3. Understand strain gages and use them to measure the strain due to applied force.
4. Understand the basics of the theory of simple bending.
5. Understand torsion and use the applied torques to measure the angular deflections of torsional members.
6. Understand the use and calibration of pressure gages.
7. Understand the concept of natural frequencies and resonance by analyzing vibrations in beams.
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| CE 27500 - Basic Mechanics II (Dynamics) |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ME 27500) Fundamental concepts, kinematics, translation and rotation. Kinetics impulse, momentum, work, energy. Rectilinear and curvilinear translation of point masses. Plane motion of rigid bodies and vibration. Credit is not allowed for both CE 27500 and ME 27500. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop interrelationship between loads and motion in mechanics in two and three dimensions for particles and ridged bodies.
2. Apply primary concepts of kinetics, energy balance, and impulse momentum for the solutions of dynamic problems in mechanics.
3. Conduct mechanical vibrations analysis for principle problems.
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| CE 29000 - Civil Engineering Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. An orientation course to provide counsel to the student on the major areas of civil engineering, including information on typical activity of civil engineers, integrated course sequences and content, and an introduction of the faculty. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CE 29100 - Civil Engineering Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and written reports of this practice. For cooperative program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| CE 29199 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in civil engineering. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 29201 - Contemporary Issues In Civil Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The objective of this course is to provide a forum on contemporary issues in the profession of civil engineering. Items addresses include professionalism and ethics, entrepreneurships, interactions with engineering faculty and professionals outside the University. A professional portfolio of communication assignments including understanding of cultural differences and collaborating globally, individual plans of study, and academic career options within civil engineering will be addressed. Restricted to sophomore status in College of Engineering. Typically offered in Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Provide an understanding of professional and ethical responsibility.
2. Demonstrate the ability to communicate effectively.
3. Demonstrate the broad education necessary to understand the impact of engineering solutions in a global economic, environmental, and societal context.
|
| CE 29299 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in civil engineering. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 29700 - Basic Mechanics I (Statics) |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Statics of particles. Rigid bodies: equivalent systems of forces, equilibrium. Centroids and centers of gravity. Static analysis of trusses, frames, and machines. Friction. Area moments of inertia. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 29800 - Basic Mechanics II Dynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Kinematics of particles. Kinetics of particles and systems of particles. Kinematics of rigid bodies. Mass moments of inertia. Kinetics of rigid bodies. Mechanical vibrations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 30300 - Engineering Surveying |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Horizontal and vertical control surveys on site and route projects for engineering design and construction layout. Geometric design of horizontal circular curves, spiral easement curves, and vertical parabolic curves. Earthwork volume computation and balancing. Use of coordinate geometry (COGO) design software including terrain and design surface modeling. Methods and tools used for construction layout, as-built surveys, and industrial measurements. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| CE 30600 - Analysis Of Survey Observations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of survey measurement systems and methods for observing distances, directions, angles, elevations, and positions. Introduction to instrument calibration, error propagation methods, and control survey design. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 30800 - Construction Engineering Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the construction industry, phases in construction projects, construction contracts and legal structures, construction planning and scheduling, construction estimation, project cash flow, labor relations, construction equipment management, quality management, and construction safety. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the construction industry, processes, codes, and regulations.
2. Understand earth moving materials and operations.
3. Estimate earthwork volume.
4. Use the mass diagram.
5. Understand excavation, lifting, loading and hauling operations, and the equipment used.
6. Understand compacting and finishing, and the equipment used.
7. Understand paving and surface treatments.
8. Understand construction planning, scheduling, economics, and contracts.
9. Understand construction safety and health.
10. Define the terms associated with project engineering.
11. Understand and identify engineering ethics.
12. Develop economic decision making models incorporating time value of money.
13. Apply the decision models developed in solving practical project management problems to select the best alternative.
14. Analyze the effect of budget in resource management and estimate costs.
|
| CE 31100 - Architectural Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces energy efficiency, thermal comfort, indoor environmental quality and green building design concepts. The course covers engineering fundamentals required for the design and analysis of building systems such as thermodynamics, fluid mechanics, heat and mass transfer, light and sound transmission. The course presents engineering principles and selected applications related to hygrothermal analysis of building enclosures, air conditioning processes in heating, ventilating and air conditioning systems, building illumination, and building acoustics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and analyze the characteristics of building environmental loads, building construction, and building operations as they define the requirements for a comfortable and healthy indoor environment.
2. Demonstrate knowledge of thermodynamics , fluid mechanics, heat and mass transfer, photometric quantities and sound transmission for use in building design.
3. Identify, formulate and solve realistic Architectural Engineering problems related to hygrothermal analysis of building enclosures, air conditioning processes in Heating Ventilating and Air Conditioning Systems, pipe and duct flow, building illumination and building acoustics.
4. Demonstarte an understanding of building systems integration to achieve efficient operation.
|
| CE 31200 - Fluid Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ME 31200) Continuum, velocity field, fluid statics, basic conservation laws for systems and control volumes, dimensional analysis, Euler and Bernoulli equations, viscous flows, boundary layer flow in channels and around submerged bodies, one-dimensional gas dynamics. Credit is not allowed for both CE 31200 and ME 31200. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand basic concepts and principles of fluid mechanics.
2. Develop physical understanding of the variety of fluid flow phenomena.
3. Become familiar with applications of fluid mechanics to engineering problems.
4. Understand pressure, velocity, and acceleration.
5. Understand fluid statics.
6. Identify control volume vs. systems.
7. Understand and use Continuity Equation.
8. Understand and use Bernoulli Equation.
9. Understand and use Momentum Equation.
10. Understand and use Momentum-of-Momentum Equation.
11. Understand and use Energy Equation.
12. Design a system using dimensional analysis and similitude.
13. Understand surface resistance.
14. Apply fundamental principles to the flow in conduits.
15. Calculate drag and lift.
16. Be aware of CFD concepts and applications.
|
| CE 31300 - Fluid Mechanics Lab |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. (ME 31300) Introduction to fluid mechanics laboratory, experiments on flow patterns, velocity profile in an air pipe, wind tunnel calibration, draining of a tank, pipe friction, boundary layer studies, falling ball experiments, and viscosity measurements. Credit is not allowed for both CE 31300 and ME 31300. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand basic fluid dynamics principles.
2. Understand theories and methods of measuring techniques in fluid dynamics.
3. Understand the various types of errors and how to minimize them.
4. Write a formal laboratory report.
|
| CE 31500 - Civil Engineering Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study the nature and performance of civil engineering materials and evaluation of their physical and mechanical properties. This course focuses on materials used in construction and maintenance of building and infrastructure such as ferrous and nonferrous metals, aggregates, Portland cement, concrete, masonry, asphalt and asphalt mixtures, wood and composites. Emphasis will be placed on selection criteria, design, applications and proper use of these materials. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CE 31600 - Civil Engineering Materials Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to civil engineering materials laboratory and design of experiments, with focus on mechanical and physical properties of construction materials; including measurement of strains using mechanical gauges and electrical resistance strain gauges; experiments on metals, aggregates, portland cement, concrete, asphalt and asphalt mixtures, and wood. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CE 31800 - Fluid Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (M E 318) Continuum hypothesis, velocity field, fluid statics, basic conservation laws for systems and control volumes, dimensional analysis and similitude, Euler and Bernoulli equations, Navier-Stokes equations, viscous flows, boundary-layer flow in channels and around submerged bodies, applications. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CE 31900 - Fluid Mechanics Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. (M E 319) Introduction to fluid mechanics laboratory and design of experiments, including experiments on flow patterns, velocity profile in an air pipe, wind tunnel calibration, draining of a tank, pipe friction, drag forces, boundary- layer studies, falling-ball experiments, and measurements of fluid properties. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CE 32200 - Introduction To Construction Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to project planning and management -- U.S. construction industry practice, organization of construction firms, cost of construction projects, cost estimating, quantity takeoff. Topics will include equivalence, present worth, uniform annual cost, depreciation, documents, contracts, and management project scheduling inspection. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CE 32201 - Project Control And Life Cycle Execution Of Constructed Facilities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The objective of this course is to continue an introduction to construction management and engineering concepts for future engineers, contractors and owner representatives involved at different stages in the life-cycle of constructed faculties. Building on the broad framework introduced in the prerequisite course, this course develops further ability with analytical tools and extends the basic foundation for advanced topics in construction engineering and management. Specifically, this course focuses on the principles, tools, and procedures used in the construction industry for project selection and financing, advanced planning and scheduling techniques, resource management, and project monitoring. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an ability to use the techniques, skills, and modern engineering tools necessary for engineering practice.
2. Demonstrate an ability to design a process to meet desired needs within realistic constraints.
|
| CE 32300 - Soil Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to soil engineering and testing. Identification and classification tests, soil water systems, settlement principles, soil stresses, and shear strength testing.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
|
| CE 32401 - Mechanics Of Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ME 32401) Integrated approach to mechanics of materials emphasizing mechanics fundamentals as applied to machine design applications. Stress and strain in machine elements, mechanical properties of materials; extension, torsion, and bending of members; thermal stress; pressure vessels; static indeterminacy, stress transformation, Mohr¿s circle. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| CE 32500 - Elementary Structural Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of determinate and indeterminate systems, including beams, trusses, frames, and arches by classical methods. Energy theorems and the beam theory are used to find out the displacement at a specific point in the system. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Construct Shear and Moment Diagrams for Beams and Frames.
2. Calculate bending deflections using Double-Integration, Moment-Area, Conjugate Beam, and Virtual Work.
3. Calculate reactions for indeterminate beams and frames using Force Method, Slope Deflection, and Moment-Distribution.
|
| CE 32800 - Mechanics Of Materials Lab |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. (ME 32800) Experimental approach to mechanics of materials emphasizing mechanics fundamentals as applied to machine design applications. Experiments cover stress and strain in machine elements; mechanical properties of materials; extension, torsion, and bending of members; thermal stress; pressure vessels; static indeterminacy, stress transformation, Mohr’s circle. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| CE 33000 - Construction Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Type and functions of management, types of construction, project delivery methods, types of construction contracts, the competitive bidding process, data and project management tools, early and detailed cost estimates, project planning, project scheduling with AOA and AON using the critical path method (CPM), project scheduling with uncertainty using PERT method, resource leveling and allocation, project financing options, project cash flow analysis, computer applications. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the basic concepts of construction management such as types and functions of management , project participants, life-cycle stages of projects, project delivery methods, types of contracts, and bidding.
2. Read and understand blue prints (drawings) and other contract documents of real life construction projects.
3. Prepare early (preliminary) and detailed cost estimates for construction projects.
4. Breakdown the project into work activities using the Work Breakdown Structure (WBS) and the Master Specification format and establish the logical relationship among activities.
5. Draw network diagrams for construction projects using the critical path method (CPM) activity on arrow (AOA) and activity on node (AON) networks.
6. Estimate activities' durations.
7. Determine activities' times (early start, early finish, late start, late finish, total float, and free float) and schedule the project using the CPM and the bar chart (Gantt chart) scheduling techniques.
8. Schedule projects with unncertain durations using the program evaluation and review technique (PERT)
9. Smooth resource profiles (resource leveling) and schedule projects with limited resources (resource allocation)
10. Understand the various options of project financing and perform cash flow analysis.
11. Use specialized software such as Microsoft Project for data management, project scheduling, resource leveling, and resource allocation. Formulate models of construction problems and use Excel solver to find an optimum solution
12. Express their ideas during classroom discussions and communicate effectively while working in their project.
|
| CE 33001 - Structure And Properties Of Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ME 33001) The relationship between the structure of materials and the resulting mechanical, thermal, electrical, and optical properties. Atomic structure, bonding, atomic arrangement, crystal symmetry, crystal structure, habit, lattices, defects, and the use of X-ray diffraction. Phase equilibria and microstructural development. Applications to design. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
Students successfully completing this course will be able to:
1. Describe the most common states that matter can assume.
2. Describe the state and structure of various materials commonly used in construction and machine design.
3. Know how to test the strength and properties of various materials commonly used in engineering.
4. Describe the crystalline structure of commonly occurring materials.
5. Have a sense of the breaking point of materials commonly used in engineering.
|
| CE 33100 - Engineering Materials II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of CE 23100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 33300 - Civil Engineering Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The nature and performance of materials under load. Important engineering materials for evaluation of physical and mechanical properties, including ferrous and nonferrous metals, plastics, bituminous materials, Portland cement, aggregates, concrete, timber, and particulate systems. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 33400 - Structural Analysis I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Loads, shear, moment, and deflected shape diagrams for beams and framed structures. Approximate methods. Calculations of deformations. Using flexibility methods to analyze frames and continuous beams. Using moment distribution and stiffness methods to analyze continuous beams and braced frames. Influence lines for determinate and indeterminate beams using Muller-Breslau principle. Computer applications to analyze beams and frames.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CE 34000 - Hydraulics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fluid properties; hydrostatics; kinematics and dynamics of fluid flows; conservation of mass, energy, and momentum; flows in pipes and open channels. Formal laboratory experiments. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| CE 34100 - Hydraulics, Hydrology, And Drainage |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic hydraulic theory, including properties, kinematics, and dynamics of liquid flow in open channels and closed conduits. Principles of hydrology with emphasis on rainfall and runoff. Application of the above principles to the analysis and design of storm sewers, sanitary sewers, drainage courses, and culverts. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 34200 - Engineering Hydrology and Hydraulics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory concepts, precipitation. Evaporation and transpiration. Interception and infiltration. Surface runoff, groundwater, and streamflow. Hydrograph analysis. Applied hydraulics including pipe and channel flow with design applications in culverts, pumping, water distribution, storm and sanitary sewer systems.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CE 34300 - Elementary Hydraulics Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The laboratory covers basic concepts in analysis of experimental data and methods in hydraulic measurements. A variety of simple laboratory experiments illustrating the principles of hydraulics are performed. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 34400 - Drainage Design Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This laboratory for land surveying engineering and construction engineering and management students covers basic concepts in the hydrological design of drainage systems. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 34500 - Transportation Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Transportation functions; transportation systems, including land, air, and marine modes; transportation system elements, including traveled way, vehicle, controls, and terminals; techniques of transportation system planning, design, and operation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CE 35000 - Introduction To Environmental And Ecological Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to water pollution, air pollution, noise, hazardous and solid wastes, and their control. Environmental impact statements and global pollution issues. Field trips required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to apply material balance tools to environmental systems.
2. An ability to describe the different types of air, soil, and water pollutants and how they affect environmental quality on a local or global scale.
3. An ability to explain the principles of water, wastewater, air, soil, and hazardous waste treatment processes.
4. An ability to describe the professional and ethical responsibility of engineers in the context of environmental management.
5. An ability to describe the key roles and responsibilities of public institutions and private organizations in managing environmental resources.
|
| CE 35100 - Introduction To Transportation Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Planning and operations of transportation facilities. Vehicle, operation, and infrastructure characteristics. Technological, economic, and environmental factors. Travel demand modeling and capacity analysis.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CE 35200 - Biological Principles Of Environmental Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction and application of environmental microbiological concepts to the solution of problems of water pollution and its control. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 35300 - Physico-Chemical Principles Of Environmental Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course presents basic physico-chemical aspects of air, water, and wastewater pollution, and pollution control methods. Topics covered in the course include acid/base chemistry, solubility, colloidal chemistry, sorption processes, and oxidation-reduction. Selected physico-chemical processes and analytical procedures are discussed, demonstrated, and applied in the laboratory. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 35400 - Introduction To Environmental Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to air and water pollution, noise, and hazardous and sold wastes; consideration of treatment and management issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CE 35500 - Engineering Environmental Sustainability |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EEE 35500) An introduction to the examination of global-scale resource utilization, food, energy and commodity production, population dynamics, and their ecosystem impacts. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be creative thinkers that can collect and analyze appropriate data and information, and perform necessary quantitative analysis to develop original and innovative management strategies for real-world sustainability problems.
2. Students will be able to individually and in teams skillfully communicate in writing, orally, and with multimedia their ideas and conclusions about managing sustainability issues in a manner that increases knowledge and understanding of the audience.
3. Students will be critical thinkers that can identify the environmental, social, political, and economic dimensions of technical challenges and evaluate their own and others’ perspectives in forming logical opinions and conclusions.
4. Students will be able to effectively identify information needs, efficiently acquire appropriate information, and critically evaluate and use it in an ethical and scholarly fashion to gain understanding of and communicate about sustainability issues, challenges, and strategies.
5. Students will become global citizens and socially aware by gaining knowledge of diverse international and cultural perspectives and display social responsibility and leadership in managing sustainability issues, ultimately increasing their global literacy.
6. Students will learn how to be a productive team member, constructively evaluate their own and others’ performances, resolve conflicts effectively and encourage the willing contributions of everyone.
|
| CE 36100 - Transportation Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Transportation functions; transportation systems, including land, air, and marine modes; transportation system elements, including traveled way, vehicle, controls, and terminals; techniques of transportation system planning, design, and operation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 36500 - Enviornmental Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to environmental engineering issues, fundamental concepts and applications to mass and energy balance, hydrology, water treatment, water quality management, wastewater treatment, air pollution, hazardous and solid wastes, and their control. Environmental impact statements and global pollution issues. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CE 36600 - Environmental Engineering Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Application of basic chemistry and chemical calculations to measure physical, chemical, and bacteriological parameters of water and wastewater. Laboratory methods and interpretation of results with regard to environmental engineering applications such as design and operation of water and wastewater treatment processes, and to the control of the quality of natural water. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CE 37100 - Structural Analysis I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Stress resultants (reactions, axial forces, shear forces, and bending moments) for beams and framed structures. Deflections of beams and frames by geometric methods (moment-area theorems and applications; conjugate beam analogy). Analysis of statically indeterminate beams and frames by classical stiffness methods; slope deflection and moment distribution. Influence functions and their applications. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
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| CE 37500 - Structural Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Stress resultants (reactions, axial forces, shear forces, and bending moments) for beams and framed structures. Deflections of beams and frames by geometric methods (moment-area theorems and applications; conjugate beam analogy). Analysis of statically indeterminate beams and frames by classical stiffness methods; slope deflection and moment distribution. Influence functions and their applications. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| CE 37900 - Numerical Methods For Engineers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (M E 373) Introduction to numerical methods for engineers. Topics include solution methods for nonlinear algebraic equations, sets of linear and nonlinear algebraic equations, eigenvalue problems, interpolation and curve fitting, numerical differentiation and integration, and techniques to solve ordinary and partial differential equations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| CE 38000 - Soil Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the nature and origin of soil and rocks; engineering classification of soil; soil compaction; permeability and seepage, engineering behavior and properties of soils; compressibility; and introduction to shear strength of soil; lateral earth pressure; and soil-bearing capacity for foundations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the origin of the soil and geological cycle.
2. Apply principles of phase diagram for soil properties and perform basic weight-volume calculations.
3. Understand consistency of soil-Atterberg limits.
4. Understand and use AASHTO method for soil and classification.
5. Understand and use Unified Soil Classification System for soil classification.
6. Understand the basic science oof soil compaction.
7. Understand basics principles of flow and soil permeability through porous media including Bernoulli's equation, Darcy's Law, Hydraulic conductivity.
8. Understand seepage in soil include Laplace equation of continuity.
9. Construct flow nets for water flow calculations.
10. Calculate in situ stress in saturated soil with and without seepage, seepage force, and implement measures to control heave in soil.
11. Understand how stresses are transferred through soils and be able to compute both geostatic and induced stresses due to point , line, and area loads.
12. Estimate the amount of consolidation and settlement and time required for settlement under a given load.
13. Basic knowledge of shear strength principles.
14. Basic understanding of Lateral Earth Pressure concept and theory.
15. Unnderstand the basic concept of ultimate bearing capacity of shallow foundations.
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| CE 38100 - Soil Mechanics Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Performing various laboratory tests to determine the characteristics and mechanical properties of soil according to the procedures and standards set by the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM). Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Perform common soil tests to identify physical and mechanical properties of soils.
2. Be familiar with soil mechanics tests and determines which test is needed in designing civil engineering projects
and/or solving engineering problems.
3. Prepare soil samples for testing, performing the test, collecting and analyzing data according to ASTM.
4. Apply the laboratory results to problem identification, quantification, and basic soil mechanics related design problem.
5. Demonstrate the ability to write clear technical lab reports.
6. Use word processors and other modern software packages in writing and finishing the report.
7. Demonstrate the ability to work in groups.
8. Understand and apply ethical issues associated with decision making and professional conduct in the lab and field environment.
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| CE 38199 - Professional Practice Co-Op I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in civil engineering. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 38299 - Professional Practice Co-Op II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in civil engineering. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CE 38300 - Geotechnical Engineering I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the nature and origin of soils and rocks; engineering significance of geologic landforms and soil deposits; identification and engineering classification of soils; engineering behavior and properties of soils; permeability, compressibility, shearing resistance; soil compaction. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CE 38399 - Professional Practice Co-Op III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in civil engineering. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CE 39100 - Civil Engineering Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and written reports of this practice. For cooperative program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| CE 39399 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in civil engineering. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CE 39499 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in civil engineering. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CE 39599 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in civil engineering. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 39699 - Professional Practice Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in civil engineering. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CE 39700 - Undergraduate Professional Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Civil Engineering. This internship experience is intended to complement the student's academic coursework and help prepare the student for a career as a practicing engineer. Program coordinated by school with cooperating employers. A written report is required. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CE 39800 - Introduction To Civil Engineering Systems Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to engineering economy and systems analysis. A systematic approach to the engineering method of design and problem solving. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 40100 - Civil Engineering Profession And Pratice |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course introduces students to civil engineering career options of practice and/or pursuing graduate studies. It introduces fundamental concepts of management, business, public policy, and leadership. It also highlights the importance of professional registration and membership in professional societies; requirements for graduate studies and the need for life-long learning, and the role of civil engineers in addressing contemporary engineering related issues such as sustainability and global warming. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Have good understanding of professional and ethical responsibility.
2. Explain basic concepts of management, business, public policy, and leadership.
3. Understand the impact of civil engineering solutions in local, global, and political context.
4. Communicate effectively with technical professionals and public.
5. Recognition of the need for, and an ability to engage in life-long learning including pursuing graduate education, professional licensure and/or continuing education.
6. Knowledge of local, national and global contemporary issues.
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| CE 40300 - Principles Of Photogrammetry And Remote Sensing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to photogrammetry and remote sensing methods used to produce maps and capture spatial information for solving civil engineering problems. Topics include: terrestrial, airborne, and satellite-based imaging systems; photogrammetric measurement, and mapping methods; photographic and digital image interpretation; digital image processing techniques. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to identify, formulate, and solve engineering problems while demonstrating proficiency in mathematics and science through differential equations, calculus based on physics, general chemistry, and probability and statistics.
2. Students will demonstrate the ability to critically analyze and interpret data in two or more civil engineering curriculum areas.
3. Students will demonstrate the ability to select and utilize modern engineering tools and techniques necessary for engineering practice.
4. Students will demonstrate an awareness of the requirements for professional licensure and continuing education.
5. Students will demonstrate the ability to communicate effectively orally and in writing.
6. Students will demonstrate the ability to work effectively in multi-disciplinary teams.
7. Students will demonstrate an understanding of professional and ethical responsibility along with the importance of a personal commitment to lifelong learning.
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| CE 40400 - Finite Element Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ME 40400) Brief history of finite element method and ANSYS; direct formulation; minimum total potential energy formulation; verification of results; trusses. Examples using ANSYS, one-dimensional elements. Numerical integration, Gauss Quadrature. Examples of one-dimensional elements in ANSYS; heat transfer problems; solid mechanics problems; two-dimensional elements. Pre-processing with ANSYS; boundary conditions; applications; heat conduction problems; torsion problems; beams and frames. Credit is not allowed for both CE 40400 and ME 40400. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. New course covers material that students should know; will help graduate obtain jobs.
|
| CE 40800 - Geographic Information Systems In Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to the application of geographic information systems (GIS) to civil engineering problems. GIS is a tool for analysis, modeling, and evaluation of civil engineering problems. The design of spatial databases, assembly of requisite data, and the development of analysis tools within GIS are presented. This course will address: definition of spatial data, data types, spatial relationships, computer operation on spatial data, topology in spatial data, representation of features in a GIS, data models, data dictionaries, data capture techniques; database types, composition of spatial queries, analysis of engineering data using a GIS, complex analysis of polygon and linear features, presentation of results, use of a GIS as an engineering model test bed. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CE 41000 - Fluid Mechanics And Hydraulics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. (ME 41000) This course is a continuation of Fluid Mechanics. Topics will include hydraulics, external boundary layer flow, and introduction to fluid power and gas dynamics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Strengthen understanding of boundary layer theory and open channel flow.
2. Strengthen error analysis capability and laboratory experience.
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| CE 41100 - Building Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Structural steel and reinforced concrete building design. Analysis of structural behavior of frameworks. Systems that resist lateral loads. Use of current building codes and design specifications. Review of building designs. Preliminary and final designs including analysis of alternative structural systems, and preparation of design sketches and calculations.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CE 41200 - Groundwater Hydrology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Flow through porous media, occurrence of ground water, well hydraulics, flow nets. Ground water contamination, pollutant movement and unsaturated flow, Case studies. Numerical modeling techniques for ground water modeling, groundwater flow, and groundwater pollution problems in steady state conditions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CE 41300 - Building Envelope Design And Thermal Loads |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course discusses the basic thermal processes in buildings and presents comprehensive methods for thermal design of envelope assemblies in commercial and residential buildings. The first part of the course includes steady-state transient conduction through envelope assemblies, convection and radiation heat transfer in buildings, solar radiation and solar gains, thermal performance of windows, internal gains, ventilation and infiltration. The second part of the course considers surface and room energy balance equations and presents analytical and computational models for calculation of hourly heating and cooling loads throughout the year. Climate-based standards, passive solar design, advanced energy guides, and innovative technologies for high performance buildings are discussed. The course also includes a design project on analytical heating/cooling load calculations for a commercial building. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Calculate heat transfer through envelope assemblies for commercial and residential buildings.
2. Solve energy balance equations for building surfaces and room air.
3. Calculate solar and internal gains and predict transient hourly heating and cooling loads for a building throughout the year using analytical and computational models.
4. Design building envelopes according to national standards.
5. Understand principles of passive solar design and the application of innovative envelope technologies.
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| CE 41400 - Building Mechnical And Electrical System Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the design of building mechanical and electrical systems. In the first part of the course students learn principles of designing and integrating heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems into building air delivery systems, mechanical cooling and heating technologies, duct design and layout, blower and pump selection, and hydronic systems. They also learn to design heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems within the constraint of achieving satisfactory occupant thermal comfort in buildings. The second part of the course covers design concepts related to building electrical systems; including, single and three-phase power systems, motors, transformers, switching, and relays. The course includes a design project related to mechanical and electrical systems for a commercial building. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Utilize building thermal load information together with a knowledge of industry standards and numerical methods to design and integrate efficient heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems into commercial and residential buildings.
2. Understand the benefits and drawbacks of conventional and innovative mechanical systems, and identify appropriate opportunities for the selection and integration of both.
3. Evaluate the performance and estimate energy consumption of common mechanical systems and components.
4. Understand the operating characteristics and appropriately size the components that are integrated into building electrical systems.
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| CE 41800 - Hydraulics Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Sources and distribution of water in urban environment, including surface reservoir requirements, utilization of groundwater, and distribution systems. Analysis of sewer systems and drainage courses for the disposal of both wastewater and storm water. Pumps and lift stations. Urban planning and storm drainage practice. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| CE 42400 - Human Resource Management In Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of the fundamental legislation affecting planning and administration of the labor resources employed in the construction industry, and introduction to the principles of labor productivity improvement and worker motivation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CE 42600 - Construction Cost Control Concepts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An investigation of the principles of cost control and financial concepts required at the project and company level. The course addresses the development of control estimates and budgets as well as various methods of cost control. Sources of construction costs as well as work breakdown structure and work packaging will be presented and discussed. In addition, the interface between field costs and company financial documents will be developed in detail. A project designed to illustrate both company- and project-level management will be required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CE 42800 - Traffic Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Driver, pedestrian, and vehicular characteristics. Traffic characteristics; study of highway capacity; analyses of traffic patterns. Principles of traffic control for improved highway traffic service. Use intersection, corridor or network analysis, computer evaluation, and optimization tools.
Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| CE 42900 - Senior Engineering Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ME 42900, ECE 42900). The senior engineering design courses I and II constitute a two-semester sequence of an interdisciplinary activity. The objective of these courses is to provide engineering students with supervised experience in the process and practice of engineering design. Projects are chosen by the students or the faculty. Students working in teams pursue an idea from conception to realistic design. The course concludes with a substantial written and oral design review before a faculty team. Class discussions will include the ethical responsibility of engineers, impact of engineering solution in a global/societal context, and small-group interactions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
Learn material needed for a project that was not taught in courses taken.
2. Identify goal(s), the necessary activities, and the key problems.
3. Prioritize tasks, manage time, control expenses, and prepare plans to complete a project on schedule and within budget.
4. Work cooperatively as part of a team (interdisciplinary as in industry).
5. Communicate effectively, both orally and in writing.
6. Design (and build and test) a system, process, or components related to a project.
7. Demonstrate the multiple engineering skills necessary for a 21st century engineer.
8. Formulate and solve engineering problems, recognize relevant parameters, identify principles, and make appropriate and reasonable simplifying assumptions and approximations.
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| CE 43000 - Transportation Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Current concepts, theories, and issues in managing transportation organizations. Study of transportation logistics and engineering systems with an overview of the operating context, leadership challenges, strategies, and management tools that are used in today's public and private transportation organizations. Analyze alternative models of decision-making, strategic planning, stakeholder valuation and analysis, government-based regulation and cooperation within the transportation enterprise, disaster communications, systems safety, change management, and the impact of globalization.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CE 43600 - Urban Transportation Planning and Modeling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Transportation data sources and cost analysis; management of transportation systems; transport legislation, transport financing; intelligent transportation systems planning; sustainable transportation concepts. Use of popular travel demand software and applications of geographic information systems (GIS) and global positioning systems (GPS).. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CE 43900 - Senior Engineering Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The senior engineering design courses I and II constitute a two-semester sequence of an interdisciplinary activity. The objective of these courses is to provide engineering students with supervised experience in the process and practice of engineering design. Projects are chosen by the students or the faculty. Students working in teams pursue an idea from conception to realistic design. The course is climaxed by the presentation of a substantial written report and a formal oral presentation before faculty and students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Pursue an idea from conception to realistic design, construction, and testing.
2. Investigate and gather information on a technical issue.
3. Formulate and solve engineering problems, recognize relevant parameters, identify principles, and make reasonable simplifying assumptions and approximations.
4. Design components, systems, or processes that meet specifications and constraints.
5. Identify goal(s) and the activities necessary to reach the goal(s).
6. Prioritize tasks, manage time, control expenses, and prepare plans to complete a project within budget and time constraints.
7. Communicate effectively, both orally and in writing.
8. Work cooperatively as part of a team.
9. Understand and apply the engineering code of ethics.
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| CE 44000 - Urban Hydraulics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Sources and distribution of water in urban environment, including surface reservoir requirements, utilization of groundwater, and distribution systems. Analysis of sewer systems and drainage courses for the disposal of both wastewater and storm water. Pumps and lift stations. Urban planning and storm drainage practice. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 44200 - Introduction To Hydrology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Description, measurement, and analysis of hydrologic processes: precipitation, evapotranspiration, infiltration, and runoff. Hydrograph analysis: unit and synthetic unit hydrographs and flood routing. Statistical analysis of hydrologic data. Fundamentals, budget, and yield analysis of groundwater flows; well hydraulics. Case studies illustrating the application of principles in both surface and groundwater flows. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 44300 - Introductory Environmental Fluid Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Kinematics of fluid flow. Differential equations for environmental fluid flows, including effects of variable density and rotation. Ideal fluid flow; boundary layer approximation; turbulence; water waves. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 44500 - Water Resources System Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of principles of hydrology, hydraulics, and environmental engineering in the planning, design, and analysis of a comprehensive water resource project. The application of engineering concepts to the practical design of water supply, distribution, collection, and treatment facilities will be emphasized. Written and oral presentation of student projects will be required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CE 44600 - Water and Wastewater Treatment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of engineering approaches to protect water quality with an emphasis on fundamental principles. Theory and conceptual design of systems for treating municipal wastewater and drinking water. Reactor theory, process kinetics, and models. Physical, chemical, and biological processes, including sedimentation, filtration, biological treatment, disinfection, and sludge processing. Engineered and natural processes for wastewater treatment.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| CE 45000 - Urban Transportation Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This class is an introduction to transportation planning in urban areas. The course will cover the history of urban transportation planning, transportation data sources and surveys, fundamentals of travel demand and network modeling, financial issues, transportation planning and environmental issues, local and federal regulations and policies, and contemporary issues. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Design, conduct and administer surveys to provide the data required for transportation planning.
2. Learn and understand zonal demand generation and attraction regression models.
3. Learn and understand demand distribution models.
4. Learn and understand model split models for mode choice analysis.
5. Develop and calibrate trip generation rates for specific types of land use developments.
6. Estimate the traffic impact of new developments using the four-stage sequential models.
7. Understand transportation project planning and development.
8. Understand and apply the process of financing to transportation projects.
9. Learn the federal legislation and planning regulations pertaining to transportation planning issues.
10. Be familiar with the impact of transportation on the environment with focus on air quality conformity.
11. Impact of the transportation project on the land use.
12. Understated selected emerging contemporary transportation issues and their impact on the society.
13. Make final decisions among planning alternatives that best integrate multiple objectives such as technical feasibility and cost minimization.
14. Communicate effectively via class technical discussions and presentations.
15. Design transportation related project in a team of two or three students and submits a final report and conduct a presentation.
|
| CE 45100 - Traffic Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to traffic engineering analysis, operation and control including traffic capacity analysis, introduction to traffic studies, basics of traffic signal design and phase timing, analysis and design of pre-timed and actuated signalized intersections, signal coordination for arterials, and traffic modeling, including computer applications. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CE 45200 - Air Pollution |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of air pollution sources. Effects of air pollutants on human health and environment. Technologies and methods used to control air pollution. Regional and global issues such as acid rain, ozone depletion, and global climate change.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CE 45600 - Water And Wastewater Treatment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental concepts and design procedures for the treatment of municipal and industrial water and wastewaters. Problem assessment; determination of water and wastewater characteristics, biological, physical, and chemical treatment methods, process design, and disposal of residues. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 45700 - Air Pollution Control And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental concepts and design procedures for the removal of particulates, gases, and toxic air pollutants from waste gas streams. Problem assessment; characterization of exhaust gas streams; fan characteristics. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 45800 - Solid Waste Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Planning and design of solid waste management systems; includes characterization and collection of domestic, commercial, and industrial solid wastes, waste minimization and recycling, energy and materials recovery, composting, incineration, and landfill design.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CE 46100 - Roadway And Pavement Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design of highway and airport pavement systems, subgrades, subbases and bases, soil stabilization, flexible and rigid pavements; cost analysis and pavement selection; quality control; drainage; earthwork; pavement evaluation and maintenance. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 46200 - Highway Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to traffic engineering and highway planning. Design, construction, and maintenance of highway facilities; earthwork, drainage structures; pavements. Preparation of environmental impact statement. This course has computer applications and will include completing a design project.
Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CE 46300 - Highway Transportation Characteristics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of basic characteristics of highway transportation systems and the elements influencing these characteristics: drivers, vehicles, pedestrians, flow, density, speed, travel time, delay, stream flow, intersection performance, capacity, accidents, traffic demand, and parking. Techniques used include experimental observation, deterministic and probabilistic queueing theory, probability and statistics, and graphical analysis. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 46500 - Water And Wastewater Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The underlying principles and design techniques related to water and wastewater collection, transport, quality and treatment including physical, chemical, and biological unit processes. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Select or construct appropriate treatment schemes to remove certain pollutants present in water or wastewater.
2. Design a water or wastewater treatment component.
3. Balance chemical reactions and use balanced reactions to determine the distribution of species at equilibrium.
4. Develop a mass balance expression for contaminants under different case scenarios and design a simple system to meet desired needs.
5. Learn how to characterize source water, and the best available technologies (BAT) for physical and chemical treatment of drinking water.
6. Learn how to characterize wastewater, and the BAT for physical, chemical and microbiological treatment of wastewater.
7. Understand selected contemporary global water and wastewater issues such as water shortage, wastewater reuse and emerging contaminants.
|
| CE 46600 - Water And Wastewater Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The underlying principles and design techniques related to water and wastewater collection, transport, quality and treatment including physical, chemical, and biological unit processes. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Select on construct appropriate treatment schemes to remove certain pollutants present in water or wastewater.
2. Design a water or wastewater treatment component.
3. Balance chemical reactions and use balanced reactions to determine the distribution of species at equilibrium.
4. Develop a mass balance expression for contaminants under different case scenarios and design a simple system to meet desired needs.
5. Learn how to characterize source water, and the best available technologies (BAT) for physical and chemical treatment of drinking water.
6. Learn how to characterize wastewater, and the BAT for physical, chemical and microbiological treatment of wastewater.
7. Understand selected contemporary global water and wastewater issues such as water shortage, wastewater reuse and emerging contaminants.
|
| CE 46700 - Solid Waste Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Comprehensive knowledge of solid waste management from the aspects of regulations, composition, collection, transfer and final disposal. Introduce the technologies of reuse, recycling, recovery, landfill, incineration and composting of municipal solid wastes. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Be able to analyze environmental, social, economical, and political information for municipal solid waste management.
2. Understand and be able to optimize the generation, collection, and transportation processes of municipal solid waste.
3. Select or construct appropriate treatment and disposal methods for municipal solid waste.
4. Be able to integrate science and engineering principles to design a landfill, the major disposal method for municipal solid waste.
5. Balance chemical reactions and use stoichiometric calculations to quantify leachate and methane gas generation, and thermal values of municipal solid waste.
6. Learn how to characterize municipal solid waste, and familiar with reuse, recycling, and recovery schemes.
7. Understand selected contemporary global solid waste issues such as solid waste minimization, life cycle concepts and sustainable development.
|
| CE 47000 - Structural Steel Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The elements of structural steel design, including tension members and their connections; structural connections, including welding, and high-strength bolts; compression members; rolled and built-up flexural members; and combined axial and flexural loading effects. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 47100 - Reinforced Concrete Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis and design of beams, one-way slabs, and columns. Design of building frames using pattern loading and moment coefficients.
Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Be able to design reinforced concrete beams subjected to transverse loading.
2. Be able to design reinforced concrete one way slabs subjected to transverse loading.
3. Be able to design reinforced concrete short columns subjected to axial and flexural loading.
4. Be able to design reinforced concrete spread square footings subjected to axial loadings.
5. Be able to design a simple reinforced concrete structural system.
6. Have a working familiarity with the ACI code.
7. Be able to communicate in a team environment.
|
| CE 47300 - Reinforced Concrete Design |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Design and behavior of reinforced concrete beams, one-way slabs, and columns. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 47400 - Structural Analysis II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Determination of deflections by the method of virtual work; analysis of trusses, continuous beams, and frames by direct stiffness method; approximate methods of analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 47500 - Design Of Steel Structures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The concepts of structural steel design, tension and compression members, beams, beam-columns, simple and eccentric connections, composite construction, and plate girders, including computer applications. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CE 47600 - Reinforced Concrete And Steel Structures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Concrete design - beams, slabs, girders, columns, and footings for building frames and bridges. Introduction to pre-stressed concrete, ultimate strength design, basic design criteria. Design of structural steel beams, columns, beam-columns, and bolted and welded connections. Introduction to design aspects of composite steel/concrete beams. Design of continuous structures. Plastic analysis. Training in computerized structural analysis and design. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CE 47800 - Design Of Concrete Structures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Flexural analysis and design of reinforced concrete beams including singly and doubly reinforced rectangular beams and T-beams, shear and diagonal tension, serviceability, bond, anchorage and development length, short and slender columns, slabs, footings, and retaining walls, including computer applications. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and compute the main mechanical properties of concrete and steel such as material strengths, moduli of elasticity, and modular ratio.
2. Identify and calculate the design loads and distribution.
3. Apply the strength method to design R.C. structural members.
4. Analyze and design R.C. members under flexure and shear.
5. Analyze and design short R.C. columns.
6. Apply relevant ACI Code provisions to ensure safety and serviceability of structural elements.
7. Analyze and design R.C. footings.
8. Apply relevant ACI Code provisions to ensure safety and serviceability of structural elements.
|
| CE 47900 - Design Of Building Components And Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design of simple floor and roof systems and load bearing walls; uses of building materials; fundamentals of design of metal form decking, steel joists, masonry (beams, columns and load bearing walls), and timber (beams, trusses, and mechanical connections). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 48000 - Finite Element Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (M E 480) Introduction to the fundamentals and the basic concept of the finite-element method through applications to problems in structures, solid mechanics, fluid mechanics and heat transfer. Emphasis on one and two dimensional problems. Computer implementation. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CE 48100 - Foundation Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The Foundation Engineering course focuses on geotechnical design of shallow and deep foundations and includes review of geotechnical properties of soil, subsurface exploration, seepage, bearing capacity of shallow foundations, lateral earth pressure theories, retaining walls, and deep foundations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Introduce students to the fundamental concepts of foundation analysis and design and to provide students with methods of analysis of geotechnical systems based on field and laboratory data.
|
| CE 48200 - Engineering Risk Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Decision making in the presence of uncertainty: reliability and probabilistic risk assessment (RPRA), decision analysis (DA), and cost-benefit analysis (CBA). Balancing risks and benefits in situations that involve human safety, potential environmental effects, and large financial and technological uncertainties. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CE 48300 - Geotechnical Engineering II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Subsurface investigations and techniques for sampling soils, lateral earth pressures, and stability of retaining structures; stability of earth slopes; shallow and deep foundations design. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 48500 - Environmental Law And Public Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review and analyze federal and state regulation of air and water pollution and hazardous wastes. Analyze pollution as an economic problem and the failure of markets. Emphasize use of legal mechanisms and alternative approaches (such as economic incentives and voluntary approaches) to control pollution and to encourage chemical accident and pollution prevention. Focus on the major federal legislation, the underlying administrative system, and the common law in analyzing environmental policy, economic consequences, and the role of the courts. Discuss classical pollutants and toxic industrial chemicals, community right-to-know, and environmental justice. Also provides an introduction to basic legal skills.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CE 48700 - Civil Engineering Design Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Planning, analysis, and design of a civil engineering project; an integrated and realistic group project involves as much as possible all major aspects of the civil engineering profession. Emphasis on teamwork, project management, testing through simulation or modeling, oral and written communications. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand how Federal/State environmental regulations and standards are developed as well as their impact.
2. Formulate a problem statement.
3. Develop multiple preliminary design solutions using brainstorming technique.
4. Evaluate alternative solutions and select the optimum alternative using well defined criteria.
5. Successfully develop detailed and final design for the project considering safety, economical, ethical, professional, and environmental issue.
6. Develop technical drawings and specification for the project, if needed.
7. Preliminary cost estimate and schedule for project activities, if needed.
8. Write technical reports clearly and concisely.
9. The ability to present preliminary work both written and orally.
10. The ability to function within a team.
11. Present final design to technical and non-technical professionals.
12. Understanding of the ethical issues that are associated with the engineering profession.
13. Knowledge of contemporary issues.
14. Understanding of the impact of civil engineering on society.
|
| CE 48800 - Civil Engineering Design Project II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of CE 48700. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. The ability to build, test and evaluate the basic design completed in the Civil Engineering Design Project course.
2. The ability to function within a team.
3. The ability to present preliminary work both written and orally.
4. Understanding of the ethical issues that are associated with the engineering profession.
5. Present final design to technical and non-technical professionals.
6. Understanding of the impact of civil engineering on society.
|
| CE 48900 - Civil Engineering Projects |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Projects or special topics of contemporary importance or of special interest that are outside the scope of the standard undergraduate curriculum can be studied. Interested students should seek a faculty advisor who works in the area of special interest and prepare a brief description of the work to be undertaken in cooperation with the advisor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Produce research solutions by developing computer models, experiments, and/or research analysis.
2. Formulate a real world problem by properly defining the physical process.
|
| CE 49000 - Selected Topics In Civil Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Special topics that cover one or more topics in civil engineering related to structural engineering, environmental engineering, fluid mechanics, hydraulics, hydrology, geotechnical engineering, transportation engineering, pavement analysis and design, materials, and construction engineering and management. May include laboratory experiments if appropriate. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CE 49100 - Civil Engineering Practice IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and written reports of this practice. For cooperative program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| CE 49200 - Civil Engineering Practice V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and written reports of this practice. For cooperative program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| CE 49700 - Civil Engineering Projects |
|
Arrange Hours and Credit. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CE 49800 - Civil Engineering Design Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Planning, design, and analysis of a civil project; an integrated and realistic group project involves as much as possible all major aspects of the civil engineering profession. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| CE 49900 - Research In Civil Engineering |
|
Arrange Hours and Credit. Credit arranged. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CE 51200 - The Comprehensive Urban Planning Process |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course that provides a framework for better understanding of the current urban planning process. Concepts and emerging trends are covered as well as an elementary description of planning methods and techniques. For planning majors and those in related design, development, and socioeconomic disciplines. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 51300 - Lighting In Buildings |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the design of illumination systems in buildings (electric and natural lighting) in order to achieve energy efficiency and visual comfort. The first part of the course includes analytical lighting calculation techniques, visual perception, radiative transfer, lamp characteristics, electric lighting system design and control for calculation of required indoor illuminance levels. The second part of the course covers daylighting (natural lighting) systems, including state-of-the-art daylighting prediction models as well as design and control of such devices and advanced metrics. The course also has a lab section, in which the students learn how to work with lighting and daylighting tools and build their own computational transient lighting models in open programming languages, in order to design illumination systems and predict electricity consumption and potential energy savings. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand fundamental illumination concepts.
2. Design and assess the performance of electric and natural lighting systems in buildings.
3. Calculate fundamental illuminance, non-point sources, radiant energy, lamp types, lighting controls, interior lighting design, daylight prediction models, optical properties of windows, advanced metrics and shading devices.
4. Build and solve lighting and daylighting models using advanced software and programming techniques to design lighting systems and calculate energy savings from the use of natural light and lighting controls.
5. Design a project, submit a project report and make an oral presentation (only individual projects are allowed). The project themes cover a wide variety of lighting/daylighting design and control such as: daylighting and lighting design of commercial buildings, measurements/monitoring of lighting levels in laboratory settings, prediction of potentional energy savings, impact of shading design and control, and advanced dayligthing system modeling.
|
| CE 51401 - Building Controls |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide students with the knowledge of fundamentals, design, and analysis for building control systems. It primarily consists of three parts. The first part covers basic concepts, terminology, procedures and computations of control systems including block diagrams & transfer functions, open-loop & closed-loop control, control system modeling, time response, root locus techniques, design via root locus, and digital control systems. The second part focuses on issues surrounding the building controls: interfacing components such as sensors and actuators, problems encountered, and state-of-the-art solutions for building energy efficiency and thermal comfort. The third part aims to develop students’ ability to convert control system concepts into real building control systems. The course provides a hands-on opportunity for students to complete three projects associated with the three primary components during the semester: indoor environmental quality assessment, building HVAC system commissioning and its control analysis, and new control algorithm development for building energy efficiency, occupant health, and individual productivity. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate basic HVAC processes and explain the function, layout, and operation of commercial HVAC systems.
2. Analyze the function, operating characteristics, and appropriate applications of basic control loops and control modes as found in direct digital, analog electronic, electronic and pneumatic commercial control systems.
3. Understand and program a sequence of control, lay out a control system logic diagram and program it into a DDC controller.
4. Understand the function of network devices and network protocols such as a bridge, router, gateway, hub, firewall, Ethernet, TCP/IP, BacNet, and Lon Talk.
5. Use general-purpose and specific building automation software to monitor and control a building HVAC system.
6. Numerically model a building to define the key control parameters for thermal comfort.
7. Develop and program alternative control algorithms for building HVAC systems in order to enable sustainable buildings.
|
| CE 51501 - Building Energy Audits |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide students with the necessary skills to perform an energy audit on commercial and residential buildings. Energy accounting procedures for all major building subsystems are covered in detail, along with operational cost analysis of these systems. Students learn fundamental techniques for auditing the building envelope; electrical and lighting systems; heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems; internal thermal loads; and building maintenance and operation procedures. Students also learn to analyze electric and natural gas utility tariffs and rate structures and apply their findings to the energy auditing process. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Analyze utility tariffs and rate structures for electricity and natural gas, and use the information to help guide energy audits.
2. Perform an energy audit of all major building subsystems, including the building envelope, electrical and lighting systems, heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems, internal thermal loads, and building maintenance and operation procedures.
3. Numerically model the energy consumption of each of the building subsystems, and run parametric studies to determine and recommend appropriate energy conservation measures.
|
| CE 52000 - Construction Project Control Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Techniques used for planning and scheduling, estimating, and cost control for construction projects. The interface of cost control with the financial management at the company level will be considered. Work breakdown structure as a method of control will be developed. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 52100 - Construction Business Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Develops students' understanding of the fundamental theories and applied principles of management of U.S. construction companies. Exposes students to the present and future practice of business management at the construction company level. Provides insight into basic construction business operations including strategic planning, organizational structure, marketing, accounting, financing, risk analysis, quality, and international construction business practice. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 52200 - Computer Applications In Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of current computer usage in the construction industry; basic computer hardware and software concepts; computer applications in construction; commercially available software applications. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 52300 - Selection And Utilization Of Construction Equipment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of economics and functional applications for major categories of construction equipment. Operational characteristics are identified for selected equipment items and are applied to typical construction situations. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 52400 - Legal Aspects In Engineering Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Legal principles and landmark cases relevant to engineering. Subjects covered include contracts, torts, agency, real property, environmental and labor laws, expert testimony, arbitration, patents and copyrights, sureties and ethics. Three evenings may be required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 52600 - Construction Of Temporary Facilities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Temporary facilities employed by the construction industry for various projects. Design and construction of temporary structures such as formwork, falsework, scaffolding, cofferdams, and cableways. An investigation of recent examples described in the literature. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 52700 - Analytical Methods For The Design Of Construction Operations Sem. 1 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides an investigation of quantitative methods used for the design and analysis of construction operations to maximize productivity and minimize resource idleness. Includes discussions on queuing theory, line of balance techniques, linear programming, and simulation. Comprehensive group projects involve modeling and analyzing actual construction operations. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 53000 - Properties And Production Of Concrete |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic properties of hydraulic cements and mineral aggregates and their interactions in concrete. Properties of plastic and hardened concrete. Modifications through admixtures. Production, handling, and placement problems. Specifications; quality control and acceptance testing; lightweight, heavyweight, and other special concretes. A one-day field trip is required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| CE 53500 - Bituminous Materials And Mixtures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Consideration of major types of bituminous materials-asphalt cements, cutback asphalts, asphalt emulsions, and tars. Influence of chemical composition upon physical properties. Desirable aggregate characteristics for bituminous mixtures. Construction techniques. Current practices for determining optimum asphalt contents. Two one-day field trips are required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 53800 - Experimental Methods In Construction Materials Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will introduce the student to the fundamental aspects of the computer control of experimental equipment. Emphasis is placed on the difficulties of interfacing computers and instruments. Experimental techniques for measuring important properties of construction materials are discussed. For example, techniques involving the use of strain gages, optical measurements, and measurement of properties such as pore structure and surface area are considered. Emphasis is placed on the effects of experimental techniques on the resulting measurements. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 54000 - Open Channel Hydraulics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Energy and momentum principles, design of open channels for uniform and nonuniform flow, boundary layer and roughness effects, flow over spillways, energy dissipation, flow in channels of nonlinear alignment and nonprismatic section. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| CE 54200 - Hydrology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Meteorology; precipitation; stream flow, evaporation, and transpiration; subsurface flows, well hydraulics; runoff relations and hydrographs; elements of stream flow routing, frequency and duration studies; extreme values statistics applied to flood and drought forecasting; application of hydrologic techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 54300 - Coastal Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to coastal engineering with emphasis on the interaction between oceanic dynamic processes (waves, currents, and tides) and coastal regions (beaches, harbors, structures, and estuaries) and on the engineering approaches necessary to prevent adverse effects caused by this interaction. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 54400 - Subsurface Hydrology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic principles of fluid flow in saturated and unsaturated materials. Darcy's law, well hydraulics, determination of hydraulic properties of aquifers. Infiltration theory. Discussions of artificial recharge, land subsidence, saltwater intrusion, ground water quality and contamination. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 54500 - Sediment Transport Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Sediment properties and the mechanics of sediment transport. Threshold of movement. Riverbed load and suspended load theories. Regime theory and stable channel design. River diversion problems. Erosion. Geomorphologic and water quality aspects. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 54700 - Transport Processes In Surface Waters |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Four main topics are covered: (1) density-stratified two-layer systems in lakes and channels, with applications to mixed-layer growth, oil-spill containment, salinity intrusions, (2) advection-diffusion modeling in channels, including analytical solutions to steady and unsteady, one- and two-dimensional problems, (3) mechanisms of diffusional transport, including turbulence in channels and longitudinal shear dispersion, and (4) near-field analysis of discharges, including similarity analyses of jets and plumes. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 54900 - Computational Watershed Hydrology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Use of professional computer programs for the calculation of the runoff from complex basins. Generation of unit hydrographs. Calculation of losses, channel and reservoir routing, parameter optimization, and application of Kinematic wave technique to urban catchments. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 55000 - Physico-Chemical Processes In Environmental Engineering I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is the first of a two-course sequence and covers physico-chemical processes as applied in water and wastewater treatment. Topics include: reactor theory, mixing, gravity separation, centrifugation, adsorption, ion exchange, disinfection kinetics, acid/base chemistry, neutralization, precipitation, and corrosion. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 55700 - Air Quality Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discussion of fugitive, mobile, and point sources of air pollution with attendant effects on materials, plants, and humans. Development and status of state and federal regulations with emphasis on the development and use of mathematical dispersion models including meteorological fundamentals and atmospheric transport. Discussion of concepts for ambient air quality control strategies including urban planning and transportation considerations. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 55900 - Water Quality Modeling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Mathematical modeling of chemical and biological processes occurring in natural aquatic systems. Classical oxygen demand and nutrient processes are modeled, as well as chemical specific transport and fate processes. Emphasis is placed on deterministic models, mass balance approaches, and chemical specific coefficients or parameters. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 56000 - Public Mass Transportation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Public mass transportation system technologies, design, operation, and planning including vehicle characteristics, bus transit, light rail and rail rapid transit, schedules and networks, capacity, passenger characteristics, and paratransit. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 56100 - Transportation Systems Evaluation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Concepts and principles of transportation economic analysis, transportation costs and benefits, user and nonuser consequences, needs studies, finance and taxation, methods of evaluation of plans and projects, cost-effectiveness, environmental impact assessment. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 56200 - Geometric Design Of Highways |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development and applications of concepts of geometric design for rural and urban highways. Design controls and criteria, elements of design including sight distance and horizontal and vertical alignment, cross-section elements, highway types, intersection design elements, types of interchanges and interchange design elements, grade separations and clearance. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 56300 - Airport Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Airport design requirements derived from using aircraft design parameters and operational characteristics; airport configuration; runway length and orientation; geometric design of taxiways, exits, and runways; apron design; airspace obstacles; effects of air traffic control; lighting and marking; asphalt pavement and rigid concrete pavement design; pavement overlays; evaluation of runway pavement; drainage; earthwork; and project management. A field trip is required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 56500 - Traffic Engineering: Operations And Controls |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Traffic laws and ordinances; design and application of signs, markings, and signals; timing of isolated and interconnected signals; speed regulation; one-way streets; pedestrian, bicycle, and mass transit considerations; traffic engineering administration. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 56600 - Transportation Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of transportation planning. Historical development and current status of techniques used in travel demand forecasting: trip generation, trip distribution, mode choice, traffic assignment. Data collection and use of surveys. Applications to passenger and freight movement in urban and statewide contexts. Implications for policy formulation and analysis. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 56700 - Highway Traffic And Safety Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Traffic and safety studies including: traffic and safety impact studies, control and geometry improvements, hazard and countermeasures identification, predicting safety benefits, before-and-after studies; data collection and computer tools for highway traffic and safety evaluation. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 56800 - Highway Infrastructure Management Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Processes and techniques of managing rehabilitation and maintenance of highway infrastructure facilities including roads and bridges. Three management systems are examined: pavement, bridge, and roadway maintenance. The primary emphasis is on data collection, life cycle cost analysis, priority setting and optimization, program development strategies, and institutional issues. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 57000 - Advanced Structural Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Studies of stress and strain, failure theories, and yield criteria; flexure and torsion theories for solid and thin-walled members; and energy methods. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| CE 57100 - Earthquake Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The objectives of the course are to: (1) expose the fundamentals of structural design in earthquake regions; (2) explain the functions of linear, nonlinear, and limit analyses with respect to design; (3) describe the complex relationships between ground motion models and structural response models in the linear and nonlinear response ranges; and (4) provide the students perspectives about the behavior of building structures in the earthquake environment. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 57200 - Prestressed Concrete Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Behavior and design of prestressed concrete structures, prestress losses, composite construction, flexure and shear design, deflections, and special topics. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 57300 - Structural Dynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of structural members and systems subject to dynamic loads such as wind and earthquake loads; basic theory for single-degree-of-freedom and multi-degree-of-freedom analytical models of civil engineering structures; free vibration, harmonic and transient excitation, foundation motion, resonance spectrum, Lagrange's equation, modal analysis, lumped parameter methods, computer methods. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 57500 - Experimental Methods In Structural Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory, methods, and techniques for experimental studies of structural members and systems. Measurements fundamentals; transducers for measuring strain, displacements, force and torque, pressure, and temperature. Physical modeling principles: similitude, materials and their properties, and loading systems for application to studies of elastic and inelastic models. Case studies. Individual project required of each student. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 57600 - Advanced Reinforced Concrete Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design and behavior of columns, two-way slab and slab-beam floor systems, and beam-column joints; strut-and-tie models. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 57900 - Structural Stability |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Bending of structural members subjected to axial and lateral loads; buckling of compression members and frames in elastic and inelastic ranges, local buckling, lateral buckling of beams, design criteria. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 58000 - Advanced Geotechnical Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced treatment of topics in geotechnical engineering, including the engineering response to loading, soil properties, earth pressures, shear strength, soil compaction and fabric, permeability, and consolidation and settlement analysis. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 58300 - Slopes And Retaining Structures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected topics in soil response and technology needed in conventional geotechnical analysis and design; shearing behavior in clays; subsurface investigation; lateral earth pressures, retaining walls, and sheet pile walls; stability of slopes. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 58400 - Foundation Analysis And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design of shallow foundations (isolated, combined, and strip footings), with specific attention to issues of mutual concern and interest to geotechnical and structural engineers. Review of factors that serve as the basis for selection of foundation type. Interpretation of subsurface exploration results. Settlement analyses and limit bearing capacity analyses. Communications and interaction between geotechnical and structural engineers. Structure and contents of a geotechnical report. Detailed treatment of geotechnical/structural design criteria and methodologies for various types of shallow and deep foundations. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 58700 - Soil Dynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Vibration of elementary systems, foundation vibratory theory, foundation design for vibratory loads, foundation isolation, wave propagation theory, response of soils to dynamic loading, dynamic soil properties, dynamic behavior of waste materials, field and laboratory methods for evaluation of dynamic soil properties, liquefaction of sands, vibratory compaction of granular materials. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 59100 - Advanced Structural Steel Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design and behavior of plate girders; design of composite beam and column members; behavior and design of bolted and welded connections, including moment-resistant connections, seated connections, and gusset-plate connections. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 59200 - Plastic Design Of Steel Structures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Ultimate load capacity of steel structures; methods of analysis for structures in the plastic range; plastic design of continuous beams, frames, and connections. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 59300 - Environmental Geotechnology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of regulations related to hazardous and solid waste disposal, including hazardous waste characterization. Discussion of contaminant transport in porous media and relationship with remediation technologies for hazardous waste sites. Discussions of soil properties relative to waste containment systems, soil stability, and permeability. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 59400 - Transportation Systems Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Identifies concepts fundamental to the planning, design, operation, and management of transportation systems. Aims to impart a systems perspective to transportation problems. Incorporates concepts from economics, engineering, operations research, management, psychology, and public policy analysis. Topics include supply-demand microeconomic framework, analysis of transportation demand, system performance, network equilibrium, and associated case studies. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 59500 - Finite Elements In Elasticity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of theory of elasticity; variational principles; one-, two-, and three-dimensional elasticity finite elements; interpolation methods; numerical integration; convergence criteria; stress interpretation. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 59700 - Civil Engineering Projects |
|
Arrange Hours and Credit. Hours and credits to be arranged. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CE 59800 - Graduate Professional Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Civil Engineering. This internship experience is intended to complement the student's academic coursework and help prepare the student for a career as a practicing engineer. Program coordinated by school with cooperating employers. Must complete one academic year in Civil Engineering. A written report is required. (May be repeated but may not be taken in successive semesters.). Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CE 61200 - Physical Geodesy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Gravity field modeling. Spherical harmonics. Gravimetry and gravity reduction methods. Discrete/continuous estimation. Gravity prediction, collocation. Local and world height datums. Earth rotation, differential equations of Euler and Liouville. Basics of inertial surveying. Prerequisite: CE 61100. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 61400 - Statistical And Econometric Methods I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic and advanced statistical and econometric methods as applied to engineering-related problems. Introduction to ordinary least squares regression, count-data models including Poisson and Negative binomial regressions and their extensions, simultaneous equations models, multinomial logit models, ordered probability models, joint discrete/continuous models, and hazard-based duration models. Prerequisites: Stat 51100. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 61500 - Statistical And Econometric Methods II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced statistical and econometric methods as applied to engineering-related problems extending the techniques covered in CE 61400. Topics include: seemingly unrelated regression, three-stage least squares, generalized extreme value models, nested logit models estimated by full information maximum likelihood, random parameters (mixed) logit models, models with fixed and random effects, and zero-inflated count-data models. Prerequisites: CE 61400. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 63100 - Advanced Concrete And Aggregates |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Microstructure of concrete. Physicochemical properties of cements and their hydration. Nature of hardened cement paste. Properties of aggregates. Workability, strength, shrinkage, creep, and fracture of concrete. Durability, freezing and thawing, air-entertainment, reactions of aggregates, chemical attack. Influence of microstructure on engineering properties of concrete. Prerequisite: CE 53000. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 66100 - Algorithms In Transportation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Modeling and analysis of transportation network problems through the design, analysis, and implementation of algorithms. Emphasis on the use of quantitative techniques of operations research to model system performance. Covers fundamental data structures, complexity analysis, memory management, recursive programs, application of graph theory and network analysis to transportation problems, analytical formulations and solution algorithms for traffic assignment problems, and dynamic traffic assignment. Prerequisite: CE 59600 or IE 50100. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 67100 - Behavior Of Metal Structures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the behavior of metal structural components and metal structural systems. The performance of civil engineering type metal structures in various loading environments is examined, and correlations between behavioral characteristics and various design specification requirements are reviewed. Primary emphasis is placed on the behavior of steel structures, although other metal systems also are discussed. Specific topics include material behavior, manufacturing processes, fatigue and fracture, bolting and welding procedures, and repair and retrofit techniques. Course material is augmented with a number of case studies. Prerequisite: CE 59100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 67200 - Advanced Topics In Structural Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A series of minicourses on special topics offered as CE 67000, CE 67200, etc. These special topic minicourses provide an opportunity for introducing students to topics of contemporary importance or special interest which fall outside the scope of the regular structural courses. Information about current offerings may be obtained from the schedule of classes or the structural engineering. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CE 67401 - Bridge Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course reviews a number of fundamental topics related to the structural design of highway bridges. Some of the key features include bridge types, aesthetics, structural analysis methods, vehicle load distribution, deck design and detailing, steel girder design, concrete girder design, integral abutment design, bearings, and construction. Concurrent prerequisites: CE 57200 and CE 59100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To solidify students' understanding of the material taught and introduce them to fundamental aspects involved in the design and constuction of bridges.
2. Students should be able to understand critical aspects of AASHTO (Americal Association of State Highway and Transportaion Officials) bridge design requirements for
steel and concrete superstructures and bridge decks.
|
| CE 67500 - Finite Element Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theoretical basis of the finite element method; elements for use in the solution of two- and three-dimensional stress problems, plate-bending problems and shell problems; static and dynamic loadings; vibration and stability problems; geometrical or material nonlinearities; flow problems. Prerequisite: CE 57700 or 57800. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 67600 - Behavior Of Reinforced Concrete Members |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Studies of the behavior and strength of reinforced concrete members, behavior of beam-columns, deflections, shear, bond, and cracking. Review of research and pertinent literature. Emphasis is placed on the background, use, and limitations of present design specifications. Prerequisite: CE 57600. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 68100 - Engineering Properties Of Soils |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Engineering properties of soils, including compaction phenomena, with emphasis on strength and compressibility. Experiments to examine the nature and validity of strength and compressibility theories and their application to stability and settlement analysis. Measures of soil fabric; behavior of waste/marginal materials. Prerequisite: CE 48300. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 68200 - Ground Water And Seepage |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Hydromechanics of confined and unconfined flow of water through soils, potential theory, conformal mapping transient flow. Applications to design of earth dams. Prerequisite: CE 483000. Typically offered Summer Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 68400 - Geological Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles describing the mechanical response of geomaterials subjected to disturbance by man. Relation between geology and engineering. Weathering and hydrothermal alteration of rock masses. Weathered rocks, problem soils, and transitional materials. Soluble rock terrain (karst). Applied geomorphology. Civil engineering design factors and case histories that relate to the behavior of rocks and sediments. Characterization of geomaterials behavior, exploration and measurement of their engineering properties. The focus of the course is on theoretical and practical solution of engineering problems. Prerequisite: CE 483000. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 68500 - Rock Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Mechanical properties governing rock behavior, from intact rock to fractured rock masses. Laboratory experiments and field tests. Failure criteria. Linear Elastic Fracture Mechanics. Rock mass deformability. Analytical and empirical approaches for the design and construction of civil engineering structures in rock masses. Slope stability. Bearing capacity of shallow and deep foundations. Prerequisite: CE 48300. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 68600 - Underground Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Planning, analysis, design, and construction of underground structures in soft ground and rock. Ground structure interaction. Static and seismic stresses on tunnel support. Relative stiffness method. Ground deformations. Construction methods, types of support, and their effects on the surrounding ground. The focus of the course is on the understanding of the interaction between ground and structure. Prerequisite: CE 48300. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 68901 - Plasticity Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course covers stress analysis, strains analysis, elastic and inelastic constitutive relations, with emphasis on plasticity, and the solution of plastic boundary-value problems for a wide range of materials, including metals, soils and alloys of various types. Specific topics covered by the course include: tensors, stress analysis, strain analysis, laws of thermodynamics, basic concepts from elasticity, viscoplasticity as an extension of viscoelastic concepts, classical plasticity, principle of maximum plastic dissipation, Drucker¿s inequality, yield function and yield surface, flow rule, hardening rule, classical models (Tresca, Von Mises, Mohr-Coulomb, Drucker-Prager), bounding-surface plasticity, thermodynamics and constitutive models, causes of plasticity at the microstructural level, noncoaxial plasticity, limit analysis, method of characteristics (slipline method) and cavity expansion analysis. Prerequisite: AAE 55300 or ME 61200. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 69100 - Civil Engineering Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. An interdisciplinary seminar which provides a forum for invited speakers and staff to discuss new developments in practice and current research in civil engineering. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CE 69500 - Probabilistic Methods In Geotechnical Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the nature of particulate media and their description and characteristics. Compares deterministic and probabilistic approaches to the action and reaction of structures of, on, or in soil when subjected to loadings. Considers uncertainties in material parameters and their effect on designs. Stability is assessed in terms of reliability as well as customary factors of safety. Prerequisite: CE 58000. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CE 69700 - Civil Engineering Projects |
|
Arrange Hours and Credit. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CE 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CE 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CEM 19100 - Construction Internship I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. First of three work periods required for students in the construction engineering and management program. The off-campus location for each work period is designated by the construction organization that sponsors the construction internship. Student intern receives compensation from the sponsor during each work period. A typical first internship period emphasizes the field-based activities of the sponsor. Recommended, but not required, to be preceded by CE 22000. Available to CEM students only. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Construction Engineering Mgmt
Department: Div of Constr Engr & Mgmt
Course Attributes: Coop, Dept Credit, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CEM 20100 - Life Cycle Engineering And Management Of Constructed Facilities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces concepts relating to the engineering and construction of facilities throughout their life cycle. Topics that will be explored include the nature of the construction industry, construction contracts, legal and management organization of construction companies, basics of the design and construction process, as well as an introduction to the role of estimating and project scheduling. Cost, time, safety and quality concepts of construction management relationships will also be discussed. Prerequisite: First Year Engineering Curriculum must be completed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Construction Engineering Mgmt
Department: Div of Constr Engr & Mgmt
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Work with construction schedules and determine which activities are critical to the timely completion of the project.
2. Identify different types of construction contracts and specifications.
3. Calculate the productivity and the costs associated with construction equipment labor.
4. Calculate the peak financial requirement for a given project based on project revenues and expenses.
5. Understand the importance of safety on the construction site.
6. Understand the principles involved in estimating and controlling costs on a construction project.
|
| CEM 29000 - Construction Engineering Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An orientation course to prepare the student for professional practice in construction engineering including information on Careers and Issues in Construction; History and Culture of the U.S. Construction Industry; Engineering Ethics and Preparation for Leadership. Information and assistance is also provided related to Specialty Options for Plans of Study; Students Organizations; Opportunities for Construction Research and Community Outreach at Purdue. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Construction Engineering Mgmt
Department: Div of Constr Engr & Mgmt
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students learn more about the construction industry.
2. Prepares students for professional practice after graduation.
3. Prepares students for upcoming internship work periods.
|
| CEM 29100 - Construction Internship II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Second of three internship periods and a continuation of that described for CEM 19100. Typically, experience emphasizes the office-based activities of the sponsor. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Construction Engineering Mgmt
Department: Div of Constr Engr & Mgmt
Course Attributes: Coop, Dept Credit, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CEM 30100 - Project Control And Life Cycle Execution Of Constructed Facilities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course continues an introduction to construction management and engineering concepts for future engineers, contractors and owner representatives involved at different stages in the life-cycle of constructed facilities. Specifically, this course focuses on the principles, tools, and procedures used in the construction industry for project selection and financing, advanced planning and scheduling techniques, resource management, and project monitoring. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Construction Engineering Mgmt
Department: Div of Constr Engr & Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to use the techniques, skills, and modern engineering tools necessary for engineering practice.
2. An ability to design a process to meet desired needs within realistic constraints.
|
| CEM 30200 - Practical Applications For Construction Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course teaches practical applications of the theories, tools and skills taught in CEM 20100 and CEM 30100. Construction processes will be studied through hands on exercises working with actual contract plans and specifications and computerized project scheduling of the sample project that is the focus of the class. Topics that will be explored are Contract Format, Understanding Contract Specifications. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Construction Engineering Mgmt
Department: Div of Constr Engr & Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Ability to read, comprehend and interpret construction contract plans and specifications. Through hands on use of plans and specifications from an actual project, they will be
taken through the process of using and understanding the various sections of the documents.
2. Identify and distinguish the different types of building construction project estimates and the role they play in the facility development process.
3. Demonstrate specific skills in the interpretation of construction plans and specifications, estimate planning and organization, quantity takeoffs and pricing, construction contracts
labor and equipment productivity, conceptual estimating, bidding strategies, and overhead costs.
4. Ability to develop and utilize a computerized network schedule for the example construction project. Scheduling will address logic flow and contract status through data analysis of
activities updates including resource and dollar loading.
5. Identify and use principal methods, tools, and techniques used to develop building construction project estimates and project schedules.
|
| CEM 32400 - Human Resource Management In Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduce a broad set of fundamental topics regarding management of people in engineering and construction organizations in the U.S. Subjects include labor-management relations (laws, regulations and practices affecting construction workers and organizations); worker motivation, productivity, and training; roles and practices of managers; construction safety; management of quality. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Construction Engineering Mgmt
Department: Div of Constr Engr & Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand managerial aspects of the engineering and construction industry.
2. Know the background and the principal laws and practices concerning labor-management
relations for the union and nonunion jobs.
3. Know current management practices involving worker supply and demand, workforce training, EEO
and workforce diversity, professional ethics and construction safety.
4. Gain basic knowledge to help you become an effective manager in engineering and construction organizations.
5. Enhance communication skills.
|
| CEM 39100 - Construction Internship III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Third, and last, of required internships. It typically emphasizes the project management activities of the sponsor. Actual assignments to a student may vary from sponsor to sponsor. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Construction Engineering Mgmt
Department: Div of Constr Engr & Mgmt
Course Attributes: Coop, Dept Credit, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CEM 42500 - Construction Practice Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The capstone senior design course for construction engineering and management majors. Working in teams in a realistic engineering practice environment, students use an actual construction project to accomplish open-ended project planning and systems design. Course covers construction project strategy, cost estimating and bidding, constructability analysis, project scheduling, contract conditions, project organization, site analysis and development, safety and quality management, and information systems design. Comprehensive written submittals and oral presentations require integration of knowledge gained in previous courses and in construction internships. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Construction Engineering Mgmt
Department: Div of Constr Engr & Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
To provide the student knowledge and experience in:
1. All phases and aspects of construction project planning, engineering, and management at the project level;
2. The complexities and uncertainties of planning and decision-making in a realistic environment;
3. How construction activities by the constructor are influenced by owner needs and project design basis and features;
4. Methods and skills of oral and written communication; and
5. Methods, techniques and experience of working in teams.
|
| CEM 45000 - Building Systems In Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The primary objective of this course is to familiarize students with the terminology, planning and execution of constructed Mechanical, Electrical and Plumbing (MEP) systems. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Construction Engineering Mgmt
Department: Div of Constr Engr & Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The student will develop proficiency in implementing MEP design concepts including reading and interpreting drawings and construction documents; developing sourcing and equipment plans; and managing construction execution and completion through the turnover phase.
|
| CEM 49700 - Construction Engineering Projects |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 4.00. Topics vary. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Construction Engineering Mgmt
Department: Div of Constr Engr & Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 18 credits
|
| CEMT 10400 - Fundamentals Of Surveying |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Measurement of vertical and horizontal distances and angles using the tape, level, transit, theodolite, and EDMI. Computations of grades, traverses, areas, and curves. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CEMT 10500 - Introduction to Construction Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the opportunities available within the construction industry. The laboratory is utilized to learn the basics of computers, the library, and e-mail systems available on campus, and the basics of word processing, spreadsheets, and computer programming. No previous computer knowledge is necessary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CEMT 11000 - Construction Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Accounting fundamentals as utilized in the construction industry with a special emphasis on basic design of construction cost accounting systems as used to manage a construction company. Use of construction cost indices for labor and materials, as well as use of construction accounting for estimating and bidding purposes. Use of accounting management software as appropriate. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CEMT 12000 - Construction Materials And Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to common construction terminology, materials, methodologies, and structural systems as they relate to buildings, industrial facilities, and infrastructure. Selection of construction materials (wood, steel, concrete, and masonry) and methods for diverse applications. Site visits for experiential learning. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CEMT 12500 - Construction Visualization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to extraction and interpretation of information from construction documents as they relate to diverse types of construction projects including heavy civil, highways, utilities, water, storm-water and sewer construction, other infrastructure construction and buildings. Lab work including blue print reading, plots, and construction symbols interpretation for diverse undertakings. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CEMT 16000 - Statics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Forces acting on bodies at rest, including coplanar, concurrent, and nonconcurrent systems. Includes centroids, moments of inertia, and friction. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CEMT 21500 - Mechanical And Electrical Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Methods for design, construction, and inspection of mechanical and electrical systems for buildings. Emphasis on heating and cooling loads, equipment selection, duct and pipe sizing, codes, safety, installation, inspection, commissioning, and estimating. Responsibilities of the general contractor for HVAC (heating, ventilating, and air-conditioning) and plumbing work. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CEMT 26000 - Strength Of Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Stress-strain relationships of engineering materials; composite analysis; shear forces and bending moments in beams; analysis and design of steel and wood beams and columns, beam deflections, and statistically indeterminate beam analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CEMT 26700 - Materials Testing |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Laboratory and field testing of structural materials to determine their mechanical properties and behavior under load. Materials included are steel, aluminum, concrete, wood, and asphalt. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CEMT 27500 - Applied Civil Engineering Drafting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Preparation of structural construction drawings for buildings, bridges, roads, and topographic drawings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CEMT 28000 - Quantity Survey |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of methods to estimate quantities of materials required in construction. Practice in making quantity surveys. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CEMT 29900 - Civil Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Hours and subject matter to be arranged with staff. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CEMT 30200 - Construction Law and Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Practical focus on key legal and ethical issues applicable to the construction industry and how to manage them. Laws related to construction work, contractual relationships and strategies, torts, liabilities, bonding, insurance, risk management, dispute avoidance and resolution, liens, partnering, and ethics are among topics covered. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CEMT 31000 - Surveying Computations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of errors in surveying measurements. Adjustments to surveying measurements, including an introduction to the least squares adjustment method. Computations using rectangular coordinates including intersections and coordinate transformations. Computations associated with horizontal and vertical control networks. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| CEMT 31200 - Construction & Route Surveying |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Field procedures for construction and route surveying, including highway, street, sewer, and bridge layout. Route surveying including vertical and horizontal curves, curve design, survey for streets and subdivisions, earthwork, and profiles/sections using both theodolite and electronic distance measuring (EDM) equipment. Computation of errors and coordinates and use of appropriate software. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CEMT 33000 - Construction Field Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of types and uses of construction equipment and machinery in relation to diverse field operations. Analysis of equipment productivity and costs. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CEMT 34100 - Construction Scheduling and Project Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the use of computers for creating, presenting, revising, and updating construction schedules, and in using the schedule and other programs to assist in managing a construction project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CEMT 34101 - Construction Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Management, methods and equipment used in the construction of buildings, earthworks, bridges and roads. Contractor organization, job management, and safety. Excavation, formwork, concrete, masonry, and steel erection methods. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Working knowledge of a construction site.
2. Knowledge of the uses and limitation of construction equipment (earthmoving, cranes, etc.).
3. Background in safety aspects of the construction site.
4. Background in means and methods of the construction process.
|
| CEMT 34200 - Construction Cost and Bidding |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course includes a study of the methods of estimating costs for labor, material, equipment, and direct overhead for construction projects; how to establish markups for indirect overhead and profit; procedures for setting up a computerized estimating system; and conceptual estimating procedures. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CEMT 34400 - Construction Inspection |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Inspection procedures as applied to contracted construction and the execution of the completed contract. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| CEMT 34700 - Construction Contract Administration and Specifications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Relationship between all parties involved in the construction process. Analysis of contracts, the general and special conditions of the contract, specifications and their purpose/intent, standard specifications, adaptation of selected provisions from standard specifications, and delineation of special supplemental conditions. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CEMT 35000 - Construction Project Cost & Production |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of contractors' record-keeping procedures and forms from estimate breakdown to completion of the project, with a review of current methods of production control.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CEMT 39000 - Construction Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Minimum of 10 weeks' work experience in the construction industry, with at least five weeks' experience in the field. Written report of this experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CEMT 39800 - Construction Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Minimum of 10 weeks work experience in the construction industry, plus written report of directed academic project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CEMT 43000 - Soils And Foundations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Measurement of technical properties of soils in situ or in the laboratory, classification for engineering and construction purposes. Soil exploration, subsurface investigation, and soil reports; concept of bearing capacity; shallow and deep foundations and retaining wall, their analysis, and construction aspects. Soil-structure interaction in terms of construction, settlement, and structural service issues. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CEMT 44700 - Construction Project Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of construction organizations, their forms and functions, project management procedures and documents, and financial management within a construction organization. Subjects appropriate for those working within a construction organization will be emphasized. Role playing may be incorporated. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| CEMT 45200 - Hydraulics And Drainage |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic hydrostatics; fundamental concepts of fluid flow in pipes and open channels; methods of estimating storm-water runoff; sizing of culverts, storm and sanitary sewers, and open channels. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CEMT 45500 - Construction Safety And Inspection |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of safety and inspection requirements for construction sites and projects. Accident record keeping, reporting; requirements of the OSHA code; inspection for safety and hazards, environmental issues, and quality; risk control; and management issues related to these. Development and implementation of company safety and hazard communication and inspection programs. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CEMT 48400 - Wood Timber & Formwork |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of wood and timber design, including beams, columns, connections, and laminated structural members. The design of formwork for concrete structures, including walls, beams, columns, slabs, and forms for special shapes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CEMT 48600 - Reinforced Concrete Design And Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The fundamentals of reinforced concrete design and analysis, including beams, slabs, columns, footings, and retaining structures. Introduction to pre-cast construction and prestressed concrete. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CEMT 49000 - Senior Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of a project combining the skill and knowledge gained from previous courses. Project is presented before a departmental panel and will include graphical material, oral, and written communication. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| CEMT 49100 - Innovation In Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course considers the role of innovation within the construction industry. The course reviews the general concept of innovation, how it's defined, and who's likely to adopt it. A variety of construction technologies, processes, and materials offering the potential of significantly improving the construction industry are also presented. Departmental permission required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Recognize innovation impediments which are inherent in the construction industry
2. Appreicate the importance of innovation as a means to being competitive in an expanding marketplace.
3. Identidy some key innovative practices currently being utilized within the industry.
4. Evaluate an innovation to assess its positive and negative characteristics.
5. Recognize work environments and employment situations which are conducive to innovative thinking.
6. Utilize web-based resources for personal research and real-world applications of construction innovation.
7. Understand the characteristics of an innovative project manager and innovative office environment.
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| CEMT 49200 - Sustainability In Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the unique role the general contractor can play in reducing the amount of energy, material and environmental resources that are expended during the construction process and it reviews the general contractor’s pivotal role on projects seeking LEED certification. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the impact the construction industry has on the environment and energy consumption.
2. Identiy strategies that can reduce this impact.
3. Be familiar with the current legislative environment and how it can affect the construction process.
4. Understand the need to adopt sustainable practices as a matter of regular company policy.
5. Consider innovations which can improve the industry’s efficiency.
6. Be familiar with LEED certification methodology.
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| CEMT 49400 - Engineering Economics for Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to engineering economy and its methods related to time value of money. Economical evaluation and comparison of alternatives considering costs, returns, interest, taxes, and probability in a time span; determining feasibility, break-even points, and rate of return. Cost indices for construction. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
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| CEMT 49800 - Constructn Practice IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Construction Practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| CEMT 49900 - Construction Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Hours, subject matter, and credit to be arranged by staff. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
|
| CEMT I1980 - Career Enrichment Internship I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's readiness for entering an initial or a second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CEMT I2980 - Career Enrichment Internship II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's readiness for entering an initial or a second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CEMT I3980 - Career Enrichment Internship III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's readiness for entering an initial or a second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CEMT I4960 - Career Enrichment Internship IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's readiness for entering an initial or a second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CEMT I4980 - Career Enrichment Internship V |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's readiness for entering an initial or a second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CET 10000 - Technical Computations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of elements from algebra and trigonometry appropriate to surveying, estimating, statics, and other construction-related courses. Graphs and reports are included. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
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| CET 10400 - Elementary Surveying |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Measurement of distances, directions, and angles using tape, level, theodolite, and total station. Computation of areas and traverses, lines and grades. Also, topographic surveys, an introduction to construction surveys, and an introduction to GPS measurement. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
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| CET 10800 - Route Surveying And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Preliminary and construction surveys for route locations Calculation and field work for simple and easement curves grade lines, and slope stakes. Preparation of plans, profiles, and cross-sections from field survey data earthwork estimates. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
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| CET 16000 - Statics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of forces acting on bodies at rest. Coplanar and non-coplanar forces, concurrent and non-concurrent forces, hydrostatic forces, centroids and moments of inertia will be studies. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
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| CET 20400 - Land Survey Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development, history, elements of the U.S. Public Land System. Tiffin's Instructions. Methodology for the subdivision of sections, retracement survey concepts, related problems and solutions. Types of land descriptions and their plots. State Plane Coordinate System and its use in surveys. Records research of land. Modern land information system, implementation of such a system. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CET 20600 - Construction Surveying |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of surveying skills relevant to the construction field. Projects include: layout of commercial and/or industrial buildings, transfer of horizontal and vertical control, establishment of lines and grades, triangulation, etc. Instruments used will include total stations, data collectors, etc. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CET 20800 - Route Surveying |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Preliminary and construction surveys for highways and railroads, including calculation and field work for simple, compound, reverse, and easement curves, grade lines and slope stakes and the superelevation of curves. Preparation of plans, profiles and cross-sections from field survey data. Earth-work estimates. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CET 20900 - Land Surveying And Subdivision |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Theory and practice of land surveying, subdivision, filing and recording deeds, United States government survey of public lands, laws of land surveying, descriptions and area computations for land surveys. Subdivision planning, calculations and plotting, water main layouts, storm and sanitary sewer calculations and layouts. Street plans and profiles. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
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| CET 21000 - Surveying Computations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of errors in surveying measurements. Adjustments to surveying measurements, including an introduction to the least squares adjustment method. Computations using rectangular coordinates including intersectons and coordinate transformationss. Computations associated with horizontal and vertical control networks. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
|
| CET 23100 - Soils Testing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The measurement of the engineering properties of soils in the laboratory and field. Identification and classification of soils by the Unified Soil Classification System and the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials System. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CET 25300 - Hydraulics And Drainage |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic hydrostatics, Bernoulli's equation, flow in water and sewer lines, overland and ditch drainage, and culvert size determination. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
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| CET 26000 - Strength Of Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of stress-strain relationships, shear and bending moment diagrams, stresses and deflections of beams, axial loads, and combined stresses. Applied problems in the field structural design. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
|
| CET 26200 - Strength Of Materials I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of stress-strain relationships of construction materials, connections, and shear and moment diagrams. Testing of materials to determine physical and mechanical properties. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CET 26400 - Strength Of Materials II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of bending stresses, beam deflections, column behavior, and combined stresses as applied to symmetric structural members. Tests of beams and columns to measure load-deflection relationships. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
|
| CET 26600 - Materials Testing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Testing of construction materials to determine physical and mechanical properties. Preparation of reports from data secured from such tests. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
|
| CET 28000 - Structural Calculations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Practice in the calculation of loads, reactions, shear, and moment for determinate structures. Analysis and design of steel structural members subjected to tension, compression, bending and combined stresses. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
|
| CET 28100 - Applied Structural Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Standard design procedures for steel and wood frame sturctures. Computation of loads, shear, moments and deflections. Sizing of beams, columns and connections. Preparation of structural drawings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
|
| CET 28200 - Structural Detailing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Detailing simple structural steel, reinforced concrete and wood structures, elementary design principles. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CET 29900 - Civil Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. This is a variable course. Subject matter to be assigned by the staff. Primarily for third and fourth semester students. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
|
| CET 30200 - Geodesy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide an overview of geodesy and includes the following: a brief history of geodesy, the geometry of the ellipsoid, the two-dimensional ellipse, the construction of an ellipse, the three-dimensional ellipsoid, geodetic transformations, geodetic datums, reduction of field observations to the ellipsoid, the geoid, and orthometric heights and leveling. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CET 30300 - Land Survey Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of ancient land survey systems which affected surveying in the United States, including metes and bounds systems. History and use of the United States Public Land Systems, including subdivision of sections, restoration of lost or obliterated corners, original surveys and retracement surveys. The study of other land system topics such as State Plane Coordinate systems. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CET 30400 - Legal Descriptions For Survey |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the writing and interpretation of legeal descriptions as they pertain to the conveying of land. Types of legal descriptions. Easment descriptions. Rights associated with written descriptions versus unwritten rights Other special topics in legal descriptions. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
|
| CET 30500 - Control Surveying |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theoretical fundamental and practical applications of establishing survey control networks including open and closed traverses, route surveying networks, using GPS and EDMI in control surveying, differential leveling and industry surveying standards. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CET 30600 - Construction Surveying |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of surveying skills relevant to the construction field. Projects include; layout of commercial and industrial buildings, transfer of horizontal and vertical control, establishment of route centerlines, establishment of lines and grades, determination of earthwork quantities, establishing slope stakes, triangulation, topographic mapping, etc. Instruments used will include transits, theodolites, automatic levels, construction lasers, and EDMs. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CET 30700 - Property Surveying |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The land surveyor in the context of real estate development/transfer. The rules and classifications of evidence and their use. Transfers of real estate and role of title companies. The process for a legal survey in Indiana. Retracement survey of a subdivision, evidence gathered and optimum resolution for the boundaries on such surveys. Plats and reports. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CET 30800 - GPS & Geodesy Surveyor |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Practical application of GPS to land surveying, use of the GPS signal and receivers. Planning a GPS survey, conducting the observations, and analyzing GPS data processing procedures. The course also includes overview of geodesy, the geometry of the multi-dimensional ellipse and ellipsoids, geodetic transformations and datums and the Geodetic Reference System. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CET 30900 - Principles Of Highway Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic principles of highway construction, including materials, methods, interpreting of plans and specifications, earthmoving, drainage, paving, bridges, and retaining walls. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CET 32200 - Astronomic And Geodetic Surveying |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Determination of directions based on astronomic observations. Computations associated with geodetic surveying and geodetic control surveys. Associations of geodetic locations and plane coordinate locations. Introduction to surveying by use of GPS methods. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CET 33100 - Properties And Behavior Of Soils |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Identification and properties of soils with emphasis on laboratory and field testing. Behavior of soils relating to design and construction of structures and highways. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
|
| CET 35000 - Structure Design For Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an overview of structural design for reinforced concrete, steel, and wood structures. Allowable and ultimate strength design methodologies are covered, including load factor design and load and resistance factor design. Structural design codes and design-construction interdependence in professional practice are emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CET 35300 - Hydraulics and Drainage II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of 253 with additional applications of fundamental hydraulics to culvert size determinations, water line calculations, weir and orifice problems, inlet spacings, and rainfall and drainage problems of small watersheds. Computer software applications. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CET 36600 - Materials Testing II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to testing structural elements and complete structures. Strain gauge measurements, instrumentation, and the design of tests to eliminate variables. Statistical analysis of test data. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
|
| CET 36800 - Experimental Stress Analysis Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Topics include a determination of the location, direction and magnitude of stress and strain in full-size and scale-size structural systems and components. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
|
| CET 38000 - Structural Design Standards |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Design of steel framed structures, including beams, columns and connections. The preparation of structural drawings, and a study of erection practices. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
|
| CET 38100 - Structural Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Standard structural design procedures for materials used in construction of the built environment. Structural analysis techniques; Analysis of statically determinate and indeterminate structures. Graduation credit required grade of C or better. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CET 38200 - Steel Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of structural steel design, with particular attention to the design of beams, columns, and their connections. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CET 38500 - Fundamentals Of Reinforced Concrete |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of concrete as a construction material and as a structural material. Field methods and practices used in concrete construction. Applied fundamentals of reinforced concrete design as applied to beams, slabs, columns, and footings. Computer applications. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CET 38600 - Reinforced Concrete Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of concrete as both a construction and structural material. Field methods and practices used in concrete construction. Fundamentals of reinforced concrete design as applied to beams, slabs, columns, walls and footings. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CET 38700 - Reinforced Concrete Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The fundamentals of reinforced concrete design and analysis, including beams, slabs, columns, footings, and retaining structures. Introduction to precast construction and prestressed concrete. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CET 40200 - Surveying Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The ownership and transfer of real property; land descriptions, statute law and common law; sequential and simulataneous conveyances; easements and reversions; riparian rights; the public land system; Rule 13. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
|
| CET 40400 - Property Surveying |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The Land Surveyor in the context of real estate development and transfer. The rules and classification of evidence and their use. Transfers of real estate role of title companies. The process for a Legal Survey. Retracement survey on such survey. Plats and Reports. Case studies. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CET 40700 - Property Surveying |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The land surveyor in the context of real estate development and transfer. The rules and classifications of evidence and their use. Transfers of real estate and role of title companies. The process for a legal survey in Indiana. Retracement survey of a subdivision, evidence gathered and optimum resolution for the boundaries on such surveys. Plats and reports. This is a capstone course for the series of surveying courses offered by the department. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CET 40800 - Construction Of Highways |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Materials, design and methods used by flexible and rigid pavement construction. Topics include preliminary layout and design of intersections and highways, soil requirements, drainage requirements, construction procedures and maintenance. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CET 40900 - Property Surveying |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Office and field work asociated with land surveying. Laws of land surveying and public records of real property. Metes and bounds, federal subdivision, and state plane coordinate descriptions. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| CET 43100 - Properties And Behavior Of Soils |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Identification and properties of soils with emphasis on laboratory and field testing. Behavior of soils relating to design and construction of structures and highways. Computer applications. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| CET 43200 - Foundation Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the design principles, construction methods equipment and construction procedures used in constructing shallow and deep foundations. Excavation procedures temporary bracing, construction site dewatering, and loads on underground structures will also be studied. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
|
| CET 45300 - Water and Wastewater Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of fundamental calculations required in the hydraulics of water supply systems and in the hydraulics of waste-water disposal. Computer applications. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CET 48200 - Steel Structure Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Applied fundamentals of structural steel design as applied to beams, columns, connections, joists, and detailing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CET 48400 - Wood Timber And Formwork |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of wood and timber design, including beams, columns, connections, and laminated structural members. The design of forms for concrete structures, including walls, beams, columns, slabs, and forms for special shapes. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CET 49900 - Civil Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. This is an independent study course. Hours, subject matter and credit to be arranged by staff. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
|
| CFS 39900 - Special Topics In CFS |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study and analysis of concepts and issues related to Hospitality Management and Nutrition. Subject matter to be arranged by staff. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 5 times
|
| CGT 10000 - Technical Graphics Lectures |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An introduction to the academic and professional opportunities available in the field of technical graphics. Lecture presentations cover a wide range of material by instructors from the technical graphics program and guests. Attendance at all lectures is important, and major assignments include writing a resume and professional goals paper, readings from course textbooks, development of a personal Web page, and weekly quizzes and lectures. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CGT 10100 - Introduction to Computer Graphics Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to and a survey of the discipline of computer graphics. The topics include a survey of the applications of computer graphics, the knowledge base and history of computer graphics, an examination of computer graphics technologies and careers as well as an overview of available resources for study and research in computer graphics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate comprehension of the basic principles of CGT.
2. Engage practicing professionals, current students, faculty, counselors, and alumni to discover opportunities within the department, college, and university to develop and validate a CGT plan of study.
3. Identify and utilize basic strategies for team building, planning, investigation and presentation.
4. Identify and utilize opportunities to participate in activities focused on critical thinking, teamwork, project management, potential social impact, ethics and communication.
5. Evaluate current technical skill level and demonstrate investigation into or competent entry skill in a CGT area of interest.
|
| CGT 10101 - Foundations Of Computer Graphics Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course provides a foundational overview of computer graphics. The topics include the applications of computer graphics in today’s world, basic technical elements of computer graphics, a review of current and future career opportunities in the field, and areas of potential research and study in computer graphics technology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate comprehension of the basic principles of CGT.
2. Engage practicing professionals, current students, faculty, counselors and alumni to discover opportunities within the department, college and university to develop and validate a CGT plan of study.
3. Identify and utilize basic strategies for team building, planning, investigating and presentation.
4. Identify and utilize opportunities to participate in activities focused on critical thinking, teamwork, project management, potential social impact, ethics and communication.
5. Evaluate current technical skill level and demonstrate investigation into or competent entry skill in a CGT area of interest.
|
| CGT 10200 - Graphic PC Basics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This introductory course gives students hands-on experience in the graphics enhancement capabilities of standard productivity software. Students will learn and apply specialized graphics options that are often overlooked in standard Windows(r) office software. Emphasis will be on the efficient exploitation of the Windows(r) Graphical User Interface (GUI), the graphics capabilities of common productivity software, acquiring and linking graphical elements to documents, graphic file formats, and the implications of producing graphics-intensive documents. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CGT 11000 - Technical Graphics Communications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to the graphic language used to communicate design ideas using CAD. Topics include sketching, multiview drawings, auxiliary views, pictorial views, working drawings, dimensioning practices, and section views. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CGT 11100 - Designing For Visualization And Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory design course for computer graphics majors. Students develop an understanding of the basic design elements and principles, composition, and typography through exercises and projects. The focus is on visual thinking, exploring the relationship between type and image, and developing multiple solutions to a given problem. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CGT 11200 - Sketching For Visualization And Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course applies fundamental computer graphics concepts of visualization, communication, and creativity within a sketching metaphor. Exercises and projects in graphic theory, problem solving, and sketching skill development provide students with activities that focus on further development within the discipline. A variety of sketching techniques are used to gather critical information and transform data into effective communication instruments. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CGT 11400 - Introduction Of Graphics For Aerospace And Aviation Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory course in computer graphics applications for aerospace, aviation, and related professions. Experiences focus on visualization, sketching, graphics standards and problem solving strategies. The course will expose students to CAD, PLM, and other related technologies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CGT 11600 - Geometric Modeling For Visualization And Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A core introductory computer graphics course that provides entry-level experiences in geometric modeling. Students develop geometric analysis and modeling construction techniques and processes to produce accurate computer models for graphic visualization and communication. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CGT 11700 - Illustrating For Visualization And Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This foundation course stresses the use of pictorial illustration for visualization and communication. Various projection systems are introduced with discussion focusing on the appropriate use of view and system utilized to accentuate and provide clear communication. A variety of digital tools are used to construct, extract and render pictorial views using vector and raster tools. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CGT 11800 - Fundamentals Of Imaging Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides a foundation for the development and use of raster and vector images for a variety of industries. Full-color images and illustrations are produced using computer technologies, with a focus on both technical and aesthetic aspects. Topics include color theory and perception, surface and lighting analysis, rendering techniques, and technical characteristics. Typically offered Spring Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CGT 12000 - Electrical And Electronic Drafting |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A basic course in electrical and electronic drafting, utilizing multiview and isometric drawing, sectioning, and dimensioning practices. Documentation of design through schematic diagrams, wiring diagrams, and printed circuit board layout. Application of graphics standards for electronic, power, and industrial control circuitry. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CGT 14100 - Internet Foundations,Technologies And Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (CNIT 14100) The course explores the history, architecture, and development of the World Wide Web. Current tagging and scripting languages are covered in a tool-independent environment. Topics also include authoring tools, design, graphic and multimedia formats, and commerce, implementation, and security issues. PC literacy required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CGT 15500 - Graphical Communication And Spatial Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The principles of engineering graphics are applied to the visualization, communication, and graphical analysis of problems. Included is the utilization of sketching and computer-aided design to create and analyze computer-generated geometric models. Manipulation of coordinate systems, methods for generating selected views, graphic and data base standards, and engineering drawing interpretation will be covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CGT 16300 - Graphical Communication And Spatial Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An introductory course in computer graphics applications for mechanical- and aeronautical-related professions. Experiences focus on visualization, sketching, graphic standards, and problem-solving strategies for engineering design. The course will emphasize the proper use of parametric solid modeling for design intent. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate the knowledge and utilization of sketching for problem solving in an engineering environment.
2. Understand CAD file interoperability by exchanging files in different CAD software packages.
3. Successfully utilize visualization abilities for creative problem solving in an engineering environment.
4. Systematically identify, evaluate and solve engineering problems using points, lines, surfaces, and solid geometry.
5. Use geometric construction techniques when creating 2D and 3D geometric forms for the construction of solid models.
6. Understand the history, research, and implications of graphics for engineering design.
7. Develop the ability to present clearly identified solutions using graphical communication conventions and standards.
|
| CGT 16400 - Graphics For Civil Engineering And Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An introductory course in the area of computer graphics documentation for civil engineering- and construction-related professions. Experiences focus on accepted industry graphic standards and their technical visual applications. The course emphasizes creation and distribution of graphics to enable communication. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CGT 21100 - Raster Imaging For Computer Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Digital images are produced using a variety of computer technologies. Advanced color theory, surface rendering, and light control are emphasized in relation to technical illustration, hardware characteristics, and software capabilities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate understanding of the primary attributes and differences between vector and raster graphics and their application to various communicative products and tasks.
2. Demonstrate understanding of analog and digital data forms and the conversion processes relating to digital imaging.
3. Appropriately use common imaging application features such as layers, channels, paths, filters, color adjustment and correction tools, histograms, color mode tools, and calibration tools.
4. Demonstrate understanding of input, manipulation, and output technologies related to raster graphics.
5. Demonstrate understanding of color theory, color models, color systems, and the physiological and psychological effects of color in raster imaging.
6. Demonstrate understanding of miscellaneous raster graphics issues such as file formats, compression technologies, vector to raster conversion methods and the legal implications of copyrights, trademarks, licenses, and releases.
7. Demonstrate skill and proficiency in creating professional raster graphics for all types of output including: textures for use in 3D environments, photographic reproduction, digital illustration, web delivery, CD-ROM multimedia, and self-promotion
|
| CGT 21500 - Computer Graphics Programming I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on programming fundamentals, logic, and problem solving necessary for advancement into upper level CGT courses. A cross-section of languages and technologies will be introduced and demonstrated. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand basic programming concepts such as variables, data types, selection and repetition control structures, arrays, files, and methods and functions.
2. Create simple object-oriented applications.
3. Demonstrate an understanding of the similarities between several different programming or scripting languages.
4. Demonstrate the ability to apply knowledge to different computer graphics software applications.
|
| CGT 21600 - Vector Imaging For Computer Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Full-color vector illustrations for a variety of uses are produced using computer methods. Color theory, surface analysis, and rendering techniques are emphasized as they apply to vector-based illustrations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the cognitive and communicative attributes that make graphics effective.
2. Learn about the history, implications and application of vector graphics.
3. Specify color in RGB, HLS, CYMK, and PANTONE systems as they relate to vector illustrations.
4. Discover the suitability of PostScript vector graphics applications for particular illustration tasks.
5. Gain skill in an industry-standard PostScript illustration tool.
6. Understand the capabilities and limitations of color printing technologies.
7. Descibe methods for planning and evaluating informational graphics.
8. Develop experience in securing high-quality color output from service bureaus.
9. Learn about the principles of light, shade and shadow as they apply to vector renderigs.
|
| CGT 22100 - Graphic Representation Of Architectural Documents |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will study graphic solutions to problems conditioned by traditional and emerging construction document standards. The principles of construction graphics are applied to the visualization, communication, and graphical analysis of problems. Included is an overview of materials and methods of residential structure construction and construction documentation creation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CGT 22600 - Introduction To Constraint-Based Modeling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the techniques used in the construction and manipulation of constraint-based solid models and assemblies. Emphasizes extracting data from databases. Downstream applications of data and the impact on overall product design processes are explored. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate basic fluency in constraint-based solid modeling techniques.
2. Create effective 3D CAD data to support the incorporation of design intent.
3. Demonstrate a basic understanding of downstream applications of solid modeling databases.
4. Demonstrate the ability to produce professional isometric and orthographic freehand sketches.
|
| CGT 24100 - Introduction to Computer Animation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the knowledge base on which digital animation and spatial graphics technology are founded and developed. Emphasis will be placed on developing a working knowledge of the mechanics of 3D geometric formats, spline-based modeling with polygon mesh & NURBS, procedural mapping of raster images, simplified polygon modeling, rendering methods, hierarchical linking, and kinematic fundamentals. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CGT 24200 - Technical Graphics For Supervision |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An introduction to commonly encountered technical drawing practices; multiview representation, isometric pictorial, reading drawings, dimensioning practices, and working drawings. Emphasis is on computer graphics as technical communication through freehand sketching. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CGT 24500 - Game And Simulation Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course concentrates on the design of interactive activities in the areas of entertainment gaming, edutainment, training, and marketing. Activities will focus heavily on preproduction and game play design. Topics will include concept development, psychological aspects of gaming, game play, and technical implementation issues. Requires of class projects. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Collaboratively work on video game project in a pseudo-realistic company environment.
2. Design functional game including game-play and interactivity models.
3. Create games using a mobile game platform.
4. Use a 3D game engine to create a multiplatform 3D game.
5. Learn to deploy games using Over-the-Air and Over-the-Internet.
6. Implement Artificial Intelligence principles in the development of Non-Player Characters (NPC's) using both logical and searching techniques.
7. Implement entire game development process including: game-play development, treatment, marketing, play-testing, and delivery.
8. Work on realistic project with dynamic design changes.
|
| CGT 25100 - Principles Of Creative Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an exploration of conceptualization and problem solving using the integration of type and image as both visual and verbal communication. Topics such as systems of organization, visual hierarchy, creativity, typography, color, and navigation are introduced and explored. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CGT 25600 - Human Computer Interface Theory And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the theory and art of human computer interface (HCI) design. Students focus on theoretical research in the area of HCI and on designing interfaces and interface components. Emphasis is placed on designing and evaluating effective and usable interfaces for multimedia and hypermedia products. Topics such as systems of organization, visual hierarchy, creativity, typography, color, and navigation are introduced. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply the design process to create computer interfaces.
2. Apply visual principles to interface design.
3. Apply usability principles to interface design.
4. Conduct usability research.
|
| CGT 26200 - Introduction To Construction Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of graphic solutions to problems conditioned by traditional and emerging construction document standards. Construction document creation is based on current architectural engineering and construction (AEC) standards with a focus on residential settings. Introductory 2D documentation will progress into 3D modeling techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Learning Objectives:
1. Employ graphic strategies in typical construction communication environments.
2. Relate construction graphics theories to real-world practices.
3. Produce graphic solutions to appropriate problems.
4. Show functional literacy in a variety of construction types.
5. Demonstrate construction print reading skills.
6. Identify and utilize construction graphic standards.
|
| CGT 29000 - Computer Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Course topics will be determined by the CGT faculty. Hours and subject matter shall be arranged by the instructor and approved by the CGT curriculum committee. This course will not be used for independent study. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CGT 29100 - Industrial Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course certifies completion of computer graphics work experience as the first session of the Computer Graphics Technology Cooperative Education Program. A written report of the experience is required. Admission to the Computer Graphics Technology Cooperative Education Program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CGT 29200 - Industrial Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course certifies completion of computer graphics work experience as the second session of the Computer Graphics Technology Cooperative Education Program. A written report of the experience is required. For cooperative education program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CGT 29900 - Selected Topics In Computer Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Hours and subject matter to be arranged by staff. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
|
| CGT 30100 - Creating Graphics for Digital Display |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The process of creating, editing and reformatting graphics for web and multimedia presentation. Students will gain proficiency in the creation and manipulation of raster and vector based imagery in appropriate technology formats for multimedia delivery. Color theory, design, communication and presentation skills will be emphasized. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CGT 30400 - Color and Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students examine traditional color harmonies and modernist theories. Interaction of color and the application of these ideas in the work of 20th century artists are studied and adapted to student projects. Creative and expressive uses of color in all areas of design are encouraged. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CGT 30500 - Interactive Animation and Delivery Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. New and emerging computer technologies are used to create interactive media-rich Web and stand-alone delivery projects. Students focus on the use of emerging scripting technologies that extend the capabilities of HTML, including JavaScript and ActionScript. Additionally, unique vector and raster implementations, such as Macromedia Flash, will be discussed and used. The course furthers the student's ability to utilize the time and location independent capabilities of Web and new interactive multimedia content delivery methods. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CGT 30700 - Advanced Graphic Design for Web and Multimedia |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the creation of intermediate to advanced graphic web design. Students are required to plan, design and implement a major web project and a final online presentation. Areas of concentration will include transforming existing print and presentation materials for use on the Internet, integration of original vector, raster and animation art, and refining of graphic design principles as they relate to graphic web design. Students will use leading industry standard software in the creation process. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CGT 30800 - Prepress Production And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the process of designing, creating, and preparing documents for commercial printing. Students will develop proficiency with publishing software. Topics include page layout, font and image management, color, printing processes, papers, bindings and proofing methods. Projects emphasize designing single and multi-page documents for business and advertising such as identities, flyers, brochures, forms, catalogs, newsletters and booklets. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Learning Objectives:
1. Create sketches and roughs for conception and planning of print documents.
2. Apply design principles to the creation of original print documents and content elements.
3. Manage all content elements and prepare documents for printing.
4. Demonstrate proficiency laying out documents and applying effects using a prevailing computer based page layout package.
5. Discuss the different types of print documents as well as their components and purposes.
6. Discuss the issues related to color processes and color printing.
7. Demonstrate knowledge of papers, inks, and bindings.
8. Create print products that show an understanding of the principles of page design and organization.
|
| CGT 30900 - Internship In Computer Graphics Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Internship course in computer graphics technology. Practical experience totaling at least 240 hours in computer graphics technology. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
|
| CGT 31000 - Drawing, Acting And Scripts For Animation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course analyzes the symbiotic relationship between thinking and physical action, between emotion and its expression. Students will explore the visual storytelling process for film, animation, video games or multimedia. Students will learn the history of and gain needed drawing skills to create storyboards, animatics, along with the learning the importance to the production process. Students will learn how animation scripts are developed as well as how visual stories are told through technical elements such as composition, lighting, framing and perspective. Students will explore how to tap into their creativity and create interesting original animations. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| CGT 31100 - Experimental Methods And Practices In Computer Graphics Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores scientific and professional methods used in computer graphics occupations. Exercises and projects are focused on developing competency and knowledge of investigative methods relative to CGT. Engagement opportunities in designing and conducting applied research are pursued to identify and enable students to make good decisions relative to selecting their undergraduate research pursuits. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate comprehension of the basic principles related to research and investigation in CGT.
2. Engage practicing professionals, current students, faculty, counselors and alumni to discover research and investigation opportunities within the discipline.
3. Identify and utilize basic strategies for investigating, designing, recording, and presenting.
4. Identify and utilize opportunities to participate in activities focusing on critical thinking, teamwork, project management, evaluating potential social impact, ethics, and communication.
5. Evaluate and leverage assets relative to investigation.
6. Define instrumentation and evaluation of CGT-based experiments.
7. Define potential strategies to garner support for investigate endeavor.
|
| CGT 31500 - Computer Graphics Programming II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of the study of computer graphics programming concepts with an emphasis on interactive graphics and application development. Topics include polygon tessellation, vector imaging, interactive programming techniques, application development, and game development. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CGT 31600 - Industrial Applications of Computer Graphics Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course includes specialized topics, skills, and applied problem solving associated with Computer Graphics Technology. The level of coverage varies according to the audience. Several variable topics may be offered under this title. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| CGT 32100 - Advanced Digital Pictorial Illustration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The importance of tone, texture, color, and entourage is stressed in the rendering of architectural interiors and exteriors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CGT 32300 - Virtual Product Integration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Integration of product data and product definition formats throughout the enterprise with an emphasis on the use of PLM data sets and digital design information. Includes common design processes within the product lifecycle in critical corporate settings, including design, manufacturing, service, training, and marketing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CGT 32600 - Graphics Standards For Product Definition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to product data exchange and interoperability standards, ANSI and NIST product documentation standards, product modeling standards, methodologies for technology selection, implementation, and evaluation. This course supports the product archival and communication processes in a PLM environment. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| CGT 33000 - Multimedia, Animation And Video Game Design And Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course outlines all the details to create an original video game, build an effective game proposal outline with background information, the story, asset lists, hardware and software requirements. This course will teach the student to maximize design and development time of the original creator. Students will properly detail the proposal for a programming and artistic team to take a game from start to finish. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CGT 34000 - Digital Lighting And Rendering for Computer Animation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The development of a working knowledge of perspective display of three-dimensional models and the resulting effects of projected light sources on shade, shadow, color, texture, and atmospheric effects in architecture, product illustration, and animation. Emphasis will be placed on lighting design, analysis, and photorealistic simulation for commercial graphic applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CGT 34100 - Motion for Computer Animation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An applied course covering three-dimensional computer graphic animation for graphics specialists and professionals involved in the use of technical design, time and motion study, surface texture mapping, digital lighting, color, and the technology required to produce computer animations for commercial applications in manufacturing design, marketing, and training. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CGT 34500 - Game And Simulation Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course concentrates on the design of interactive activities in the areas of entertainment gaming, edutainment, training and marketing. Activities will focus heavily on preproduction and game play design. Topics will include concept development, psychological aspects of gaming, game play, and technical implementation issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Learning Objectives:
1. Collaborate on a video game project in a pseudo-realistic company environment with dynamic design changes.
2. Design a functional game including game-play and interactivity models.
3. Use a 3D game engine to create a multiplatform 3D game.
4. Create and deploy mobile games using over-the-air and over-the-Internet methods.
5. Implement artificial intelligence principles in the development of non-player characters (NPC) using both logical and searching techniques.
6. Implement entire game development process including: game-play development, treatment, marketing, play-testing, and delivery.
|
| CGT 34600 - Digital Video And Audio |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Covers the use of digital technologies for video and audio in multimedia, hypermedia, and animation products. Students examine the methods for creating, sampling, and storing digital video and digital audio and the constraints placed on these media assets when used for media-based products. Emphasis is placed upon the technology of digital video and audio, including formats, data rates, compressors, and the advantages and disadvantages of the different technologies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate understanding of the principles editing.
2. Solve video compositing problem by using masking, tracking, color correcting, and animation.
3. Properly compress a digital video when given a set of constraints.
4. Author interactive video disks (Blue-ray) using standard authoring tools.
5. Set up a solution to stream video.
|
| CGT 35100 - Interactive Multimedia Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the many facets of interactive multimedia design and production. Students are introduced to authoring programs used for information delivery, with special attention focused on the integration of various media assets for communication. There is also concentration on the storage, management, and retrieval of media assets in a production environment. Considerable time is spent on the systematic design of interactive media products to meet specified goals of communication. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CGT 35300 - Principles Of Interactive And Dynamic Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the development of interactive and dynamic media components for web and interactive media products. The course examines the design, creation and integration of 2D animation, 2D games, text, sound, video, programming, and databases for use in web and other interactive media. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop skills and proficiency in creating professional vector animations and interactive components using HTML5, jQuery, JavaScript, and CSS.
2. Demonstrate understanding of JavaScript programming.
3. Develop beginning to moderately complex games.
4. Integrate AHTML5 and jQuery with PHP, MySQL, and XML.
5. Further understand the emerging capabilities of delivering Web content.
6. Further examine the advantages, disadvantages, and limitations of Rich Internet Applications on the Web.
7. Extend the students ability to systematically develop content for the Web, from concept to implementation.
8. Further the students cognitive skills in problem solving, debugging, and programming.
|
| CGT 35600 - Web Programming, Development And Data Integration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course focusing on the development of dynamic content and applications to facilitate information distribution. The course stresses development strategies for managing the rapidly changing information of corporations and organizations for just-in-time distribution, using authoring programs to create interactive multimedia products that utilize database management systems, file systems, and XML to provide a method for visualizing and manipulating that data. Significant time is spent on intermediate to advanced programming and scripting. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an understanding of how to use server-side technology to develop dynamic web sites and personalize content for users.
2. Integrate server-side and client side technology in developing web applications.
3. Demonstrate an understanding of the logic behind web applications.
4. Cerate projects using server-side technologies to be used in an advanced Web project.
5. Utilize custom COM objects for file uploading, sending emails, and other purposes.
6. Show understanding of basic database design, theory, and application.
7. Design and create databases in SQL Server (or equivalent robust DBMS)
8. Use SQL SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, and CREATE statements appropriately.
|
| CGT 36000 - Applications Of Construction Documentation I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Standards applied to the creation and distribution of documentation within the construction enterprise. Construction documents are created as products of a computer model. Residential modeling is followed by an introduction to light commercial documentation. Topics include a study of blueprint reading and 5D building information modeling (BIM) estimation of material extracted from a model. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply parametric technologies to architectural engineering and construction (AEC) problems.
2. Produce renderings and 3D models to increase communication effectiveness.
3. Determine how loading and framing techniques affect structures.
4. Identify how codes affect documents.
5. Determine how new building technologies affect building design and documentation.
|
| CGT 39000 - Computer Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Course topics will be determined by the CGT faculty. Hours and subject matter will be arranged by the instructor and approved by the CGT curriculum committee. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CGT 39300 - Industrial Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Completion of computer graphics work experience as the third session of the Computer Graphics Technology Cooperative Education Program. A written report of the experience is required. For cooperative education program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CGT 39400 - Industrial Practice IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Complete a computer graphics work experience as the fourth session of the Computer Graphics Technology Cooperative Education Program. A written report of the experience is required. For cooperative education program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CGT 41100 - Contemporary Problems In Applied Computer Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Groups will identify, design, qualify, manage, create, and present a final project relative to existing or emerging issues within applied computer graphics. Activities and experiences will explore related topics such as project planning and management, user expectations, interpersonal communications skills, and quality management. The course concludes with faculty, peers, and practicing professionals evaluating oral, written, and media presentations of final projects. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CGT 41500 - Seminar For Senior Design Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Preliminary work toward the senior design project is carried out with guidance from faculty. This course includes background research, review of previous projects, definition of project requirements, and the successful creation of a formal project proposal. The course concludes with a proposal presentation to faculty. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CGT 41501 - Contemporary Problems In Applied Computer Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Students identify, research, define, and propose a senior project relative to existing or emerging issues within Computer Graphics Technology. Activities and experiences will explore related topics such as self-assessment, industrial needs and applications, exploratory research, interpersonal communication skills, and management of time, resources, and quality assurance. The course concludes with faculty, peers, and practicing professionals evaluating formal project proposals developed by individual students. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Research contemporary problems and issues related to computer graphics technology.
2. Identify relative existing and emerging graphic technologies appropriate for an applied project.
3. Evaluate technological frameworks, tools, and methods for the creation and development of a computer graphics application or solution.
4. Plan, manage and determine the potential for success of a computer graphics based project through the application of accepted investigation methods.
|
| CGT 41600 - Senior Design Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This capstone course requires students to engage in a substantive endeavor directed at solving problems related to computer graphics. Activities include the creation and management of graphic systems and media assets per the requirements of the senior design proposal. Students are required to demonstrate professional attitudes and attributes in the timely completion and presentation of their project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CGT 42300 - Product Data Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an understanding of the types of data generated and used in the product lifecycle, the current tools and methodologies in the management of that data, and system analysis and implementation techniques for using PDM as the backbone supporting a company's product development and implementation activities. Interaction between various enterprise systems is also discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| CGT 42600 - Industry Applications Of Simulation And Visualization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on developing mathematically accurate physical-visual simulations of mechanisms, systems, and assemblies. Topics include physical system analysis; coordinate systems; inverse kinematics; linear, rotational, and reciprocating motion. Simulations will be created using modeling technology, programmed scripting, and diverse software. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CGT 44200 - Production for Computer Animation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An applied course covering advanced spline modeling techniques, lighting techniques, applied shading, motion dynamics and controllers, particle systems, application customization programming, and pre-production development and planning. Study of emerging advancements in computer animation and spatial graphic technologies will be included. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CGT 44300 - Scripting For 3D Animation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides the basic knowledge and skills required to use scripting languages found in 3D animation software. Emphasis is on implementing application extensions for real-world production problems and pipelines. Discussions and projects include, extending the software in areas of modeling, animation, rendering, data I/O, and scene management. Laboratory exercises include developing working macros, UI customization, utilities, and scripted plug-ins. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CGT 44400 - The History And Technique Of Visual Effects In Film |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This lecture-based course presents the history and technique of special or visual effects in film from the 19th Century (George Me'lie's) to the current digital age of visual effects. Emphasis is placed on the use of effects in fantasy, science fiction, and horror genres. These effects can range from the recreation of historical venues, to fictional characters and to worlds not yet seen. This course serves not only to address this facet of the history of film and cinema, but also the techniques and technology of visual effects including practical effects, miniatures, stop-motion, makeup, mechanical effects, optical effects, motion control, and the digital realm. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
|
| CGT 44500 - Video Game Design And Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines video game design, theory, and development from aesthetic, psychological, and technical perspectives. Students will gain applied experience with a commercial game development platform. Advanced game development techniques will be taught in this course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Learning Objectives:
1. Deconstruct and analyze an existing game and define its essential elements.
2. Apply psychological paradigms in video game experiences.
3. Understand behavior modification principles and how they are used in video games.
4. Understand the mechanisms, theories, and concepts that drive video game design and development.
5. Develop a feature-complete, market-ready video game that can be deployed to an online marketplace.
6. Create a functional game design document and work plan.
7. Demonstrate proficiency with a commercial game platform/engine.
8. Perform research on an aspect of game development.
|
| CGT 44600 - Post-Production And Special Effects For Computer Animation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A variety of commercial applications of technical animation and spatial graphics are analyzed and produced, with special emphasis upon client development, design, organization, scripting, storyboarding, technical production, management, and evaluation. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
|
| CGT 45000 - Professional Practices |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Preparation for professional employment in computer graphics professions. Topics covered include creative and publishing law, contracts, copyrights, corporate and freelance employment considerations; portfolio planning; and interviewing. Arranged interviews and portfolio reviews. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CGT 45100 - Multimedia Application Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the development of applications that manipulate media assets. Significant time is spent on intermediate to advanced programming and scripting as well as the synchronization of aural and graphical components. Students are required to plan, design, and implement a major project, and a final presentation is required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CGT 45600 - Advanced Web Programming, Development And Data Integration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course presents the advanced technologies available for use on the World Wide Web and within corporate intranet environments. Emphasis and discussion is focused on the advantages and disadvantages of these technologies as well as on implementation to create unique solutions for business and industry. Strategies for planning, development, and implementation will be discussed and demonstrated. Significant time is spent on advanced programming and scripting as well as manipulation and visualization of data from various sources, including robust database management systems. Students are required to plan, design and implement a major project. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
|
| CGT 46000 - Building Information Modeling For Commercial Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of commercial jobsite planning and coordination. Trade coordination, visualization, and communication are emphasized. Activities include collision detection reports, construction animations, and professional presentations. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Learning Objectives:
1. Be familiar with the current technologies in BIM and what is utilized for MEP systems.
2. Incorporate BIM principles into current AEC projects.
3. Develop independent and teamwork skills for BIM, involving architects, clients, and other users of construction graphics.
4. Incorporate multiple file formats into one that will evaluate MEP and structural systems collisions.
5. Embed and link vital information required for estimation and tendering.
6. Explain how BIM is used in industry.
7. Assess a BIM project and develop a BIM project assessment.
8. Become aware of BIM career opportunities.
|
| CGT 46200 - Applications Of Construction Documentation II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Creating, archiving, integrating, qualifying and utilizing computer-generated, three-dimensional architectural models in a light commercial construction enterprise. Topics include components of MEP, fire protection, blueprint reading and 4D BIM scheduling. Credit cannot be obtained for both CGT 36200 and CGT 46200. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn, decipher, and apply parametric and geometric technologies to AEC problems.
2. Explain where new and emerging software technologies can be applied in the industry.
3. Program database-driven parametric objects for use in various projects.
4. Explain how parametric technologies can benefit the production homebuilder.
5. Develop leadership and life-long learning skills applicable to the construction industry.
6. Incorporate renderings and 3D models into drawing sets for effective communication.
7. Prepare effective marketing materials for residential and commercial industry.
|
| CGT 49000 - Computer Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Senior-level course topics will be determined by the CGT faculty. Hours and subject matter shall be arranged by the instructor and approved by the CGT curriculum committee. This course will not be used for independent study. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CGT 49100 - Special Topics in Computer Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. A variable title, variable content course pertaining to problems and research in graphical methods and representation. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CGT 49500 - Industrial Practice V |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Complete a computer graphics work experience as the fifth session of the Computer Graphics Technology Cooperative Education Program. The cooperation education certificate is awarded after completion of this session and is recorded on the student's official transcript. For cooperative education program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CGT 49900 - Selected Tropics in Computer Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Hours and subject matter to be arranged by staff. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
|
| CGT 50100 - Seminar In Computer Graphics Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. A variable topics course that addresses contemporary problems and issues related to M.S. students in Computer Graphics Technology. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the transition from undergraduate to graduate study (course approaches, studying, research, assistantship responsibilities).
2. Understand and apply ethics in research and writing.
3. Understand the grant process and agencies that offer grants.
4. Understand the publishing process relative to articles and proceedings.
5. Understand the various publishing formats and methods of citations (APA, Chicago, and MLA versus organizational approaches).
6. Understand the IRB process and method of research approval.
7. Develop a plan of study.
8. Establish a graduate committee.
9. Understand the process for obtaining the MS.
10. Grand challenges in Computer Graphics Technology.
|
| CGT 51100 - The Development Of Graphics In Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the historical development of visual science in western civilization and its effect on computer graphics techniques and practices. Topics include the historical, contemporary, and future developments in computer graphics. Emphasizes the study of visual science and the significance of computer graphics as a communications medium. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CGT 51200 - Human Factors Of Computer Interface Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Addresses an array of human factors issues related to human computer interaction and the graphic user interface. Theoretical and practical relationships are drawn between aesthetics and the cognitive sciences in the development of primarily multimedia and hypermedia products. Methods to validate design solutions are learned through controlled usability testing and assessment through small and large prototype projects. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| CGT 51300 - Interactive Multimedia Development And Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the interactive multimedia development process, knowledge base, and applications in business and industry. Particular attention is paid to research issues surrounding theoretical, technological, and interactive techniques, and validating those approaches through applied research. Emphasis is placed on the interdisciplinary nature of the development of new media tools. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| CGT 51400 - Product Lifecycle Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the graphical knowledge base with business and industry applications that support the product lifecycle management process is presented. Graphical applications used in the development of a product from an initial concept through its disposal are covered. Current and past application topics are reviewed in both theoretical and technological aspects and are validated through applied research. Emphasis is placed on the interdisciplinary nature of product lifecycle management through industrial case studies. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| CGT 52000 - Computer Graphics Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides a working knowledge of computer graphics programming using OpenGL and C++. OpenGL is the platform independent industrial standard APL and the leading edge technology for computer graphics application design. It has been used in the gaming industry, as well as in research and for scientific visualizations. The course focuses on creating real-time and interactive applications and is structured into several blocks; OpenGL introduction, modeling, texturing, transformations, lighting, and interactive application design. Students will develop various applications through the course focusing different aspects of computer graphics programming. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the OpenGL pipeline and the OpenGL API.
2. Modeling: understand and actively apply modeling techniques such as surface of revolution, extruded surface, polygonal mesh simplification, implicit surface
modeling and generation, marching cubes, etc.
3. Transformations: understand and actively apply modeling and viewing transformations, hierarchies, object, and scene and object manipulations.
4. Lighting: understand and actively apply Phong illumination model to surfaces.
5. Texturing: understand and actively apply texturing, 2D image manipulation, transfer functions, mip-mapping, texture compression, transparency.
6. Interaction: understand and actively apply basic interaction techniques such as picking, object manipulation and editing, scene walkthrough, flying, etc.
|
| CGT 52100 - Advanced Real-Time Computer Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on a working knowledge of real-time rendering and shaders using GPI. Students will learn how to program advanced computer graphics techniques and how to benefit from the existing graphics hardware in an efficient way. The main focus is on programming modern graphical processing units (GPUs) using the GLSL, CG and OpenGL. Students will learn what the data-flow programming model is, and how to write vertex, geometry, tessellation, and fragment shaders. Another output is using texturing and lighting on the low level of the GPU and the next step is to provide animations using vertex shaders. Advanced texturing techniques such as bump mapping or environment mapping will be explained. Permission of instructor required. Typically Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the OpenGL pipeline and the OpenGL API.
2. Understand and apply the most advanced GPU features such as shaders and FBOs.
3. Advanced Modeling: understand and actively apply modeling techniques such as surface skinning, vertex shaders, tessellation surfaces, etc.
4. Advanced Transformations: understand and actively apply modeling and viewing transformations, bounding volume hierarchies and quaternions.
5. Lighting: understand and actively apply Phong illumination model to surfaces on the shaders levels. Using advanced lighting techniques such as photon maps and volumetric ray casting
on the GPU.
6. Texturing: understand and actively apply texturing, 2D image manipulation, multiple reflections using shaders, bump mapping on the GPU and shadow generation.
7. Level of Detail: understand and actively apply level of detail techniques.
|
| CGT 54000 - Current Topics In 3D Animation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course addresses recent research and development in 3D animation. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an understanding of the latest research contributions in the field of 3D animation.
2. Discuss advanced/emerging 3D animation technologies and suggest improvements and alternatives.
3. Develop research, presentation, and writing skills related to technical content.
4. Effectively set up for animation (rig) realistic/fantasy creatures and objects.
5. Animate realistic/fantasy creatures and objects in a believable way.
6. Create physically accurate animations using rigid body and soft body dynamics, particle systems, cloth and hair.
7. Apply advanced/emerging animation methods and techniques to development of original animation-based productions.
|
| CGT 58100 - Workshop In Computer Graphics Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. Advanced study of technical and professional topics. Emphasis is on new developments relating to technical, operational, and training aspects of industry and technology education. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CGT 59000 - Special Problems In Computer Graphics Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Independent study of a special problem under the guidance of a member of the staff. Does not substitute for either M.S. thesis or M.S. project credit. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CGT 59800 - Directed MS Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A formal investigation of a particular problem under the guidance of the advisory committee. Not applicable to a thesis option plan of study. Enrollment during at least two consecutive terms for a total of three credits is required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CGT 60000 - Spatial Ability Research And Assessment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines spatial ability research through the 20th century; examining the various contributions of psychometric, developmental, differential, and information processing researchers as it applies to computer graphics. Additionally, students examine the various assessment devices that have been used to assess spatial ability and teaching interventions for improving it. Students will develop a research brief based upon the literature reviewed in the course. Prerequisite: CGT 51100. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CGT 61000 - Visual Intelligence And Perception |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the fundamentals of perception and cognition relative to vision and its implications to the field of computer graphics technology and the creation of graphics. Students will examine the foundations of human perception of form, shape, color, and motion, developing an understanding of why and how humans perceive visual information. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Discover the history of investigations into visual perception.
2. Understand how the human vision system constructs an understanding of the 3D world.
3. Know the visual rules that govern the interpretation of form, shape, color and motion.
4. Understand the clinical aspects relative to vision and perception.
5. Learn to apply visual rules in the planning, creation and evaluation of all graphics.
|
| CGT 61100 - Computer Graphics Production Pipeline And Project Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an examination of computer graphics project management principles coupled with production pipeline principles related to graphics. Students will be expected to (a) define the stages of a project, (b) demonstrate competency in managing projects, processes, and people, and (c) define a production pipeline for their area of study. Students will conduct an in-depth analysis of some aspect of a pipeline, perform assessment and/or a pilot research study, and propose methods of pipeline improvement relative to their area of study. Prerequisites: CGT 51100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain CG project management principles via a written final examination.
2. Develop, given a set of criteria, a unique production pipeline based on unique requirements for a computer graphics project (containing an aesthetic and technical component).
3. Utilize the developed pipeline to execute a practical project by outsourcing (hiring) labor to execute on the technical requirements.
4. Analyze and document the effectiveness of the developed pipeline in comparison to published pipelines.
5. Demonstrate competency in managing projects, processes, and people by successfully designing (as demonstrated by written artifacts), implementing (as demonstrated by the creation of tangible product), and evaluating (as demonstrated by the post-project report) a CG project.
|
| CGT 62000 - Graphics Processing Unit Computing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides a working knowledge of general-purpose graphics processing unit computing (GPGPU) using CUDA, OpenCL, and C++. OpenCL and CUDA are the platform independent industrial standard API and leading edge technology for GPGPU. The course focuses on utilizing, GPU for advanced tasks of scientific computing on parallelization of creating real-time and interactive applications and is structured into several blocks; parallel programming and synchronization tasks, GPU architecture, CUDA programming model, the OpenCL programming model. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the Graphics Processing Unit Computing models.
2. Understand the modern Graphic Processing Units.
3. Parallelize sequential tasks and apply them to the Graphics Processing Unit Computing model.
|
| CGT 68100 - Workshop In Computer Graphics Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 6.00. This variable topics course focuses on advanced study of technical and professional research topics, primarily for doctoral students. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstration of understanding of CG project management principles.
2. Demonstration of understanding of CG production pipeline principles.
3. Ability to define the stages of a CG project within at least two differing industries (e.g., animation, gaming, manufacturing, construction, publishing).
4. Demonstration of competency in managing projects, processes, and people.
5. Mastery of a production pipeline for their area of study.
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| CGT 69000 - Research Projects In Computer Graphics Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. This course provides a means of independent study of a special problem under the guidance of a graduate faculty member who holds a terminal degree. It is assumed that projects in this course are research projects independent of one’s doctoral research. Although not required, it is likely that a major result of the course will be a conference or journal publication. This course does not substitute for dissertation research credit on the plan of study. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Learning outcomes will be defined by the proposal that is created by the student and graduate faculty member.
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| CGT 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer Graphics Technology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| CGT I1980 - Career Enrichment Internship I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's readiness for entering an initial or a second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CGT I2980 - Career Enrichment Intern II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Career Enrichment Internship II. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CGT I3980 - Career Enrichment Internship III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Career Enrichment Internship III. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CGT I4960 - Career Enrichment Intern IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Career Enrichment Internship IV. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CGT I4980 - Career Enrichment Internship V |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Career Enrichment Internship V. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHE 19000 - Chemical and Biomedical Engineering Introduction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An orientation course to inform students of the various areas in chemical engineering, to assist them in selection of electives suited to their particular abilitites and interest, and to instill a sence of professional ethics, and responsibility. Lectures drawn from all fields of chemical engineering. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CHE 20000 - Chemical Engineering Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. An orientation course to inform students of the various areas in chemical engineering, to assist them in selection of electives suited to their particular abilities and interest, and to instill a sense of professional ethics and responsibility. Lectures drawn from all fields of chemical engineering. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CHE 20100 - Cooperative Seminar I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Lectures by faculty and students on subjects that relate the academic work and the industrial experience. Written reports on the industrial experience are required and will include a documentation of the student's success in finding application of specified academic activities. For students returning from the first and second work periods. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| CHE 20500 - Chemical Engineering Calculations |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Quantitative applications of steady-state mass and energy balances to solve problems involving multi-component systems and multi-unit chemical processes. Single-component and multi-component phase equilibria, single-reaction and multiple-reaction stoichiometry, coupled mass and energy balances, chemical processes involving bypass and recycle streams. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Estimate physical properties of real systems.
2. Evaluate introductory single-component and multi-component phase equilibria and incorporate these concepts into solutions of mass and energy balance problems.
3. Solve steady state and transient mass and energy balance problems for both reacting and non-reacting systems with or without recycle using.
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| CHE 21100 - Introductory Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Basic principles and concepts of thermodynamics applied to chemical engineering problems; use of basic thermodynamic functions of enthalpy, entropy, free energy to solutions, phase equilibria, and chemical equilibria; thermodynamic processes and efficiencies; equations of state; and relation of macroscopic to molecular properties. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation, Recitation
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CHE 29000 - Industrial Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and comprehensive written reports of this practice. For cooperative program students only. Must be accepted for the program by the cooperative program coordinator. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CHE 29100 - Industrial Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and comprehensive written reports of this practice. For cooperative program students only. Must be accepted for the program by the cooperative program coordinator. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CHE 29199 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CHE 29299 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of departmet required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CHE 29600 - Professional Internship I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in chemical engineering. Program coordinated by school in cooperation with participating employers. Students submit a summary report. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHE 29699 - Professional Practice Internship I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHE 30000 - Chemical Engineering Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Continuation of CHE 20000. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CHE 30100 - Cooperative Seminar II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Continuation of CHE 20100. For students returning from the third and fourth work periods. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHE 30300 - Frontiers In Chemical Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Exposure to advances in thermodynamics, fluid mechanics, heat and mass transfer, kinetics and reaction engineering. Applications of chemical engineering in case studies from the biomedical, biochemical, pharmaceutical, polymer, and microelectronics industry. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 30600 - Design Of Staged Separation Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The application of equilibria and mass and energy balances for the design of staged separation processes. Use of various equilibrium data and thermodynamic principles for the design of batch and continuous distillation, absorption, stripping, and extraction systems. Stagewise calculations and graphical methods for design of binary systems. Design of multicomponent separators. Determination of stage efficiency and column size. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CHE 32000 - Statistical Modeling And Quality Enhancement |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Statistical modeling methods, design of experiments, error analysis, curve fitting and regression, analysis of variance, confidence intervals, quality control and enhancement: emphasizes preparation for designing chemical engineering laboratory experiments and analyzing data. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CHE 33000 - Principles Of Molecular Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of concepts of atomic and molecular bonding, solid microstructure, phase equilibria, and rate processes to the design of solid materials for specific engineering objectives. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CHE 34800 - Chemical Reaction Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Application of kinetic rate equations, mass balances and energy balances to the analysis and design of chemical reactors involving homogeneous and heterogeneous chemical reactions. Chemical equilibria, kinetic rate equations for homogeneous and heterogeneously catalyzed reactions, design of ideal isothermal reactors, effects of non-isothermal operation, effects of diffusion in porous catalysts and non-ideal mixing in continuous flow reactors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CHE 37700 - Momentum Transfer |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Differential (microscopic) and integral (macroscopic) mass, momentum, and energy balances. Newtonian and non-Newtonian fluids. Fluid statics. One-dimensional steady and transient laminar flows. Turbulence. Dimensional analysis and similarity. Friction factors and drag coefficients. Applications to engineering analysis of practical problems. Introduction to numerical analysis and visualization of flows. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CHE 37800 - Heat And Mass Transfer |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Macroscopic and differential energy balances. Heat transfer coefficients for free and forced convection and phase change. Conductive and radiative heat transfer. Applications to heat transfer equipment design and compressible fluid flow. Macroscopic and differential species balances. Mass transfer coefficients and analogies. Mass transfer with and without chemical reaction. Mass transfer equipment design. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CHE 38199 - Professional Practice Co-Op I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of departmet required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CHE 38299 - Professional Practice Co-Op II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of departmet required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CHE 38399 - Professional Practice Co-Op III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of departmet required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CHE 39200 - Industrial Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and comprehensive written reports of this practice. For cooperative program students only. Must be accepted for the program by the cooperative program coordinator. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CHE 39300 - Industrial Practice IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and comprehensive written reports of this practice. For cooperative program students only. Must be accepted for the program by the cooperative program coordinator. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CHE 39399 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of departmet required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 39400 - Industrial Practice V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and comprehensive written reports of this practice. For cooperative program students only. Must be accepted for the program by the cooperative program coordinator. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 39499 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of departmet required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CHE 39599 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of departmet required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CHE 39600 - Professional Internship II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in chemical engineering. Program coordinated by school in cooperation with participating employers. Students submit a summary report. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHE 39699 - Professional Practice Internship II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| CHE 40000 - Professional Guidance |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Lectures to acquaint the senior students with professional ethics, job opportunities, graduate study, graduate schools' continuing study, and services of professional societies. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand and appreciate the need for professional integrity and ethical decision making in the professional practice of chemical engineering.
2. Demonstrate an understanding of contemporary issues encountered in the professional practice of chemical engineering including business practices, environmental, health, and safety issues and other public interests. Our graduates will be aware of the wide-reaching effects that engineering decisions have on society, our global community and our natural environment.
3. Appreciate the need for and engage in life-long learning to maintain and enhance the professional practice of chemical engineering.
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| CHE 40100 - Cooperative Seminar III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Continuation of CHE 30100. For senior students returning from the last work period. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CHE 41100 - Chemical Engineering Science Research Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Experience in chemical engineering science research or development; either directed or independent work that can be experimental or theoretical. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHE 41200 - Chemical Engineering Design Research Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Experience in chemical engineering design research or development; either directed or independent work that can be experimental or theoretical. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHE 42000 - Process Safety Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will develop knowledge of process safety management in the process industries. This new course is being developed with significant input from industrial safety professionals and will prepare students for the safety problems they will encounter in industry. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate ability to apply principles of chemical engineering to design practical systems.
2. Participate in team-based projects to understand team operation and decision-making.
3. Gain experience in and appreciation of the need for individual learning about new systems, equipment, etc.
4. Understand the role of the engineer in promoting safe operation and consideration of environmental issues in technical decisions.
5. Develop an appreciation of current issues and challenges which you may well be addressing as professionals.
6. Demonstrate knowledge and understanding of the elements of process safety management.
7. Be able to pro-actively identify and analyze safety hazards.
8. Demonstrate knowledge and understanding of risk management tools, programs, and processes associated with process safety.
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| CHE 42900 - Advanced Chemical Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of industrial chemical reactions by general type. Comprehensive problems in process fundamentals. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 43400 - Chemical Engineering Laboratory I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Quantitative experimental study of thermodynamics, fluid mechanics, and heat and mass transfer; operation and evaluation of equipment; application of methods of data analysis in practice; use of computers in controlling and simulating experiments; strong emphasis on report writing and oral communication. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 43500 - Chemical Engineering Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Quantitative experimental study of projects involving problems in fluid mechanics and heat and mass transfer or operation and evaluation of equipment; projects include analysis and data-based design of operations involving mass transfer such as distillation, absorption, extraction, drying, humidification, etc; study of rates and equilibria in simple chemical reaction systems; study of chemical processes; application of methods of data analysis in practice; some library work; emphasis on group work, report writing, and oral communication. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Obtain experimental data and calculate physical quantities from these data.
2. Understand experimental error, estimate it, and infer its significance in the experimental results.
3. Design statistically sound experiments, conduct these experiments, and analyze the results.
4. Determine the intrinsic performance data required to complete the design, process, or process equipment.
5. Design and conduct an experimental program to determine the required performance data.
6. Use the requisite performance data to obtain a technically feasible and economical design to meet desired needs.
7. Effectively report results in written form and be able to communicate these results in an oral presentation.
8. Understand different personality types, how these types respond, and how they can function effectively together as a team.
9. Develop the ability to identify, formulate, and solve engineering problems.
10. Develop the capability of independent and lifelong learning.
11. Develop knowledge of contemporary issues and understand the impact of engineering solutions in a global and societal context.
12. Develop ability to use modern techniques and engineering tools.
13. Develop an understanding of the professional and ethical responsibilities as a member of an engineering team.
14. Understand and practice appropriate safety measures.
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| CHE 44200 - Chemistry And Engineering Of High Polymers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to basic principles of polymer engineering, including the chemical structure and use of a variety of industrial polymers, polymerization mechanisms and kinetics, techniques for molecular and morphological characterization, polymer processing, and a variety of engineering properties. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 44900 - Fundamental Process Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Use of process and product synthesis methods and concepts; detailed design of unit operation equipment, the economics of chemical plants, and flow sheet optimization methods. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 45000 - Design And Analysis Of Processing Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Use of process and product synthesis methods and concepts; detailed design of unit operation equipment, the economics of chemical plants and flow sheet optimization methods. Synthesize, develop, and evaluate a preliminary design of a chemical process that meets market requirements for a specific product. Analysis of design alternatives using case studies and optimization methods. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply systematic strategies for synthesizing chemical process designs that involve conventional unit operations.
2. Understand the difference between steady state and batch chemical processes and the implication on their design and operation.
3. Know where and how to obtain information on industrial chemical processes, process operating parameters, equipment costs, cost of chemicals and materials, and associated safety and environmental hazards.
4. Understand the role of physical property estimates on process design and be able to use appropriate physical property estimation methods in unit operations design.
5. Estimate the capital and operating cost of a process and to assess its profitability.
6. Perform detailed hands-on work with tools that ultimately lead to the design of a chemical plant.
7. Communicate project progress and final results in a professional manner orally and in written form.
8. Work effectively in a team to execute open-ended design projects with time-bound deliverables in a professional and ethical manner.
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| CHE 45600 - Process Dynamics And Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Dynamic response and control of chemical processing equipment, such as heat exchangers, chemical reactors, and absorption towers. Use is made of fundamental techniques of servomechanism theory, such as block diagrams, transfer functions, and frequency response. Introduction to advanced control techniques. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation, Recitation
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 46100 - Biomedical Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An introduction to the field of biomedical engineering, with particular stress on the chemical engineer's role. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 46300 - Applicatiions Of Chemical Engineering Principles |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Team-based design projects in materials transport, heat transfer, mass transfer, separations, chemical reactors. Emphasis on team operation and decision-making. Consideration of current technical challenges, societal and economic issues. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate ability to apply principles of chemical engineering to design practical systems.
2. Participate in team-based projects to understand team operation and decision-making.
3. Gain experience in and appreciation of the need for individual learning about new systems, equipment, etc.
4. Understand the role of the engineer in promoting safe operation and consideration of environmental issues in technical decisions.
5. Develop an appreciation of current issues and challenges which you may well be addressing as professionals.
|
| CHE 49600 - Chemical Engineering Honors Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Quantitative experimental study of fluid mechanics, heat and mass transfer, chemical kinetics, and reactions. Design of experimental studies. Comparison of experimental results with theory. Development of new experiments. Library work. Strong emphasis on report writing and oral communication. Honors classification. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 49700 - Special Topics In Chemical Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Primarily designed for subject areas for which there is no specific course offered. Areas of study will deal with topics that have enough student interest to justify the teaching of specialized courses on a trial basis. The course can be repeated by a student as long as the topic being taught is not repeated. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHE 49800 - Undergraduate Thesis Research I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Individual research projects for students completing a non-honors undergraduate thesis. Requires prior approval of, and arrangement with, a faculty research advisor. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| CHE 49801 - Undergraduate Honors Thesis Research I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Individual research projects for students completing an honors designated undergraduate thesis. Requires prior approval of, and arrangement with, a faculty research advisor. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Research
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHE 49900 - Undergraduate Thesis Research II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Individual research projects for students completing a non-honors undergraduate thesis. Continuation of CHE 49800. Includes submission of written thesis and public oral presentation. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 49901 - Undergraduate Honors Thesis Research II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Individual research projects for students completing an honors designated undergraduate thesis. Continuation of CHE 49801. Includes submission of written thesis and public oral presentation. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Research
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHE 51700 - Micro/Nanoscale Physical Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ME 51700) Study of physical processes encountered in small scale systems like Micro-Electromechanical Systems (MEMS) and nanotechnology. Introduction of tools for micron to molecular scale analysis of statics, dynamics, electricity and magnetism, surface phenomena, fluid dynamics, heat transfer, and mass transfer. Quantitative analysis of specific MEMS devices using finite element analysis. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 52500 - Biochemical Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Enzyme kinetics, mathematical models of microbial growth, bioreactor design and operation, genetic and metabolic engineering, plant and animal cell culture, and purification of biological products.
. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 53600 - Particulate Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A broad overview of the fundamental concepts in particulate systems including particle characterization, particle size measurement, sedimentation, fluidization, gas and liquid conveying, particle storage, fluid-particle separation, particle size enlargement and reduction, particle mixing and hazards associated with the handling of particulate solids. Practical applications are emphasized, with a focus on how particles behave differently than fluids. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 53800 - Design And Processing Of Particulate Products |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Characterization particulate systems, use of population balances to describe processes that make or transform particles, applications in important unit processes including crystallization, granulation, milling, aerosol processes. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn the definition of some key particle properties and appreciate the critical importance of particle characterization in the design of particulate processes.
2. Gain an understanding of the population balance as a way of analyzing particulate processes and be able to apply it to a new, unseen problem.
3. Gain an understanding of important science underlying many particulate processes including powder, wetting and particle mechanics.
4. Use a combination of this science base, prior chemical engineering knowledge and the population balance to solve design and operating problems in crystallization, granulation, grinding, spray drying and aerosol processes.
5. Become familiar with some of the typical engineering equipment used for each process studied.
|
| CHE 54000 - Transport Phenomena |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of CHE 37700 and 37800. Topics in fluid mechanics, heat transfer and mass transfer including unsteady state transport problems, stream functions, potential flow, hydrodynamic and thermal layers, turbulence, and multicomponent diffusion. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 54300 - Polymerization Reaction Engineering And Reactor Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Polymerization kinetics, polycondensation, gelation, radical polymerization, ionic polymerization, copolymerizations, Ziegler-Natta polymerizations, polymerization in bulk, solution, suspension and emulsion, modeling, stochastic processes, Z-transforms, batch, CSTR and tubular reactors, stability analysis, computer control, separation, and drying. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 54400 - Structure And Physical Behavior Of Polymer Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Statistical mechanics of chain molecules, thermodynamics of polymer solutions, phase separations, experimental methods of molecular weight determination, crystallization of polymers, polymer physics, rubber elasticity, viscoelasticity. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 55000 - Optimization In Chemical Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of the basic computational tools for solving nonlinear constrained and unconstrained optimization problems. Emphasis on methods applicable to problems arising in chemical plant design, process operations and scheduling, parameter estimation, and waste energy reutilization. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 55500 - Computer Integrated Process Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to computer-aided process operations management. Topics include: process monitoring, regulatory control, data reconciliation, unit and plant-wide optimization, process fault diagnosis, supervisory control, planning, and scheduling. A design project involving a unified application of the presented methodologies is taken from a published industrial benchmark problem. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 55700 - Intelligent Systems In Process Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to artificial intelligence concepts and techniques and their application to important problems in process systems engineering. Topics covered include: introduction to artificial intelligence, knowledge representation and search, knowledge-based systems, neural networks, genetic algorithms, inexact reasoning techniques, industrial case studies in process fault diagnosis and control, design and synthesis, planning and scheduling, AI languages, tools, and environments. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 55800 - Rate-Controlled Separation Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Rate-controlled separation processes based on solute movement (adsorption, chromatography and ion exchange), membranes (reverse osmosis, ultrafiltration, and gas permeation), and crystallization. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 59700 - Special Topics In Chemical Engineering |
|
Arrange Hours and Credit. Hours and credits to be arranged. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHE 61000 - Advanced Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Properties of pure fluids and mixtures are described in the context of classical and statistical thermodynamics. Equations of state and solution theories are developed for this description of fluid phase equilibrium and chemical equilibrium. Fluids encountered in mass transfer and separation operations are treated. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 61100 - Molecular Thermodynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course aims at providing a systematic treatment of the microscopic foundation of thermodynamics as well as a working knowledge of the statistical formalism needed to predict microscopic properties from molecular interactions. Topics covered include kinetic theory of gases, statistical-mechanical ensembles and their correspondence with thermodynamics, ideal and imperfect gases, distribution function theory of liquids, lattice models of liquid and polymer solutions, and molecular simulation methods. Offered in alternating years. Prerequisite: CHE 61000. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 62000 - Advanced Transport Phenomena I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of transport of momentum, energy, and mass by molecular and turbulent mechanisms. Prerequisite: CHE 52700. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 62100 - Advanced Transport Phenomena II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics included are momentum transfer with interfacial effects, transport in porous and multiphase media, transport in dispersed phase systems, heat transfer, and multicomponent mass transfer. Prerequisite: CHE 62000. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 62300 - Separation Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design of binary and multicomponent separation processes. Analysis and synthesis of adsorption, ion exchange, and chromatography in packed beds, moving beds, simulated moving beds, and in cyclic operation. Design and operation of membrane separation techniques including dialysis, reverse osmosis, ultrafiltration, and dynamic membranes. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 63000 - Applied Mathematics For Chemical Engineers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Determinants and matrices: solution of a system of algebraic equations; applications to dimensional analysis, stoichiometry, thermodynamics, kinetics of first order reaction systems, and stagewise operations. Differential equations: series solutions, Sturm-Liouville systems, boundary value problems, applications to heat and mass transfer and chemical reactor problems. Elements of complex variables: LaPlace and infinite Fourier transforms, applications to heat and mass transfer problems. First order partial differential equations: applications to separation processes, chromatography. Prerequisite: MA 26200. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 63200 - Linear Operator Methods In Chemical Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of the spectral theory of linear self-adjoint and non-self-adjoint operators on abstract Hilbert spaces to problems in chemical engineering. Symmetrizable non-self-adjoint problems in finite and infinite dimensional spaces with applications to physical and chemical rate processes in homogeneous and composite media. Solution of transport equations governing heat and mass transfer in deforming and chemically reacting media. Introduction to non-self-adjoint problems in chemical engineering. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: CHE 63000. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 63300 - Probabilistic Methods In Chemical Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to probability, random variables, and stochastic processes. Ito calculus and stochastic differential equations. Brownian dynamics and Bridge processes. Applications to chemical engineering systems. Master equations and system size expansion concepts to nonequilibrium processes. Stochastic point processes and population balance. Theory of fluctuations. Prerequisite: CHE 63000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 65600 - Advanced Process Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics in linear and nonlinear system theory applied to automatic control of processes. Subjects include stability analyses, phase plane methods, statistical disturbances, sampled systems, theoretical and experimental determination of process dynamics, optimization, and computer control. Prerequisite: CHE 45600. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 66000 - Chemical Reaction Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Heat, mass, and momentum transfer in the design and analysis of chemical reactor systems. Optimization techniques applied to reactor design. Prerequisite: CHE 34800. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 66200 - Catalysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of the kinetics of heterogeneous catalytic reactions, including the application of collision and transition state theories to the estimation of rate constants and calculation of rates over energetically nonuniform surfaces. Discussion of the chemical and physical properties of solid surfaces that influence catalytic reactions, and illustration of concepts of catalytic behavior with specific examples from catalytic cracking, reforming, oxidation, and hydrodesulfurization. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: CHE 34800. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 66600 - Methods In Catalysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Various spectroscopic and other techniques for characterizing catalysts and for probing the chemistry of solid surfaces and their interactions with adsorbing and reacting gases are discussed. Topics include infrared, X-ray photoelectron, Mossbauer, and secondary ion mass spectroscopies. Emphasis is on understanding the principles underlying each method and gaining an awareness of the kind of information each can provide in a broad spectrum of research problems. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: CHM 37500. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 66800 - Colloidal And Interfacial Phenomena |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Preparation, characterization, and stability of emulsions, aerosols, and other multiphase dispersions. Interparticle forces, electrokinetics, thermodynamics and kinetics of coagulation. Techniques for determining size, shape, orientation, and charge of particles. Capillary and wetting phenomena. Thermodynamics of interfacial tension and adsorption. Applications to surfactants, polymers, biodispersions, flotation, separations, oil recovery, etc. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 68500 - Educational Methods In Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will learn how to teach in an engineering environment where both classroom and laboratory instruction is intertwined. Classroom techniques, such as lectures, cooperative groups, mastery and PSI, TV and video, and guided design will be studied, in addition to class preparation issues, such as ABET accreditation and design content. Students will study motivation, learning theories and cycles, and personality types. Includes teaching practice and group projects. Admittance into a doctoral program in a technical area. Not open to students who have taken PSY 69500 / EDPS 63400. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHE 69000 - Seminar In Chemical Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Required of all graduate students. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHE 69700 - Special Topics In Chemical Engineering |
|
Arrange Hours and Credit. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHE 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHE 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
Department: Chemical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHEM 53300 - Introductory Biochemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A rigorous one-semester introduction to biochemistry. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CHEM 54200 - Inorganic Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the chemistry of main group and transition elements in which descriptive chemistry is wedded to qualitative theories of bonding and structure. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CHEM 59000 - Special Topics In Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Lecture courses offered on topic areas that are not part of the regular graduate curriculum. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Will vary with each topic taught.
|
| CHEM 59900 - Special Assignments |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Directed reading or special work not included in other courses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHEM 62100 - Advanced Analytical Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A critical survey of recent developments in chemical and instrumental methods of analysis. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CHEM 65100 - Advanced Organic Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Modern structural organic chemistry, including introductions to molecular orbital theory and reaction mechanisms. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CHEM 65200 - Synthetic Organic Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced treatment of methods for preparing major types of organic functionalities and bonds, stressing stereochemical control and involving mechanisms for understanding the reactions employed. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CHEM 69500 - Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 or 1.00. Groups meeting for review and discussion of important current literature in analytical, biological, inorganic, organic, and physical chemistry. Each graduate student is required to attend the seminar of his or her major subject. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHEM 69600 - Special Topics In Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Lectures on selected topics of current interest. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHEM 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHEM 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. PhD Thesis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHEM B1110 - General Chemistry I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Chemistry of the elements and their compounds with emphasis on basic principles. Atomic and molecular structure, chemical bonding, stoichiometry, properties of solutions, and nature of matter.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM B1120 - General Chemistry II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Continuation and extension of CHEM 111, including chemical kinetics, electrochemistry, chemical equilibrium, chemistry of metals and nonmetals, and radioactivity. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C1000 - The World Of Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A topically oriented, non-mathematical introduction to the nature of matter. Topics covered include fossil fuel and nuclear sources of power; environmental issues involving chemistry such as recycling, acid rain, air and water pollution, global warming, ozone depletion; genetic modification of foods, DNA profiling, use of food additives and herbal supplements, and other public policy issues involving science. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C1010 - Elementary Chemistry I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Essential principles of chemistry; atomic and molecular structure; bonding; properties and reactions of elements and compounds; stoichiometry; solutions; acids and bases. For students who are not planning careers in the sciences and for those with no previous course work in chemistry. Note: Most degree programs that include C1010 require the concurrent laboratory, C1210. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C1020 - Elementary Chemistry II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Continuation of CHEM C1010. Introduction to organic chemistry and biochemistry; organic compounds and their reactions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C1040 - Physical Sciences and Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. An integrated survey of modern applications and relationships of physical sciences to society developed from the basic concepts of motion, structure of matter, energy, reactions and the environment, and leading to considerations of specific problem areas such as pollution, drugs, energy alternatives, consumer products, and transportation. May be taken by students deficient in chemistry background without credit toward graduation in preparation for C105. Credit not given for both C104 and C101 or C105. The 5 credit hour version of this course includes laboratory work. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Ability to recognize the meaning of physical science terminology.
2. Ability to explain fundamental concepts of physical sciences.
3. Ability to solve physical science problems using algebra.
4. Ability to employ dimensional analysis to solve problems.
5. Ability to recognize the relevance and application of physical science in society and everyday life.
|
| CHEM C1050 - Principles Of Chemistry I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. A placement examination may be required for admission to this course. See text on page 42 under Chemistry Placement Examination. Principles of inorganic and physical chemistry emphasizing physical and chemical properties, atomic and molecular structure, chemical bonding and states of matter. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C1060 - Principles Of Chemistry II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Continuation of CHEM C1050. Topics include condensed phases, solution chemistry, thermodynamics, equilibrium and kinetics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C1070 - Frontiers of Chemical Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A freshman seminar featuring talks and demonstrations by various faculty about current research in analytical, biological, inorganic, organic, and physical chemistry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C1080 - General Organic Biochemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Basic atomic and molecular structure, gases, liquids, solutions, reactions, stoichiometry, equilibria, acids-bases, nuclear chemistry, chemistry of major functional groups of organic compounds, carbohydrates, lipids, proteins and enzymes, hormones and neurotransmitters, replication, expression of genes.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C1100 - The Chemistry Of Life |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A non-mathematical introduction to organic molecules and their transformation to useful materials such as drugs and polymers. An emphasis is placed on the chemical features of biomolecules including hormones and neurotransmitters; proteins; lipids (fats); carbohydrates (sugars); and nucleic acids (DNA/RNA). The chemistry of enzymes, carcinogens, vitamins, antihistamines, anesthetics, genetic engineering, mental health, and other health-related topics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C1150 - Laboratory For The Chemistry Of Life |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Laboratory work illustrating topics covered in C110. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C1170 - Principles Of Chemistry And Biochemistry I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Lecture course covering basic principles of chemistry and biochemistry, basic mathematical and conceptual principles in atomic structure and periodic properties, molecular structure, chemical bonding, energy (thermochemistry), kinetics, equilibrium and thermodynamics. Credit given for only one of the following: C1170-C1270, C1050-C1250, or S1170. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CHEM C1200 - Laboratory For The World Of Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A hands-on approach to the topics discussed in C100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| CHEM C1210 - Elementary Chemistry Laboratory I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to the techniques and reasoning of experimental chemistry. Emphasis is given to study of physical and chemical properties of inorganic compounds. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C1220 - Elementary Chemistry Laboratory II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Emphasis on organic and biochemical experimental techniques. Credit given for only one of the following: C122, C126, or S126; credit may also be received for C122 with consent of the chemistry undergraduate adviser.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C1250 - Experimental Chemistry I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Laboratory work illustrating topics covered in C105. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C1260 - Experimental Chemistry II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Continuation of CHEM C1250. Laboratory work illustrating topics covered in CHEM C1050 and CHEM C1060. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C2080 - Problems And Reports |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Laboratory, independent reading, and consultation with faculty advisor to be arranged. Intended for students who would like to investigate a topic related to chemistry and its applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C2090 - Special Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Every semester, time arranged. Individually supervised special problems of chemical interest, e.g., environmental problems, development of experiments, development of audiovisual materials, etc. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHEM C2100 - Laboratory/Field Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. A laboratory/field experience in education for sophomores. Second-year field experience shall include looking into the nature of child growth and development through observations of children in a variety of growing and developing situations, e.g., observations and participation in school classrooms, Sunday schools, 4-H clubs, YWCA, YMCA, Girl Scouts, etc. (To be taken concurrently with P250, P251, P253.)
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHEM C2110 - Quant & Analyt Chem Lab |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Quant & Analyt Chem Lab. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CHEM C3010 - Chemistry Seminar I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Topics in various areas of chemistry. Students are required to attend departmental seminars and to prepare and present at least one seminar on their research. CHEM C301 and CHEM C302 may be elected three semesters for credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C3020 - Chemistry Seminar II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Content same as CHEM C301. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C3050 - Environmental Chemistry Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C3090 - Cooperative Education In Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Industrial or similar experiences in chemically oriented employment. Grade is determined on basis of employment visitations, a written student report, and a supervisor evaluation report. May be repeated for a maximum of 5 credit hours of which 3 may be used to satisfy an advanced chemistry elective. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 4 times
|
| CHEM C3100 - Analytical Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 5.00. Fundamental analytical processes including solution equilibria, theory and applications of electrochemistry and spectrophotometry, and chemical methods of separation.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C3110 - Analytical Chemistry Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory instruction in the fundamental analytical techniques discussed in CHEM C3100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C3150 - Chemical Measurements Laboratory I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Experimental work in related areas of chemical analysis, instrumentation, and elementary physical.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHEM C3170 - Equilibria and Electrochemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Treatment of analytical data; chemical equilibrium; aqueous and nonaqueous acid-base titrimetry; complex-formation titrations; gravimetric analysis; redox titrations, electrochemical theory; potentiometry; voltammetry; coulometry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C3180 - Spectrochemistry and Separations |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Ultraviolet, visible, infrared, and luminescence spectrophotometry; flame and electrical discharge techniques; X-ray and mass spectrometric methods; phase equilibria and extractions; counter current distribution; gas, thin-layer liquid, and high-performance liquid chromatography. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C3250 - Introductory Instrumental Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Instrumental methods of chemical analysis and separation for the chemical technician or preprofessional chemistry major. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C3330 - Experimental Environmental Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A laboratory course that will use techniques in analytical chemistry to isolate, detect, and estimate (qualitatively and quantitatively) a few priority environmental pollutants. Laboratory experience will include scientific observations, collection of samples, data analysis, and proposing scientific explanation of the results.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C3410 - Organic Chemistry I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Comprehensive study of organic compounds. Valence bond theory, stereochemistry, and physical properties of organic compounds are discussed in detail. Introduction to reaction mechanisms and to spectroscopic identification. Synthesis and reactions of selected compounds are also discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C3420 - Organic Chemistry II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of CHEM C3410. The chemistry of aromatic compounds and other major functional groups are discussed in detail. Multistep synthetic procedures and reaction mechanisms are emphasized. Introduction to biological chemistry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C3430 - Organic Chemistry Laboratory I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Fundamental laboratory techniques of organic chemistry, introduction to spectroscopic methods of compound identification, and general synthetic methods. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C3440 - Organic Chemistry Laboratory II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Preparation, isolation, and identification of organic compounds, spectroscopic methods of compound identification, qualitative organic analysis, multistep synthesis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C3600 - Elementary Physical Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Properties of gases and liquids, intermolecular forces, diffusion, chemical thermodynamics, ligand binding, kinetics, and introduction to quantum chemistry and spectroscopy. Includes topics in biophysical chemistry. For students who desire a survey course in physical chemistry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C3610 - Physical Chemistry Of Bulk Matter |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Kinetic-molecular theory, gases, liquids, thermodynamics, statistical mechanics, solutions, transport properties, and phase and chemical equilibria. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C3620 - Physical Chemistry Of Molecules |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Quantum states and spectroscopy of molecules, statistical thermodynamics, and elementary kinetic theory, current topics. Credit given for only one of of C3620 or C3600. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C3630 - Experimental Physical Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Experimental work to illustrate principles of physical chemistry and to introduce research techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C3640 - Introduction to Basic Measurements |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Graduated laboratory practice relating elementary principles of measurement technologies to current research applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C3710 - Chemical Informatics I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Basic concepts of information representation, storage, and retrieval as they pertain to chemistry. Structures, nomenclature, molecular formulas, coding techniques for visualization of chemical structures and properties. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CHEM C3720 - Chemical Informatics II: Molecular Modeling |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to computer representation of molecular structure and simulation of chemical reactions; visualizing fundamental chemical concepts, such as reaction paths of standard organic reactions, molecular orbital diagrams, vibrations and conformational changes; quantitative structure activity relationships (QSAR), pharmacophore docking to biomolecules and related methods for drug design.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CHEM C3900 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHEM C4090 - Chemical Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. For outstanding students. Cannot be substituted for any chemistry course. May not be used to satisfy upper-level laboratory hour requirement in a B.S. major; may not be used in fulfillment of chemistry major hours in a B.A. major. C4090 and G4100 may not be taken concurrently during the same semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHEM C4100 - Principles Of Chemical Instrumentation |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Modern methods of instrumental analysis, including spectroscopy, chromatography, and electrochemistry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C4110 - Principles Of Chemical Instrumentation Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Laboratory instruction in the instrumental analysis techniques discussed in CHEM C4100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C4300 - Inorganic Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Atomic structure; periodic trends and properties of the elements. Introduction to symmetry and group theory. Valence bond, molecular orbital and ligand field theories of bonding and their application to structure and properties of inorganic and organometallic compounds. Spectroscopic properties and acid-base, oxidation-reduction, and coordination reactions of inorganic compounds. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C4350 - Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Synthesis, characterization, and study of chemical and physical properties of inorganic and organometallic compounds. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C4450 - Advanced Organic Chemistry Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Experimental problems in organic analysis and synthesis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| CHEM C4700 - Polymer Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the fundamental principles of polymer chemistry. Includes historical development; mechanisms and kinetics of radical, ionic, and coordination polymerization; classification of polymers; systhesis, characterization, and testing of polymers; polymer applications in fibers, elastomers, coatings, and engineering plastics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C4710 - Chemical Information Sources |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Techniques for the storage and retrieval in both printed and computer-readable formats; sources of chemical information, including Chemical Abstracts; development of search strategies; online searching of chemical databases. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C4720 - Computer Sources For Chemical Information |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Techniques for the utilization of the major computer-based information tools found in academic and industrial
environments.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CHEM C4830 - Biological Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The chemical and biophysical properties of biologically important molecules and systems. Special emphasis on the relationship between structure and function in proteins, nucleic acids, and biomembranes, as well as bioenergetics, kinetics, allosteric interactions, and enzyme catalysis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C4840 - Biomolecules And Catabolism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Mechanisms of biological catalysis, metabolism, biosynthesis, regulation of genetic information, and molecular biology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C4850 - Biosynthes And Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The second semester continues your exploration of metabolic pathways, focusing on use of energy to build the molecules needed in each cell. The in-depth treatment of metabolic pathways allows students acquire an understanding of the cross-talk among metabolic pathways and complexity of their regulation. The second portion of
this course covers the means by which genetic information is expressed in cells. In addition to learning about metabolic diseases, students will also learn the fundamental biochemical concepts they need to consider nutritional topics and may even be able to launch into an intelligent debate about the science behind the wildly popular Atkins diet. Finally, students will learn about the biochemistry behind the modern genetic engineering and recombinant DNA techniques that allow for the commercial production of protein drugs such as insulin.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CHEM C4860 - Biological Chemistry Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An introduction to the important laboratory techniques currently employed by practicing biological chemists, including biomolecule isolation, purification, enzyme kinetics, and biomolecule characterization by electrophoresis, centrifugation, and spectroscopic methods. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C4880 - Introduction To Medicinal And Agricultural Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Introduction To Medicinal And Agricultural Chemistry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CHEM C4890 - The Practice Of Medicinal Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The Practice Of Medicinal Chemistry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CHEM C4900 - Individual Study |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM C4940 - Introduction To Capstone In Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Course objectives are to: (1) facilitate student career planning, including topics such as work place or graduate school, and resume preparation; (2) improve verbal communication and presentation skills; and (3) provide appropriate discussion and planning for the independent study project, the major objective of the C495 capstone course.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CHEM C4950 - Capstone In Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Independent study, under the supervision of a chemistry faculty member or appropriate academic advisor can be earned by completion of (a) a chemical research project; (b) a library research project in an area of current scientific investigation; (c) a research investigation in industry; or (d) a service activity in university, government, public schools, or other science-related groups or organizations. Students will report the results of their activities in both a formal written report and oral presentation, prepare portfolios of undergraduate work in chemistry, discuss recent scientific literature, and explore chemistry in society. Enrollment in the Capstone in Chemistry requires joint approval of the capstone instructor and the independent project advisor. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHEM C4960 - Methods In Teaching Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Designed for workshop leaders, this course is intended to offer continued support and training in group dynamics and learning theory. The larger goals for this course are to continue the development of leadership skills, to foster ongoing communication among workshop leaders, and to provide an environment for reviewing content knowledge. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHEM G9010 - Advanced Research |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Advanced Research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| CHEM N1000 - Nutrition |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Basic principles of general and organic chemistry, digestion, absorption and storage of various nutrients, food facts, fallacies. Food habits, heart disease, obesity, cancer, and other consumer-oriented information. Food addiction, sociocultural and economic factors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM N1900 - The Natural World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces students to the methods and logic of science, and helps them understand the importance of science to the development of civilization and the contemporary world. Provides a context within which to evaluate the important scientific and technological issues of modern society. Interdisciplinary elements.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM N3900 - The Natural World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Explores an important scientific or technological issue in modern society. Applies scientific methods and interdisciplinary perspectives in an examination of the subject. Investigates the broader implications and ethical dimensions of scientific research and technological advancement. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHEM S1250 - Honors Experimental Chemistry I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to laboratory experimentation, with particular emphasis on the collection and use of experimental data, some properties of solutions, stoichiometry, thermochemistry, and synthesis. Credit given for only one of the following: C1250, C1210, or S1250
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM S1260 - Honors Experimental Chemistry II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A continuation of CHEM C1250, with emphasis on equilibria; qualitative analysis; acids and bases; and oxidation reduction, including electrochemistry, chemical kinetics, and synthesis. Credit given for only one of the following: C1260, C1220, or S1260. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM T1050 - Physical Science for Elementary Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Principles of physical science with focus on elementary chemistry and physics. Laboratory, demonstration, and exploration enrich course material which is designed at developing the expertise needed for success in the elementary school classroom. Does not satisfy the general education requirement in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHEM V1000 - Elementary Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the basics of inorganic chemistry with a study of the chemical and physical properties, and changes of matter including measurement, nomenclature, reactions, and stoichiometry, including a discussion of nuclear chemistry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| CHEM V100L - Elementary Chemistry Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Experiments to illustrate concepts of Elementary Chemisty. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| CHEM V1020 - Scientific And Decorative Glass Working |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Fundamentals of working with glass tubing and rods. Techniques of end seals and tee tubes used to introduce the "feel" of handling glass; shaping glass tubing and crocheting glass rods. Proficiency required in end seals, tee tubes u-bends, flairs, and ring seals. A scientific project, an art project, and a project of the students’ choice are required. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| CHEM V1070 - World Of Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course presents a unified view of science and practice of chemistry. It is
an introductory college chemistry course for students not majoring in the sciences. It presents a view of the molecular world and the fundamental role it plays in the phenomena we observe in daily life. It also helps students understand the major scientific and technological issues facing all of us as citizens and consumers. The laboratory is performed with chemicals that are available from grocery stores, drug stores or hardware stores and are found in most homes. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| CHEM Y3980 - Professional Practice in Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Designed to provide opportunities for students to receive credit for career-related, full-time work. Evaluation by employer and undergraduate adviser. Course credit may count as elective hours in the B.S. in chemistry and B.S. in biochemistry majors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CHHS 10000 - Introduction To Health Professions |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This seminar is designed to introduce students to the prerequisites, requirements, and course content of health professions offered at IPFW. In addition, an opportunity is given to pursue similar investigations in health professions' careers independent of IPFW curriculums. Information on specific health careers will be presented by department educators from the various health curriculums to inform and discuss professional standards and requirements, as well as ethical responsibilities of each health profession. Each instructor will also share the expected work environment and compensation for each position. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Compare and contrast the seven major health professions: CFS and Nutrition, Dental Education, Human Services, Nursing, Radiography, Communications Science and Disorders and Transfer Programs.
2. Demonstrate an understanding of expected curriculums, including prerequisites and application guidelines for the various courses offered.
3. Analyze which programs would and would not fit in the student's career goals.
4. State the professional standards.
5. Explain ethic responsibilities within a career in the health professions.
6. Complete a resume and cover letter.
7. Complete a Focus Career Assessment.
8. Complete a Portfolio which will include all course assignments.
|
| CHHS 30100 - International Humanitarian Healthcare |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Examines international healthcare with a focus on global health specifically related to health disparities in underserved populations. Uses the World Health Organization’s (WHO) Global InfoBase to design portable healthcare education. Incorporated cultural beliefs and ethnic values of international communities in the planning for healthcare delivery. Incorporates humanitarian mission experiences. Permission of department required. Embraces service learning and actualizes the agenda of the WHO for the improvement of health. The clinical experiences may vary based on opportunities. Students will be interacting with the members of the population of Cienfuegos under the guidance of IPFW faculty and medical students from a local university in Santiago. Clients will be seen in a primary healthcare clinic, in local homes, and a hospital. The remainder of the clinical hours will be spent in the Fort Wayne Area. Student must have a minimum GPA of 3.0 to be eligible to participate.Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Explore the concepts of global healthcare.
2. Utlize the WHO Global InfoBase to understand “health inquiries worldwide and improve the health of nation” (WHO). Retrieved from https://apps.who.int/infobase/index.aspx.
3. Analyze the impact of culture, socioeconomic status, lifestyle, environment, and violence on the health of the community.
4. Identify strategies used to provide culturally competent care for populations at risk.
5. Critique current influences of health policy affecting global healthcare.
6. Analyze ethical issues affecting global healthcare.
7. Develop culturally competent healthcare material.
8. Analyze the use of culturally competent healthcare strategies in a cultural encounter.
|
| CHHS 30200 - Introduction To Patient Safety In Healthcare |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Developed for undergraduate students pursuing a career in a health profession. Based on the global drive by the World Health Organization (WHO) to educate future healthcare providers to practice patient-centered care with an interdisciplinary perspective. Focuses on strengthening the competencies related to the quality and safety of patient care in the complex, dynamic, and pressurized environments. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Attain a beginning knowledge base about patient safety in healthcare organizations.
2. Describe the elements of a safe health-care delivery system.
3. Charaterize types of healthcare teams utilized to promote safety.
4. Explain error, violation, near misses, adverse events, and hindsight bias.
5. Describe ways to reduce errors.
6. Describe models of quality improvement.
7. Apply effective communication techniques.
|
| CHHS 30300 - Interdisciplinary Healthcare In Gerontology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Research that encompasses the holistic aspect of geriatric health care that promotes healthy aging and optimal quality of life is included in the course study. A focus of ageism and stigmatization are integrated into the course. Geriatric health assessment and correlation of physiological disease processes such as diabetes, vascular disease, cardiac, pulmonary, and renal disease are studied. Psychological disease processes that include dementia, depression, and etiologies of behavioral changes commonly experienced by the elderly population are emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe aging theories, ageism, and apply to stigmatization in the elderly population.
2. Identify national and state goals and funding care of the elderly population.
3. Recognize correlation of physiological and psychological disease processes.
4. Identify treatment modalities of multi-system disease processes.
5. Characterize holistic nursing care practices to promote healthy aging.
|
| CHHS 49900 - Special Topics In Health Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 6.00. Hours, subject matter, and credit to be arranged by staff. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
|
| CHM 10000 - Preparation For General Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the basic ideas and laboratory techniques of chemistry, together with relevant parts of algebra and elementary physics. Intended for those whose background does not permit them to proceed directly with a general chemistry course. Not available for credit toward graduation in the School of Science. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 10200 - Chemical Science For Engineers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of CHM 1010. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CHM 10300 - Chemistry & Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. For students who think they hate chemistry! This unique course may be used for 3 hours of lab science credit for students outside the Schools of Science, Engineering, Health Science, Technology, Agriculture and Nursing. The course offers a totally new approach to chemistry, using decision-making activities related to real-world societal issues that have important chemistry components (such as the hole in the ozone layer, nutrition, consumer products, energy and pollution). A main goal is the development of critical thinking, problem solving and writing skills. The laboratory portion is performed in small groups using common household chemicals. This course should be of greatest interest to students in the Schools of Education, Humanities and Liberal Arts.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, TransferIN
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| CHM 10400 - Living Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory chemistry course that focuses upon the biomolecules of living systems. General chemistry topics include chemical bonds, solutions, acid/bases, and buffers. The study of organic chemistry is given as a preamble to the structure, function and metabolism of biomolecules such as proteins, lipids, carbohydrates and nucleic acids. No credit toward any chemistry degree or a chemistry minor. Not acceptable as a prerequisite for CHM 11500. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CHM 10600 - Chemistry Of Cooking |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to be an experimental and hands-on approach to general and applied chemistry, as observed in cooking. Cooking is one of the oldest and most widespread applications of chemistry. Students will study how recipes work in chemical context. Cooking experiments will be done to illustrate chemical principles, not limited to extraction, denaturation, and phase changes. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| CHM 11100 - General Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Not available for credit toward graduation in the School of Science. Required of all freshmen in the School of Agriculture who are not in CHM 11500 and required of students in the School of Consumer and Family Sciences in retailing, textile, RHIT, and dietetics options who are not in CHM 11500. Required of students in physical therapy who are not in CHM 11500. Not available for credit toward graduation in the School of Science. Metric and S.I. Units; dimensional analysis; density; the atomic concept; elements, compounds, and mixtures; the mole concept; equations and stoichiometry; atomic structure, spectra; the periodic table; chemical bonding, gases; descriptive chemistry of the common elements. Prerequisite: two years of high school algebra. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
|
| CHM 11200 - General Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of CHM 11100. Liquids and solids; solutions; chemical kinetics; equilibrium; acids and bases; oxidation and reduction; electrochemistry; descriptive chemistry of the metals and nonmetals; introduction to organic chemistry; nuclear chemistry. Not available for credit toward graduation in the School of Science. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 11500 - General Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Stoichiometry; atomic structure; periodic properties; ionic and covalent bonding; molecular geometry; gases, liquids, and solids; crystal structure; thermochemistry; descriptive chemistry of metals and non-metals. Required of students majoring in science and students in engineering who are not in CHM 12300. One year of high school chemistry or one semester of college chemistry required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:IPS 1721 General Chemistry I w/lab
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 11600 - General Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A continuation of CHM 11500. Solutions; quantitative equilibria in aqueous solution; introductory thermodynamics; oxidation-reduction and electrochemistry; chemical kinetics; qualitative analysis; further descriptive chemistry of metals and nonmetals. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:IPS 1722 General Chemistry II w/lab
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to use theory to understand/predict experimental observations.
2. Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of the physical properties and a molecular understanding of chemical reactivity and materials.
3. Students will be able to document scientific information and experimental data and write scientific reports, with graphical presentation of data.
|
| CHM 11900 - General Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 5.00. A survey of organic chemistry and biochemistry. Intended primarily for students in the nursing program but may be taken with the consent of the instructor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
|
| CHM 12000 - Chemistry And Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to introduce students majoring in fields outside the physical and life sciences to the basic principles of chemistry. These principles will be presented in the context of the materials used by visual artists to produce and preserve paintings, ceramics, metalwork and photographs. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CHM 12300 - General Chemistry For Engineers I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Stoichiometry; atomic structure and chemical bonding; gases, liquids, and solids; thermochemistry; chemical kinetics; solutions; aqueous solution chemistry; introduction to equilibria. Although intended for students in the Schools of Engineering and this course will also satisfy requirements for chemistry majors in place of CHM 11500 or 12500. One year of high school chemistry or one semester of college chemistry required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 12400 - General Chemistry For Engineers II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A continuation of CHM 12300. Chemical equilibria; elementary thermodynamics; electrochemistry; phase diagrams; and nuclear chemistry. Examples will be taken from alloys and ceramics; semiconductors; organic chemistry; and polymers. Although intended for students in the Schools of Engineering this course will also satisfy requirements for chemistry majors in place of CHM 11600 or 12600 or 13600. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 12500 - Introduction To Chemistry I |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Principles of chemistry including stoichiometry; atomic structure and chemical bonding; properties of gases, liquids, and solids; thermochemistry; descriptive inorganic chemistry. Recommended for entering students intending to major in chemistry. One year of high school chemistry or one semester of college chemistry required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 12600 - Introduction To Chemistry II |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. A continuation of CHM 12500. Properties of solutions; chemical equilibrium calculations; elementary thermodynamics; oxidation-reduction reactions and electrochemical cells; rates of reaction; qualitative analysis; descriptive chemistry. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 12700 - Advanced General Chemistry Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Honors section of CHM 126. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 12901 - General Chemistry With A Biological Focus |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. An accelerated and comprehensive one-semester general chemistry course that emphasizes principles that are important in biological systems. This course is designed to cover the essential elements of general chemistry traditionally covered in a two semester series. Topics to be covered include: Stoichiometry and chemical equations; atomic theory and structure; periodic properties; electronegativity; ionic and covalent bonding; non-covalent forces; bond energies; Lewis structures; molecular geometry; gases, liquids, and solids; solutions, quantitative equilibria in aqueous solution; acid/base chemistry and buffers; introductory thermodynamics; oxidation-reduction; electrochemical and membrane potential; colligative properties; chemical and enzyme kinetics; nuclear chemistry; coordination chemistry. One year of high school chemistry is required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop an understanding of universal physical laws as they apply in chemistry.
2. Develop an understanding of the scientific process.
3. Develop the ability to document scientific information and experimental data and to make quantitative/structural measurements and interpret results.
|
| CHM 13500 - General Chemistry Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A sophisticated treatment of the principles of chemistry. Stoichiometry, atomic structure and bonding, gases, thermodynamics, and phase equilibria. Satisfactory record of one year of high school chemistry and suitable high school rank and S.A.T. scores. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHM 13600 - General Chemistry Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A sophisticated treatment of the principles of chemistry. Atomic structure and bonding, spectroscopy, equilibria, thermodynamics and kinetics. Advanced Placement chemistry credit (level 4 or 5) or admission to the honors program in Science or Engineering or a score of at least 70% on the CHM 11500 test-out exam. Students with a grade of C or better in CHM 13600 who need 8 hours of credit in general chemistry may request credit for CHM 11500. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHM 18300 - Cooperative Work Experience I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Cooperative Work Experience. Must be accepted for the program by the Cooperative Education Program coordinator. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 18400 - Cooperative Work Experience II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Cooperative Work Experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 19400 - Freshman Chemistry Orientation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Designed to provide incoming chemistry majors with the acedemic, survival, and computational skills to make a successful transition from high school to college. Discussion of opportunities within the chemistry department including degree options, co-op program, undergraduate research, careers in chemistry, use of spreadsheet software, graphing packages, and drawing programs for chemical structures. Attendance and performance on assigned projects are the basis of the assigned grades. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 19700 - Chemistry Freshman Honors Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Supervised individual research performed by student. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 20000 - Fundamentals Of Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Integrative study of core concepts in chemistry that play a major role in governing the physical world. These core concepts are taught within the framework of important societal issues, such as atmospheric chemistry and nutrition. The pedagogy of this course is designed to provide reflective, interactive and hands-on-learning experiences that will assist elementary education majors to develop useful instructional strategies for their own classrooms. Required of students in elementary education program in the School of Education. Not available for credit toward graduation in the School of Science. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 21400 - Chemistry For Elementary Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of introductory chemistry including atoms, elements, and compounds, acids and bases, the periodic table, and chemical bonding of inorganic and organic compounds. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| CHM 21500 - Laboratory Health And Safety |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Emphasis on the principles of prudent practice in the use and storage of laboratory equipment and materials, including consideration of governmental regulations regarding the disposal of toxic and hazardous material. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CHM 21800 - Introduction to Inorganic Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Descriptive inorganic chemistry of the elements including structure and bonding of inorganic materials, acid-base theory, oxidation-reduction, and coordination chemistry. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CHM 22400 - Introductory Quantitative Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to titrimetric, gravimetric, and instrumental methods of analysis; principles of separation processes, including chromatography; recognition and evaluation of possible sources of error. Required of students majoring in biology who do not take CHM 32100. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 24100 - Introductory Inorganic Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Descriptive inorganic chemistry dealing in a systematic way with the elements and the structures, properties, and reactions of their compounds. Required of students majoring in chemistry. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 25100 - Organic Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A one-semester introductory organic chemistry course for students not expected to take biochemistry. Emphasis on nomenclature, bonding, properties, and reactions of aliphatic and aromatic compounds containing various functional groups. No credit toward an IU degree in medical technology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CHM 25101 - Organic Chemistry Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory experiments designed to familiarize the student with the appearance, preparation, and properties of various types of organic compounds. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 25200 - Organic Chemistry Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory experiments to accompany CHM 251 illustrating methods of separation and the more common techniques and methods for preparing various types of organic compounds. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CHM 25400 - Organic Chemistry Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory experiments to accompany CHM 25500 illustrating methods of separation and the more common techniques and methods for preparing various types of organic compounds. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CHM 25500 - Organic Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of aliphatic and aromatic hydrocarbons and their simple derivatives in terms of (a) structure, bonding, etc.; (b) general syntheses and reactions; and (c) a logical modern rationale for fundamental phenomena as supported by reactivity orders, orientation effects, stereochemistry, and relative rates. Recommended for biology majors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to use theory to understand/predict experimental observations.
2. Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of the physical properties and molecular understanding of chemical reactivity and materials.
3. Students will be able to plan and perform chemical transformations.
|
| CHM 25501 - Organic Chemistry Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory experiments to accompany CHM 25500, illustrating methods of separation, instrumental methods of analysis, and the more common techniques and methods for preparing various types of organic compounds. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 25600 - Organic Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of CHM 25500 with various functional groups such as the carboxyl, amino, etc., and including such polyfunctional natural products as carbohydrates and peptides. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to use theory to understand/predict experimental observations.
2. Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of the physical properties and a molecular understanding of chemical reactivity and materials.
3. Students will be able to plan and perform chemical transformations.
4. Students will be able to recognize and use chemical instrumentation and spectroscopy.
|
| CHM 25601 - Organic Chemistry Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A continuation of CHM 25501. Experiments are designed to illustrate principles discussed in CHM 25600. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to use theory to understand/predict experimental observations.
2. Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of the physical properties and a molecular understanding of chemical reactivity and materials.
3. Students will be able to document scientific information and experimental data and write scientific reports, with graphical presentation of data.
4. Students will be able to plan and perform chemical transformations.
5. Students will be able to recognize and use chemical instrumentation and spectroscopy.
6. Students will be able to identify and handle hazardous materials.
|
| CHM 25700 - Organic Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introductory organic chemistry. Emphasis is on structure, nomenclature, reactions, and theory as applied to simple organic compounds. This course is designed for students who require a one semester overview in preparation for biochemistry. Not recommended for majors in the College of Science. Typically offered Fall Spring. Both CHM 25700 + 25701 =
CTL:IPS 1723 Organic And Biochemistry w/lab
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to use theory to understand/predict experimental observations.
2. Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of the physical properties and molecular understanding of chemical reactivity and materials.
3. Students will be able to plan and perform chemical transformations based on functional groups, stereochemistry, and reaction conditions.
4. Students will be familiar with IUPAC nomenclature for organic compounds.
|
| CHM 25701 - Organic Chemistry Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory experiments designed to accompany CHM 25700 and to illustrate methods of separation, identification, and preparation of selected organic molecules. Typically offered Fall Spring. Both CHM 25700 + 25701 = CTL:IPS 1723 Organic And Biochemistry w/lab
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 25800 - Organic Chemistry Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A continuation of CHM 25400 but emphasizing methods for identifying organic compounds, including simple "unknowns". Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CHM 26100 - Organic Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comprehensive study of the chemical principles underlying aliphatic and aromatic compounds. The syntheses and reactions of these materials are discussed. Modern theory and stereochemistry are stressed to illustrate the logic inherent in the subject matter and to demonstrate the predictability of many chemical transformations. Recommended for students majoring in chemical engineering. If not a chemical engineering major, see CHM 26505 Organic Chemistry. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 26105 - Organic Chemistry For Engineers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Chemical principles underlying the reactivity of organic molecules with an emphasis on mechanism; the structure and stereochemical properties of organic molecules and functional groups; physical properties that influence the reactivity of organic molecules; an introduction to ionic and racial reaction mechanisms with particular attention given to issues of product selectivity; synthesis and structure of polymeric materials. Recommended for students majoring in Chemical Engineering. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 26200 - Organic Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of CHM 26100, but a broader scope. The chemistry of a variety of functional groups is discussed. Theory is employed extensively to demonstrate the coherence underlying seemingly diverse transformations. Qualitative organic analysis is introduced, with particular emphasis on spectroscopic methods. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 26205 - Organic Chemistry For Engineers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of CHM 26105, expanding the scope of ionic and radical reaction mechanisms, including a survey of of functional group transformations; spectroscopic analysis of organic materials; properties and reactivity of aromatic species; principles and examples of catalysis; an introduction to supramolecular and interfacial chemistry and biological molecules. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 26300 - Organic Chemistry Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory experiments designed to illustrate the lecture material of CHM 26100. Elementary laboratory techniques essential to organic chemistry are introduced, followed by the actual syntheses and purification of compounds discussed in CHM 26100. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to use theory to understand/predict experimental observations.
2. Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of the physical properties and a molecular understanding of chemical reactivity and materials.
3. Students will be able to document scientific information and experimental data and write scientific reports, with graphical presentation of data.
4. Students will be able to plan and perform chemical transformations.
5. Students will be able to recognize and use chemical instrumentation and spectroscopy.
6. Students will be able to identify and handle hazardous materials.
|
| CHM 26400 - Organic Chemistry Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A continuation of CHM 26300 in that the experiments are designed to illustrate principles discussed in CHM 26200. A major portion of the course is devoted to methods employed in organic qualitative analysis. The student is expected to identify several unknown compounds and mixtures. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to use theory to understand/predict experimental observations.
2. Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of the physical properties and a molecular understanding of chemical reactivity and materials.
3. Students will be able to document scientific information and experimental data and write scientific reports, with graphical presentation of data.
4. Students will be able to plan and perform chemical transformations.
5. Students will be able to recognize and use chemical instrumentation and spectroscopy.
6. Students will be able to identify and handle hazardous materials.
|
| CHM 26500 - Organic Chemistry Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Similar to CHM 26300 except that a larger number and more sophisticated organic syntheses are required. The preparations are designed not only to illustrate the classical reactions discussed in CHM 26100, but to allow for an extrapolation of the principles involved to other systems. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 26505 - Organic Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comprehensive study of the chemical principles underlying aliphatic and aromatic compounds. The syntheses and reactions of these materials are discussed. Modern theory and stereochemistry are stressed to illustrate the logic inherent in the subject matter and to demonstrate the predictability of many chemical transformations. Recommended for students majoring in chemistry. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 26600 - Organic Chemistry Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A continuation of CHM 26500. All experiments are designed to illustrate the principles discussed in CHM 26200. A major portion of the course is devoted to the methods employed in organic qualitative analysis. The student is expected to identify unknowns and mixtures and is introduced to some modern instrumental techniques. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 26605 - Organic Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of CHM 26505, but a broader scope. The chemistry of a variety of functional groups is discussed. Theory is employed extensively to demonstrate the coherence underlying seemingly diverse transformations. Qualitative organic analysis is introduced, with particular emphasis on spectroscopic methods. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 26700 - Organic Chemistry Laboratory Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Laboratory experiments designed to accompany the lecture material of CHM 26100, but at an advanced level. Modern instrumentation is introduced to supplement the usual elementary laboratory techniques of organic chemistry. Multistep syntheses are employed to illustrate and supplement the reactions discussed in CHM 26100. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to use theory to understand/predict experimental observations.
2. Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of the physical properties and a molecular understanding of chemical reactivity and materials.
3. Students will be able to document scientific information and experimental data and write scientific reports, with graphical presentation of data.
4. Students will be able to plan and perform chemical transformations.
5. Students will be able to recognize and use chemical instrumentation and spectroscopy.
6. Students will be able to identify and handle hazardous materials.
|
| CHM 26800 - Organic Chemistry Laboratory Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A continuation of CHM 26700. Experiments, more sophisticated than those in CHM 26600, are designed to illustrate and extend the concepts presented in CHM 26200. A major portion of the course is devoted to organic qualitative analysis. The student is expected to identify unknown compounds by classical methods as well as by the use of modern instrumentation like infrared gas chromatography and nuclear magnetic resonance. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 27300 - Introductory Physical Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory treatment of the general properties of gases, liquids, and solids, with an emphasis on applications of physical chemistry in real systems. This course may be used by pre-medical, pre-dental, biology, and technology students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CHM 28000 - Chemical Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A survey of the tools employed for the effective and efficient search and the retrieval and analysis of chemical information including online databases, chemical abstracts, patents, handbooks, encyclopedias, and comprehensive works. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CHM 28400 - Cooperative Work Experience III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Cooperative Work Experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 29000 - Selected Topics In Chemistry For Lower-Division Students |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHM 29400 - Sophomore Chemistry Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Discussion of undergraduate research opportunities, upper-division courses, career opportunities, laboratory safety, use of the library and chemical information, and topics of current interest in chemistry. Required of sophomores majoring in any chemistry curriculum. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 29500 - Undergraduate Chemistry Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Opportunities in CHM 499; Degree options and special chemsitry programs; Advice about upper-division courses; Overview of chemical field; Governmental & Industrial opportunities; Safety in the chemical laboratory; and Topics of current general interest. Required of sophomores majoring in any Chemistry curriculum. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 31800 - Biomolecular NMR Spectroscopy/Magnetic Resonance Imaging |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed for biotechnology, biology and chemistry majors. Topics will include: theory and modern experimental applications of proton nuclear resonance (H-NMR) spectroscopy, as needed for structural elucidation of biomolecules; H-NMR spectroscopy in tow, three, and four dimensions; and Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) and its uses in diagnostic medicine. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CHM 32000 - Introduction To Biochemical Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A survey of the theoretical basis and practice application of modern biochemical techniques including separation, qualitative analysis, and quantitative analysis methods. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CHM 32100 - Analytical Chemistry I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Quantitative measurements on complex chemical systems that show matrix effects or require isolation of a component prior to its determination; general approaches to quantitative problems at the trace level; critical comparisons of competitive procedures with emphasis on principles of separation processes, including chromatography; recognition and evaluation of possible sources of error; approaches for optimizing conditions so as to minimize time and/or effort required to attain prescribed levels of accuracy and precision. Required of students majoring in chemistry. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 32300 - Analytical Chemistry I Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Open to students in the chemistry honors program. Topical coverage similar to CHM 32100. Laboratory will include a group of core experiments plus special experiments designed by students and staff to study original problems related to analytical chemistry. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 32400 - Survey of Environmental Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the chemicals, chemical principles and chemical phenomena of environmental consequence. Topics include ozone depletion, greenhouse effect, air pollution, water pollution, acid rain, toxic chemicals, energy flow, and environmental technology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CHM 32800 - Principles And Practice Of NMR |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed for biology, chemistry and technology majors. The theory of modern NMR will be taught and demonstrated by hands-on access and computer labs. Topics will include theory and experimental applications of multinuclear NMR spectroscopy, as needed for the structural elucidation of biomolecules, polymers and inorganic materials; H-NMR in one or more dimensions. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CHM 33300 - Principles Of Biochemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Structure and function of biologically important molecules. Intended for students in life sciences. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to use theory to understand/predict experimental observations.
2. Students will be able to have a molecular understanding of chemical reactivity in biochemical systems.
3. Students will be able to carry out calculations related to Biochemistry.
4. Students will be able to understand energetics and kinetics of biochemical transformations.
5. Students will be able to apply concepts of general chemistry and organic chemistry to biochemical systems.
|
| CHM 34200 - Inorganic Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Interpretation and correlation of the reactions and properties of inorganic compounds in terms of their electronic and molecular structures. A survey of the preparations and reactivities of important compounds of the representative elements, with an emphasis on group trends. The elementary chemistry of the transition metals, including magnetic and spectral properties of coordination compounds. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to use theory to understand universal physical laws as they apply to chemistry.
2. Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of the physical properties and a molecular understanding of chemical reactivity and materials.
3. Students will be able to develop problem-solving skills: identifying the objective.
4. Students will be able to plan and perform chemical transformations.
5. Students will be able to carry out calculation related to specific chemistry topics.
6. Students will be able to make connections between different courses/subdisciplines in chemistry.
|
| CHM 34201 - Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory work to accompany CHM 34200. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 34300 - Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory work to accompany CHM 34200. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| CHM 37000 - Topics In Physical Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Kinetic theory of gases; statistical thermodynamics; quantum mechanics; atomic and molecular structure and spectroscopy; properties of ionic phases. May not be used to satisfy requirements for graduation in chemistry. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 37100 - Physical Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course in physical chemistry. Not open to chemistry majors, but suitable for other science majors. Topics to be covered include states of matter, thermodynamics, physical equilibrium, solutions, chemical equilibria, electrochemistry, and kinetics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CHM 37200 - Physical Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Principles of physical chemistry with emphasis on chemical thermodynamics and kinetics, illustrated examples from the biological sciences. Intended primarily for students in the life sciences. Typically offered Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to use theory to understand/predict experimental observations.
2. Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of the physical properties and a molecular understanding of chemical reactivity and materials.
3. Students will be able to understand the connections of different courses/subdisciplines in chemistry.
4. Students will be able to understand the connections between chemistry and current events, everyday occurrences and other scientific disciplines.
|
| CHM 37300 - Physical Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Physical chemistry of matter. Properties of gases, liquids, and solids; equations of state; thermodynamics; energy, heat, and work; entropy; spontaneity and equilibrium; chemical potential; chemical equilibrium; phase diagrams; colligative properties. Typically offered Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to understand universal physical laws as they apply to chemistry.
2. Students will be able to use theory to understand/predict experimental observations.
3. Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of the physical properties and a molecular understanding of chemical reactivity and materials.
4. Students will be able to develop problem-solving skills: identifying the objective.
5. Students will be able to carry out calculations related to specific chemistry topics.
6. Students will be able to understand energetics and kinetics of chemical transformations.
7. Students will be able to reduce complex problems into simpler components.
|
| CHM 37400 - Physical Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Physical chemistry of molecules. Wave properties of matter; quantum mechanics of translation, rotation, and vibration; atomic structure; molecular orbitals; quantum states; stastical mechanics; chemical kinetics; collision theory; transition state theory. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to understand universal physical laws as they apply to chemistry.
2. Students will be able to use theory to understand/predict experimental observations.
3. Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of the physical properties and a molecular understanding of chemical reactivity and materials.
4. Students will be able to develop problem-solving skills: identifying the objective.
5. Students will be able to carry out calculations related to specific chemistry topics.
6. Students will be able to understand universal physical laws as they apply to chemistry.
7. Students will be able to understand structure/activity and structure/property relationships.
8. Students will be able to understand the physical principles upon which chemical instrumentation is based.
9. Students will be able to reduce complex problems into simpler components.
|
| CHM 37409 - Professional Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Industrial practice fee is attached to this course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 37500 - Physical Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Quantum theory of atom and molecules; theories of chemical bonding; molecular spectroscopy; methods for determining molecular structure; electrical and magnetic properties. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 37509 - Professional Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Industrial Practice fee is attached to this course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 37600 - Physical Chemistry Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Laboratory portion of CHM 37300 and 37400. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to use theory to understand universal physical laws as they apply to chemistry.
2. Students will be able to use theory to understand/predict experimental observations.
3. Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of the physical properties and a molecular understanding of chemical reactivity and materials.
4. Students will be able to develop problem-solving skills: identifying the objective.
5. Students will be able to carry out calculations related to specific chemistry topics.
6. Students will be able to understand energetic and kinetics of chemical transformations.
7. Students will be able to reduce complex problems into simpler components.
8. Students will be able to work in teams and collaborate.
9. Students will be able to work with minimal supervision.
10. Students will be able to comprehend scientific papers.
11. Students will be able to organize data for meaningful interpretation, including causes of experimental error, limitations of data.
12. Students will be able to practice professional behavior: reliability, punctuality, efficiency.
|
| CHM 37700 - Physical Chemistry Honors Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A laboratory course running parallel with 376 but offering more sophicated and challenging experiments in the optional experiment section of the course and requiring a special student-designed experimental project in lieu of assigned experiments in the terminal section of the course. Open to students in the chemistry honors program. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 38300 - Physical Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Kinetic theory of gases, gas equations of state, Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution. Classical thermodynamics including the first, second, and third laws, spontaneity, chemical potential, phase equilibria. Introduction to quantum mechanics: postulates of quantum theory, linear operators, Heisenberg indeterminary principle, Pauli principle, orbital and spin angular momentum. Simple quantum systems such as particle-in-a-box, harmonic oscillator, hydrogen atom. Symmetry. Atomic and molecular spectroscopy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CHM 38400 - Physical Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Basic kinetics and chemical reactions: first, second, third order reactions, elementary steps, macroscopic view in terms of concentrations and activities, calculation of equilibrium constants, thermodynamic interpretation of transition state theory. Solution thermodynamics: pure solutions, mixtures, ideal solutions (Raoult's law), ideally dilute solutions (Henry's law), Debye-Huckel theory, colligative properties. Electrochemistry: relationship to thermodynamics and chemical equilibrium. Photochemistry, nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, electrical and magnetic properties of matter. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CHM 38500 - Physical Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Statistical mechanics: partition function and ensembles, translational, vibrational, rotational, and electronic partition functions, microscopic view of thermodynamics. Kinetics and reaction rate theories: collision theory, conventional and variational transition state theory, RRKM theory. Reaction dynamics: quantum scattering and classical trajectories. Surface chemistry and solid state chemistry. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CHM 38600 - Cooperative Work Experience IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Cooperative Work Experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 39500 - Chemistry Honors Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Seminar for junior honors students. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHM 39699 - Professional Practice Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will demonstrate the ability to think and function as a scientist.
2. Students will demonstrate the ability to communicate well, both orally and in writing.
3. Students will demonstrate depth in major.
|
| CHM 42000 - Laboratory In Molecular Biochemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A laboratory-grounded course to develop the skills and techniques for characterizing and manipulating proteins and nucleic acids. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| CHM 42400 - Analytical Chemistry II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Principles and application of optical and electrical methods of chemical analysis, including topics in instrumentation. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to write scientific reports, with graphical representation of data.
2. Students will be able to document scientific information and experimental data.
3. Students will be able to use theory to understand/predict experimental observations.
4. Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of the physical properties and a molecular understanding of chemical reactivity and materials.
5. Students will be able to develop problem-solving skills: identifying the objective.
6. Students will be able to make quantitative/structural measurements and interpret results; evaluate data for quality and reliability.
7. Students will be able to recognize and use chemical instrumentation and spectroscopic methods.
8. Students will be able to organize data for meaningful interpretation, including causes of experimental error, limitations of data.
9. Students will be able to use statistics to judge limitation of data; use math to understand data.
10. Students will be able to reduce complex problems into simpler components.
11. Students will be able to practice professional behavior: reliability, punctuality, efficiency.
|
| CHM 42500 - Molecular Modeling And Visualization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles and applications of current theoretical and computational methods in molecular modeling. Advanced visualization methods will be used to study molecular structure. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain experience in using Linux-based software and performing research level calculations using both semi-empirical and ab initio methods, including modern density functional theory.
|
| CHM 42600 - Analytical Chemistry II Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Topical coverage similar to CHM 424. Laboratory will include a group of core experiments plus special experiments designed by students and staff to study original problems related to analytical chemistry. Open to students in the chemistry honors program. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 44400 - Cosmochemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Stellar evolution, nucleosyntheses, and chemical abundances. Origin, composition, and structure of the solar system and objects in it. Cosmochronology with particular emphasis on meteorites. Emphasis upon recent developments in planetology. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 46200 - Intermediate Organic Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and application of organic chemistry and reaction mechanisms to organic synthesis and contemporary research topics in closely related areas. Topics include stereochemistry, reactive organic intermediates, molecular orbital theory, photochemistry, organic materials chemistry, and chemical biology. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to use theory to understand/predict experimental observations.
2. Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of the physical properties and a molecular understanding of chemical reactivity and materials.
3. Students will be able to plan and perform chemical transformations.
4. Students will be able to present a formal oral summary of a topic in organic chemistry and receive feedback.
5. Students will be able to write a scientific report using the format of the Chemical Society.
6. Students will be able to practice computer literacy: use available online and database tools, especially in the Organic Chemistry field.
|
| CHM 47500 - Advanced Physical Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced applications of physical chemistry. Selected topics including theories of chemical bonding; molecular spectroscopy; crystal structure; solid-state and surface chemistry; phase equilibria in multicomponent and complex systems; theory of electrolytes; electrochemistry; chemical kinetics in solution. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 47509 - Professional Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Industrial Practice fee is attached to this course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 48100 - Environmental Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of chemical aspects of environmental problems and the application of chemistry to their solution. Topics will include atmospheric pollution problems, groundwater pollution and waste disposal problems, inorganic water pollutants, and the occurrence and fate of toxic organic compounds and other substances in the environment. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to use theory to understand/predict experimental observations.
2. Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of the physical properties and a molecular understanding of chemical reactivity and materials.
3. Students will be able to understand the connections of different courses/subdisciplines in chemistry.
4. Students will be able to understand the connections between chemistry and current events, everyday occurrences and other scientific disciplines.
|
| CHM 48700 - Cooperative Work Experience V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Cooperative Work Experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 48900 - Sturctural Biochemistry And Bioinformatics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the fundamental theories and practices of computational biological chemistry and bioinformatics. Topics covered include: molecular modeling, database design and theory, accessing genomic and proteomic information, data sources and tools for data mining, identifying protein and DNA informational patterns, and methods linking genome data to gene function. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| CHM 49000 - Selected Topics In Chemistry For Upper-Division Students |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHM 49400 - Junior-Senior Chemistry Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Major emphasis on developing skills in oral and written presentations by students. The subject matter can be library material and/or accomplishments in undergraduate or co-op research. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 49500 - Seminar In Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Discussion of topics in analytical, inorganic, organic, and physical chemistry and biochemistry. Students are required to select a topic from the primary literature which must be approved by the coordinator of the seminar series. Students must make an oral presentation of the topic and submit a written report. Open to juniors and seniors majoring in chemistry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHM 49600 - Advances In Chemistry I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Seminars on recent developments or topics not normally covered in regular courses. Attendance at all departmental seminars is required and students must submit a brief synopsis of each seminar attended. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CHM 49700 - Advances In Chemistry II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Continuation of 496. No credit for 497 unless 496 has been completed. Attendance at all departmental seminars is required and students must submit a brief synopsis of each seminar attended. In addition, students are required to submit a written report on a topic chosen from the primary literature and approved by the coordinator of the seminar series. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CHM 49800 - Research In Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Undergraduate research, which will qualify as an Experiential Learning experience. Admission by special permission. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHM 49900 - Special Assignments |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Undergraduate research. Individual research projects undertaken under faculty direction. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHM 50200 - Modern Chemistry In The High School |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A critical discussion of the means by which the fundamentals of modern chemistry can best be introduced at the high school level. The laboratory will deal with the manufacture and use of lecture demonstration equipment, the use of films and film strips, and the problems involved in organizing and running a high school chemical laboratory. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 51300 - Chemical Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Types of information in technical publications; exercises in finding, assembling, and using such data. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 53300 - Introductory Biochemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A rigorous one-semester introduction to biochemistry. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 53400 - Introductory Biochemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of CHM 53300 with emphasis on enzymatic catalysis and metabolic transformations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| CHM 53500 - Biochemistry Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory component for Biochemistry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| CHM 53800 - Molecular Biotechnology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of modern tools for the characterization, manipulation, and design of nucleic acids and proteins. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 54800 - Radiochemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Nuclear properties, structure, and reactions; radioactive decay; interaction of radiation with matter; radioactivity in the environment; nuclear applications in chemistry. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 56000 - Organic Spectroscopic Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Identification of organic compounds and characteristic groups by the use of mass spectrometry, infrared, nuclear magnetic resonance, and ultraviolet spectroscopy. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 56100 - Fundamental Organic Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A general survey of synthetic organic chemistry including some discussion of current organic theory. Should be preceded by elementary organic chemistry. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 56300 - Organic Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Ionic and free radical reactions are discussed critically with emphasis on the synthetic and mechanistic aspects of the reactions studies. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 57900 - Computational Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theoretical basis and practical applications of computational methods relevant to chemical and biochemical research problems. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 58100 - Atmospheric Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EAPS 52100) An introduction to the chemistry of the earth's atmosphere. Covers evolution of the earth's atmosphere, its physical and chemical structure, its natural chemical composition and oxidative properties, and human impacts, including increasing tropospheric ozone, decreasing stratospheric ozone, climate change, and acidic deposition. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 59900 - Special Assignments |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Directed reading or special work not included in other courses. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHM 60500 - Safety In The Chemistry Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Lectures on safe practices in the chemistry laboratory. Required of students doing research in chemistry. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 61000 - Topics In Chemical Education |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. A variable topics course for graduate students in chemistry, chemical engineering, medicinal chemistry, and biochemistry. This course provides an overview of the literature in one of the areas of chemical education, such as: chemistry misconceptions and conceptual change; theories of learning, from Piaget and Vygotsky to radical constructivism; distributed cognition; and developing and assessing instructional materials. Offered in alternate years.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHM 61100 - Formulas For Successful Teaching |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An introduction to the issues of successful teaching of chemistry at the college/university level for graduate students in chemistry, chemical engineering, medicinal chemistry, and biochemistry who are interested in academic careers. Offered in alternate years.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 61500 - Principles Of NMR Spectroscopy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course is intended to provide in-depth coverage of fundamental concepts in modern NMR spectroscopy. Included are the vector model of spin resonance, topics in signal processing, product operator formalism, discussion of important 2D experiments, Redfield relaxation theory, and methods for molecular structure determination. The emphasis is on general spectroscopic concepts, also used outside spin resonance spectroscopy. Spectrometer operation and data processing are also demonstrated. Prerequisite: Undergraduate degree or completed advanced coursework in chemistry, physics, biology, or engineering. Basic knowledge of NMR is expected, but not required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 61600 - Advanced Experimental Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The theory and practice of multidimensional nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and advanced NMR techniques. Prerequisite: CHM 56000, 61500. Typically offered Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 62000 - Spectrochemical Instrumentation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A critical review of instrumental methods of analysis, with particular emphasis on spectroscopic techniques. Topics include: methods of measurement; analog and digital electronics; optics and spectrophotometric modules; and instrumental methods in UV-visible, infrared, and NMR spectroscopies. Prerequisite: introductory analytical and two semesters of physical chemistry. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 62100 - Advanced Analytical Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A critical survey of recent developments in chemical and instrumental methods of analysis. Prerequisite: CHM 32100, 42400. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 62200 - Chemical Aspects Of Mass Spectrometry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A graduate-level treatment of chemical aspects of mass spectrometry. No prior knowledge in mass spectrometry is required. Prerequisite: Bachelor's degree in Chemistry.
. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 62400 - Particle Spectroscopy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the application of ion and electron beams in the chemical analysis of gases and of surfaces. Emphasis is on the unity of the phenomena that underlie the preparation, manipulation, and analysis of ion and electron beams and on the analogies between inelastic reactions of ions and electrons, including those with both gaseous and solid targets. Mass spectrometry is covered in some depth, and a number of newer aspects of particle spectroscopy are treated, including ion scattering spectrometry, Rutherford scattering, energy loss spectrometry (ion and electron), ion kinetic energy spectrometry, ion cyclotron resonance and Auger spectrometry. Applications of these techniques feature structural analysis (compositions of mixtures, molecular structure of organics, electronic state assignment in simple ions), chemical preparations (ion implantation), and isotopic analysis. The underlying chemistry is explored, particularly in considering the kinetics and dynamics of unimolecular fragmentation and in terms of the factors that affect the cross-sections of inelastic collisions. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: CHM 42400. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 62900 - Chromatographic Methods Of Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Principles and practice of modern gas and liquid chromatography are developed from an integrated point of view. Emphasis is placed on those features useful in practical analytical separations. Instrumentation is described and evaluated using chemical examples from recent literature. Although column techniques are emphasized, thin-layer chromatography and electrophoresis methods also are described. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: CHM 42400. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 63100 - Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy: |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Theory, experimental practice, and current applications to biological systems of nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and, to a lesser extent, electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: CHM 53300, 56100, 57700, 57800. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 63200 - Membranes: Structure And Function |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The structure and molecular properties of biological membranes and appropriate model systems. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 63400 - Biochemistry: Structural Aspects |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Chemistry of materials of biochemical interest; carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, amino acids, nucleic acids, porphyrins; biochemistry of blood. Prerequisite: CHM 26200, 32100, 37400. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 63500 - Biochemistry: Dynamic Aspects |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Enzymes, metabolism, and protein and nucleic acid biosynthesis. Prerequisite: CHM 63400. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 63800 - Biophysical Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Applications of the principles and methods of physical chemistry in biochemistry with emphasis on the behavior of macromolecules in solution. Protein engineering. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: CHM 57800, 63400. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 64100 - Advanced Inorganic Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of main group and transition metal chemistry. Main group special topics, bonding and structure of boron hydrides. Coordination chemistry, bonding models in coordination compounds. Transition metal organometallic chemistry, ligand types and reactivity patterns. Survey of inorganic NMR spectroscopy. Prerequisite: CHM 34200. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 64200 - Advanced Inorganic Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Physical inorganic chemistry. Applications of group theory to chemistry and spectroscopy, especially vibrational and electronic spectra of transition metal complexes. Molecular orbital theory and theoretical bases for reactivity. Magnetic properties and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy of inorganic materials. Prerequisite: CHM 34200. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 64400 - Solid State Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The chemistry of solids, including a discussion of ionic crystals, metals, alloys, and binary compounds, and their characterizations by various physical methods. Description of chemical reactions, phase changes, and catalysis in terms of current theories of the solid state. Prerequisite: CHM 34200, 37400. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 64600 - Kinetics And Mechanisms Of Inorganic Reactions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Chemical kinetics, reaction orders, mechanisms and rate expressions; experimental techniques; transition state theory; reactions in solution; complex mechanisms; linear free-energy relationships; acid-base catalysis and proton-transfer reactions; redox reactions (electron and atom transfer, oxidative addition-reductive elimination); substitution reactions of metal ion and organometallic complexes; homogeneous catalysis; and heterogeneous reactions. Prerequisite: CHM 34200. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 64700 - Transition Metal And Organometallic Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the chemistry and physical properties of compounds of the transition metals. Halides, oxides, and oxy-salts; transition metal carbonyls and derivatives; pi-bonded organometallic compounds; catalysis; spectral and magnetic properties of compounds. Prerequisite: CHM 64100. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 64800 - Bioinorganic Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides a detailed perspective on the roles of metals in biology. Emphasis is placed upon principles guiding the field. The basics of biochemistry and inorganic chemistry are provided such that students from diverse backgrounds may participate. Readings are from the research literature. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 65100 - Advanced Organic Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Modern structural organic chemistry, including introductions to molecular orbital theory and reaction mechanisms. Prerequisite: a year's course in organic chemistry. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 65200 - Synthetic Organic Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced treatment of methods for preparing major types of organic functionalities and bonds, stressing stereochemical control and involving mechanisms for understanding the reactions employed. Prerequisite: CHM 65100. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 66800 - Physical Organic Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The theoretical and mechanistic bases for structure and reactivity in organic chemistry is discussed. Individual topics include kinetics and thermodynamics, molecular orbital theory, stereochemistry and reactive intermediates as applied to the mechanisms of organic reactions. Prerequisite: CHM 56300 or 65100. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 67100 - Advanced Physical Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected topics, including atomic and molecular structure and modern theories underlying thermodynamics and chemical kinetics. Prerequisite: CHM 57800. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 67200 - Quantum Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic principles of classical and quantum mechanics, exact solutions for simple systems, approximation methods, atomic structure, spectroscopy, application of group theory, theory of molecular binding. Prerequisite: CHM 67100. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 67300 - Computational Quantum Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Semiempirical and molecular-mechanics treatments of large molecules, ab initio methods, modern density functional theory, Green's functions, multichannel quantum defect theory, global optimization methods. Prerequisite: CHM 67100. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 67500 - Chemical Kinetics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Experimental and theoretical consideration of chemical reaction rates and mechanisms. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 67605 - Molecular Spectroscopy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theoretical and experimental fundamentals of the interactions between molecules and electromagnetic waves. Topics include electronic, vibrational, and rotational spectroscopies, and laser-based methods. Prerequisites: CHM 67100. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will possess a firm working knowledge of the interactions of light with molecules and be able to explain molecular spectroscopy concepts to other scientists.
2. Students will be able to analyze molecular rotational, vibrational, and electronic spectra, extracting information about the shapes, bond distances, vibrational motions/frequencies, and electronic excited states from the spectra.
3. Students will be able to read and understand key aspects of the current literature in molecular spectroscopy, including advanced, laser-based methods.
4. Students will be able to use group theory to identify the point group of a molecule and assign molecular rotational, vibrational, and electronic states to symmetry species.
|
| CHM 67900 - Chemical Thermodynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced thermodynamics of chemical and phase equilibria, of electrolytic and nonelectrolytic solutions, and of imperfect gases. Prerequisite: CHM 57800. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 68200 - Statistical Thermodynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of statistical mechanics to the description of imperfect gases, liquids, and solutions; to order-disorder phenomena in solids and surfaces; and to absolute reaction rate theory. Prerequisite: CHM 67100, 67900. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHM 69500 - Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 or 1.00. Groups meeting for review and discussion of important current literature in analytical, biological, inorganic, organic, and physical chemistry. Each graduate student is required to attend the seminar of his or her major subject. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHM 69600 - Special Topics In Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Lectures on selected topics of current interest. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHM 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHM 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Chemistry
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHNS 10100 - Chinese Level I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A comprehensive course in elementary Mandarin, designed to develop basic proficiency in listening, speaking, reading, and writing. Systematic coverage of syntactical patterns. After oral foundation work, 20 characters are introduced each lesson in unsimplified and simplified forms. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand sentence-length utterances which consist of recombinations of learned elements in a limited number of content areas, particularly if strongly supported by the situational context.
2. Make short statement and ask simple questions, primarily by relying on memorized utterances but occasionally by expanding these through simple recommendations of those elements.
3. Identify a limited number of character components and high-frequency characters in areas of immediate need.
4. Read for instructional and directional purposes, standardized messages, such as some prices in stores, time/date on schedules, etc.
5. Write simple fixed expressions and limited memorized material and some recombination thereof.
|
| CHNS 10200 - Chinese Level II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A continuation of the study of elementary Mandarin. Students will complete study of basic syntactical patterns. Character recognition will be built to 500. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand sentence-length utterances which consist of recombinations of learned elements in a limited number of content areas, particularly if strongly supported by the situational context.
2. Ask and answer questions, initiate and respond to simple statements and maintain face-to-face conversation.
3. Read, for basic survival and social needs, simple connected specially prepared material and can puzzle out pieces of some authentic material as it reflects similarity to specially prepared material and/or high-frequency oral vocabulary and structure.
4. Read for instructional and directional purposes, standardized messages, such as some prices in stores, time/date on schedules, etc.
5. Meet limited practical writing needs.
|
| CHNS 10700 - Chinese For Heritage Students |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A Chinese language course designed for students who have acquired some oral Chinese from home or other sources. It capitalizes on students' heritage background to develop communication and comprehension skills, maintaining and vitalizing the linguistic and cultural proficiency already acquired. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHNS 20100 - Chinese Level III |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A course in intermediate Mandarin, with integrated spoken and written tracks emphasizing the cultural contexts of usage. Mastery of more advanced syntactic patterns, with enriched vocabulary. Character recognition built to 800. Introduction to Chinese dictionaries. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHNS 20200 - Chinese Level IV |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A continuation of the study of intermediate Mandarin. Development of enhanced oral narrative skills and listening comprehension skills through audio-visual supplements. Short exercises in expository composition. Character recognition built to 1,100-plus. Introduction to Chinese newspaper. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHNS 20700 - Intermediate Chinese For Heritage Students |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An intermediate level Chinese language course which capitalizes on students' heritage background for further development of communication and comprehension skills. It maintains and further vitalizes the linguistic and cultural proficiency that has already been acquired. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHNS 22400 - Chinese Level IV Business Chinese |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Practical reading, writing, speaking, and listening comprehension skills directed towards use of Chinese for business purposes. Course materials cover daily business dealings as well as national and international trade, living conditions, environmental, cultural, and social problems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHNS 23000 - Chinese Literature In Translation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading and discussion of selected texts from major writers and genres. The course provides a broad survey of the Chinese literacy tradition and its cultural and historical background. Emphasis may vary from year to year. Knowledge of Chinese not required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHNS 24100 - Introduction To The Study Of Chinese Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Class reading and discussion of selected Chinese poetry, prose, and drama; introduction to the methods of literary criticism, applied to the reading of Chinese literary discourse. Texts, discussion, and written assignments primarily in Chinese. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHNS 28000 - Topics in Chinese Civilization and Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected topics on Chinese civilization and culture including history and geography, Confucianism, contemporary China, education, family, international cultural and economic cooperation. Course materials also cover most current issues on and in Chinese-speaking communities. Lectures in English. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHNS 28500 - Chinese Calligraphy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Principles and techniques of writing Chinese characters. The aesthetics of Chinese calligraphy, its function as an art form, and its role in Chinese culture. Emphasis on training and practice in calligraphic writing. Conducted in English. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHNS 30100 - Chinese Level V |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continued development of Chinese speaking, listening, reading, and writing abilities, using materials dealing primarily with everyday life and civilization from a variety of sources, e.g., newspapers, magazines, television, recent literature, etc. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHNS 30200 - Chinese Level VI |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continued development of Chinese speaking, listening, reading, and writing abilities, using materials dealing primarily with everyday life and civilization from a variety of sources with stronger emphasis on authentic texts, e.g., newspapers, magazines, television, recent literature, etc. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHNS 30500 - Introduction To Classical Chinese |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the grammar of Classical Chinese. Reading will include selections from pre-Ch'in texts as well as later classical prose and verse. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHNS 31300 - Reading And Writing Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Concentration on further development of reading and writing abilities for students with conversational proficiency, using materials primarily from modern social and cultural studies, including annotated literary texts. Conducted in Chinese. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHNS 34100 - Chinese Literature I: Traditional Chinese Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading and discussion of selected classical Chinese texts from major writers and genres. Introduction to methods of literary criticism as applied to Chinese literature. Texts, discussion, and written assignments are largely in Chinese. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHNS 34200 - Chinese Literature II: Modern Chinese Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of selected poetry, drama, and fiction from the twentieth century. Students will read and discuss major authors and texts and will write critical essays on literary topics. Texts, discussion, and written assignments are largely in Chinese. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHNS 39900 - Special Study Abroad Credit In Chinese |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. This course number is for assignment after the fact of credits in Chinese earned while enrolled at a foreign university on a Study Abroad program which cannot be appropriately accommodated under an established Purdue course number. It is not for use for courses offered at or conducted by Purdue. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
|
| CHNS 40100 - Chinese Level VII |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continued development of Mandarin Chinese speaking, listening, reading, and writing skills. Emphasis will be upon modern, everyday language and culture (with some introduction to traditional culture) using various sources such as textbooks, newspapers, and literary works. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHNS 40200 - Chinese Level VIII |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Further development of Mandarin Chinese speaking, listening, reading, and writing skills. Materials will include advanced textbooks and original texts such as newspapers and literary works. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CHNS 49000 - Special Topics In Chinese Language |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHNS 49300 - Special Topics In Chinese Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Study of a selected topic in Chinese literature. The topic will be announced in advance. Conducted in English; readings in English. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHNS 59400 - Special Topics In Chinese Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Special topics in Chinese Literature. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CHNS B1010 - Beginning Chinese I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. First course in Chinese language. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CIC 95100 - CIC Trvlg Scholar To |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 12.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CIC 95200 - CIC Trvlg Scholar From |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CIC 96000 - Univ Of Chicago |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CIC 96100 - Univ Of Illinois |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CIC 96200 - Indiana University |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CIC 96300 - Univ Of Iowa |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CIC 96400 - Univ Of Michigan |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CIC 96500 - Mich State Univ |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CIC 96600 - Univ Of Minnesota |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CIC 96700 - Northwestern Univ |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CIC 96800 - Ohio State Univ |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CIC 96900 - Univ Of Wisconsin |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CIC 97000 - Penn State Univ |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CIC 97100 - University Of Nebraska |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CIMT 20000 - Programmable Logic Controllers (PLCs) |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the applications, programming, servicing, and troubleshooting of programmable logic controllers (PLCs) with applications in hydraulics, pneumatics, analog, and electrical controls for automated applications. Laboratory
experiences include the design and troubleshooting of ladder logic programs. The Allen-Bradley PLC-5/11 and 5/60 processors are applied to control applications using rung programming, rung sequencing, data manipulation, file moves, and subroutines. PLCs are also interfaced to pneumatic pick-and-place robots for automated applications. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| CIMT 20001 - Programmable Logic Controllers (PLCs) Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course emphasizes the programming and troubleshooting with an Allen-
Bradley PLC using RSLogix and RSLinx. Programs are used to control discrete and analog I/O. Typically offered Fall.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| CIMT 20400 - Troubleshooting Automated Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course covers systematic approaches used to troubleshoot electrical and pneumatic faults in an automated system. Electrical and pneumatic circuit diagram analysis is emphasized. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| CIMT 20401 - Troubleshooting Automated Systems Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course emphasizes the hands-on troubleshooting methods used to diagnose electrical and pneumatic faults. Voltage, current, resistance, and pressure measurements are used to diagnose electrical and pneumatic faults that occur in an automated system. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| CIMT 20600 - Motors And Motor Control |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course provides theory and application of AC and DC motors, types of single phase motors, three phase power, three phase motors, forward and reversing motor starters, and various motor control circuits. DC drives and Variable frequency drives are included with control applications. Wiring and troubleshooting of three-phase motor control circuits are emphasized in lab.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| CIMT 20601 - Motors And Motor Control Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course emphasizes the wiring and troubleshooting of a 3 phase reversible
motor starter with timing, counting, and air clutch control capabilities.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| CIMT 22500 - Programming Industrial Robots |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course provides the knowledge and skill to program a Motoman six axis articulated manipulator for industrial applications. Programs are developed for assembly applications involving the interfacing and control for clamping, parts feeding, conveyor
integration, palletizing, and fault detection.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| CIMT 22501 - Programming Industrial Robots Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course emphasizes the programming and I/O interfacing of a 6 axis Motoman Robot for an assembly application.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| CIMT 25000 - Robotics Applications And Servicings |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Application and servicing is emphasize dutilizing industrial grade robots, programmable logic controllers(PLC’s), Visual Basic, Panel View Terminals, conveyors, index tables, bowl feeders, a host computer, and other automated equipment. Students gain servicing and troubleshooting experience; plus fabrication of a grip and feeder, and system integration experience on dedicated machinery, assembly robots, and a robotic MIG welding station. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| CIMT 26500 - Industrial Networking And PC Control Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course covers networking of PLC's and PC systems used with supervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA) applications. The hardware used for networking and control will include Allen-Bradley ControlLogix PLC, Ethernet, Allen-Bradley Data Highway (DH+), and DeviceNet. The software used will include Windows 2000, RSLogix 5000, RSLinx, RSNetworx, and PC Anywhere. Microsoft Excel and Access will be incorporated into the networking system to process information. System installation, programming, application, and troubleshooting will be performed. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| CIMT 26501 - Industrial Networking And PC Control Systems Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course emphasizes networking PC systems together and file sharing through Ethernet; and networking Allen-Bradley ControlLogix 5000 PLC systems together using EtherNet, Produce/Consume, DH+, Remote I/O, DeviceNet, Hubs, Bridges, and Gateways. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| CIMT 29000 - Instrumentation And Automated Process Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course prepares students for working in food, chemical, and pharmaceutical industries. Lecture and lab assignments provide experience with sensors, level control, flow control, pressure control, temperature control, DAC and ADC conversion, digital set-point applications, analog processing, and PID control. The Allen-Bradley ControlLogix processor will be used as the controller with a process control trainer to design, construct, interface, program and troubleshoot control circuits and systems. Additional high-level process control will provide experience in control by HMI (Human Machine Interfacing) software such as RSVIEW32 and VISUAL BASIC on a PC. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| CIMT 29001 - Instrumentation And Automated Process Control Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course emphasizes the controlling of a batch processing application using an Allen-Bradley ControlLogix 5000 PLC and RSView32 software. Control includes discrete I/O; level and valve control, and analog I/O; temperature, flow, and VFD motor control. Typically offered Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| CIMT V1000 - Electronics For Automation I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course in the theory, characteristics, and application of basic electronic components used in AC, DC, and digital electronic circuits. Topics will include circuit analysis, measurement, and troubleshooting.Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| CIMT V100L - Electronics For Automation Lab |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course emphasizes the building, analyzing, and troubleshooting of AC, DC, and Digital electronic circuits.Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| CIS 10000 - Introduction To Computers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction To Computers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 10300 - Survey Of Information Systems And Information Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to information technology and computer information systems designed for department majors. Topics include university resources, career opportunities, ethics, computer concepts, problem solving techniques, logic, system development life cycle, program development life cycle, database management systems, computer math, security and privacy issues, networks, and file management. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 11100 - Introduction To Human Computer Interaction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces foundational concepts of human computer interaction. Students focus on human-centered software development, usability testing, and understanding interaction styles. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 14000 - Introduction to Networks |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course is an introduction to computer networks. How networks are used in business and industry environments will be explained. The various types of communication equipment and cables used in networks will be explained, the difference between local area and wide are networks is introduced, analog and digital transmission is explored, and the concepts involved in transmitting data are discussed. Network design and the implementation of those designs are an integral part of the course. Students will use a graphic software package to create network diagrams. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 16000 - Computers And Data Processing |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Computers And Data Processing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 16600 - Introduction To Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to computer programming. Emphasis in this course is on the program development life-cycle, structured programming and top-down design. Topics include identifiers, data types, arithmetic operators, if, if/else, looping, case selection, modules, arrays, and an introduction to classes. Extensive programming exercises are required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 18000 - Introduction To Project Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces foundational concepts of project management. Students focus on components of IS project management, the impact of IS projects on companies and basic theories of how to manage IS projects. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 18700 - Applied Computer Operating Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to computer operating systems and other systems software. Topics include: supervisor organization, utility programs, job control language, memory management and process management. Labs include installations of client based operating systems, like: Windows 9x, Windows 2000, Windows NT and Unix/Linux. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 20000 - Introduction To Information Systems Policies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the need for and creation of policies for information systems and their impact on business. Course content will include information security policies, disaster recovery policies, and other related policy topics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 20400 - Introduction To Computer-Based Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to computer-based systems with an emphasis on how computers can assist the user. Computer concepts, terminology, and a survey of programming languages, operating systems, word processing, spreadsheets, database, communications, graphics, and Internet are included. Extensive laboratory exercises are assigned. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 20500 - Information Systems For Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An integrated approach to Management Information Systems with emphasis on business systems analysis, design, development and implementation. A case problem will be presented which the students will implement via the above approach. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 21000 - Personal Computer Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The personal computer is explored at the application level. Topics covered include an in-depth study of DOS commands and application software review. An overview of digital circuits the internal structure of microcomputers, microchip differences, PC communications, microcomputer operating systems and peripheral devices are discussed in relation to the evaluation of PC hardware and software. New technology topics round out the course. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 21500 - Structured Program Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the development cycle, logic diagrams, debugging procedures, top-down design, top-down programming, is used to implement program solutions. Extensive programming exercises are assigned. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 21600 - Visual Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to object-oriented program development. An overview of object-oriented analysis and design techniques and terminology is presented. Object-oriented programming techniques are implemented using a visual programming environment. Extensive written homework and computer laboratory exercises are assigned. Computer program solutions are implemented using a visual programming environment. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 21700 - Visual Basic Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course emphasizes VB program development. An overview of analysis and design techniques and terminology is presented. Object-oriented programming techniques are implemented using a visual programming environment. Numerous written homework and computer laborartory exercises are assigned. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 21800 - C# Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis in this course will be on the object-oriented paradigm using C#. Topics include definition of classes and objects, definition of class methods, definition of functions, definition of derived classes, inheritance, polymorphism, exception handling, and an introduction to development of Window's applications. Extensive programming exercises using C# are required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 23000 - Data Communications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The role of data comminications in modern business environments is explored. Real time systems and data transmission techniques are covered. Topics include terminal equipment, communication media, data codes, error detection and correction, local area versus wide area networks, digital transmission techniques, terminal software, and the Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) model for network software. The primary emphasis in the course is on software aspects. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 23200 - Assembly Language Programming I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Assembly Language Programming I. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 23300 - Advanced Assembler |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced Assembler. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 24100 - Web Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an in-depth study on the internet and World Wide Web. Topics include intra- and extra-net concepts, security issues, design criteria and other Web aspects. Focus is on teaching skills necessary to develop applications for use on the Internet. Students learn how to write HTML, BVScript, and JavaScript code, how to use Microsoft FrontPage and other tools to create Web pages, and how to use image maps, forms and scripts, frames animated GIG files tables, and style sheets. Students will complete a semester project working as a member of a team. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 24200 - E-Commerce Architecture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to client/server and web-base architecture. Topics include the history and evolution of client/server systems, standards, client/server processing models the role of the client and of the server, middleware, multi-tiered architectures, methods of data distribution, designing a client/server system,distributed RDBMS, transaction processing and E-commerce. New developments, trends and uses for E-commerce are discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 25100 - Commercial Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Commercial Systems. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 25200 - Systems Analysis And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the procedural requirements of the system development cycle (SDLC). Through actual problem solution, the student is introduced to the techniques of system planning, analysis, design, implementation, and evaluation. This course prepares students for careers as business analysts and technical analysts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 25300 - Applied Database Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the applied aspects of database systems and their associated languages. Topics include database terminology and concepts including data modeling, data dictionaries, redundancy, independence, security, privacy, and integrity. Extensive laboratory exercises are assigned. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 25500 - Fundamentals Of Information Assurance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an integrated, comprehensive coverage of the information security policies, process, techniques, security tools, and awareness vital to information security. The classroom instruction provides a practical approach through case scenarios of both the principles and practice of information, computer, and network security for the enterprise and home. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 26000 - Structured Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Structured Programming. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 26100 - RPG Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to programming in RPG/400. Extensive programming exercises are assigned including report generation, control breaks and the creation and maintenance of indexed files. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 26300 - Java Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course uses the Java programming language for creating object-oriented software, including applications utilizing a graphical user interface. Students will study the structure and style of Java and will be required to submit extensive programming laboratory exercises. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 26400 - Fortran Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fortran Programming. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 26500 - Cobol Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the programming language, ANS COBOL, which is especially useful for file and table handling and extensive input and output operations. The student will study the structure and details of COBOL and perform programming exercises dealing with practical applications like table handling, record selection and reporting. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 26600 - C++ Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis in this course will be on the object-oriented paradigm using C++. Topics include definition of class, data abstraction, member functions, friend functions, this pointer, static class member, operator overloading, inheritance, virtual function and polymorphism, template, exception handling, elementary data structures, reusability, and introduction to Standard Template Library. Extensive programming exercises in C++ are required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 26700 - Software Engineering Requirements Definition And Quality |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces basic concepts and principles of software requirements engineering, its tools and techniques, and methods for modeling software systems. It looks at how software quality assurance and configuration management are performed and how software process improvement is maintained in order to assure the highest possible quality in the development of software. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 27700 - Software Engineering Design, Construction & Evolution |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the methods and techniques used in the design of software systems. It includes architectural and detailed design, with an emphasis on object-oriented methods, the design process, and the design documentation and review. It also examines issues, methods, and techniques associated with constructing software, given an architectural and detailed design, and for maintaining software over its lifetime. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 28600 - Computer Operating Systems I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to computer operating systems and other system software. Topics include: supervisor organization, utility programs, job control language, memory management and process management. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 28700 - Applied Computer Operating Systems II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of CIS 187 with emphasis on systems installation and configurations using UNIX and Linux. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 28800 - LAN Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an intermediate networking course and local area networking and design course. This is a laboratory and lecture course that covers the topics of topologies, networking protocols, hardware, and software of the local area network. Students will evaluate networking technologies, design local area networking solutions, and implement local area networking solutions. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 29000 - Computer Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Independent study for sophomore students who desire to execute a computer-oriented project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| CIS 29400 - Data Process Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Data Process Seminar. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 30000 - Introduction To Computers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction To Computers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 30100 - Data And File Structures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Methods of organizing, linking, and retrieving information stored in computer memory or auxiliary storage: arrays, lists, stacks, queues, linked lists, trees. File organization and access: sequential, random, indexed, linked, inverted, partitioned. Associated data manipulation algorithms: data entry, searching, retrieval, sorting; algorithmic analysis. Selected applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 30200 - Information Systems Budgeting And Procurement |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the budgeting and procurement processes and issues and their impact on business. Course content will include vendor selection and management, managing costs on IS projects and planning IS budgets. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 30400 - Advanced Computer Utilization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a continuation of CIS 20400. The objectives of the course are to teach students how to obtain and analyze information, apply advanced application skills, research a topic, generate reports and present the results. These computer skills are required in many disciplines today. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 31000 - Server Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will prepare students for being a network and server administrator. Specific topics of the course will include administration of commercial operating systems in a commercial environment. Students will have practical knowledge on how to install, configure, and implement a server solution. Students will be exposed to the theory of server technologies, directory services, and management theory of server systems. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 31200 - Legal Issues In Information Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on legal issues surrounding Information Technologies. Current legal issues in information technology are addressed including elements of contracting, payment systems, digital signatures, privacy concerns, intellectual property, IT torts and criminal liability including hacking, computer trespass and fraud. Examination of legal issues including privacy, systems abuse and legal practices in Information Technology will be explored. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 31500 - Wireless Network Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will introduce the fundamentals of wireless technology with an emphasis on information technology and implementation issues. Wireless communications theory, licensing standards, limitations, and emerging technologies will be explored in depth. This course has an extensive laboratory component and students will implement several wireless local area networking technologies. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 32300 - Object-Oriented Systems Analysis And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an introduction to the object-oriented analysis and design technique for systems development. Topics include problem analysis, data collection techniques, system and program design techniques. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 33300 - Concepts Of System Software |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Concepts Of System Software. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 34100 - Web Development II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a continuation of CIS 241. Advanced Web content generation techniques are covered. Topics include using advanced multimedia and database and application integration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 34200 - Multimedia For Web Developers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to the creation and use of graphics, animation, video and audio on the Web. Students will design, create and deploy several instances of graphics, video and audio on a series of Web pages. Topics include graphics, video and audio file formats, creating multimedia content, formatting images on Web pages, animation and video, and the use of graphics for purposes such as buttons, dividers, and image maps. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 34500 - Computer Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of computer hardware used to make graphic displays including printers, plotters, and cathode ray tubes. Programming techniques for plotting lines and special symbols and the organization and representation of data, and a survey of applications. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 35100 - Decision Support And Expert Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to techniques employed in supporting decision-making in business, industry and government. Various types of models are developed and solved using manual and computerized techniques. Students analyze, prepare a model for, and develop solutions for selected types of problems. Decision support software packages may be specified to implement some solutions. Topics include an overview and relationship to Artificial Intelligence, project management, optimization techniques, statistical analysis, graphical analysis, simulation techniques, building management models, and presentations of results. Typically offered Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 35300 - Advanced Database Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics include processing statements of SQL blocks, procedures, functions, packages, dependencies, database triggers, built-in packages, dynamic SQL and Object Technology and code tuning. Students acquire advanced skills in an applied environment reinforcing concepts and techniques of SQL programming. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 35400 - Relational And Object-Oriented Database Modeling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course discusses the role of databases in the System Development Life Cycle with an emphasis on relational databases and object-oriented database analysis and design techniques-logical data modeling. Additional topics include the functions and components of state-of-the-art commercial DBMS software, distributed database, database models, and the role and function of the Database Administrator. Students will be assigned data modeling projects. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 35500 - Database Management System Implementation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course emphasizes the implementation of a relational DBMS. Students will use fourth generation languages and tools to implement design specifications. Additional topics include the implementation of physical data models, backup/ recovery facilities, concurrency control, integrity services and security mechanisms. Students will be assigned implementation projects. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 35600 - Topics In Database Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to accessing a relational database using a programming language such as COBOL, C++, JAVA or RPG. focus is on one language during the semester. Topics include defining and controlling transactions, sequential access techniques, use of primary and secondary keys, cursors, report generation, updating techniques, and dynamic SQL. This course is a variable title course. This course can be repeated, with a different title, for credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CIS 35700 - Data Warehousing/Data Mining |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an overview of data warehousing and data mining together with in-depth explanations of critical issues in planning, design, deployment and ongoing maintenance of data warehousing. Students will gain a clear understanding of techniques for extraction of data from sources, data transformations, data staging, data warehouse architecture and infrastructure and various methods for delivery. Additional topics will include an overview of On-Line Analytical Processing, Knowledge Discovery Database Process Model, Expert Systems, Neural Networks, Regression Analysis, Intelligent Agents as they relate to data warehousing. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 36300 - Advanced Java Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course is a continuation of CIS 26300. Topics include multi-threading, client/server, database access and exception handling. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 36500 - Topics In Cobol |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced COBOL topics concerning indexed files with variable length records, direct files, sophisticated table handling employing subscripting and indexing, simulation and program use. The Report Writer feature of COBOL is also introduced. Programming exercises include advanced file maintenance techniques and menu-driven programs. subprogram use. The Report Writer feature of COBOL is also introduced. Programming exercises include advanced file maintenance techniques and menu-driven programs. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 37300 - Distributed Dataprocessing Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Distributed Dataprocessing Systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 38300 - On-Line Programming Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to Command Level CICS used to illustrate the concepts and considerations required in the design development and implementation of online application programs. CICS commands, program design, programming, CICS commands, program design, programming, screen maps, debugging and testing are covered utilizing business-oriented assignments. screen maps, debugging and testing are covered utilizing business oriented assignments. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 38400 - Database Integration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This capstone course combines database skill sets and techniques, providing students with an integrated comprehensive experience of various database platforms and programming languages. Topics include the latest development tools, database features and strategies, embedded SQL programming, administrative APIs, CLI.ODBC, and OLE DB programming, Java programming, stored procedures and more. Students develop database applications in a variety of environments using a variety of programming tools, maximizing database performance, availability, and efficiency. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 38900 - Novell LAN Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a continuation of CIS 388. The emphasis in the course is on illustrating the tasks that the LAN administrator must perform to maintain a NOVELL network. Topics include the SYSCON menu, menu creation, trustee assignments, assigning rights to users, file directories, installing software on the file server, login scripts and network monitoring software. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 39300 - Industrial Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Practice in industry with written reports of the practice by the co-op student. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 39400 - Industrial Practice IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Practice in industry with written reports of the practice by the co-op student. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 39500 - Industrial Practice V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry with written reports of the practice by the co-op student. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 40000 - Information Systems Strategic Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Information systems are covered and their relationship to the overall strategic business plans. Course content will include enterprise resource plans and business process redesign. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 41200 - Human-Computer Interaction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for students who desire to understand the complex interaction of people with machines. Studnets will learn how to design, manage, maintain, train, refine, and evaluate the user interface of interactive systems. Serious users of interactive systems will find that the course gives them a more thorough understanding of the design questions for user interfaces. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 41300 - Information Systems Auditing and Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the fundamentals of Information Systems auditing. Emphasis on understanding IS controls, the types of IS audits and the concepts and techniques used in IS audits. Exposure to risk assessment and professional standards in the field of IS auditing are provided. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 41400 - Information Systems Professionalism And Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course will cover ethical issues regarding the development of software and information systems and discuss the impact of these systems on society and businesses. Professional societies and their roles in information systems including their professional and ethical codes will be addressed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 41600 - Wireless Security |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will prepare students for being a wireless network administrator. Specific topics of the course will include encryption, VPN technologies over wireless, authentication mechanisms, and wireless topologies for security, radiation and signal propagation techniques, site analysis, monitoring and troubleshooting, and current threats against wireless devices. The course will cover advanced concepts specific to wireless security technologies and the implementation of protective technologies in the wireless realm. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 42000 - Wide Area Network Implementation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an advanced networking course and enterprise level architecture and design course. Students will evaluate networking technologies, design enterprise level networking solutions, and implement enterprise networking solutions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 42100 - Risk Assessment For Information Assurance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on analysis of Risk Assessment models associated with information technology framework. This course describes threats associated with information technology security. IT security threats from Hardware and Software level as well as countermeasures for reducing those threats are explored in detail. Countermeasures for Information Security Vulnerabilities from the framework of People, Processes, Computer level, Network technology, and Encryption are discussed. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 42200 - Network Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an integrated, comprehensive, up-to-date coverage of the techniques, standards, models for the network management vital to communications, networking, and services including current trends of next generation converged networks and emerging 4GM wireless technologies. The classroom instruction provides a practical approach of both the principles and practice of network management from different perspectives. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 42300 - Structured Systems Analysis And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is the first semester of a two-semester sequence in the advanced study of the system development life cycle. Topics include analysis and design using structured techniques to analyze existing information systems, preparation of the associated structured documentation to design new computer information systems, and preparation of the technical specification to implement the system. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 42400 - Object Oriented Analysis and Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an in-depth study of the system development life cycle using object oriented analysis and design techniques. Other topics include project management, software quality assurance, computer-assisted software engineering (CASE), and other state-of-the-art techniques that the software engineering profession introduces to support the systems development process. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 42500 - Information Systems Change Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course covers the purpose and techniques of IS change management and its impact on business planning and functions. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 42600 - Applications Software Development Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A capstone course integrating the knowledge and abilities gained through the other computer-related courses in the curriculum within a comprehensive system development project. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 42700 - System Develop Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course represents a capstone course that integrates the knowledge, skills and abilities gained through the computer-related courses in the curriculum within a comprehensive system development project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 44000 - Advanced Network Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will emphasize common carrier systems, ATM, Systems Network Architecture (SNA), Fiber Distributed Data Interface (FDDI), and Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN). New developments in data communications will be discussed. Students will design and simulate a wide area network using a simulation software package. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 44100 - Web Server Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a study of the implementation, configuration and maintenance of Web server software. Students will install and configure a Web server. Topics include server layout and design considerations, cgi and back-end program management, data collection and management, backup and recovery procedures, security and secure transactions and logging and auditing. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 44200 - Internet/Web Security |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a study of existing methods and techniques for securing various components of computerized systems. Topics include types of attacks, monitoring and detection techniques, encryption methods, data security, authentication techniques and current trends in security. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 44500 - Network Security |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a study of existing methods and techniques for developing and implementing a security policy and for securing various components of computerized systems. Topics include types of attacks, monitoring and detection techniques, encryption methods, data security, authentication techniques and current trends in security. Labs will emphasize various hardware and software security and data prevention packages. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 44600 - Web Development III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a study of advanced methods and techniques for developing and implementing Web and network-based applications. New topics and techniques in Web development are discussed. Extensive laboratory exercises and a comprehensive semester project are assigned. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 44700 - Disaster Recovery And Contingency Plans For Information Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides methods to identify vulnerabilities and take appropriate countermeasures to prevent and mitigate information technology failure risks for an organization. Topics include: disaster recovery principles, development of policies and procedures, preparation of disaster recovery plan, testing and rehearsal of the plan, and actually recovering from a disaster. The classroom instruction provides a practical approach to develop disaster recovery and contingency plans. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 44900 - Information Technology Security Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers techniques for architecture design, security infrastructure, and policy design. The course provides a practical approach through case scenarios of both the principles and practice of design, implementation, testing, and management of security technologies and security services. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 45100 - Computer Forensics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers methods to properly conduct a computer forensics investigation. The course uses case scenarios to illustrate the principles and practice of investigation. Topics include: digital evidence and controls, processing incidents using computer forensics tools, investigation reports, and forensic analysis. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 45300 - Data Base Management Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Data Base Management Systems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 45400 - Management Information Systems II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Management Information Systems II. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 45700 - Database Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers database administration tasks and techniques. Students will install and implement two relational database management systems. Topics include RDBMS architecture, installation, creating databases, configuration, migrating data, database object management, user account management, tuning and backup and recovery. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 46000 - Programming Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A broad overview of some basic and advanced concepts in higher level languages and their design. Emphasis is on issues and breadth rather than on details. Topics cover basic characteristics of programming languages, formal methods of defining syntax and semantics, broad language areas of string and list processing, formula manipulation, on-line commands, simulation, concepts of languages for specialized application areas and for program validation, and current research topics and technical issues. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 46100 - Enterprise Solutions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course exploring enterprise-level solutions and trade-offs in achieving design goals. The solution patterns and best practices will be discussed. Topics include the design considerations in achieving application availability, scalability, and reliability; technical issues involved in transaction, testing, optimization, and deployment; the practical solutions for different architectures, component-based multi-tiered solutions, and distributed applications. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 46600 - Multithreaded Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers multithreaded programming and distributed computing techniques. Topics include a review of object-oriented analysis and design, Universal Modeling Language (UML), Application Programming Interfaces (API), implementation of object-oriented design patterns, factorization, generalization, and object-oriented frameworks. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 46900 - Operating Systems Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will prepare students for being a network administrator. Specific topics of the course will include structure of scripting languages, scripting tools, and scripting uses. Scripts will be utilized to configure and update server and client operating systems types. The strengths and weaknesses of scripting techniques and tools will be discussed. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 48000 - Managing Information Systems Projects |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the advanced application of knowledge, skills, tools, and techniques that project managers use to plan, staff, estimate, and manage information technology projects. Students will apply project management technology and techniques to business problems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 48300 - Computer Hardware/Software Selection |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The course is designed to provide EDP technical personnel with information required to plan, design, and select computer systems. Included are the formulation of corporate requirements, configuration of hardware and software to satisfy stated requirements, comparison and evaluation of hardware and software, installation considerations, implementation procedures, performance measurement approaches and contract negotiations. Typically offered Fall.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 48600 - Systems Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Systems Programming. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CIS 49000 - Senior Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Independent study for seniors who desire to execute a complete computer oriented project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CIS 49700 - Informational Systems and Computer Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Hours, credit, and subject matter to be arranged by staff. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CIT 10200 - Discovering Computer Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course introduces students to computer technology and campus resources. It is designed to help students develop essential writing and thinking skills along with the study and time-management skills needed for academic success in computer technology. Teaching/learning strategies will use campus technology and library resources as tools for completion of course requirements. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 10600 - Using A Personal Computer |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to word processing, spreadsheet, and presentation software. It also includes instruction in basic computer concepts, Windows operating systems, the Internet, collaborative tools, and database concepts. Applications are taught through the use of problem solving assignments, projects, and exams. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Use the basic functions of an operating systems and its built-in tools.
2. Use Internet tools necessary for productivity.
3. Use word processing software for academic, personal, and professional use.
4. Use electronic spreadsheet software for academic, personal, and professional use.
5. Create and manipulate data in a database table.
6. Use presentation software for academic, personal, and professional use.
|
| CIT 11200 - Information Technology Fundamentals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides students with a working knowledge of the terminology, processes, and components associated with information technology. Students will receive experience with the Internet, World Wide Web, current versions of hardware and software, networking, security, maintenance, information systems, and the application development process. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain terms and concepts of information technology (hardware, software, networking, security, Internet/Web and applications).
2. Select and judge usage of information technology products and services.
3. Use Internet/Web services as a resource for learning and discovery.
4. Explore and evaluate information technology career opportunities.
5. Create useful end products in information technology areas of interest to explore major, career, skills, interests, and talents.
|
| CIT 11500 - Computer Information Systems Fundamentals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides students with a working knowledge of the terminology, processes, and components of information systems, information systems development, and hands-on experience with the Internet and World Wide Web as well as state-of-the-art hardware and software. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CIT 12000 - Quantitative Analysis I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to both qualitative and quantitative problem solving featuring a systems approach that relies on graphic models to describe such concepts as relations, sequences, and logic patterns. Course includes a brief introduction to set theory, logic, and descriptions of data. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CIT 12200 - Computer Applications In Finite Mathemathics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. CPT 115, CPT 140, and MATH 153 or MATH 151. Computer-related mathematical concepts used in the solution of business/industrial problems. Topics include linear systems, matrix algebra, probability theory, and mathematics of finance.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 12300 - Internet Skills |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This web-based course uses the Internet both as the message and the media for presentation. It is designed to increase an individual's competency in the global communication environment. All assignments, examinations, and quizzes are structured so that they may be executed via the Internet.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CIT 14000 - Programming Constructs Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to problem-solving techniques, program design
and development, programming logic, and object-oriented terminology and concepts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply standard programming constructs.
2. Use control structures correctly.
3. Successfully create programs using the Visual Basic development environment.
4. Use programming to create a variety of solutions including desktop applications, business programs, programs for mobile devices, and Web pages.
5. Use proper naming conventions.
|
| CIT 17600 - Information Technology Architectures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A conceptual and technological survey of information technology architectures inclusive of operating systems, network operating systems, distributed systems architectures, and distributed application architectures. Interoperability between these architectural components is explored. Current technology and trends in each architectural element are reviewed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Define and explain computer terminology, concepts, and acronyms as they relate to computer hardware, construction, and assembly.
2. Define and explain computer hardware/software failures.
3. Evaluate and determine valid solutions for hardware/software failures.
4. Demonstrate successful installation of computer hardware/software components.
5. Demonstrate problem-solving skills as they relate to computer architecture.
|
| CIT 17900 - Database Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The function and applications of database management. Several assignments are completed to demonstrate each
component. Not open to CPT majors. This course meets for five weeks.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 18800 - Microcomputer Applications Packages |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the topics and skills associated with a selected microcomputer applications package. Because various applications packages may be offered under this title, this course may be repeated for up to 9 credit hours. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| CIT 19000 - Freshman Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Independent study for freshman students wanting to execute a complete computer technology-oriented project, not directly covered in another CIT class, as approved by the department. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| CIT 20200 - Networking Fundamentals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will provide students with the fundamental skills necessary to design, implement, troubleshoot and manage a small to medium sized Local Area Network. Students will gain hands-on experiences in a lab environment, configuring a client server network, working with connectivity devices, troubleshooting hardware and software issues. Students will explore topics including network performance, network management and network security. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate mastery of core computing and mathematical concepts.
2. Analyze user needs and identify the computing requirements appropriate to an IT solution.
3. Plan, design, implement, and evaluate IT-based projects and systems to meet desired needs.
4. Functions effectively on teams to accomplish a common goal.
5. Communicate effectively with a wide range of auduences.
|
| CIT 20300 - Information Security Fundamentals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The purpose of the course is to provide the student with an overview of the field of Information Security and Assurance. Students will be exposed to the spectrum of Security activities, methods, methodologies, and procedures. Coverage will include inspection and protection of information assets, detection of and reaction to threats to information assets, and examination of pre-and post-incident procedures, technical and managerial responses and an overview of the Information Security Planning and Staffing functions. Students will explore current encryption, hardware, software and managerial controls needed to operate networks and computer systems in a safe and secure manner. In addition, students will participate in a semester project to re-enforce key concepts such as Policy Development and Business Contingency Planning. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Define Information Security.
2. Recognize the business need for Information Security.
3. Define key terms and concepts in Information Security.
4. Identify & prioritize information assets.
5. Identify & prioritize threats to information assets.
6. Define risk management & risk control.
7. Understand how risk is identified and assessed.
8. Understand management’s role in Information Security.
9. Define an information security strategy architecture.
10. Plan for and respond to intruders in an Information System.
11. Describe legal and public relations implications of security and privacy issues.
12. Explain the basic principles of cryptography.
13. Create and present a disaster plan for recovery of information assets after an incident.
|
| CIT 20600 - Advanced Computer Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will cover the advanced topics of office applications in Word, Excel, and PowerPoint, as well as establishing desktop publishing skills using Microsoft Publisher. Topics include web-driven applications, forms, and documents, macros, financial functions, worksheets queries, web spreadsheets, web databases, interactive OLE, VBA, brochures, newsletters, and business forms. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CIT 20700 - Data Communications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides the foundation for the understanding of data communication systems and computer networks. Topics include information representation and transmission, transmission media types and configuration, telephone, error handling, OSI model, and IP addressing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Demontrate mastery of core computing and mathematical concepts.
2. Function effectively on teams to accomplish a common goal.
3. Communication effectively with a wide range of audiences.
4. Explain the need to engage in continuing professional development.
|
| CIT 21200 - Web Site Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to give students an introduction to web site design and site creation. The course involves learning current standard XHTML fundamentals, CSS and design concepts. The proper design approach for constructing Web site and related techniques will also be covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply the tools and techniques for effective Web site planning and analysis.
2. Create static Web pages using HTML and XHTML.
3. Create pages using CSS for formatting and layout.
4. Construct dynamic Web pages using DHTML and JavaScript.
5. Use Web authoring tools such as Dreamweaver.
6. Apply current HTML and accessibility standards in the creation of Web pages.
7. Design and implement a static business-oriented Web site.
|
| CIT 21300 - Systems Analysis And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides students with the concepts, processes, and tools of system analysis and systems design. Object-oriented methods and tools are utilized with a focus on developing web-based interfaces and prototypes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn the terminology of systems analysis and design.
2. Apply the object-oriented approach to systems development.
3. Demonstrate and develop problem-solving skills in a team environment.
4. Become functionally knowledgeable of UML modeling techniques and tools.
5. Develop and document a web-based prototype.
|
| CIT 21400 - Introduction To Data Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to basic database development concepts. Extensive exploration of data manipulation using a relational DBMS and SQL. Students develop database applications using the most current database techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand basic data management concepts.
2. Understand the functions of DBMS and database administration.
3. Understand the structure and methods of the relational data model.
4. Create and manipulate relational databases using DBMS and SQL.
5. Model logical data requirements using object-oriented techniques.
6. Transform a logical data model into a relational database structure.
7. Apply normalization techniques to a database.
|
| CIT 21500 - Web Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will provide students with the knowledge and techniques of a variety of Web programming languages. Both client and server side languages will be examined. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop working knowledge of Javascript and PHP.
2. Explain available benefits and limitations of popular Web-based application frameworks.
3. Recognize, consider and adapt to Web-specific factors for software development, such as download time, connectivity, and browser compatibility.
4. Research and select the best framework, toolset or design pattern to address a specific problem.
5. Design and implement moderately complex web-based applications.
|
| CIT 22000 - Quantitative Analysis II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continued investigation into the problem solving tools and techniques that focus on both hardware systems and quantitative data analysis. The course is designed for CIT majors in their second full year of study. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop problem-solving skills as they relate to hardware systems and quantitative analysis.
2. Apply critical thinking and analytical skills, analyze situations from a descriptive statistical view.
3. Express situations in mathematical terms.
4. Develop oral and written communication skills relating to hardware systems and data analysis.
5. Develop and refine professional skills.
6. Express situations in descriptive statistical terms.
|
| CIT 22200 - Computer Applications Of Discrete Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. CPT 115, CPT 140, and MATH 151. Mathematical concepts that bear directly on such computer areas as knowledge-based systems, architecture, database management systems, and communications networks. Topics include set theory, Boolean algebra, combinatorics, graph theory, and an introduction to automata theory.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 22300 - Web Page Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to give students a basic look at World Wide Web page and site creation. The course involves current HTML fundamentals, design concepts, links, anchors, use of color, placing graphics, utilization of tables, image maps, site structures, and the use of search engines. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 22400 - Microcomputer Tools And Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Applications of word processing, electronic spreadsheets, graphing, and other microcomputer tools, and
demonstrations of their uses by several assignments. Internet tools including electronic mail, World Wide Web, gopher, ftp, telnet, and strategies for resource discovery. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 22500 - Statistical Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to elementary statistics, with emphasis on the analysis of actual data. Description and representation of sample data, probability, theoretical distributions, sampling, estimating, correlation, regression, and computer statistical routines.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 23300 - Computer Hardware/Software Architecture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course presents a detailed investigation of computer hardware and software. Looking at hardware and software components, along with several operating systems, students should enhance their knowledge of the interrelations between these components. In addition, through the use of programming examples, the student will learn about the structure of the microprocessor and microcomputer basics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CIT 24000 - Introduction To Data Communications And Networks |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the role of data communications in modern information systems. Topics include data
communications, applications, voice communications, network hardware and configuration, network protocols and the World Wide Web.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 24200 - Introduction to ASP.Net Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will provide students with the tools and techniques to build dynamic Web sites using the ASP.Net programming environment. Students gain hands-on experience building a database-driven Web site. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the three pillars of object oriented programming.
2. Develop working knowledge of C# programming constructs and the .NET framework.
3. Write an object oriented program using custom classes.
4. Build and debug well-formed Web forms with ASP.NET controls.
5. Perform form validation with validation controls.
6. Create custom controls with user controls.
7. Use ADO.NET in a web application to read, insert, and update data in a database.
|
| CIT 25400 - Analysis And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Concepts, processes, and tools of systems analysis and systems design. Object-oriented methods and tools are utilized. Web-based user interfaces and prototypes are developed by students. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 26200 - Problem Solving And Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to object-oriented programming with emphasis on object design, construction, use, modification, and reuse. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 26500 - Cobol Programming I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course consists of a study of the programming language COBOL which is oriented toward data
handling and processing tasks. The student will study the structure and details of COBOL and perform programming exercises that cover current practical applications.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 27000 - Java Programming I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to the Java Programming language. Students will learn the syntax of the language, how to use objects, classes, and methods, and will perform programming exercises that illustrate how Java is used in stand alone applications and applets. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply problem-solving techniques in designing computer applications.
2. Use control structures correctly.
3. Successfully create programs using the Java development environment.
4. Explain and use object-oriented terminology.
5. Apply object-oriented modeling and design elements in the creation of computer programs.
|
| CIT 28600 - Operating System Concepts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to computer operating systems and other systems software including UNIX, DOS, and Windows. Topics will include architecture, threads, multiprogramming, timesharing, disk and kernel scheduling, and paging. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CIT 28800 - Using Database Management Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to basic database development concepts. Extensive exploration of data manipulation using a relational DBMS and SQL. Students develop a microcomputer database application using web database technology. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 29000 - Computer Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Independent study for sophomore students wanting to execute a complete computer-oriented project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| CIT 29900 - Computer Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Hours, credit, and subject matter to be arranged by staff. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CIT 30100 - Digital Technologies For The Consumer |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course acquaints users with computer, digital, and telecommunications technologies necessary for personal and professional productivity. Students will learn the importance of protecting computers in cyberspace; how to apply security in homes and small businesses; and how to make cost-effective choices among hardware, software, and service alternatives in today¿s marketplace. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 30200 - Microcomputer Organization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. CPT 222, CPT 286, and CPT 341. Microcomputer organization and microcomputer architecture, emphasizing combinational circuits, microprogramming, chip interfacing, and RISC technology. Not open to students who have credit in CPT 499 Computer Organization.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 30300 - Communications Security And Network Controls |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will provide students with an overview of the field of information security and assurance. Students will explore current encryption, hardware, software, and managerial controls needed to operate networks and computer systems in a safe and secure manner. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CIT 30600 - Computer Technology Applications Capstone |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will study how organizations incorporate and automate computer applications, web applications and web services. Students will create a capstone project and a training module for an organization focusing on the use of current emerging computer and web application technologies as well as support and communication tools. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CIT 30700 - Data Communications |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course provides the foundation for the understanding of data communication systems and computer networks. Topics include information representation and transmission, medium types and configuration, telephony, error handling, TCP/IP and internetworking, and diagnostic techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CIT 31000 - Career Planning And Placement Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This seminar is an orientation to the job search activities and information systems and telecommunications career planning for computer technology students about to enter the work force. Guest speakers offer job-hunting tips, relate their work experiences, and describe career opportunities. Students investigate their transferable and technical skills, personal priorities, and consider how to find matching professional positions. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CIT 31200 - Advanced Web Site Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the tools and techniques necessary to maximize the effectiveness of deploying e-commerce Web applications and address both client and server side strategies with a focus on optimal Web design strategies. Strategies focus on internal design issues such as security, reusability, accessibility and architecture and external design issues such as user interfaces, load times and multimedia. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply web page design standards, use Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) at an advanced level where appropriate.
2. Create code that works in multiple browsers, understand the issues surrounding search engine optimization.
3. Demonstrate application of multiple navigational strategies, create web forms using validation and incorporate usability.
4. Define and apply techniques for optimizing speed of web delivery components.
5. Dmeonstrate application of reusability strategies for Web components, Utlize JavaScript Frameworks to perform real time validation.
6. Design pages using sound web design techniques and methods including usability and accessibility standards.
|
| CIT 31300 - Commercial Web Site Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This project-based course will have students develop a data driven web site to support business processes. Students will utilize both client and server side languages in developing the site. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify the appropriate target audience and their informational needs.
2. Design an effective web site, including well designed navigational paths.
3. Determine data needs and design and implement appropriate database structure.
4. Use server-side and client side scripting to support business needs.
5. Design, implement and document a data driven solution.
|
| CIT 31500 - Introduction to Multimedia Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to computing concepts in multimedia development. An integration of the science behind multimedia including compression algorithms, analog/digital conversations, media filtering, streaming media, and XML-based languages. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 31600 - Introduction to Virtual Reality |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explore concepts of 3D imaging and design including primitive shapes, transformations, extrusions, facesets, texture mapping, shading and scripting. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 31700 - System and Network Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental concepts of system administration. Design and administration of network servers and workstations. Focus on basic network concepts such as user account administration, resource allocation, security issues, and internet service management. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 32000 - Quantitative Analysis III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of statistical inference introduced in Quantitative Analysis II with emphasis on confidence intervals, hypothesis testing, analysis of variance, forecasting including linear regression and correlation, and quality control as they apply to information technology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CIT 32300 - Multimedia |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers contemporary, interactive multimedia technology systems, focusing on types, applications, and theories of operation. Students learn how to digitize and manipulate images, voice, and video materials. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 32500 - Human-Computer Interaction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) focuses on understanding how humans interact with computers and how they can use this knowledge to improve the design and evaluation of computer systems, particularly the user interface. This course will examine the development, evaluation, and testing of effective and efficient computer interfaces. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 32700 - Wireless Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will learn about the growing range of wireless technologies and their applications. The course will explore the fundamentals of each wireless technology from basic signaling properties to current and future market uses. Students will have the opportunity to gain hands-on experience with various wireless technologies. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the principles of wireless communications.
2. Give examples of the multiple applications of wireless communications.
3. Define the terminology associated with wireless communications.
4. Assess various wireless communication platforms in selecting solutions for an application.
5. Critically compare strengths and weaknesses of each platform discussed.
6. Design and implement a wireless network.
7. Apply new knowledge with hands-on experience with wireless communications.
|
| CIT 32900 - Java Server Pages |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will cover the programming of Java Server Pages (JSP) and Java Servlets in an E-Commerce environment. Students will develop reusable E-Commerce software using server-side components. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply problem-solving techniques in designing computer applications.
2. Use control structures and web protocols correctly.
3. Successfully create programs using the JSP development environment.
4. Explain client/server concepts as they apply to JSP.
5. Apply object-oriented modeling and design elements to Java Server Pages.
|
| CIT 33600 - Data Communications Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is a companion to CPT 30700 and emphasizes hands-on lab work. In this course, students will implement hardware and software configurations to meet specific requirements of a data communications system. In addition, students will explore tools and network troubleshooting. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 34100 - Data Communications II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for CPT majors in their sophomore or junior year who are interested in
expanding their knowledge of the role data communications and computer networks play in business operations. Principles and issues of network design, operation and management of both Local Area and Wide Area Networks
are covered as well as the issues involved in designing and implementing Intranets.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 34400 - Database Security |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will cover fundamentals of database security, data auditing, basic security models, and best practices. Topics may include security architecture, access control policies, auditing and monitoring. The course will have application oriented projects using a database system such as Oracle or SQL Server. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Understanding the fundamentals of database security architecture.
2. Learn the operating system security fundamentals.
3. Study the authentication, access control policies.
4. Perform database auditing.
5. Training on privacy and k-anonymity.
6. Learn the fundamentals of XML and statistical database security.
|
| CIT 34500 - Computer Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study and programming of graphical techniques, such as scaling, translation, rotation, and polygons. Emphasis
on the programming aspects of graphics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 34600 - Desktop Publishing Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Interdisciplinary introduction to desktop publishing technology integrating application and hardware. Students will learn desktop publishing theory and techniques to produce flyers, newsletters, brochures, business forms, web forms, and publications with database interconnectivity. Service learning includes a complete DTP solution for a small business or not-for-profit agency. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CIT 34700 - Advanced ASP Net Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will apply the ASP.Net framework to e-commerce applications. Advanced ASP.Net techniques will be covered such as Web services, ADO, LINQ, AJAX, and security components. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop advanced knowledge of C# and ASP.NET.
2. Use ADO+ to connect to XML, arrays and non-database sources.
3. Create and consume Web Services.
4. Use LINQ to interact with XML and database sources.
5. Utlize AJAX to enhance usability of a website.
6. Use Security and Authentication components.
|
| CIT 35100 - Expert Systems I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide hands-on experience in the creation and use of expert systems. It is designed to teach the theory and mechanics of expert system development.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 35200 - Decision Support And Information Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Definition of support and management information systems-similarities and differences. Use of decision support systems (DSS) and management information systems (MIS) in organizations. Tools for modeling and simulation. Application of system analysis and system design concepts to DSS and MIS situations. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 35600 - Network Operating Systems Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design and administration of network servers and workstations. Focus on basic network concepts such as user account administration, resource allocation, security issues and internet service management. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Configure a basic Linux and Windows operating system.
2. Analyze and solve issues with start up and shutdown of both a Linux and Windows server.
3. Create and administer user accounts on both a Linux and Windows platform.
4. Explain the workings of the file system structures on Linux and Windows.
5. Understand the role and responsibilities of a system administrator.
6. Monitor and analyze system problems.
|
| CIT 36200 - Object-Oriented Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course continues the study of object-oriented programming by introducing visual components. Students complete exercises and programs using an object oriented programming language in a visual environment. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 36500 - Cobol Programming II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced COBOL programming techniques concerning indexing and subscripting of one and two dimensional tables, updating of sequential files, sorting files, subprogram use and embedded SOL.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 37400 - Systems And Database Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive exploration of application and database analysis in a synergistic environment. Students engage in collaborative, project-based activities to learn about project management, requirements analysis, modeling, prototyping, employing problem solving, and team-building skills. Object-oriented and data modeling tools are used to apply class concepts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Analyze user needs and identify the computing requirements appropriate to an IT solution.
2. Plan, design, implement, and evaluate IT-based projects and systems to meet desired needs.
3. Function effectively on teams to accomplish a common goal.
4. Communicate effectively with a wide range of audiences.
5. Use current technical concepts, techniques and practices in the information technologies within the student's area of expertise.
|
| CIT 38000 - Requirements Discovery & Modeling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an advanced study of systems analysis and design, focusing on object-oriented methods, techniques, and tools. Topics include object-oriented technology, object-oriented methods and techniques to analyze a business problem and design and implement a solution, use-cases, object models, requirements gathering, effective communications, project management, and cost-benefit analysis. Emphasis is placed on working in a team environment to model and design a solution to a "real-life" business problem. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 38100 - Unix Programming And Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will teach students to effectively administer and develop applications in Linux/Unix. Emphasis will be on the ability to read, write, and debug shell script programs. An exploration of Windows scripting languages will also be covered. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Interpret, write, and debug shell script programs.
2. Write a program using Unix/Linux tools such as grep, sed.
3. Become proficient in the use of regular expressions.
4. Write programs using Windows scripting languages.
5. Compare shell scripting in Linux/Unix to that of other operating systems such as Windows.
|
| CIT 38400 - Systems Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of tools and techniques for system designs through a semester project. Software selection decisions, conversion and implementation planning, post-operational review planning, and maintenance considerations are also discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CIT 38700 - Evaluation And Selection Of Smal Computer Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of microcomputer and minicomputer hardware and software, microprocessor architecture, distributed processing concepts and design, specification, evaluation and selection techniques, vendor and marketplace analysis, and interfacing.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 38800 - Topics In Programming Languages |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Since various languages may be offered under this title, this course may be used for a maximum of 9 hours of credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| CIT 38900 - Using A Database Management System |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study and use of a database management system (DBMS). Topics include user language, host language interface, file management, monitoring, recovery, and reorganization.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 40200 - Design And Implementation Of Local Area Networks |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The design, implementation, and configuration of local area networks. Students install the necessary hardware and software to set up a LAN server with several clients. Students will explore topics including "iinter-networking", network management, network performance, and security. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the principles of computer netowrking. Identify components common to all Client Server networks.
2. Describe the purpose of the TCP/IP model and each of its layers; Explain specific functions belonging to each TCP/IP Model layers.
3. Explain Transmission Media Basics and Networking Media; Configure client operating system for a LAN environment.
4. Design addressing schemes for TCP/IP networks; Identify the functions of LAN connectivity hardware.
5. Apply systematic troubleshooting process to identify and resolve networking problems; Troubleshoot LAN communication issues and record findings.
6. Summarize and present independent research on evolving and emerging technologies; Research and propose technical solutions to the given problem.
|
| CIT 40600 - Advanced Network Security |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides students with the in-depth study and practice of advanced concepts in applied systems and networking security, including security policies, access controls, IP security, authentication mechanisms and intrusion detection and protection. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify the key types of access control mechanisms using Unix and Windows ACL; Audit passwords on Windows and Linux.
2. Understand how TCP/IP traffic behaves on the network and how to operate sniffing tools to detect anomalies.
3. Implement an organizational policy using software-based and hardware-based packet filtering.
4. Configure NIDS tools like Snort to look for certain detects.
5. Configure and run a vulnerability scanner to find weak points in your systems.
|
| CIT 40700 - Fundamentals of Intelligent Agents |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the concepts, applications, and theories of operations of Intelligent Agent Technology. An Intelligent Agent is a software program that uses communication protocols to exchange information for automatic problem solving. Students will perform an in-depth analysis of an Intelligent Agent for a specific application and construct a prototype of it. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 41000 - Information Technology Ethics And Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides participants with ability to understand and analyze ethical and leadership issues in a highly dynamic IT environment. Participants also learn about legal, management, moral and social issues of IT in a global society. It supports the growing need to sensitize individuals concerning ethical utilization of information technology. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 41200 - XML-Based Web Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers how to build Web applications using XML. Students will learn how to create and validate data in XML documents and how to display XML documents using Cascading Style Sheets (CSS), XSL Transformations (XSLT), data binding and the Document Object Model. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CIT 41500 - Advanced Network Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this course, students will learn advanced concepts for installing, configuring and securing various types of network servers including enterprise, web and mail servers. The course also covers the documentation of network systems infrastructure and the testing of hardware and software network components. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply the concepts of advanced network administration.
2. Set up network security on servers.
3. Install, configure and maintain Active Directory, Mail Servers, Web Servers, and DNS servers.
4. Analyze emerging network techologies and standards.
|
| CIT 41900 - Streaming Media Technology Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This courses focuses on the technology that allows the transmission of audio, video, and multimedia type content over the Internet or private network. Topics will focus on the understanding, design and development of efficient and effective multimedia programs. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 42000 - Digital Forensics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the fundamentals of computer forensics and cyber-crime scene analysis. The various laws and regulations dealing with computer forensic analysis will be discussed. Students will be introduced to the emerging international standards for computer forensic analysis, as well as formal methodology for conducting computer forensic investigations. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply the principles and procedures of computer forensics. Apply the principles and procedures of mobile forensics.
2. Apply the principles and procedures of network forensics.
3. Demonstrate an understanding of the various laws dealing with computer forensics analysis. Use digital forensics applications and tools.
4. Understand the rules of evidence and the importance of the chain of custody.
5. Explain the basic principles of computer forensics and the fundamentals of crime scene analysis.
6. Adapt to the changing face of security.
|
| CIT 42300 - Electronic Commerce |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of current electronic commerce applications and the related legal and policy issues. Coverage of electronic payment systems, authentication, and security. Topics such as privacy, content selection and rating, and intellectual property rights are discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 42600 - Enterprise Networks |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to enterprise networks and the issues related to their design and implementation. This course examines the need for corporate networks and the role they play in the business environment. Students will learn how to integrate various technologies to meet the needs of an organization. Topics covered include network security, interoperability, performance, and integration. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 43100 - Applied Secure Protocols |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will emphasize the applied facets of cryptography for the information assurance and security professional. By the end of the course students will be able to apply important cryptographic principles and tools to allow networks to communicate securely. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply the following: symmetric-key cryptography, public-key cryptography, one-way functions, and hash functions.
2. Demonstrate an understanding of classical cryptography. Demonstrate an understanding of digital signatures.
3. Demonstrate a working knowledge of how to exchange a secret key; Understand and apply public key infrastructure (PKI).
4. Identify and use different encryption algorithms for identification and authentication; Determine when and how various protocols should be used.
5. Compare and contrast block cipher with stream cipher, AES with DES; Understand how RSA encryption/decryption work.
6. Explain birthday attack; Explain dictionary attack.
|
| CIT 43600 - Advanced E-Commerce Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will allow students the opportunity to develop a data driven E-Commerce site for a small to medium size company. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Become familiar with multi-tiered application; Determine and enhance needs of the client.
2. Utilize Use Case scenarios to document client needs.
3. Design and implement a data driver web solution.
4. Implement security through user input validation.
5. Integrate a common payment engine into a website.
6. Work with VB.NET, C# or JSP in development.
|
| CIT 44000 - Communication Network Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to wide area networking, which is a technology used to extend telecommunications connectivity for information distribution over large geographic regions. Topics include architecture, design including Frame Relay and ATM, and implementation, as well as the influence of the state and federal regulatory environments. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the principles of computer networking.
2. Understand WAN concepts.
3. Demonstrate an understanding of WAN hardware and gain hands on experience with configuring WAN components.
4. Solve technical issues through hands on experience with troubleshooting WAN's.
5. Apply the skills for using routers for configuring network devices.
6. Demonstrate confidence in working with explosively evolving technology of computer networking.
|
| CIT 44400 - Advanced Database Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course addresses enterprise data management and logical design concepts with an emphasis on needs determination and data modeling skills from an organizational perspective. Students will create data models and apply forward and reverse engineering techniques. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify the major functions of data management.
2. Understand data modeling concepts, terminology, and best practices.
3. Be able to design a logical data model for an enterprise.
4. Learn how to use a CASE tool for data modeling tasks such as forward and reverse engineering.
5. Understand the importance of needs determination and business requirements.
6. Evaluate different data modeling standards and industry approaches.
|
| CIT 45100 - IT Security Risk Assessment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will learn the basic tools of security risk assessment and risk management. Students will be able to identify and assess security risk, conduct information asset valuation, and apply risk control strategies. Other topics discussed will be: security policies, NIST Security Models, and training education and awareness. At the end of the course students will be able to assess vulnerabilities and document them according to published assessment standard. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CIT 46000 - Wireless Security |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the risks and benefits associated with wireless communications, as well as how the networking industry defines a secure wireless network. In addition, students gain the skills needed to properly create, configure, and maintain a secure wireless network. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Recognize the foundational principles of wireless LAN’s.
2. Identify the role a secure wireless LAN plays in overall network security.
3. Describe the importance of understanding frequency allocation and interference as it pertains to wireless security.
4. Discuss standards associated with wireless security.
5. Identify ways to defend a wireless network from internal and external threats.
6. Create and document a secure wireless network.
7. Examine multiple methodologies for wireless network security.
|
| CIT 47900 - Database Implementation And Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Extends knowledge of database concepts. Topics include physical database design, client/server implementation and databaes administration. Given a logical database design, students develop physical database structures and implement a database application. Students carry out database design, construction, and programming activities using client/server technology. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CIT 48400 - Systems Analysis And Design Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a seminar-styled course utilizing a collaborative learning approach to analyze and design a realistic information system of moderate complexity. Synthesis of system analysis and design concepts, principles, and practices are the major content components. Project management, group dynamics, and conflict resolution are experienced and discussed by the course participants. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 48500 - The Living Lab |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. The Living Lab allows students to apply networking, security, database, website, and application development concepts and techniques learned from prior CIT courses to internal and/or external projects. The Living Lab emulates an industry IT department in which students work on one or more projects as part of an IT team. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
|
| CIT 49000 - Senior Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Independent study for seniors wanting to execute a complete computer-oriented project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 7 credits
|
| CIT 49100 - Senior Design Project Phase I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An extensive design, analytical, or research project performed in collaboration with a faculty adviser. Specific tasks include defining an acceptable project proposal and a final project specifications report.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 49200 - Senior Design Project Phase II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A continuation of CPT 491, Phase II includes finalized design, prototype, and/or product; procurement of materials; oral presentation to faculty and other interested parties; and written technical report following standard format.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT 49900 - Computer Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Hours and subject matter to be arranged by staff. Possible individual study under directed leadership of professor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CIT 52800 - Information Security Risk Assessment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (CNIT 52800) Covers information security risk assessment, including the following topics: steps in performing information security risk assessment, threats to information security, technical, managerial, and operational vulnerabilities, methods for analyzing controls, methods for determining likelihood of and impact from an information security breach, and methods for determining risk. Emphasizes the development and utilization of security metrics in the risk assessment process.
Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
Upon successful completion of this course, students will be able to:
Identify and prioritize information assets.
Identify and prioritize threats to information assets.
Define an information security strategy and architecture.
Plan for and respond to intruders in an information system.
Explain legal and public relations implications of security and privacy issues.
Present a risk assessment plan using a published assessment standard.
Prepare a risk assessment plan.
Present a risk assessment plan.
Explore IT¿s impact on work, workers, and the workforce.
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| CIT 55000 - Organizational Impact Of Information Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (CNIT 55000) An enterprise view of the organizational impact of information technology as the most effective means for achieving "better, faster, cheaper operations" in today's highly competitive business environment. Examines how information technology has enabled new organizational forms and changes in business processes, products, markets, delivery systems, ways of working, and people management issues and challenges. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
Upon successful completion of this course, students will be able to:
Evaluate the strategic application of information technology (i.e. achieving better, faster, cheaper).
Explain the impact of IT on E-business design (including Enterprise Resource Planning, Customer Relationship Management, Supply Chain Management, and E- commerce).
Use Porter¿s Value Chain to describe IT¿s impact.
Use Mendonca¿s Value Model to describe the business value of business value of IT (including Business Intelligence).
Explain the need for an Enterprise Information Architecture.
Discuss and evaluate how IT has enabled process re-engineering, organizational design alternatives, and alliances/partnering.
Explain the appropriate roles of the CIO, CEO, CTO for IT leadership.
Explore IT¿s impact on work, workers, and the workforce.
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| CIT 56500 - Teachiing Computer Programming And Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Participants explore best methods for teaching secondary computer programming and computer applications. Additionally, participants learn to integrate other subjects with computer programming and applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate in-depth knowledge and competencies in core technology areas necessary for instructing students in computer applications and computer programming.
2. Explain the role and purpose of computer applications and computer programming courses in public schools
3. Indentify a variety of computer applications and programming instructional strategies that meet the needs of all learners in the middle and high school settings and meet curriculum and community goals.
4. Create lesson plans geared toward building secondary students’ skills in computer subjects, while improving critical thinking and problem-solving skills through multiple settings.
5. Develop behavioral standards for computer applications and computer programming and incorporate these into lesson plans.
6. Identify strengths of different assessment techniques and demonstrate the ability to use relevant assessment methods in appropriate situations.
7. Analyze contemporary social, professional, ethical, and legal issues related to technology and computing through oral and written work.
8. Develop expertise in the maintenance and management of lab instructional tools and technology.
9. Demonstrate teaching competencies through peer teaching/critiquing in computer applications and computer programming.
10. Evaluate personal instructional strategies and communication methods to identify strengths and weaknesses in pedagogy.
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| CIT C4940 - Cooperative Education Practice I-V |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's academic program and intended career with a business, industry, or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the practice is required. Typically offered Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CIT E1010 - Using Technology At IUPUI |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Using Technology at IUPUI. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT E1230 - Internet Skills |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This hands-on course will provide an introduction to the Internet. Topics: global communications, searching techniques, safety while using the Internet, the Internet as a research tool, web services, chatting, instant messenger, hosting, and choosing an Internet Service Provider. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CIT E2000 - Using Computer Software II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will further develop students' application and operating systems software skills and use of the Internet to enhance and support their academic, personal, and professional life. Advanced topics in Word, Excel, and PowerPoint will be integrated with their major field of study. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT E2010 - Information Technology For The Consumer |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will provide a decision framework for the overwhelming variety of choices created by the accelerating pace of technological innovation in information technology. Students will learn how to make cost-effective choices among the dazzling array of hardware, software, and service alternatives available in today's marketplace, as well as how to use sources of information for future decisions. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT E2030 - Desktop Publishing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This hands-on, interdisciplinary course will provide an introduction to desktop publishing technology, integrating application and hardware. Students will learn how to use desktop publishing to produce flyers, newsletters, brochures, business forms, web forms, and original graphics. Skills are developed through relevant problem-solving tutorial assignments, projects, and tests. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT E2050 - Creating Web Pages I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This introductory course will provide students with basic knowledge and skills required to develop web pages. Designed for non-majors, with little or not web experience, the course will use a hands-on approach to enable students to plan, develop, and implement a website using application software and elementary HTML. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT E2350 - Home And Small Business Networking |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This hands-on course will provide an introduction to home and small business networking. Students will learn how to setup, install, maintain, and secure a network within a small business, school, or home environment. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT E3010 - Protecting Yourself In Cyberspace |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will provide an introduction to the importance of protecting a computer in cyberspace. Students will learn the importance of information assurance and security, how to apply security in small business, school and home environments. Students will study security issues as it relates to wesites, networks, and data protection. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT E3050 - Creating Web Pages II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to Macromedia Dreamweaver, an industry-standard web editing software that saves valuable development time. Learn to create, edit, and manage web sites and gain the skills needed to develop static and data-driven websites. This course is taught through the use of problem solving tutorial assignments, projects, and tests. You will create a web site showcasing the skills learned in this course. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT E4940 - Employment Enrichment Experience IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Employment Enrichment Experience IV. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CIT I1980 - Career Enrichment Internship I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Career Enrichment Internship I. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CIT I2980 - Career Enrichment Internship II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's readiness for entering an initial or a second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Internship, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CIT I3980 - Career Enrichment Internship III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Career Enrichment Internship III. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CIT I4940 - Career Enrichment Internship IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Career Enrichment Internship IV. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CIT I4950 - Career Enrichment Internship IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Career Enrichment Internship IV. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CIT I4980 - Career Enrichment Internship V |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Career Enrichment Internship V. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CJUS K3000 - Techniques Of Data Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. It covers the properties of single variables, the measurement of association between pairs of variables, and statistical inference. Additional topics, such as the analyses of qualitative and aggregated data, address specific criminal justice concerns. Credit given for only one of the following: CJUS K3000, ANTH A3060, ECON E3700, ECON S3700, MATH K3000, MATH K3100, POLS Y3950, PSY K3000 , PSY K3100, SOC S3710, STAT K3100, STAT S3000, or SPEA K3000. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| CJUS P1000 - Introduction To Criminal Justice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Historical and philosophical background, structure, functions, and operation of the criminal justice system in the United States. Introduction to and principles of formal behavior control. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| CJUS P2000 - Theories Of Crime And Deviance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Critical examination of biological, psychological, and sociological theories of crime and deviance. Examination of individual, group, and societal reactions to norm-violating behaviors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CJUS P3030 - Corrections And Criminal Justice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Historical and comparative survey of prison confinement and the various alternatives within the scope of the criminal justice system’s policy and methods of implementation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| CJUS P3250 - Principles Of Forensic Investigation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on how a criminal offender is influenced by a variety of factors within psychosocial environment. The class will examine the legal arenas and investigate procedures involved in dealing effectively with the system’s most serious and chronic offenders. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| CLAS A3010 - Classical Archaeology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The material remains of the classical lands from prehistoric through Roman times and a variety of approaches by which they are understood. Archaeological theory and methods are illustrated through select sites, monuments, works of art, and other remains of cultural, artistic, and historical significance. (Equivalent to Herron H310 and Bloomington Classical Studies C206/Fine Arts A206; students may not receive credit for both courses.). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CLAS A4180 - Myth And Reality In Greek Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to Greek iconography (the study of images) that explores contemporary approaches to narration and representation. The course examines the illustration of myth, history, and everyday life in Greek art in relation to ancient society. (Equivalent to Herron H418; students may not receive credit for both courses.). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CLAS C2050 - Classical Mythology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to Greek and Roman myths, legends, and tales, especially those which have an important place in the Western cultural tradition. Approved by Arts and Sciences for use in fulfilling the cultural studies requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CLAS C2080 - Greek And Latin In English Vocabulary |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of Greek and Latin roots which commonly occur in English, for purpose of extending the range and precision of understanding of English works, including the processes involved in work formation and semantic change. No knowledge of Greek or Latin required. Does not count toward the foreign language requirement or the distributional requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CLAS C2090 - Medical Terms From Greek And Latin |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Basic knowledge of some 1,000 words, together with materials for formation of compounds, enables student to build a working vocabulary of several thousand words. Designed for those intending to specialize in medicine, dentistry, or microbiology. Does not count toward the foreign language requirements or the distribution requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CLAS C3100 - Classical Drama |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Masterpieces of ancient Greek and Roman theater studied in relation to literary, archaeological, and artistic evidence for their production and interpretation.Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CLAS C3210 - Classical Myth And Culture In Film |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines depictions of ancient Greece and Rome in modern cinema and television. Questions to be asked: How historically accurate are these onscreen versions of antiquity? What conventions and stereotypes appear? How has classical mythology been treated? How do these films reflect the period in which they were made? Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop skills in critical viewing and analysis of cinematic representations of the ancient world.
2. Examine both ancient and modern culture: values, beliefs, stereotypes.
|
| CLAS C3510 - Golden Age Of Athens |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Literary and artistic masterpieces of classical Greece viewed against the intellectual, cultural, and political background of democratic Athens.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CLAS C3610 - The Golden Age Of Rome |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Literary and artistic masterpieces of the Augustan age viewed in connection with the foundation of the Roman Empire. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CLAS C3860 - Greek History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Political, social, and economic developments in the Greek word from the age of Mycenae and Troy until the Roman conquest 30 BC. Greek colonial world, Athens and Sparta, career and legend of Alexander the Great, the Hellenistic age. Archaeology as a source of political and social history. Equivalent to HIST C386; students may not receive credit for both courses.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CLAS C3960 - Classical Studies Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00-9.00. Credit for foreign study in classical languages, civilization, and archaeology when no specific equivalent is available among departmental offerings. Credit in C396 may be counted toward a minor in classical studies or classical civilization with approval of undergraduate advisor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| CLAS C4050 - Comparative Mythology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. The advanced study of Classical Greek and Roman myths, including the reading and evaluation of comparative myths, both inside and outside the Mediterranean cultural area. Approved by Arts and Sciences for use in fulfilling the western cultural studies requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| CLAS C4120 - Art And Archaeology Of The Aegean |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the preclassical art and archaeology of the Aegean Basin: Greece, Crete, and the Aegean islands during the Stone and Bronze Ages (to about 1000 B.C.). Topics covered include Troy, Minoan Crete, and Mycenaean Greece. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CLAS C4130 - The Art And Archaeology Of Greece |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Art and archaeology of Greece from about 1000 B.C. through the Hellenistic period. Special attention given to the development of Greek architecture, sculpture, and vase painting. (Equivalent to Herron H413; students may not receive credit for both courses.). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CLAS C4140 - The Art And Archaeology Of Rome |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Development of Roman architecture, sculpture, and painting from the beginning through the fourth century A.D. Consideration given to the major archaeological sites. Continuation of C413, but C413 is not a prerequisite. (Equivalent to Herron H414; students may not receive credit for both courses.). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CLAS C4910 - Topics In Classical Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A detailed examination of a particular aspect of classical civilization using a variety of literary and archaeological evidence. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CLAS G1000 - Elementary Greek I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Fundamentals of both classical and koine Greek; develops reading comprehension; selections from classical authors and the New Testament. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| CLAS G1500 - Elementary Greek II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Fundamentals of both classical and koine (New Testament) Greek; develops reading comprehension; selections from classical authors and the New Testament. Credit not given for both G1500 and G3020. Typically offered Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| CLAS G3010 - Classical Greek: Accelerated Course I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Classical Greek: Accelerated Course I. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CLAS G5000 - Elementary Greek I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Elementary Greek I. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CLAS L1000 - Elementary Latin I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Fundamentals of the language; develops direct reading comprehension of Latin. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| CLAS L1310 - Beginning Latin I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Fundamentals of the language; develops direct reading comprehension of Latin. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CLAS L1320 - Beginning Latin II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Fundamentals of the language; develops direct reading comprehension of Latin. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CLAS L1500 - Elementary Latin II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Fundamentals of the language; develops direct reading comprehension of Latin. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| CLAS L2000 - Second-Year Latin I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading from select authors, emphasizing the variety of Latin prose. Examination of the concept of genre. Grammar review and/or prose composition. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| CLAS L2500 - Second Year Latin II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading from Virgil's Aeneid with examination of the epic as a whole. Prosody of dactylic hexameter and study of poetic devices. Grammar review. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| CLAS L4950 - Individual Readings in Latin |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CLCS 18100 - Classical World Civilizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course introduces students to "Classical" civilizations on three continents (Europe, Africa, and Asia) demonstrably interconnected by an ancient world system. Course focuses on essential themes of past civilization: religion, philosophy, surviving texts, gender relations, urbanism, technology, social and political formations. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CLCS 22000 - Topics In Classical Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected topics in Greek and Roman literature for the student with no knowledge of the language. Courses may be arranged by period, literary genre, or special subject. All works assigned will be read in English translation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CLCS 23010 - Survey Of Greek Literature In Translation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to Classical Greek literature from Homer to Aristotle, laying a foundation for understanding the influence of Hellenic thought on subsequent Western culture. Readings in English translation. Approach will be based on the canonic genres of ancient literature. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Have broader and more detailed grasp of the history of ancient Greek literature, including the development of specific genres (epic, lyric, choral, tragedy, comedy, historical and philosophical prose);
2. Be able to appreciate the place and role of literature within the shifting historical, political and social contexts of the ancient Greek world; and
3. Be equipped to trace the influences of ancient Greek literature on the literatures of the later western world.
|
| CLCS 23100 - Survey Of Latin Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to Classical Latin literature, Golden and Silver, based on the ancient canons. Some sense of the Greek literary legacy will be sought. Typically Roman literary genres will be highlighted. Readings in English translation. Contour of the syllabus will be broadly historical. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Written Communication, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Written Communication, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Have broader and more detailed grasp of the history of ancient Latin literature, including the development of specific genres (epic, lyric, choral, tragedy, comedy, historical and philosophical prose);
2. Be able to appreciate the place and role of literature within the shifting historical, political and social contexts of the ancient Roman world; and
3. Be equipped to trace the influences of Latin literature on the literatures of the later western world.
|
| CLCS 23200 - Classical Roots Of English Words |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an introduction to English etymology with emphasis on building vocabulary. Students will learn English derivatives from both classical Greek and Latin. All texts to be read in English. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CLCS 23300 - Comparative Mythology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Comparative study of the myths of four major ancient world cultures, with an emphasis on shared typological features. Assessment of ancient and modern theories of interpretation of myths. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Have a detailed grasp of principal characters, narratives, and themes in the myths of a number of representative ancient world cultures (Mesopotamian, Egyptian, Celtic, Aztec, Mayan, East Asian, African);
2. Be able to appreciate the many functions of myths within ancient societies, namely to explain natural events, support religious practices, and underwrite social and political power; and
3. Be able to identify recurrent patterns and themes in the myths of historically disparate ancient and modern cultures.
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| CLCS 23500 - Introduction To Classical Mythology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will survey the cosmogony and theogony of ancient Greece and Rome as viewed through ancient sources. Emphasis will be on the Olympians and minor deities, the role of the hero, and major and minor myths. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Have a detailed grasp of the principal characters, narratives, and themes of Greek mythology;
2. Be able to appreciate the many functions of myths within ancient Greek society, namely to explain natural events, support religious practices, and underwrite social and political power; and
3. Be able to identify modern myths and appreciate the role they continue to play within all societies.
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| CLCS 23600 - Ancient World Onscreen |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An investigation of the ways in which classical antiquity is depicted in cinema, television, and video. No knowledge of Greek or Latin required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Have a detailed historical grasp of the ways in which the ancient Greek and Roman worlds have found expression in modern cinema;
2. Be able to appreciate how ancient texts fare when translated into the radically different artistic medium of film; and
3. Be able to discuss intelligently what forces influence how we choose to see and represent the ancient western world.
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| CLCS 23700 - Gender And Sexuality In Greek And Roman Antiquity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course investigates questions of sexuality and gender in the ancient Mediterranean world, including the effects of social and political power on gender roles and the status of women in antiquity. Modern theorists will be consulted along with ancient texts. All texts to be read in English. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CLCS 23800 - The Tragic Vision |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Greek and Roman tragedy from their beginnings until today. Readings in English from representative authors such as Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, and Seneca; later receptions of ancient tragedy in drama and other media. Course may include performance, theories of comedy and tragedy, or recent and current expressions of the tragic in film and other media. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Have a detailed historical understanding of the development of ancient Greek tragic through close reading of representative samples of the genre;
2. Be able to appreciate and intelligently discuss major themes in Greek tragedy as they relate to both ancient and modern views of what is "tragic";
3.. Be able to identify specific examples of the influence of ancient Greek tragedy on the drama of the later western world.
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| CLCS 28000 - Topics In Classical Civilization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected topics in Ancient Civilization. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will have a broader and more detailed grasp of issues that relate to the social, economic, and political institutions that structured ancient communities throughout Asia Minor and the Mediterranean basin. This will allow them to appreciate the confluences of factors and forces that contribute to the formation of cultures and civilizations in the ancient world.
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| CLCS 33700 - The Ancient Epic |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the epic in four ancient cultures, with emphasis on its structure, nature, and social functions. Reading of Gilgamesh, The Iliad, The Odyssey, The Aeneid, and Beowulf as representatives of the genre of epic. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CLCS 33900 - Literature And The Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. How far does "law" align with "justice" in classical antiquity? This course investigates how classical literature presents questions of legality and justice in relation to political customs, religious sanctions, and ethical norms, comparing classical Rome with other literary/legal cultures. All readings in English. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will strengthen their skills in critical analysis through an interdisciplinary approach to literature in a variety of genres, including drama, oratory, philosophy, and historiography. Students will learn to use careful systematic examination of literary evidence to investigate key social and political issues in specific historical settings, while taking into account the different rhetorical frameworks provided by each text they read.
2. Students will learn about problems surrounding justice and the law in ancient and early modern thought, including the legal impact of various political and social changes. This will enable them to situate their awareness of contemporary questions about legality and justice in a wider context, by extending their knowledge of other cultures and legal/political systems.
3. Students will read canonical works of Classical and other literature that have had a major influence on modern western thought.
4. Students will gain access to some of the questions debated in a growing area of scholarship on the interaction between literature and law.
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| CLCS 38000 - Alexander The Great and Hellenistic World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course examines the career of Alexander the Great and the rise of Macedonia in the Hellenistic Era. Topics include the emergence of Macedonia under Philip II; the achievements of Alexander the Great; and the wars of succession following his demise. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CLCS 38100 - Julius Caesar: Statesman, Soldier, Citizen |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course Examines the career of Julius Caesar by focusing on events from Caesar's birth (100 BCE) through his assassination in 44 BCE. Course places Caesar's complex personality within the context of political, military, economic, social, and cultural upheaval during the Late Roman Republic.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CLCS 38300 - The Roman Empire |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course examines developments from the Augustan Settlement to the end of the Roman Empire (27BCE - 476CE), along with aspects of religious, social, sexual and material culture throughout the Mediterranean at that time. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CLCS 38500 - Science, Medicine And Magic In The Ancient West |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the development of the idea of rationality in the West by studying the evolution of Greek and Roman sciences. Special emphasis is given to ancient medicine and astrology. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CLCS 38600 - Ancient Greek Religion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the religious beliefs and practices of ancient Greece, based on written, artistic, and archaeological evidence of their forms and functions. How the ancient Greeks understood, represented, and related to God and the gods, and how they sought to legitimize their view of the world. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Have a broader and more detailed grasp of belief systems and religious behaviors of the ancient Greek world from the Mycenaean to the Hellenistic period.
2. Be better able to assess the representation of religious experience in other religious traditions with greater historical perspective and methodological sophistication.
3. Be able to express themselves on issues of religion more clearly and with more understanding, both orally and in writing.
|
| CLCS 38700 - Roman Religion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the religious beliefs and practices of ancient Rome, based on written, artistic, and archaeological evidence of their forms and functions. How the Romans understood, represented, and related to God and the gods, and how they sought to legitimize their view of the world. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Have a broader and more detailed grasp of belief systems and religious behaviors of the Roman world from the earliest sources to the third century CE.
2. Be better able to assess the representation of religious experience in other religious traditions with greater historical perspective and methodological sophistication.
3. Be able to express themselves on issues of religion more clearly and with more understanding, both orally and in writing.
|
| CLCS 48000 - Potters And Society In Antiquity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course covers the range of eastern Mediterranean ceramics encountered in Rough Cilicia Archaeological Survey Project from the Bronze Age to the Later Roman Empire. Course also explores strategies employed by archaeologists and historians to exploit ceramics as research materials. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CLCS 48100 - Culture And Society In The Age Of Pericles |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course explores interrelationships between the emergence of Greek democracy and the cultural, political, social, and economic rise of Athens in the fifth century BCE. More broadly, course surveys history of the Greek world from the Late Bronze Age to 362 BCE. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CLCS 48300 - Republican Rome |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course examines the military, political, economic, and social developments that enabled the Roman people to expand from an Italian city-state to a trans-Mediterranean empire, and the consequences that initiated the decline and transition in their republican form of government.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CLCS 49900 - Special Topics In Classics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Special Topics in Classics. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
|
| CLCS 59000 - Directed Reading In Classics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Directed readings in Classics. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CLCS 59300 - Special Topics In Classical Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Special topics in Classical Literature. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CLPH 36100 - Geriatric Pharmacy Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is designed to provide health professional students with a general understanding of the elderly population and the medical care they receive. The course considers sociological-psychological aspects of aging and their effects on health delivery for the elderly. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CLPH 43000 - Introduction To Critical Care Pharmacotherapy |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The purpose of this course is to familiarize the student with the specialized use of drugs in certain types of critical care disease states with a strong orientation toward case based learning. The course is designed to meet the needs of students with an interest in further developing their knowledge base in common acute diseases by utilizing real-life patient cases. Instruction will be provided through a combination of lectures and progressive case discussions. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CLPH 43500 - Pediatric Pharmacotherapy |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This elective course will focus on the pharmacotherapeutics and pathophysiology of the more common disorders that apply to the pediatric population. The purpose of the course is to discuss the relevant differences between the adult and pediatric population in regards to the diagnosis, treatment options, desired therapeutic outcomes and therapeutic drug monitoring parameters. Instruction will be provided through a combination of lectures, case discussions, homework assignments, and group presentations. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CLPH 44900 - Introduction To Psychiatric Pharmacy Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course that provides an overview of psychiatric pharmacy practice, introduction to stigma and diversity issues in mental illness, and disease state overviews in a lecture format. In one class period, the students are able to interact with 4th year pharmacy students and/or pharmacy residents who have worked or are working in the area of psychiatric pharmacy. Four of the class periods also provide live presentations and interactions with persons living with severe mental illness and mental health workers who work with them. Mental Health America of Tippecanoe County works with the instructor to schedule these live presentations. Students are assessed for attendance and participation and also for a reflection written about each class period. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CLPH 45100 - Pharmacy Practical Training |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Course allows students to gain employment experience in a pharmacy practice setting. Students receive credit for practical experience in the time period just prior to course enrollment when they complete the course paper requirement. Pre-approval of enrollment required prior to employment experience. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Ensure pharmacy students receive early exposure to the most common career paths taken by today's graduates and gain a first-hand perspective of pharmacists' responsibilities and activities in their roles. This contributes to a foundation for gaining appreciation of strategies for continually evolving patient care roles in practice.
2. Provide pharmacy students with early observation of pharmacists providing pharmacy services that particularly address the following Professional Program (Pharm.D.) Outcome Ability Goals: Integrative (Practice-related) Competence, Critical Thinking and Decision Making Abilities, Communication Skills and Abilities, Responsible Use of Professional Values and Ethical Principles, Social Awareness and Social Responsibility, Professional Abilities and Habits, and Group Interaction and Citizenship. See the "Student Handbook" for specific descriptions of the components of these outcome abilities.
3. Provide pharmacy students with early practice exposure that illustrates the reasons that pharmacists need in-depth learning of the basic and applied sciences and a commitment to lifelong learning for professional effectiveness.
4. Provide pharmacy students with experiences and learning in care-giving that is essential to evolving a patient-centered care role.
5. Contribute to pharmacy student development of a personal practice philosophy (professionalization) as well as a vision and motivation to become a positive practice change agent.
6. Broaden students' perspectives on career pathways and foster initiatives to enhance career planning.
|
| CLPH 45300 - Advanced Primary Literature Evaluation: A Focus On Therapeutic Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The purpose of this elective course is to enhance the primary literature evaluation skills of the student prior to clerkship rotations. The course is designed to meet the needs of students with an interest in pursuing post-graduate training programs to enhance their ability to discuss the medical literature. Instruction is provided through a combination of lectures and class discussions of recently published literature articles with a cardiovascular focus. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
At the completion of this course, the student will be able to:
Discuss the basic fundamentals of clinical research.
Understand and interpret statistical data in the published literature.
Evaluate published literature as it pertains to study design, validity of results and application to treatment of specific patients and practice.
Explain research outcomes from a clinical, economic and humanistic standpoint.
Discuss the strengths/weaknesses of published current primary literature.
Present a journal club and debate current primary literature.
|
| CLPH 45400 - Advanced Practice In Psychiatric Pharmacy |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The purpose of this course is to provide the student with knowledge and insight regarding the use of medications in persons with mental illness. Instruction will be provided in the following areas (but not limited to): (1) psychiatric disease states; (2) psychiatric medications - usual dosing, adverse effects, drug interactions; (3) clinical use of psychiatric medications in psychiatric pharmacy practice; (4) useful and appropriate monitoring parameters; (5) the interaction of medical illness in the treatment of psychiatric disorders; (6) strategies to improve medication adherence and minimize adverse events; (7) utilization of recognized treatment guidelines in clinical care. Case-based learning will be utilized in emphasize important points in clinical use and monitoring of psychiatric medications and disorders. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1.Define and understand the DSM-IV, TR diagnostic criteria for selected psychiatric disorders.
2.Recognize significant co-morbid psychiatric and medical disorders common in the psychiatric population.
3.Classify psychiatric medications based upon FDA-approved and evidence-based reasons for use.
4.Characterize psychiatric medications based upon common reason for use, neuropharmacology and mechanism of action, significant adverse events & warnings for use, drug interactions, dosage forms, and usual dose ranges.
5.Develop techniques for the critical evaluation of psychiatric literature.
6.Apply the psychiatric literature to the clinical treatment of psychiatric disorders.
7. Identify applicable treatment guidelines and develop strategies for implementing guidelines in clinical practice.
8. Discuss the impact of substance dependence upon the treatment of psychiatric illness.
9.Identify drug interactions and adverse events related to complicated psychiatric medication regimens and make sound recommendations for drug therapy.
10.Identify potential medication adherence issues and made recommendations to improve medication use and patient outcomes in clinical practice.
11.Develop an understanding of the psychiatric treatment team and the role of the pharmacist.
Apply knowledge learned to clinical case examples.
Proactively participate and interact during in-class case discussions.
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| CLPH 45600 - Pharmaceutical Care Of Diabetes |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The purpose of this course is for students to obtain a comprehensive knowledge of the pharmaceutical care of diabetes. Students will expand understanding of comprehensive diabetes care. This will expose the students to experiences in which they will gain an appreciation for the complexities involved with diabetes, develop empathy for patients with diabetes, construct evidence-based treatment plans, and enhance oral and written communication skills. Students will also complete care plan assignments to apply concepts learned in the didactic lectures. This course provides a platform for shaping pharmacists into excellent caregivers for patients with diabetes. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Presentation
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. For each class of drugs used in diabetes management, be able to: describe the mechanism of action; recall the initial, maintenance, and maximum dose; list 3-5 adverse effects; determine applicable monitoring parameters with appropriate frequencies; and discuss important counseling points for patient education.
2. Educate a patient on the correct use of a blood glucose meter and how/when to test blood sugars.
3. Recommend practical methods to implement for adherence to a diabetic diet.
4. Summarize the macro and micro-vascular complications of diabetes and state relevant landmark trials.
5. Empathize with patient with diabetes by personally experiencing some of the challenges faced such as monitoring blood sugars regularly, adhering to a complex medication regimen, maintaining a diabetic diet, and following an exercise regimen.
6. Understand the different treatment strategies used in special populations-elderly, pediatric, and pregnant patients.
7. Identify standards of care for patient with diabetes and how these treatment goals may differ from non-patient with diabetes. Explain a comprehensive health care plan to a patient with diabetes.
8. Collaborate with peers and work with different personalities to effectively research a topic, summarize it, and present it to colleagues.
9. Initiate and titrate dosing for insulin injections and insulin pumps. Educate a patient with diabetes on effective insulin pump use.
10. Describe different opportunities for pharmacists to become involved in diabetic care and processes for becoming a Certified Diabetes Educator (CDE) or Board Certified Advanced Diabetes Manager (BC-ADM).
|
| CLPH 45700 - Pharmaceutical Care In Developing Countries |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This elective will emphasize the major disease states, rational drug selection, especially with a limited medication formularly, desired therapeutic outcomes, and the provision of complete pharmaceutical care to patients in developing countries. The impact of drug therapy on health care, economics, and quality of life for diverse populations will be emphasized. Students will prepare to provide care in a cross-cultural environment in which resources are limited. Instruction is provided through a combination of lectures, discussions, and presentations. Enrollment is limited to Doctor of Pharmacy students (068) DP-C status or by consent of course coordinator. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CLPH 46000 - Principles Of Pharmaceutical Care And Biometrics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Therapeutics use of drugs to selected human disease states and an introduction to biometrics with an emphasis on the applications of biometrics to interpret and analyze data. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| CLPH 46300 - Pediatric Pharmacotherapy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will consist of a lecture/case discussion format. The lectures will focus on the pediatctric management of the following topics: Clinical Application in Pharmacokinetics, Fluids and Electrolytes, Nutrition, Respiratory Infections/Menigitis, Pain Management, and OTC products. The case discussions allow for practical application of the information gained through the lectures. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CLPH 46900 - Principles Of Pharmacy Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The relationship of the pharmacist to drug product selection, preparation and delivery, assessment and documentation of drug therapy outcomes, and the identification and prevention of medication-related problems are emphasized. The therapeutic use of drugs for numerous chronic human disease states are introduced through lecture, written assignments, and case studies. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CLPH 47100 - Pathophysiology And Therapeutics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the therapeutic use and monitoring of drug effects. Teaching strategies employ lecture, case studies, and exercises that develop student knowledge and abilities with patient databases, use of medical terminology, and development of drug monitoring parameters and patient care plans. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| CLPH 49000 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An honors course to be used to relate to, and supplement, an existing course. Subject matter and method of approach individually directed by instructor. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CLPH 69000 - Special Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Individual research topics pertaining to the practice of clinical pharmacy in institutions and the community. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CLPH 69600 - Seminar In Pharmacy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Designed to provide the student with experience in the oral and written presentation of special topics of interest to clinical pharmacists and researchers. Discussion of current problems relating to the clinical practice of pharmacy. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CLPH 86600 - Introduction To The Advanced Pharmacy Practice Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The Introduction to Advanced Pharmacy Practice Experience (APPE) course was designed to provide students with the tools needed to be successful clerkship students. Students will participate in a variety of activities, including case studies, group work, evaluations and assessment, review of therapeutic topics, and student/preceptor panel interactions. Activities will be supplemented by didactic lecturing for each topic. The activities and lecture topics were selected based on feedback from previous clerkship students, preceptors, and faculty, and are intended to “de-mystify” the clerkship experience. This course prepares students to enter the clerkship year with the ability to successfully submit required clerkship forms, evaluate preceptors and peers, avoid common clerkship student mistakes, document clinical interventions, review medical charts, and prepare for therapeutic and pharmacokinetic responsibilities. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain how to register for rotations.
2. Recall clerkship policies and procedures.
3. List the forms which should be submitted to the Office of Experiential Learning after each rotation.
4. Critique preceptors and rotations constructively and assess peer performance on oral and written work.
5. Apply strategies to maximize the clerkship experience to each assigned rotation.
6. Cite the rotation portfolio requirements.
7. List handy drug information resources to use during rotations.
8. Explain ways to handle “tough situations” during rotations.
9. Document complete clinical interventions using Clinical Measures software.
10. Provide pharmacokinetic recommendations using provided equations and tools.
11. List ways to succeed on non-patient-care rotations.
12. List ways to prepare for post-graduate training during rotations.
|
| CLPH 86700 - Principles Of Drug Information And Literature Evaluation |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is designed to provide students with basic fundamentals needed for the provision of drug information in pharmacy practice. Emphasis is placed on the evaluation, interpretation, and practical implications of primary literature on the delivery of pharmaceutical care. Concepts of formulary management, medication use improvement, medication safety, and evaluating and reporting adverse drug events will also be reviewed. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| CLPH 87200 - Pathophysiology And Therapeutics II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Pathophysiologic and therapeutic instruction on selected disease states to prepare the student to design, recommend, implement, monitor, and alter cost-effective, patient-specific pharmacotherapeutic plans. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CLPH 87300 - Pathophysiology And Therapeutics III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. A continuation of CLPH 57200. Pathophysiologic and therapeutic instruction on selected disease states to prepare the student to design, recommend, implement, monitor, and alter cost-effective, patient-specific pharmacotherapeutic plans. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CLPH 88500 - Inpatient Medicine Clerkship |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Four-week clinical experience rotation in a selected inpatient medical, pharmacy, or healthcare related patient care facility. Students gain experience in therapeutic decision making, disease management, communication, drug information activities, administrative skills, and research in the context of providing pharmaceutical care and services. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic 1, Clinic 2, Clinic 3, Clinic 4, Clinic
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CLPH 88800 - Doctor Of Pharmacy Clerkship - Ambulatory Medicine |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Four-week clinical experience rotation dealing with patients in a selected ambulatory care medical or pharmacy facility. Students gain experience in therapeutic decision making, disease management, communication, drug information activities, and the provision of pharmaceutical care. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic 1, Clinic 2, Clinic 3, Clinic 4, Clinic
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CLPH 88900 - Doctor Of Pharmacy Clerkship - Elective Rotation |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Four-week clinical experience rotation in a selected medical, pharmacy, or healthcare related facility. Students gain experience in therapeutic decision making, disease management, communication, drug information activities, administrative skills, research, and the provision of pharmaceutical care and services. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic 1, Clinic 2, Clinic 3, Clinic 4, Clinic
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CMCI 95100 - CIC Common Market To |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CMCI 95200 - CIC Common Market From |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CMCI 96000 - Univ Of Chicago |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 12.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CMCI 96100 - Univ Of Illinois |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 12.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CMCI 96200 - Indiana University |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 12.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CMCI 96300 - Univ Of Iowa |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 12.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CMCI 96400 - Univ Of Michigan |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 12.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CMCI 96500 - Mich State Univ |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 12.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CMCI 96600 - Univ Of Minnesota |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 12.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CMCI 96700 - Northwestern Univ |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 12.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CMCI 96800 - Ohio State Univ |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 12.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CMCI 96900 - Univ Of Wisconsin |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 12.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CMCI 97000 - Penn State Univ |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 12.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CMCL C1210 - Public Speaking |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and practice of public speaking: training in thought processes necessary to organize speech content; analysis of components of effective delivery and language. Students record their speeches on audio- or video cassettes. Credit will not be given for both S1210 and C1210. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CMCL C1220 - Interpersonal Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the study of communication, culture, identity and power. Each student does original primary research. Topics range from groups in North Africa to high school and college students in the United States, and issues such as gendered language, slang, verbal play, and institutional language. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CMCL C1900 - Introduction To Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. AHLA Form, technique and language of the media; analysis of specific film, television, and video production introduction to major critical approaches to media studies. Credit given for only one of CMCL C1900 and CMLT C1900. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CMCL C2050 - Introduction To Communication And Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course critically examines communication as a cultural practice as it affects the beliefs, attitudes, values, and behaviors of individuals, groups, and publics. Credit given for only one of C205 or S205. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CMCL C2230 - Business And Professional Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines organizational communication, with emphasis on skills acquisition. Developed skills include interviewing, group discussion, parliamentary procedure, and public speaking. Four of the written assignments require the use of audiocassettes that cannot be submitted online or via e-mail. Credit will not be given for both S223 and C223. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CMCL C2250 - Discussion And Decision Making |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Leadership and participation in group, committee, conference, and public discussion, logical and psychological aspects of group process. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Richmond
|
| CMCL C2280 - Argumentation And Advocacy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reasoning, evidence, and argument in public discourse. Study of forms of argument. Practice in argumentative speaking. Credit not given for both S228 and C228.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CMCL C3040 - Communication And Social Conflict |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A & H Examination of sources and functions of symbolic influence in contemporary society. Emphasis upon developing rhetorical skills for critiquing social conflict. Credit not given for both S304 and C304.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CMCL C3150 - Advertising And Consumer Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Critical examination of advertising's role in modern societies. Focuses on marketing and consumption as central activities in shaping personal identity and social relations. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CMCL C3340 - Current Topics in Communication and Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of selected problems in communication and culture. Topics vary each semester. May be repeated once for credit if topic varies. No more than 6 credit hours may be earned for any combination of S335 and C334.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CMCL C3800 - Nonverbal Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides a conceptual and theoretical foundation for understanding how nonverbal communication influences perceptions of others and the ways in which nonverbal communication reflects emotions, status, sex roles, etc. The course explores how nonverbal communication facilitates retention, comprehension, and persuasiveness of verbal information, including the ability to detect deceptive communication. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Richmond
|
| CMCL C4270 - Cross-Cultural Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey study of national, cultural, and corss-cultural persuasion in theory and practice. (Offered spring semester, odd years.)
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CMCL C4400 - Organizational Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of internal and external communication in business and other professional organizations, with emphasis on theory, techniques, practices, goals, and the social environment in which such communication exists. Offered spring semester, even years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Richmond
|
| CMCL C4500 - Gender and Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the extent to which biological sex and gender role orientation and stereotypes influence the process of communication. Focuses on gender differences in decoding and encoding verbal and nonverbal behavior, development of sex roles, cultural assumption, and stereotypes regarding gender differences in communication. Analyzes how the media present, influence, and reinforce gender stereotypes. Credit not given for both S450 and C450. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CMET 10000 - Freshman Experience For CMET |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will include utilization of campus resources, goal setting, values exploration, relationship of academic planning and life goals, discipline-specific career exploration and critical thinking. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CMET 10100 - Construction Lectures |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Construction Lectures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CMET 10200 - Technical Computations |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A study of elements from algebra and trigonometry appropriate to surveying, estimating, statics, and other construction-related courses. Graphs and reports are included. Additionally, word processing, spreadsheets, and PowerPoint presentations will be included. The correct use of calculators will be addressed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CMET 10300 - Introduction To Construction Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will provide students with an introduction to the construction management discipline, and prepare students for the program curriculum. Additionally, this course will serve as a Freshman Experience course, and will include utilization of campus resources, goal setting, values exploration, relationship of academic planning and life goals, discipline-specific career exploration, and critical thinking. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate familiarity of campus facilities, campus resources, and campus regulations.
2. Set personal and academic goals and develop strategies to achieve them.
3. Demonstrate an understanding of time management techniques and the value of setting priorities.
4. Describe their personal values and apply them to personal and academic success.
5. Learn to think critically and apply problem solving techniques.
6. Develop a Plan of Study to achieve academis success.
7. Demonstrate familiarity with Library resources ( information literacy) including available library databases, academic journals, archives, indexes, abstracts, etc.
8. Learn to work effectively in teams.
9. Develop effective study skills including note-taking, reading, test-taking, and the use of study aids.
10. Demonstrate an understanding of personal financial management through discussions of the process of applying for financial aid, scholarships, grants, loans and their repayment, and credit
card debt.
11. Demonstrate a general understanding of the construction management discipline.
12. Define the life cycle of a typical construction project.
13. Demonstrate an understanding of the topic areas includded in the Construction Management and Engineering Technologies curriculum.
14. Define the typical career options avilable in the construction management discipline.
|
| CMET 19000 - Construction Experience I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Minimum of 10 weeks work experience in the construction industry, plus written report of directed academic project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Credit By Exam, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CMET 19800 - Construction Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Construction Practice. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CMET 20000 - Industrial Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Industrial Practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CMET 25000 - Industrial Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Industrial Practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CMET 28000 - Quantity Survey And Estimating |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of methods to estimate quantities of materials required in construction. Practice in making quantity surveys. Introduction to estimating labor and cost. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CMET 29100 - Construction Experience II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Minimum of ten weeks work experience in the construction industry, plus written report of directed academic project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CMET 29800 - Construction Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Construction Practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CMET 30000 - Industrial Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Industrial Practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CMET 32500 - Structural Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Techniques in analyzing statically determinant and indeterminate structures with a discussion of moment distribution. Standard design procedures for wood, steel, and concrete structures. Sizing of beams, columns and connections. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CMET 33500 - Shoring, Formwork And Scaffolding Design And Safety |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals in the design of shoring; concrete forms for beams, columns, slabs and walls; the design and selection of scaffolding systems. A discussion of erection and fabrication techniques with an emphasis upon safety. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CMET 34100 - Construction Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Management, methods and equipment used in the construction of buildings, earthworks, bridges and roads. Contractor organization, job management, and safety. Excavation, formwork, concrete, masonry, and steel erection methods. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CMET 34400 - Construction Inspection |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Inspection procedures as applied to contracted construction, and the role inspection plays in the execution of the completed contract. The laboratory period is used for demonstration, guest lecturer presentations, and for field trips to construct sites, fabrication shops, and testing laboratories. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CMET 35000 - Industrial Practice IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Industrial Practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CMET 39000 - Construction Experience III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Minimum of 10 weeks work experience in the construction industry, plus written report of directed academic
project.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CMET 39800 - Construction Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Construction Practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CMET 40000 - Industrial Practice V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Industrial Practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CMET 42000 - Construction Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces general construction laws and regulations and legal procedures relevant to construction projects. The course covers wide-ranging legal aspects during a construction project from planning, design, engineering, and construction phases through the post-construction phase. Topics in this course include typical legal aspects in the construction industry; contractual liabilities from owners, design professionals, and contractors' perspectives; common issues for disputes and claims; suggestions to resolve legal arguments; and ethics in the construction industry. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CMET 44200 - Construction Costs And Bidding |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of methods to estimate quantites of materials required in construction. Practice in making quantity surveys. Estimating total job costs (material and labor, quality survey, overhead, subcontracts) and bidding practices of the construction industry. Topics in construction law and ethics. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CMET 44500 - Construction Management I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Business policy and problems relating to construction companies. Includes contractors' organization, financial management, project management, supervision, cost analysis, and equipment economics and topics in construction law and ethics. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CMET 45000 - Construction Scheduling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the planning and control of construction projects. Time schedules for materials, labor and equipment ,expediting material delivery, bar charts, Critical Path Method (CPM) scheduling. Precedence diagrams and Program Evaluation Review Techniques (PERT). The course emphasizes the use of computers for scheduling and updating of the construction process. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CMET 48700 - Design And Development For Facility Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the functional relationships required to design modern commercial, office, hospital, industrial and institutional facilities. Development and leasing of commercial buildings. Design of office interiors including an introduction to furniture and communications systems. A basic introduction to drafting and blueprint reading. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CMET 48900 - Senior Project Survey |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students will develop a topic for the following design project, CMET 49000. Students will establish project scope, general and specific objectives, literature review and background, and establish time schedules for completion of the project. Students are encouraged to develop alternate proposals. Students will analyze a previously completed senior project. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CMET 49000 - Senior Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The development of a project which will combine the skill and knowledge gained from various areas of study. The student will be expected to present a project which has been approved by his faculty advisor to a panel of departmental faculty chosen by the advisor. This presentation should include graphical material as well as oral and written communication. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CMET 49300 - Facility Operations, Scheduling And Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the management, methods and equipment used in the remodeling or construction of commercial, office and institutional buildings. A study of the planning and control of construction projects including time schedules for materials, labor, equipment and maintenance; expediting material delivery; bar charts; Critical Path Method (CPM); and Program Evaluation Review Techniques (PERT) for scheduling. Business policy problems as they relate to facilities as well as financial management, project management, supervision, cost analysis and equipment costs will be discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CMET 49500 - Introduction To Facility Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to topics directly related to the management of large facilities with an emphasis on architectural and engineering systems, maintenance, cost management, life safety, and grounds and landscaping maintenance. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CMET 49700 - Construction Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 4.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CMET 49800 - Construction Practice IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Construction Practice. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CMET 49900 - Special Assignments |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Hours, subject matter and credit to be arranged by staff. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
|
| CMET 50100 - Temporary Structures In Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for students who want to learn analytical methods and techniques applicable in construction operations. It covers fundamental simulation algorithms and computer-aided quantitative analysis methods to be used for construction operations. Topics to be included are: data analysis, operational analysis tools, and simulation techniques that require comprehensive group projects involving modeling and analyzing actual construction operations. Prerequisite: Graduate status or senior status with consent of instructor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an understanding of the basic elements involved in highway and roadway planning.
2. Understand the general principles of design of highways and roadways.
3. Interpret typical federal, state, and local highway design standards.
4. Understand typical highway and roadway plans and specifications.
5. Perform highway design using national standard design manuals.
6. Demonstrate an understanding of the parameters associated with the strength, workability, and placement of rigid and flexible pavements.
7. Show an understanding of typical highway construction procedures.
8. Understand typical highway construction and their maintenance procedures.
|
| CMET 50800 - Highway Construction And Maintenance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for students who are seeking to begin their careers in highway engineering and construction industry. Focused on the core issues of highway construction and maintenance, the course covers the entire highway construction project life cycle from the planning stage to key maintenance issues of the highway system. Detailed topics to be covered include primary elements of highway planning, principles of highway and pavement design, typical road plans and specifications, pavement parameters, and the key issues of highway construction and maintenance. This course also requires a term project where students can experience a real highway construction project. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an understanding of the basic elements involved in highway and roadway planning.
2. Understand the general principles of design of highways and roadways.
3. Interpret typical federal, state, and local highway design standards.
4. Understand typical highway and roadway plans and specifications.
5. Perform highway design using national standard design manuals.
6. Demonstrate an understanding of the parameters associated with the strength, workability, and placement of rigid and flexible pavements.
7. Show an understanding of typical highway construction procedures.
8. Understand typical highway construction and their maintenance procedures.
|
| CMET 52000 - Green Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the LEED© Green Building Rating System. An overview of the system will be discussed and each environmental category will be covered. An in-depth analysis of each possible credit in each category will be discussed. Students will develop strategies for each credit’s attainment; listing the advantages and disadvantages of each strategy. Necessary documentation for credit attainment will also be covered. Graduate students with insufficient background may be required to take some leveling courses. Permission of instructor is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate a comprehension of the LEED© Green Building Rating System (GBRS)
2. Understand the intent of each available credit in the rating system.
3. Develop research skills necessary to develop strategies to earn points available through GBRS.
4. Demonstrate proficiency in documenting credits as required by LEED©
5. Demonstrate their comprehension of the goals and objectives of the LEED© rating system for new constuction.
|
| CMET 54100 - Advanced Construction Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for students who would like to learn analytical methods and techniques to be applicable in construction operations. It covers fundamental simulation algorithms and computer-aided quantitative analysis methods to be used for construction operations. Topics to be included are: data analysis, operational analysis tools, and simulation techniques, which require comprehensive group projects that involve modeling and analyzing actual construction operations. Prerequisite: Graduate status or senior status with consent of instructor. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an understanding of the basic elements involved in construction operation process.
2. Obtain understanding of operational tools and methods.
3. Understand the general principles of process modeling concepts.
4. Learn fundamental simulation algorithms.
5. Show an understanding of building process models in construction.
6. Demonstrate an understanding of the parameters in construction simulation.
7. Show an understanding of decision making process in typical construction operations.
8. Perform sensitivity analysis in construction simulation.
|
| CMET 58100 - Workshop In Construction Management And Engineering Technologies |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. This course is an advanced study of technical and professional topics. Emphasis is on new development relating to technical, operational, and training aspects of industry and technology education. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop advanced understanding as well as critical thinking and research skills.
|
| CMET 59000 - Special Problems In Construction Management And Engineering Technologies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Intensive individual study of selected current developments and issues in Construction Management & Engineering Technology. Does not substitute for either M.S. thesis or M.S. project credit. A faculty sponsor is required for this course. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| CMLT C1900 - Introduction To Film |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Nature of film technique and film language; analysis of specific films; major historical, theoretical, and critical developments in film and film study from the beginnings of cinema to the present.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CMLT C2050 - Comparative Literary Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an introductory course in literary interpretation required of Comparative Literature majors and recommended for other students interested in the study of literature. The course will acquaint the student with basic methods and concepts of criticism through close reading of texts (lyric poetry, drama, short fiction) by major authors. There will be examinations, class presentations, and five short papers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CMLT C2170 - Detective And Mystery Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Origins, evolution, conventions, criticism, and theory of the detective and mystery story; history of the Gothic novel; later development of the tale of terror; major works of this type in Western fiction, drama, and film. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| CMLT C2550 - Modern Literature And The Other Arts: An Introduction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analyzes the materials of literature, painting, and music, and the ways in which meaning is expressed through the organization of the materials. Investigates similarities and differences among the arts. Examples selected from the past 200 years. No previous knowledge of art required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| CMLT C3330 - Romanticism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The rise of Romantic tendencies in 18th-century Europe (Pre-Romanticism); the Romantic Revolution in early 19th-century Western literature. Such authors as Goethe, Chateaubriand, Wordsworth, Byron, Novalis, Hoffman, Hugo, Poe. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| CMLT C3370 - The 20th Century:Tradition And Change |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The search for forms and language to express new understandings of art and reality in the era of modernism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| CMLT C3400 - Women In World Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of creative women writers who deal with unconventional themes. Comparison of images of female characters in 20th-century novels by French, English, and American women writers who callenge literary or social conventions. Focus on fiction or on another genre (e.g. drama, poetry, essay) each time course is offered. May be repeated with different topics, for a maximum of 9 credits. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| CMLT C3900 - Film And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topic varies: film in relation to politics, ideology, and social history. May be repeated once with a different topic. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| CMLT C3920 - Genre Study In Film |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Problems of definition; the evolution of film genres such as criminal or social drama, comedy, the western, science fiction, horror, or documentary film; themes, subject matter, conventions, and iconography peculiar to given genres; relationship of film genres to literary genres. Focus on one specific genre each time the course is offered. May be repeated once with different topic. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CMLT C4910 - Authorship And Cinema |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the work of one or more film artists. Attention paid to the style, themes, and methods that make the filmmaker's work unique. Filmmakers studied in the contexts of film traditions, ideologies, and industries which informed their work. May be repeated one time with a different topic. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CMLT C4930 - Film Adaptation Of Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of the processes and problems involved in turning a literary work (novel, play, or poem) into a screenplay and then into a film. Close study of literary and film techniques and short exercises in adaptation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| CMLT C5410 - Modern Drama |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Realism, naturalism, expressionsim. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| CMLT C5860 - Literature & The Other Arts |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Problems of methodology based on concrete examples; analysis of important secondary texts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| CMLT C5920 - Genre Study In Film |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Topics varies: the evaluation of typical genres; problems of generic description as definition; themes, conventions, and iconography peculiar to given genres, etc. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CMPL 23000 - Introduction To Comparative Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (LC 23000) Foundations for comparison of works in different languages, thematic (philosophical, sociological, psychological), and structural (genre, composition, use of linguistic devises); parallel interrelation of theme and structure in works of different literatures. The importance of literary norms and systems of genres. Examination of crosscurrents in different literatures during successive periods of development. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Comparative Literature
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CMPL 26600 - World Literature: From The Beginnings To 1700 A D |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ENGL 26600) World literature in translation. A comparative and chronological survey of the masterpieces of Eastern and Western literature. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Comparative Literature
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CMPL 26700 - World Literature: From 1700 A D To The Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ENGL 26700) World literature in translation. A comparative and chronological survey of the masterpieces of Eastern and Western literature. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Comparative Literature
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CMPL 59000 - Directed Reading In Comparative Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Directs the reading of students with special interests. Guides students in profitable reading in subjects of their own choice. Individual conferences. No class meetings. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Comparative Literature
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CMPL 63000 - Comparative Literature: Function And Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ENGL 66000 and LC 63000) An introduction to methods, problems, and the bibliographical tools pertaining to comparative study. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Comparative Literature
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CMPL 65000 - Seminar In Comparative Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ENGL 66500 and LC 63900) Exploration of a significant topic in comparative literature, e. g., the arts of translation, thematology, genre studies, literary movements, literary relations among countries. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Comparative Literature
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CMPL 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00-18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Comparative Literature
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CNET 19000 - Experience In Construction I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Minimum of ten weeks' work experience in the construction industry, plus recorded (written or otherwise as approved in advance) report of directed academic project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CNET 27600 - Construction Industry Professions, Specifications, Contracts And Codes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of general conditions and major phases of construction codes, specifications, agreements, contracts, liens, and bonds. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CNET 28000 - Quantity Estimating |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of estimating practices. Development of skill in preparing manual estimates of material quantities required in construction. Introduction to labor and material costs, electronic media, and computer applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CNET 29000 - Experience In Construction II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Minimum of ten weeks' work experience in the construction industry, plus recorded (written or otherwise as approved in advance) report of directed academic project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CNET 34400 - Constructed Project Quality I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Construction and design quality assurance. The role quality control plays in the execution of the construction contract. Inspection trips to construction sites. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CNET 34800 - Senior Capstone Design Project I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The first term of a two-term, comprehensive, capstone design project. Establishment and development of the design process with special emphasis placed on teamwork towards the initial Design Proposal - written and oral. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CNET 39000 - Experience In Construction III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Minimum of ten weeks' work experience in the construction industry, plus recorded (written or otherwise as approved in advance) report of directed academic project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CNET 44100 - Construction Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Management methods and equipment used in the construction of building earthworks, bridges and roads. Contractor organization, job management, and safety. Excavation, formwork, concrete, masonry, and steel erection methods. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CNET 44200 - Cost Estimating |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of design and construction cost estimation and cost control practices. Development of unit costs for material and labor. Topics include equipment, subcontracts, risk management, overhead, profit, bid strategy, bid price, total development cost, and value engineering. Use of electronic media and computer applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CNET 44300 - Engineered Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Computations for a broad range of design and construction problems such as construction equipment and falsework; winter protection, temporary heat and electrical requirements; humidity, condensation, and equilibrium moisture contents of materials; expansion of materials, structures, curtain walls, and piping; sound absorption and transmission. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CNET 44500 - Construction Project Management I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Planning the organization of people, resources, and activities required for a construction project from inception through design, construction, and operation. Emphasis on time control through critical path scheduling and management-by-exception, and related strategies. Computer applications. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CNET 44800 - Senior Capstone Design Project II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The second term of a two-term, comprehensive, capstone design project. Multi-interdisciplinary, project-oriented, real-world experience at the cutting edge. Generation and conclusive development of the final design with consideration for design reviews, prototype requirements, scheduling, ergonomics, safety and economic constraints. A written report and oral defense of the project is required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CNET 45000 - Issues In Sustainability |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces students to the broad concepts and issues involved in sustainability that they may take them into the world and become leaders in their communities. In the project associated with this course, students will read, conduct research, synthesize material and produce and present their findings. Students will also implement one campus sustainability initiative. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Posses an appropriate mastery of the issues and concepts involved in sustainability.
2. Demonstrate the ability to plan, conduct, analyze, and interpret their research.
3. Demonstrate quantitative reasoning ability.
4. Apply creativity in the design of their response to the problem being addressed.
5. Function effectively on teams.
6. Demonstrate the ability to identify, analyze, and solve problems, as well as to construct arguments and consider the arguments of others.
7. Communicate effectively, in both written and oral work.
8. Understand the need for and demonstrate the ability to engage in lifelong learning, through problem solving and ability to apply theory.
9. Understand professional, ethical, and social responsibilities.
10. Develop a respect for diversity and knowledge of contemporary professional, societal, and global issues.
11. Have a commitment to quality, timeliness, and continuous improvement.
|
| CNET 45400 - Construction Legal Aspects |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of law with an emphasis on its application to the construction. A survey of laws, regulations, and cases that stress the relationships among the design professionals, the contractors, and owners. Introduction to safety in design and construction. Study of facility failures and related problems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CNET 45500 - Company Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Business policy, financial management, and other entrepreneurial problems as they relate to construction, design, and materials firms. Company organization, contracts, bonds, insurance accounting systems, project control and labor relations and current regulatory issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CNET 45700 - Construction Safety |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of strategies and technologies in design, construction, and operation, for reducing hazards, accidents, injuries, and damage. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CNET 49900 - Construction Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Hours, subject matter, and credit to be arranged by staff. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
|
| CNIT 10100 - Orientation To Computer And Information Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This is a resource seminar required for all incoming Computer & Information Technology (CIT) majors. It is intended to ease a freshman CIT major¿s entry into the CIT program at Purdue North Central and, in general, the Purdue University system. It introduces the student to some fundamental details such as how to study, time management, academic success strategies, general policies and procedures of the University, and the many resources available at the North Central campus. In addition, it is designed to provide students with information regarding career options in the Information Technology field. Required of all students entering the CIT program with less that 30 credit hours of college credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| CNIT 10500 - Introduction To C Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to computer programming using the "C" language. The emphasis is on structured programming principles, and understanding the basic concepts that apply to engineering problems. Among topics covered in this course are: problem solving using top down design, using flowcharts to explain the program logic, selection structure, repetition structure, bitwise operations, arrays, pointers, strings, passing arguments, and sequential files. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
|
| CNIT 10700 - Computers And Software Packages |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Prerequisites vary with course content. Does not carry credit toward degree requirements in Computer Technology.Topics and skills associated with specific computer(s) and/or specific software package(s). Level of coverage varies according to audience. Various applications packages may be offered under this title. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| CNIT 11100 - Computer Literacy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to computers and applications for students admitted to the Horizons program. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CNIT 12100 - Microcomputer Database Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course does not carry credit toward degree requirements in Computer Technology. A study of relational databases and their applications with special emphasis on the proper techniques of database construction. Instruction will center around learning how to design databases and operate a database management system in a Windows environment. Students will build projects and develop systems for the storage, manipulation, and retrieval of large amounts of data on the personal computer. This course is designed for non-Computer Technology majors who have had a modest exposure to computers. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| CNIT 12600 - Website Development And Internet Technologies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course does not carry credit towards degree requirements in Computer Technology. A course in website design, construction, and implementation using a web editor and other tools. The main focus will be learning how to use web-editing programs to create practical, professional websites. Students will also study proper website design techniques, construct data-driven websites, and gain a general understanding of Internet technologies such as Internet communications, search engine strategies, website publishing techniques, etc. There will be some HTML and low-level coding, but the majority will be with the web editor. This course is designed for students who wish to learn how to construct basic websites for business and communication needs. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| CNIT 12700 - Microcomputer Spreadsheet Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course does not carry credit towards degree requirements in Computer Technology. An expanded study of microcomputer spreadsheets. Students will learn how to properly design spreadsheets and the necessary commands to provide solutions to business-related problems. Significant time will be devoted to gain an understanding of how to develop spreadsheets that model the calculations involved in financial applications. This course is designed for non-Computer Technology majors who have had a modest exposure to computers. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Create a Worksheet and chart data.
2. Use functions, create tables, and manage large workbooks.
3. Analyze data with pie charts, line charts, and What-if analysis tools.
4. Use financial and lookup functions, define names, validate data, and audit worksheets.
5. Manage large workbooks and use advanced sorting and filtering.
6. Create charts, diagrams, and templates.
7. Create PivotTable and PivotChart reports and use BI tools in Excel.
8. Use the data analysis, solver, and scenario features, and build complex formulas.
9. Use macros and Visual Basic for Applications.
10. Use external data, database functions, and side-by-side tables.
11. Collaborate with others and prepare a workbook for distribution.
|
| CNIT 12800 - Advanced Word Processing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course does not carry credit toward degree requirements in Computer Technology. An extended study of word processing and its practical application in business and technology. A project-oriented approach will be utilized to illustrate word processing in solving specific information processing problems. Students will learn how to use word processing in a Windows environment to perform document enhancement, merging of documents and databases, incorporation of spreadsheet tables into documents, and applying desktop publishing techniques to documents. This course is designed for non-Computer Technology majors who have had a modest exposure to computers.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Create documents with Microsoft Word 2010.
2. Use tables and templates to create resumes and cover letters.
3. Create research papers, newsletters, and merged mailing labels.
4. Use styles and create multilevel lists and charts.
5. Use advanced table features.
6. Create Web pages and use advanced proofing options.
7. Build documents from reusable content and use markup tools.
8. Create mass mailings.
9. Create standardized forms and manage documents.
10. Work with long documents.
11. Embed and link objects and use macros.
|
| CNIT 13600 - Personal Computing Technology And Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an intermediate coverage of PC technology and problem solving. Topics include computer hardware, operations and ethics, and operating systems and environments. Students will gain hands-on skills with applications such as desktop and file management; word processing; spreadsheets; presentation graphics; electronic mail; personal information management; and internet browsing, searching, and publishing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:IPS 1740 Introduction To Microcomputers
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify the role of computers as an integral part of an information system.
2. Define terminology associated with information systems and computers.
3. Identify components of a computer system.
4. Demonstrate proficiency in the use of various business application packages.
5. Discuss various social issues associated with computers and information systems.
|
| CNIT 14100 - Internet Foundations, Technologies, and Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (CGT 14100) This course explores the history, architecture and development of the World Wide Web. Current tagging and scripting languages are covered in a tool independent environment. Topics also include authoring tools, design, graphic and multimedia formats, and commerce, implementation and security issues. PC literacy required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
|
| CNIT 15500 - Introduction to Object-Oriented Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces fundamental software development concepts common to most programming languages. Topics include: problem solving and algorithm development, debugging, programming standards, variable, data types, operators, decisions, repetitive structures, modularity, array, user interface construction, software testing and debugging. A broad range of examples will be used throughout the course to show how each programming concept applies to real life problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Define key application development terms.
2. Explain the importance of programming to different domain areas.
3. Identify advantages and disadvantages of using an IDE to write program code.
4. Use debugging tools to find program errors.
5. Use data types, variable, constants, arithmetic operators, logical operators, decision, loop, function, and arrays when writing computer programs.
|
| CNIT 17200 - Introduction To Application Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students with little or no personal computing experience are encouraged to take the following: CPT 107 prior to CPT 172. This course introduces the development of information systems through the use of a database. Topics include business information systems, system and application development, database management systems, problem solving, logic, data types, and programming using database technology. Given a database design and application requirements, students design, construct, and test a personal computer information system.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| CNIT 17500 - Visual Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces event-driven application development and programming using a visual programming environment. Topics include problem solving and program design, control structures, objects and events, user interface construction, documentation, and program testing. Credit may be established in only one of: CPT 15500 or CPT 17500 or CPT 25000. PC literacy required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CNIT 17600 - Information Technology Architectures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A conceptual and technological survey of information technology architectures inclusive of operating systems, network operating systems, distributed systems architectures, and distributed application architectures. Interoperability between these architectural components is explored. Current technology and trends in each architectural element are reviewed. PC literacy required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CNIT 18000 - Introduction To Systems Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces information systems development. Topics include types of information systems, system development, database management systems, and problem solving. Students will read/create UML, ERD, and data flow diagrams to model information system objects, data, processes, and logic. Labs emphasize modeling and SQL/QBE querying to prepare students for later systems, programming, and database classes. Given user requirements students will design, construct, and test a personal computer information system. PC literacy required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CNIT 18800 - Microcomputer Applications Package |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course does not carry credit toward degree requirements in computer technology. A study of relational databases and their applications with special emphasis on the proper techniques of database construction. Instruction will center around learning how to design databases and operate a database management system in a Windows environment. Students will build projects and develop systems for the storage, manipulation, and retrieval of large amounts of data on the personal computer. This course is designed for non-computer technology majors who have had a modest exposure to computers.
. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CNIT 19000 - CNIT Problem Solving |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to develop reasoning skills and analytic abilities necessary for a career in computer and information technology. It covers scientific reasoning and problem solving methods as well as logic development, Boolean connectives, computer math, and other topics related to application system development. It introduces students to fundamental computer concepts using hands-on exercises in the context of manipulating 3D objects in a virtual world. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
Students successfully completing this course will be able to:
1. Development algorithms to solve logic problems.
2. Use modeling methods and case tools to assist in solution development.
3. Perform computer math operations in binary and hexadecimal base numbering systems.
4. Understand and implement fundamental object-oriented programming processes.
|
| CNIT 19900 - Topics In Computer And InformationTechnology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Hours and subject matter arranged by staff. Individual study under directed leadership of professor. Primarily for students with special aptitudes. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| CNIT 22700 - Introduction To Bioinformatics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Survey course in Bioinformatics for information technology specialists including topics such as: virtual bio-instrumentation, data reduction and mining algorithms and tools, data visualization, pattern matching, modeling and simulation, computational methods, and collaborative application environments. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
|
| CNIT 23000 - Data Communications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to both Local Area Networks (LANs) and Wide Area Networks (WANs). Modem technology, standards, and practices are explored. Three architectural models are used to illustrate protocol relationships and operational characteristics of both packet and circuit switched networks. Business issues from both provider and user perspectives are discussed. Current technology and trends in each architectural element are reviewed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| CNIT 23500 - Management Information Systems And Collaboration Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces management information systems, project management topics and technologies, and collaboration technologies. PC literacy required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand management information systems.
2. Understand the typical business functions and organizational structures found in business.
3. Gain knowledge on using project management and collaboration technologies.
|
| CNIT 24000 - Data Communications And Networking |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides a comprehensive introduction to data communications and networks. Topics include communication standards and concepts, protocols, the Open Systems Interconnect (OSI) model, point-to-point communication, and local area networks. Business issues from both provider and user perspectives are discussed. Current technology and trends in each architectural element are reviewed. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CNIT 24200 - System Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides a comprehensive introduction to system administration. Topics include authentication and authorization, directory services, system management and system security. Emphasis is placed on enterprise level systems. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain systems administration concepts as they apply to business environments.
2. Design, construct and administer an enterprise-class application environment using Windows-based client and server software.
3. Describe, install and maintain an enterprise-class application environment in a virtualized environment.
4. Plan and execute a cutover from a physical computing environment to a virtualized computing environment.
5. Troubleshoot and solve operating system installation and operational problems (client and server) in a Windows environment.
|
| CNIT 25500 - Programming For The Internet |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces software development concepts common to modern object-oriented programming languages. Topics include: intermediate data types, decisions, repetitive structures; methods; arrays and collections; encapsulation; inheritance, and polymorphism; exception handling; data persistence; Database Management System (DBMS) connectivity; user interface construction; software testing and debugging; and working in teams. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify when to use all intrinsic data types of a programming language.
2. Demonstrate how to use nested decisions and case statement.
3. Demonstrate how to use advanced looping structures including nesting, early exits, and recursion.
4. Identify how and when to use method arguments, parameters, and overloading.
5. Define and use encapsulation, inheritance, and polymorphism.
6. Demonstrate how to handle run-time exceptions.
7. Understand how to persist and object’s state information to sequential and binary files.
8. Understand how to persist an object’s state information to a Relational Database Management System (DBMS).
9. Develop GUI applications.
10. Work effectively in teams on a software development project.
|
| CNIT 26700 - Introduction To C++ Language Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to C++ language programming for persons with prior programming experience. Course topics include data types, control flow, operators and expressions, and an introduction to class construction including other object-oriented concepts and constructs. Applications are designed for business, manufacturing, or technology, depending on audience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
|
| CNIT 27200 - Database Fundamentals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of relational database concepts. These concepts include data design, modeling, and normalization; the use of Structured Query Language (SQL) to define, manipulate, and test the database; programmatic access to a database and practical issues that database developers must handle. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the principles and characteristics of good relational database design.
2. Design entity relationship models for a business problem domain.
3. Build data models that solve business problems.
4. Compare and contrast components of Structured Query Language (SQL).
5. Write SQL queries in a multiple table environment.
6. Understand the concept of database transactions, and demonstrate the proper use of commits and rollbacks.
|
| CNIT 27600 - Systems Software And Networking |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to a wide range of topics in the networking field. Topics include: systems and network administration support practices, desktop and server support, security, disaster recovery, ethics, change management, help desks, networks, network operating systems, and directory services. The students will gain hands-on experience in the laboratory with installing and configuring network operating systems and application software. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CNIT 28000 - Systems Analysis And Design Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Comprehensive introduction to information systems development. Topics include the systems analyst, the systems development life cycle, methodologies, development technology, systems planning, project management, systems analysis, systems design, systems implementation, and systems support. Introduction to tools and techniques for systems development. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation, Recitation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
|
| CNIT 28500 - Topics In Programming Languages |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A programming course in one or more programming languages not covered in other CPT courses. Application of structured or event-driven program design, construction, debugging, testing, and documentation techniques. Topics, projects, and languages vary with course offering. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CNIT 29000 - Computer Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Dependent on course content. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CNIT 29500 - Object-Oriented Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on using object-oriented programming languages in the development of modern, business applications. Topics include object-oriented design, encapsulation, object interfaces, inheritance, aggregation, abstract classes, polymorphism, data structures, and exception handling. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
|
| CNIT 29900 - Topics In Computer And Information Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Hours and subject matter to be arranged by staff. Individual study under directed leadership of professor. Primarily for students with special aptitudes. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| CNIT 30400 - Operating Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to computer operating systems and other systems software. Topics will include (but are not limited to): Internal computer systems (registers, instruction execution, cache), utility programs, memory management virtual memory, processor scheduling and security. Current operating systems will be discussed.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| CNIT 30500 - Information Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of contemporary trends in information technology, including applications, languages, hardware, software, and communications. Integration of information and systems. Emphasis on database management and administration. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
|
| CNIT 31500 - Systems Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces concepts of lower level systems programming in C/C++ on a UNIX/Linus operation system platform. Command level development, algorithms, data structures, iteration and recursion, algorithms and analysis will be covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop applications for the command line.
2. Identify number systems and perform arithmetic operations.
3. Develop programs on Linux/UNIX operating systems.
4. Develop C/C++ programming proficiency.
5. Explain and use linear and tree-based data structures and algorithms.
6. Analyze algorithms.
7. Explain and use iteration and recursion.
8. Explain and use techniques of memory management.
9. Explain and use object-oriented programming in systems environments.
10.Explain and use text and binary file I/O.
|
| CNIT 32100 - Enterprise Social Media And Global Information Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on enterprise social media and global information technology. Topics include social media software applications such as communication, collaboration, multimedia and entertainment software, globalization, global information technology issues, cultural differences, understanding the role of culture and communicating across cultures. An emphasis will be placed on how companies are integrating enterprise social media applications and the impact of these technologies on the globalization of information technology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the business impact of enterprise social media technologies.
2. Gain experience using social media technologies.
|
| CNIT 32500 - Object-Oriented Application Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on using object-oriented programming languages in the development of modern, business applications. Topics include object-oriented design, encapsulation, object interfaces, inheritance, aggregation, abstract classes, polymorphism, data structures, and exception handling. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand object-oriented concepts and architectures.
2. Understand software development motivations to use object-oriented design and development.
3. Demonstrate how to design and create classes and objects.
4. Understand the use of polymorphism and overloading.
5. Demonstrate how to design and use inheritance.
6. Understand how to apply a high-level integrated development environment to develop systems.
7. Demonstrate how to design, use and extend exception handling.
8. Demonstrate how to design, use and extend textual and binary data streams.
9. Understand how to integrate persistent data storage using RDBMS
10. Understand the development of distributed systems and n-level architectures.
|
| CNIT 33000 - Local Area Networking And Systems Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides a comprehensive introduction to Local Area Networks (LANs). Topics include the study of LAN communication protocols, the Open Systems Interconnect (OSI) model, client/server operating system architectures, basic security services, and introductory systems administration concepts. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| CNIT 34000 - UNIX Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the tasks and issues involved in the administration of UNIX systems. Topics include installation, networking, software management, scripting, and user management. In the laboratory portion of the course, students implement and maintain UNIX systems. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the theory and practice of administering UNIX based operating systems.
2. Install and maintain UNIX operating systems.
3. Implement and maintain basic UNIX services including file sharing, e-mail, and X-Windows.
4. Secure UNIX operating systems.
5. Write and maintain UNIX shell scripts.
6. Integrate UNIX and Windows systems.
|
| CNIT 34200 - Advanced System And Network Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the tasks and issues involved in the installation of distributed computing systems. Topics include the administration of network operating systems and network system interoperability. In the laboratory portion of the course, students implement and maintain a comprehensive network service infrastructure. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the differences between various enterprise storage and architectures.
2. Design and implement a storage area network (SAN) solution.
3. Install and configure a network boot environment supporting various operating systems.
4. Understand and implement centralized authentication solutions.
5. Design and implement domain name system (DNS) solutions for internal and external networks.
6. Design, install and maintain messaging and e-mail systems.
7. Design and implement web based solutions.
8. Control and manage outbound web traffic.
9. Provide load balancing and fault tolerance to network infrastructure solutions.
|
| CNIT 34300 - Advanced System And Network Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the tasks and issues involved in the installation and administration of distributed computing systems. Topics include the administration of network operating systems, UNIX system administration, and network system interoperability. In the laboratory portion of the course, students implement and maintain local area network and UNIX servers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| CNIT 34500 - Internetwork Design And Implementation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an advanced course in network architecture. Students learn to design and implement local and wide area networks capable of simultaneous transport of real-time traffic and multiprotocol data over packet-switched and circuit-switched networks. An emphasis is placed on the integration of diverse communications technologies, while considering the effects of engineering decisions on overall performance, from both business and technology perspectives. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the operation of shortest path spanning trees in internetworks.
2. Perform IP subnetworking to correctly size and allocate addressing to network devices.
3. Perform IP supernetworking to correctly size and allocate addressing to network devices.
4. Identify the correct network architecture to deploy a given set of requirements.
5. Deploy dynamic routing protocols.
6. Design, deploy, test, and maintain enterprise-class internetworks.
|
| CNIT 34600 - Wireless Networks |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces wireless networking. Topics include fundamental wireless communication concepts, wireless local area networks (LANs), and cellular systems. Wireless specific protocol elements are addressed in typical application environments. Data communications in multiple wireless environments are emphasized. In the laboratory section, students implement wireless solutions and integrate them into wired LAN environments. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand basic wireless data and telecommunications terminology and jargon.
2. Understand the basic underpinnings of important wireless technology, security, and management issues.
3. Implement 802.11 networks in multiple different scenarios.
4. Conduct successful site surveys with different 802.11 equipment and standards.
5. Discuss wireless data and telecommunication issues with professionals in an informed and intelligent manner.
6. Know how and where to seek further information concerning more advanced topics not covered in this class without feeling overwhelmed.
7. Formulate a checklist regarding existing and/or new wireless data/telecommunication systems and infrastructure.
|
| CNIT 35000 - Object-Oriented Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on using object-oriented programming languages in the development of modern business applications. Topics include object-oriented design, encapsulation, object interfaces, inheritance, aggregation, abstract classes, polymorphism, data structures, and exception handling. Credit cannot be earned in both CNIT 29500 and CNIT 35000. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| CNIT 35500 - Software Development For Mobile Computers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an advanced programming course that teaches students the skills necessary to develop applications for mobile computing devices (e.g. Smartphones and tablet computers). Combining theory and practice, this course gives students hands-on experience with the latest technologies, tools and techniques used to develop mobile software solutions for business and entertainment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. List the popular mobile device platforms and market share.
2. Undertsand the difference between developing apps for mobile devices and developing apps for PCs and servers.
3. Understand user interface design concepts specific to mobile devices.
4. Demonstrate how to persist app data to a mobile device.
5. Develop casual games that use essential game programming concepts.
6. Demonstrate how to use graphics programming techniques for drawing shapes, text, and sprites.
7. Develop apps that use more than one processing thread.
8. Develop apps that communicate with code running on a server.
|
| CNIT 36100 - Software Redesign Using Cobol |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to COBOL programming with an emphasis on redesign of legacy COBOL applications to extend their useful lifetime in contemporary organizations. Topics include user interface redesign, structured design, object-oriented programming, and transition from conventional files to databases. Students learn to analyze existing programs to isolate legacy code problems, develop and test solutions, and integrate solutions into software libraries. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
|
| CNIT 36300 - Open Source Technologies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced course in programming, database management systems, and dynamic web page construction using open source technologies. Students will develop programming skills in the current open source programming languages. Emphasis will be on server-side programming and the integration of database management systems to create data-driven web sites. Other supporting open source tools will be examined and employed as appropriate. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Use open-source software, similar to what is used by professional web developers.
2. Develop an advanced, dynamic web page.
3. Integrate a server-based database into their web site.
|
| CNIT 37200 - Database Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores advanced database programming techniques for enterprise-wide databases and their implementation. It uses programmatic extensions to Structured Query Language (SQL) supported by today's enterprise-class Relational Database Management Systems (RDBMS). Topics include advanced data manipulation, storage considerations, data transformation techniques to enhance interoperability of data, stored procedure and trigger design and implementation; and query optimization. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
|
| CNIT 37600 - Information Storage And Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides a comprehensive introduction to information storage technology. It prepares students to make more informed decisions about data storage and also to learn advanced concepts, technologies, and products. Topics include the architectures, features, and benefits of intelligent storage systems; networked storage technologies such as FC-SAN, NAS, and IP-SAN; and long-term archiving solutions such as CAS. Other topics include business continuity, back-up and recovery, virtualization, security, and management. Students will gain hands-on experience with installing and configuring storage management technologies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe storage technology solutions.
2. Understand and articulate the technologies and solutions available to support an IT infrastructure.
3. Understand the key tasks in successfully securing, managing, and monitoring a data storage infrastructure.
|
| CNIT 38000 - Advanced Analysis and Design |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course is an advanced study of system analysis and design methods and techniques used by systems analysts to develop information systems. Object-oriented tools and the Unified Modeling Language (UML) will be used for describing object structure and behavior, and use cases will be used for modeling functional processes. Topics include rapid development concepts, application architecture and system design, transition from object-oriented analysis and models to components and services, graphical user interface design, web interface design, prototyping, and commercial software package integration. Emphasis is also placed on the use of an object-oriented CASE tool. This course surveys other important skills for the systems analyst, such as fact-finding (requirements discovery), communications, project management, and cost-benefit analysis.
. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
|
| CNIT 38301 - Packaged Application Software Solutions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces knowledge, skills, tools, and techniques used to select and implement packaged application software solutions, both small and large (including ERP). Topics will include the make-verses-buy decision, critical success factors for packages, economic analysis, requirements analysis, identifying vendors and products, request for proposals, analysis of vendor proposals, decision analysis, implementation service providers, contracting for software and service, implementation project planning, life-cycle architecture, software installation and configuration, business process redesign organizational change management, integration with legacy system, customization verses adaptation, data conversion, system and application testing, training and support, system cutover and post go-live considerations. The course will focus on best practices, and consequences of less than best practices. This course will benefit students with career aspirations as systems analysts, business analysts, consultants, data and database administrators, and IT managers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the make-verses-buy software alternatives, criteria, and implications, including considerations for open source solutions.
2. Describe characteristics of packaged application software solutions to enterprise and inter-enterprise problems and opportunities that meet transactional, operational, managerial and executive needs.
3. Budget for the total cost of ownership for packaged application software solutions, and present the accompanying business case.
4. Use appropriate tools and techniques to solicit, evaluate, and contract for packaged application software solutions offered by venders and software foundations.
5. Organize, write and/or analyze business and technical reports and communications that are specific to the selection and implementation of packaged application software solutions.
6. Create and implement comprehensive project plans as required and implement packaged application software solutions.
|
| CNIT 38400 - Requirements Discovery & Modeling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an advanced study of systems analysis and design focusing on object-oriented methods, techniques, and tools. Topics include object-oriented technology, object-oriented methods and techniques to analyze a business problem and design and implement a solution, use-cases, object models, requirements gathering, effective communications, project management, and cost-benefit analysis. Emphasis is placed on working in a team environment to model and design a solution to a real-life business problem. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| CNIT 38500 - Advanced Design Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an advanced study of system design methods and techniques used by systems analysts to develop information systems. Topics include rapid development concepts, application architecture and system design, transition from object-oriented analysis and models, graphical user interface design, web interface design, prototyping, and commercial software package integration.
. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| CNIT 39000 - Supervised Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An instructor-directed practicum designed to combine University study with work experience directly related to the student's plan of study. Designed to be scheduled during a regular semester. Credit awarded upon the completion of department-approved project. Maximum of three credit hours may be applied to the CPT bachelor degree. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CNIT 39200 - Enterprise Data Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines advanced design techniques and physical issues relating to enterprise-wide data management. Topics include advanced design concepts, enhanced modeling and constructs, objects and unstructured and semi-structured data in databases, data management in non-business contexts, implementation of an enterprise data architecture, and data quality and stewardship.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
|
| CNIT 39900 - Topics In Computer And Information Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Hours and subject matter to be arranged by staff. Primarily for students with special aptitudes. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| CNIT 40400 - Advanced Networking Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course requires the students to design and implement a network, using knowledge they have gained in their previous coursework. Students will use analysis and design techniques along with design software to draw up a network according to given specifications. They will then implement the network. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| CNIT 40500 - Software Development Methodologies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores methodologies and practices commonly used in contemporary software development projects. Topics include programming standards, code ownership and accountability, source code management and version control, productivity and quality metrics, software testing, and software process maturity models. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate a level of proficiency in software development process and project topics.
2. Understand what is needed to work in and lead a team developing comprehensive software projects.
3. Understand the advantages and disadvantages of software development process models.
4. Understand the ramifications of in house vs. outsourcing of software development projects.
5. Analyze and evaluate the various software development methodologies available.
6. Understand and be able to implement requirements traceability to software modules.
7. Understand and be able to implement software testing procedures.
8. Identify, monitor, and document risks involved with software and software development.
9. Produce reports detailing the proper implementation of a software development methodology or technology.
10.Understand change management as applied to software.
11.Understand software project, process and product metrics.
12.Understand software quality concepts and the processes required to ensure software quality.
13.Understand the issues of accountability, responsibility, and certification as they apply to software professionals.
14.Understand intellectual property rights as applied to software.
|
| CNIT 42000 - Basic Cyber Forensics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces students to the fundamentals of cyber forensics and cyber-crime scene analysis. The various laws and regulations dealing with computer forensic analysis are discussed. Students are introduced to the emerging international standards for cyber forensic analysis, as well as a formal methodology for conducting computer forensic investigations. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify the role of computers as an integral part of an information system.
2. Define terminology associated with information systems and computers.
3. Identify the various components of a computer system.
4. Demonstrate proficiency in the use of various business application packages.
5. Discuss various social issues associated with computers and information systems.
|
| CNIT 42100 - Small Scale Digital Device Forensics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will help students understand the issues, techniques, and vulnerabilities of small scale digital device forensics. Emphasis will be placed on the forensically sound acquisition, preservation, analysis and presentation of small scale digital devices as evidence. Specific investigations will cover devices such as Personal Digital Assistants (PDA's), Cell Phones, and Smart Phones. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CNIT 42500 - Software Development For Mobile Devices II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This programming course teaches students the skills necessary to develop complex applications for mobile computing devices (e.g. smartphones and tablet computers). This course gives students hands-on experience developing mobile applications that use advanced features found on the latest mobile computing devices. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop applications for mobile devices that use advance features of mobile devices.
2. Develop apps that use more than one processing thread.
3. Develop apps that communicate with code running on a server.
4. Understand ways to earn money from a mobile application.
|
| CNIT 43500 - Advanced Network Services |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the concepts and technologies required to deploy advanced network services such as telephony and television over modern data networks. The underlying network structure and enabling services will be detailed along with a comprehensive analysis of protocols and services required to deploy such services. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
|
| CNIT 44500 - Advanced Internetwork Routing And Switching |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course extends routing and switching knowledge with specific attention given to emerging trends. This course focuses on the concepts of traffic shaping, advanced exterior gateway routing protocols, label switching technologies, and quality of service. The necessary perspectives of integration of these topics into enterprise networks are addresses in both lecture and laboratory. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CNIT 44600 - Advanced Wireless Networks |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an advanced course in wireless networking. Building on knowledge gained from the introductory wireless local area network course, this course addresses wireless network design and implementation on a large scale. Topics include mesh networking, broadband wireless access, backhauling, WiMAX and cellular systems. The laboratory portion of the course includes implementing and simulating these technologies in an outdoor setting. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand current WLAN, WMAN and WWAN design and implementation strategies.
2. Understand the increasing roles that WLANs, WMANs, WWANs are playing to increase mobility and augment wire line high throughout technologies.
3. Design and configure Metropolitan and Wide Area scaled wireless networks based on a given business scenario or problem.
4. Understand wireless data and telecommunications terminology and jargon.
5. Understand the basic underpinnings of important wireless technologies and wireless internet provider management issues.
6. Conduct successful outdoor site surveys with different equipment and standards.
7. Be able to discuss wireless data and telecommunication issues with professionals in an informed and intelligent manner.
8. Formulate a checklist regarding existing and/or new wireless data/telecommunication systems and infrastructure.
|
| CNIT 45000 - Enterprise Application Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores advanced application development techniques in a large enterprise-wide setting. Topics include component development and reuse, distributed object technologies, multi-tier applications, data marshalling, transaction processing, concurrency problems and resolutions, load balancing and tuning, and application installation and deployment issues. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the pros and cons of using object-oriented programming.
2. Develop and use 3rd-party class libraries.
3. Compare modern application architectures and abstraction layers.
4. Know DBMS connectivity options and abstraction layers.
5. Develop multi-tier applications.
6. Develop applications that work within multi-user environments.
7. Develop applications that use remote procedure calls to marshal data between processes.
|
| CNIT 45500 - Network Security |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores business, conceptual, and technological aspects of network security for voice and data networks. The course deals with the analysis, design, implementation, and management issues surrounding effective network security. Key concepts and technology include virus protection, firewalls, authentication, encryption, wireless security, security protocols, physical security, and network security architecture and policy development. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the principles and theories of building layered security solutions.
2. Deploy filtering and firewall technologies to provide layered security solutions.
3. Understand basic cryptography theory and techniques.
4. Understand and implement virtual private network solutions.
5. Understand the principles and practices for system vulnerability scanning.
6. Understand and implement network access control solutions.
|
| CNIT 45600 - Wireless Security And Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an advanced course concerning security and management issues as they apply to wireless networking. Students will gain knowledge on the problems and solutions the wireless industry face when implementing large scale networks. Issues addressed include encryption weaknesses, security methodology tradeoffs, large scale network management techniques and systems, and advanced wireless network architecture. The laboratory portion of the course enforces the learning outcomes with hands-on experiences in implementing secure, manageable complex wireless networks. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain extensive knowledge of wireless security standards.
2. Students will implement non-standards based wireless security methodologies.
3. Students will understand WLAN and WWAN network management and the differences between wireless and wire-line security.
4. Students will understand wireless security audit tools and procedures.
|
| CNIT 45800 - Biomedical Informatics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the tools and objectives of research in the medical and life sciences industry relevant to the skills of information technology. The driving outcome of this course is for students to understand the domain demands inherent to information systems in healthcare, bioinformatics and computational life sciences, with respect to their role in commercialism, therapeutic decision support and discovery support systems. Topics include information technology application in support of health care delivery, a brief overview of healthcare delivery, the history of healthcare informatics, an overview of the state of current systems and the professional opportunities in Health Informatics. In bioinformatics, introduce the concepts of genomics and proteomics, biotechnology, biological databases and file structures, common computational methods for exploiting biological databases, integrating computational methods within the life sciences industry, and a survey of successful computational life science applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand how genomic and proteomic data are structured, stored and queried.
2. Understand the methods used to represent nucleotides and mino acids in the digital realm, and how to access genomic and proteomic databases.
3. Understand and implement algorithms used to efficiently carry out sequence alignments.
4. Understand the methods and rationale for constructing cladograms.
5. Understand the genetic basis of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), existing SNP databases, and the role of SNPs in systems supporting personalized medicine and forensics.
6. Understand the rationale and utilization of DNA design applications supporting molecular biology methods.
7. Understand the rationale and utilization of 3 dimensional protein rendering applications.
8. Understand how information and data support clinical therapeutics.
|
| CNIT 46000 - High Performance Computing Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to high performance, cluster, and grid computing from a systems perspective. The driving outcome for this course is for students to understand and apply high performance computing concepts, architectures, and software components to develop and operate a high performance computing environment. Topics include: high performance computer architectures, network architectures for High Performance Computing (HPC), commodity and open-source cluster architectures, and software systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand factors that motivate the use and development of high performance computers and supercomputing systems.
2. Demonstrate skill in developing high performance computing systems.
3. Understand the continuum of high performance computing architectures.
4. Understand appropriateness of each architecture type to problem solving for a wide variety of applications.
5. Understand the effects of communications architecture and performance characteristics on application performance.
6. Demonstrate the use of commodity components in high performance computing and the trends and forces that motivate their use.
7. Demonstrate the use of tools and techniques of cluster and high performance computing.
|
| CNIT 46100 - Parallel Data Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to the techniques and technologies used in high performance computing for developing, using and managing high performance data systems. Topics covered in this course will focus on aspects of the design, implementation, and use of high performance storage systems progressively from the hardware layer through the operating system up to the application level. Topics will include: commodity hardware and novel architectural storage components; the architecture and use of parallel file systems, including PVFS2 and Lustre; reliability and scheduling; virtualization and fault tolerant strategies for Petascale computing; system architectures for data intensive computing and workflows; parallel I/O systems; and grid and cloud computing architectures. The driving outcome for this course is for students to understand and apply advanced high performance computing concepts, architectures, and software components to develop and operate a high performance computing environment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the factors that motivate the use and development of high performance parallel storage systems.
2. Understand the importance of fast data rates to the efficient use of HPC systems and processors, and the effects of poor I/O on application performance.
3. Develop a high performance storage system by building, benchmarking and optimizing a small commodity-based storage system based on the Linux operating system and other open source software packages.
4. Understand the storage hierarchy, and the speeds, feeds, and costs at each level.
5. Understand the technological characteristics of components at each level of the storage hierarchy, and the effects of these technologies on reliability and performance.
6. Understand the range of interconnection technologies available for parallel data systems, and the effects of these technologies on storage performance.
7. Understand the range of storage technologies available and the design of high performance storage systems that are cost effective and reliable.
|
| CNIT 46500 - Senior Software Development Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This capstone course integrates the software development technologies and techniques taught in prior courses. Over the duration of the semester, students work as a team to develop an automated system of real value and quality. Class lectures explore project-related topics such as project planning and management, user and management expectations, system architecture and design, and quality management. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand how to work effectively in teams on a software development project.
2. Use source code management, software testing and quality assurance, and bug tracking tools in a team environment.
3. Understand the importance of the project manager, technical lead, software developers, test engineers, DBA and client liaison roles typically found in a large software development project.
4. Develop a multi-user, multi-tier application that solves a real world problem.
|
| CNIT 47500 - Electronic Commerce and Business Implementation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an in-depth study of electronic commerce and electronic business implementation. The focus is on e-business topics and concepts including business models, electronic payment systems, infrastructure, implementation concerns, design criteria, solution of business problems through case studies, and related Web topics. Students will develop web-based applications that support e-business activities. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
|
| CNIT 48000 - Managing Information Technology Projects |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the application of knowledge, skills, tools, and techniques that project managers use to plan, staff, estimate, and manage information technology projects. Special emphasis is placed on learning and applying the concepts of managing scope, risk, budget, time, expectations, quality, people, communications, procurement, and externally provided services. Students will apply project management technology and techniques to business problems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the genesis of project management and its importance to improving the success of information technology projects.
2. Demonstrate knowledge of project management terms and techniques.
3. Use Microsoft Project and other software to help plan and manage information technology projects.
4. Appreciate the importance of good project management.
|
| CNIT 48100 - Information Systems Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The purpose of this course is to provide the student with an understanding of the issues and challenges in managing information systems activities. This course will identify the various information system management functions; their relationship to organizational functions; their interaction with various organizational units; and methods for achieving the objectives relevant to each. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| CNIT 48500 - Topics In Information Systems And Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will require students to analyze, design, implement, test, and document a complete computer-based information system by using knowledge and techniques acquired from their previous coursework. Students will work on their assigned projects as part of a team. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| CNIT 48700 - Database Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores tools and techniques for managing an organization's database technology. Topics include database architecture, database technology installation, database creation and maintenance, Database Management System (DBMS) operation and troubleshooting, and database performance tuning. In the laboratory, students engage in activities performed by a typical database administrator. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
|
| CNIT 48800 - Data Warehousing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The design and implementation of data warehouses (including data marts and operational data stores) are studied using current database technologies. Topics include data modeling for warehouses, data warehousing infrastructure and tool selection, data exploration, data synthesis and reduction, organizational metadata, data warehouse administration, and other contemporary issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
|
| CNIT 48900 - Advanced Topics In Database Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will provide students with a chance to explore contemporary issues in the database arena. These issues may be related to new or breakthrough concepts, technologies, and techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
|
| CNIT 49000 - Senior Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Team industrial experience for seniors who undertake a significant controlled project experience for an actual client and problem. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CNIT 49900 - Topics In Computer And Information Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Hours and subject matter to be arranged by staff. Possible individual study under directed leadership of professor. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CNIT 51100 - Foundations In Homeland Security Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An interdisciplinary course addressing prevention, mitigation, preparation, response, and recovery from catastrophic events that threaten private and public sector resources and infrastructures. Course contents will include: characteristics of security; personal/corporate perspectives; identification of assets; assessing cost/benefits of protecting assets; risk assessment and risk management; crisis decision making; emergency management resources and response infrastructures; best practices in emergency management and risk and crisis communication; business continuity; and the importance of a collaborative response. Case studies include the 9-11 attacks and Hurricane Katrina. External experts will present and career opportunities will be discussed. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand principles and interdisciplinary issues within Homeland Security.
2. Apply information and information systems to homeland security issues.
3. Apply phases of emergency management to business in difference areas.
4. As an individual and part of a group, perform risk assessment and apply to various fields.
5. Prepare professional homeland security communications in students various home field of study.
|
| CNIT 51200 - Managing Resources And Applications For Homeland Security |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An interdisciplinary course providing examples and practice in applying and managing the resources, including technologies, used in the private and public sectors for homeland security programs. Course contents will include: terrorism; corporate security; biosecurity; health care preparedness; personal/community preparedness; risk transfer; and information security and privacy. Additional content includes discussion of local, state, and federal preparedness programs issues in the public/private sectors that are designed to ensure survival during a continuum of emergency events, and continued practice in using collaborative application of team building skills. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply business continuity and redundancy in information systems to disasters and emergencies.
2. Apply examples and practice in homeland security.
3. Understand resource process to solve homeland security problems.
4. Interact with subject matter experts and apply homeland security principles.
|
| CNIT 55000 - Organizational Impact Of Information Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An enterprise view of the organizational impact of information technology as the most effective means for achieving "better, faster, cheaper operations" in today's highly competitive business environment. Examines how information technology has enabled new organizational forms and changes in business processes, products, markets, delivery systems, ways of working, and people management issues and challenges. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CNIT 55100 - Information Technology Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the economics of information systems and information technology as it relates to business performance. Topics include strategic information technology planning, alignment with business planning, value assessment, and performance measurement. Special emphasis is placed on issues relevant to strategic information technology infrastructure management, both for the information technology unit as well as the business as a whole. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CNIT 55200 - Information Technology Project Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores the necessary skills and knowledge to successfully initiate, plan, manage, control, and report on information technology projects. Special emphasis is placed on learning the PMBOK and its practices concerning integration management, scope management, time management, cost management, quality management, human resource management, communications management, risk management, and procurement management. Practical examples are used to demonstrate the concepts and techniques, plus hands-on experience is received by working on a case study. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CNIT 55300 - Quality Management In Information Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores quality and productivity models used to ensure quality in information technology systems development processes. Special emphasis is on learning and understanding process metrics and measurement, as well as initiatives such as Total Quality Management, Continuous Process Improvement, Six Sigma, and the Software Engineering Institute Capability Maturity Model.
. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CNIT 55500 - Advanced Network Security |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced conceptual and technological aspects of network security for voice and data networks. Deals with the advanced analysis, design, implementation, and management issues surrounding effective network security. Technology research and presentation of results, as well as security technology implementation, are required course outcomes. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CNIT 55600 - Basic Computer Forensics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Covers the fundamentals of the maturing discipline of computer forensics. The focus of the course is on gaining a broad understanding of the field of study and how technology and law interact to form this forensic science. Emerging standards and current and future issues related to the field are also explored. Examines law and public policy, the computer forensic methodology, report presentation, and expert witness testimony, as well as anti-forensic techniques that can be used to obfuscate evidence. Students are exposed to theory and practice with lab exercises, thought and term papers, and a practical, as well as written, final exam. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CNIT 55700 - Advanced Research Topics In Cyber Forensics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides students at the advanced degree level the opportunity to expand their knowledge of cyber forensics. Students are expected to have fundamental understanding of cyber forensics and digital forensic science. The emphasis is on directed learning and scholarly inquiry. Possible research topics range from law and public policy to software and/or hardware development. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CNIT 55800 - Bioinformatics Computing And Systems Integration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a graduate-level course for students interested in the application of computational methods and information technology in the pharmaceutical, biotechnology, and life sciences arena. An overall understanding of information technology and systems is assumed, as well as an in-depth knowledge of one or more areas of information technology. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CNIT 55900 - Data Warehousing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The design and implementation of data warehouses (including data marts and operational data stores) are studied using current database technologies. Topics include data modeling for warehouses, data warehousing infrastructure and tool selection, data exploration, data synthesis and reduction, organizational metadata, data warehouse administration, and other contemporary issues. Preference is given to students having graduate status in the College of Technology with a CIT concentration. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CNIT 56000 - Advanced High Performance Computing Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a graduate level course that covers advanced topics in high performance, cluster, and grid computing in detail from a systems perspective. Topics covered in this course will focus on aspects of the design, implementation, and use of high performance computing systems at each level of the system, including: commodity hardware and novel architectural components, such as graphics processing units; operating systems for HPC systems, including low-noise OS and light-weight kernels; system reliability and job scheduling; virtualization systems and fault tolerance for HPC; data intensive computing and workflows; parallel I/O systems; and grid and cloud computing architectures. Experience in Linux systems administration is a prerequisite for this course. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the impact of performance, cost, reliability, and usability on the design and deployment of high performance computing systems based on mixture of commodity and special purpose components and software.
2. Demonstrate skill in finding a balance among these factors by designing, building, benchmarking, and optimizing a small commodity-based cluster computer based on the Linux operating system and other open source software packages.
3. Demonstrate ability to analyze problems inherent in cluster computing and to design new solutions to those problems based on the development and integration of new technologies, such as GPUs, parallel data systems, and workflow systems.
4. Demonstrate understanding and knowledge of the core concepts of high performance computing, which include: The continuum of high performance computing architectures, and the appropriateness of each architecture type to problem solving for a wide variety of applications; The effects of communications architecture and performance characteristics on application performance; The effects of component reliability and operating systems on Petascale computing; The use of commodity components in high performance computing, and the trends and forces that motivate their use; The design of high performance computing systems to meet specific application needs and resource constraints; tools and techniques of cluster and high performance computing, such as scheduler configuration and use, benchmarking tools and techniques, queuing and reliability models.
|
| CNIT 56100 - Advanced Parallel Data Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a graduate level course that covers advanced topics in high performance, cluster, and grid computing in detail from a systems perspective. Topics covered in this course will focus on aspects of the design, implementation, and use of high performance storage systems progressively from the hardware layer through the operating system up to the application level. Topics will include: commodity hardware and novel architectural storage components; the architecture and use of parallel file systems, including PVFS2 and Lustre; reliability and scheduling; virtualization and fault tolerant strategies for Petascale computing; system architectures for data intensive computing and workflows; parallel I/O systems; and grid and cloud computing architectures. Experience in Linux systems administration is a prerequisite for this course. Typically Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the impact of performance, cost, reliability, and usability on the design and deployment of high performance computing systems based on mixture of commodity and special purpose components and software.
2. Demonstrate skill in finding a balance among these factors by designing, building, benchmarking, and optimizing a small commodity-based cluster computer based on the Linux operating system and other open source software packages.
3. Demonstrate ability to analyze problems inherent in cluster computing and to design new solutions to those problems based on the development and integration of new technologies, such as GPUs, parallel data systems, and workflow systems.
4. Demonstrate understanding and knowledge of the core concepts of high performance computing, which include: The continuum of high performance computing architectures, and the appropriateness of each architecture type to problem solving for a wide variety of applications; The effects of communications architecture and performance characteristics on application performance; The effects of component reliability and operating systems on Petascale computing; The use of commodity components in high performance computing, and the trends and forces that motivate their use; The design of high performance computing systems to meet specific application needs and resource constraints; tools and techniques of cluster and high performance computing, such as scheduler configuration and use, benchmarking tools and techniques, queuing and reliability models.
|
| CNIT 56500 - Information Security Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Information Security Management explores the issues surrounding the alignment of business and information security. More precisely, once the context of information security is understood in terms of the business and the problems with the current state of Information Security Management are identified, the course pursues solutions to those problems in terms of people, policy, process, procedures, and technology. The product produced as a result of this pursuit is an Enterprise Security Architecture, mapping business needs to technology implementation. The enterprise security architecture produced is dynamic and maintainable, thereby assuring traceability and accountability. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop a multi-layer enterprise security architecture.
2. Prepare a Risk Assessment.
3. Identify and employ appropriate information security metrics and standards.
4. Employ appropriate tools and methodologies to balance business and security considerations.
|
| CNIT 58100 - Workshop In Computer Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. Advanced study of technical and professional topics. Emphasis is on new developments relating to technical, operational, and training aspects of industry and technology education. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Travel Time, Practice Study Observation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CNIT 59000 - Special Problems In Computer Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Independent study of a special problem under the guidance of a member of the staff. Does not substitute for either M.S. thesis or M.S. project credit. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CNIT 59800 - Directed MS Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A formal investigation of a particular problem under the guidance of the advisory committee. Not applicable to a thesis option plan of study. Enrollment during at least two consecutive terms for a total of three credits is required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CNIT 62300 - Contemporary Computer Technology Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and practice in the development of comprehensive solutions to problems in industrial, technical, and human resource development environments. Solutions based on emerging procedures will be emphasized. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CNIT 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Computer and Information Tech
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CNT 10500 - Introduction To Construction Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the opportunities available within the construction industry. The laboratory is utilized to learn the basics of computers, the library, and e-mail systems available on campus, and the basics of word processing, spreadsheets, and computer programming. No previous computer knowledge is necessary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CNT 19000 - Construction Experience I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Minimum of 10 weeks work experience in the construction industry, plus written report of directed academic project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CNT 19800 - Constructn Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Construction Practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CNT 29000 - Construction Experience II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Minimum of 10 weeks work experience in the construction industry, plus written report of directed academic project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CNT 29800 - Constructn Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Construction Practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CNT 32500 - Structural Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Techniques in analyzing statically determinant and indeterminate structures with a discussion of moment distribution. Standard design procedures for wood, steel, and concrete structures. Sizing of beams, columns and connections. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| CNT 34000 - Construction Scheduling |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A study of the planning and control of construction projects. Topics include time schedules, labor, and
equipment balancing; expediting material delivery; bar charts and critical path method (CPM) network scheduling; and an introduction to the use of the computer in CPM network analysis.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CNT 44200 - Construction Costs Bidding |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Estimating total job costs, and the study of bidding practices of the construction industry. Topics include: unit costs of materials and labor, quantity survey, overhead, subcontracts, total estimated costs, and bid price. The laboratory period is for the development of costs for an actual job. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CNT 44500 - Construction Management I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Business policy and problems as they relate to construction companies. Contractors' organization, financial management, project management, supervision, cost analysis, and equipment economics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CNT 44600 - Construction Financing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles and sources of construction funding for contracting firms and projects during all phases of construction. Mortgage and construction loans, market and feasibility studies for construction projects, effects of company organizational structure on funding, overhead and project cost control, and financial management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CNT 45000 - Constructn Scheduling |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A study of the planning and control of construction projects. Time schedules for materials, labor and equipment ,expediting material delivery, bar charts, Critical Path Method (CPM) scheduling. Precedence diagrams and Program Evaluation Review Techniques (PERT). The course emphasizes the use of computers for scheduling and updating of the construction process. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CNT 47000 - Site Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles and practices of land development, with consideration of market analysis, site selection, restrictions imposed by covenants and governmental regulations, costs, and financing. Collection of data and preparation of drawings for site development. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CNT 48800 - Construction Structures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design of construction structures and erection procedures for use during construction, including temporary bridges, scaffolding, sheeting, bracing, and underpinning; erection stresses in bridges and buildings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CNT 49000 - Senior Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The development of a project that will combine the skill and knowledge gained from various areas of study. The student will be expected to present a project that has been approved by the faculty advisor to a panel of faculty chosen by the advisor. This presentation should include graphical material as well as oral and written communication.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CNT 49200 - Value Management for Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Value engineering and value management theory and procedures as applied to buildings and construction projects. Life-cycle cost theory with regard to construction prices, from conception through the total life expectancy of a structure. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| COAS A1000 - Issues In United States History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study and analysis of selected historical issues and problems of general import. Topics will vary from semester to semester but will usually be broad subjects that cut across fields, regions, and periods. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| COAS E1030 - Topics In Arts And Humanities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Specific topics will vary by section and over time, but all versions of E103 will meet the objectives of the SOAS TOPICS curriculum. The curriculum is open to freshmen who will learn how scholars from the arts and humanities distribution area frame questions, propose answers, and assess the validity of competing approaches. Writing and communication skills are integrated in the course. It's the same as Coas BE103. The BE just stands for Block enrollment and means that it is attached to another class (usually English Comp or Speech).
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| COAS E1040 - Topics In Social And Behavioral Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Specific topics will vary by section and over time, but all versions of E1040 will meet the objectives of the COAS Topics curriculum. The curriculum is open to freshmen and sophomores, who will learn how scholars from the S&B distribution area frame questions, propose answers, and assess the validity of competing approaches. Writing and related skills are stressed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
|
| COAS E1050 - Topics In Natural And Mathematical Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 4.00. N&M specific topics will vary by section and over time, but all versions of E1050 will meet the objectives of the COAS TOPICS curriculum. The curriculum is open to freshman and sophomores, who will learn how scholars from the N&M distribution area frame questions, propose answers, and assess the validity of competing approaches. Writing and related skills are stressed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| COAS I1000 - Introduction To International Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an interdisciplinary introduction for students interested in International Studies. A core requirement for the International Studies Minor Program, it examines global issues from the perspectives of the natural sciences, social sciences and humanities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| COAS I3980 - Continuing Studies Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. For General Studies students to gain practical experience in applying theoretical knowledge while engaged in pre-professional work in specific career fields. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| COAS I4980 - Continuing Studies Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. For General Studies students to gain practical experience in applying theoretical knowledge while engaged in pre-professional work in specific career fields. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| COAS J1010 - Introduction To College Composition I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to College Composition I. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| COAS J1100 - Introductory Problem Solving |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Emphasizes problem solving and the development of logical reasoning skills. Topics include elementary logic, set theory, measurement of geometric figures, and translating English statements into algebraic equations. Not counted toward any COAS distribution requirement or toward the COAS fundamental skills requirement in mathematics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| COAS J1110 - Introduction To College Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. For Groups students only. A review of basic algebra. Not counted toward any College of Arts and Sciences distribution requirement or toward the College of Arts and Sciences fundamental skills requirement in mathematics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| COAS J1120 - Introduction To College Mathematics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. For Groups students only. A continuation of J1110 that includes functions, exponential functions, and logarithmic functions. Not counted toward any College of Arts and Sciences distribution requirement or toward the College of Arts and Sciences fundamental skills requirement in mathematics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| COAS Q1010 - Research And The Virtual Library |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Taught exclusively online with emphasis on skills and techniques essential to conducting research using online resources in the virtual library. Students will learn to locate online information and evaluate it for authenticity, validity, and reliability. Concepts will prepare students to become independent, lifelong learners. Credit allowed for only one of the courses COAS Q101 and COAS Q161.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| COAS Q1100 - Introduction To Information Literacy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course examines information struture and organization as well as teaching techniques and skills for effectively identifying, acquiring, evaluating, using, and communicating information in various formats. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| COAS Q1610 - Library Skills And Resources |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Techniques and skills for research term papers, speeches, and other library projects. Credit allowed for only one of the courses COAS Q101 and COAS Q161.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| COAS Q4000 - Job Search Strategies For Liberal Arts Students |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Emphasis on identifying each individual's marketable skills, locating job possibilities, writing resumes and correspondence, and interviewing for jobs. Stresses the value of the arts and sciences degree in the competitive labor market.
Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| COAS R2000 - Research Writing Requirement |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Satisfies the research writing requirement needed for graduation. The student will learn to cunduct and write research papers within the academic discipline in which the course is attached.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| COAS S1000 - Workshop |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. This course is an introductory ballet class geared towards the beginning ballet student. Students will learn basic ballet terminology and movement through physical in-class participation. Each class will include a ballet barre warm-up, center floor combinations, and traveling combinations. Students are graded on class participation.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| COAS S1040 - Freshman Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. The purpose of the first-year seminar is to help make the adjustment to college life successful. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| COAS S1540 - Pathways |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course teaches students how to use tools available to aid them in their academic planning, explore course majors and interests, increase their academic problem solving skills, enhance their social networking skills, and expand their financial planning skills as it relates to college success. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to use AAR as well as the planning of their graduation map.
2. Students will examine their interests to identify potential careers and majors which suit their interests.
3. Students will explore course majors and academic interests.
4. Students will better understand the academic requirements for graduation.
5. Students will learn additional financial planning skills.
6. Students will develop networking skills to help them interact with professionals.
|
| COAS S2000 - Workshop |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Specialized workshops on a topical basis to be offered to non-traditional populations. May be offered by TV, radio, Weekend College, etc. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| COAS S3000 - Workshop |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Specialized workshops on a topical basis to be offered to non-traditional populations. May be offered by TV, Radio, Weekend college, etc. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| COAS W1000 - Introduction To Business |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A broad overview of the areas that would be covered within a business major. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| COAS W1010 - Library Skills I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An introduction to the resources of the University Library for the undergraduate. Emphasis is placed on the developing of individual skills. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| COAS W1110 - Critical Inquiry |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course facilitates the acquisition of collegiate academic skills for first year students by identifying and applying strategies such as critical thinking, independent learning, reading, writing an information management in relation to a specific academic discipline. Requirements and formats vary according to the introductory discipline course to which it is linked. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| COAS W1930 - Interdisciplinary Undergraduate Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topic varies. See department for content of current offering. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| COAS W3330 - Intensive Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Course to satisfy College of Arts and Sciences Intensive Writing requirement. This course must be taken in conjunction with one of the approved Intensive Writing sections. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| COAS W3980 - Internship In Professional Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Designed to provide opportunities for students to receive credit for a selected career-related full-time paid work experience. Evaluation by employer and faculty sponsor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
|
| COAS X1110 - Freshman Interest Group |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Designed to help Freshman Interest Groups (FIGs) students make the academic transition to Indiana University, this course helps students sharpen study skills; introduces campus academic, cultural, and student service resources; and assists students in integrating course content from FIGs courses.Typically Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| COAS X1120 - Traditions And Culture Of Indiana University |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the traditions and cultures of Indiana University. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| COAS X2080 - Basic Career Development |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Investigation of careers, the world of work, and the career planning process. The focal point is you and your goals. Provides assistance in developing practical, meaningful, and realistic insights into the nature of making a career choice in today's world. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| COGS Q3010 - Brain And Cognition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course asks a deceptively simple question: how do the neurons and areas of the brain work together to accomplish the vast range of human behaviors? To answer this question, we first cover the basics of brain neuroscience and then attempt to link these with a variety of human capacities studied by cognitive psychologists. We will look at areas such as: perception, attention, memory, learning through synaptic plasticity, language, motor control, and executive function. The course uses a problem-based learning approach that stresses realistic problems as a technique to organize the course materials. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| COLL E1030 - Topics In Arts And Humanities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| COLL E1050 - Tpcs Natural & Math Sci |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics in Natural and Mathematical Sciences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| COLL Q1750 - Introduction To The College |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is highly recommended for directly admitted freshman and transfer students. With guest speakers, campus visits, and online resources, students are introduced to valuable tools at Indiana University and taught how to use these resources most effectively. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| COLL Q2940 - Basic Career Development |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The topic of this course is basic career development. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| COLL S1030 - Freshman Seminar In Arts And Humanities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to college-level projects chosen from arts and humanities fields. Students will learn how scholars frame questions, propose answers, and assess the validity of competing approaches in a small-class experience with a faculty member. Writing and related skills are stressed. Topics will vary. Open only to freshmen. Credit given for only one of COLL S1030 or COLL E1030. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| COLL X1110 - Freshman Interest Group Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Freshman Interest Group Seminar. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| COLL X1120 - Traditions And Cultures Of Indiana University |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An on-line examination of the culture of a research university as told through the storied traditions of IU Bloomington. Students will learn about the history of American higher education by examining how the campus has changed since its 1820 founding-in terms of its demography, programs, and buildings. Certain unique treasures of IUB (the Gutenberg Bible, Little 500, the Indiana Memorial Union, the Kinsey Institute) will be used to illustrate issues related to
information technology, student activism, commercialization, and academic freedom. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| COM 10000 - Introduction To Communication Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This semester-long course will introduce students to many opportunities offered by the Department of Communication. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Presentation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| COM 10100 - Introduction To Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to introduce students to the study of human communication in a variety of contexts including interpersonal, group and organizational, rhetoric and persuasion, mass communication, and cultural studies. Students will learn a range of basic concepts and theories in communication, how to read communication research, and how to write using appropriate citation styles for the field of communication. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the breadth and complexity of the communication discipline.
2. Interpret and evaluate communication concepts.
3. Understand the broad goals of the discipline.
4. Understand and begin to speak the language of the communication discipline.
5. Understand and describe the paradigms of human communication.
6. Develop writing and research skills appropriate for advanced undergraduate work.
|
| COM 10200 - Introduction To Communication Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of approaches treating communication as an individual, functional activity and as a social, structuring activity. Covers definitions and models of communication, core processes (interpretations, sending, receiving), structures (language, nonverbal behavior), and key contexts (personal, organizational, public). Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| COM 10300 - The Freshman Seminar In Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course provides entry-level Communication majors with skills and materials deemed important to their ultimate success in Communications. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 11400 - Fundamentals Of Speech Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of communication theories as applied to speech; practical communicative experiences ranging from interpersonal communication and small group process through problem identification and solution in discussion to informative and persuasive speaking in standard speaker-audience situations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer. NOTE: Concurrent registration is not permitted for ENGL 10600 and COM 11400.
CTL:ICM 1103 Fundamentals Of Public Speaking
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division, GTC-Speaking & Listening, UC-Oral Communications
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| COM 12000 - Introduction To Communication Technology And Communication Fields |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This is the first of a series of three, one credit courses that all Communication majors at IPFW entering Fall 06 and after are required to take. The applied portion of this course will introduce students to technology and software that is desirable for communication professional. This course will also provide students with an overview of the general fields to which their degree will most likely lead them. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| COM 14000 - Introduction To Media Production |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to basic audio/visual production techniques and equipment including (but not limited to) basic camera functions, audio recording, lighting, digital editing, web design, and basic production positions and organizations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Be aware of and skillful in the use of new technologies relevant to your major.
2. Demonstrate a basic understanding of the terminology of mediated and public communication.
3. Identify and analyze the form, structure, and techniques of mediated or public texts in their entirety, and consider how they function in a larger context.
|
| COM 20100 - Introduction To Media Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to Media Studies introduces students to the various fields in Mass Media including (but not limited to) Digital Media, Film, Journalism, the Internet, Radio, and Television. This course will survey the basic principles, theories, and processes of each specialized area. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 20200 - Electronic Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Origin, development, nature, and function of radio and television in America. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 20300 - Communication Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a foundational course that introduces students to a wide range of communication theories in the areas of interpersonal and organizational communication, persuasion, rhetoric, mass media, and cultural studies. Students will read, evaluate, and synthesize communication research from the social scientific, interpretive, and critical paradigms. They will also learn how to write literature reviews using APA format. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify, describe and apply communication theories across the discipline’s traditions.
2. Be able to apply various theories to “real life” contexts and/or situations (i.e., personal examples, current events, television and film).
3. Identify the paradigms under which the theories belong.
4. Define epistemology and ontology and explain how they differ in the social scientific, interpretive, and critical paradigms.
5. Be able to locate communication research articles at the library or through the library’s website.
6. Identify the key elements of scholarly journal articles.
7. Accurately summarize scholarly journal articles.
8. Synthesize research on a given communication topic in form of a well-written literature review that could be the foundation for one’s own research project.
9. Be able to cite in APA format.
|
| COM 20400 - Critical Perspectives On Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to critical thinking and writing about communication. Draws on humanistic and qualitative traditions to help students learn and apply critical approaches to understanding communication.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Written Communication, UC-Written Communication
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| COM 21000 - Debating Public Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of argumentation as applied to public discourse. Lectures on logic and reasoning, library research methods and bibliography, identification and analysis of issues, construction and organization of cases, refutation and rebuttal, and the phrasing and delivery of the argumentative speech. Preparation of debate cases. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| COM 21100 - Practicum In Speech Communication Activities |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Practice and training in the theory and techniques of applied communication activities. May include projects in organizational communication or public relations, public presentations, or participation in competitive forensic events. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| COM 21200 - Approaches To The Study Of Interpersonal Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the basic characteristics of human communication and the theoretical and practical implications of these characteristics for various forms of oral communication. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:ICM 1101 Interpersonal Communication
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| COM 21300 - Voice And Diction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the contemporary theories of interpersonal communication, with particular focus on the implications of the theories for the process of interpersonal and intrapersonal communication. Investigation and comparative analysis of rhetorical theories, linguistic theories, behavioral theories, quantitative theories and psychological theories will be emphasized, as will be construction and analysis of models of communication. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 21400 - Comparative Theories Of Interpersonal Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the contemporary theories of interpersonal communication, with particular focus on the implications of the theories for the process of interpersonal and intrapersonal communication. Investigation and comparative analysis of rhetorical theories, linguistic theories and psychological theories will be emphasized, as will be construction and analysis of models of communications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 21600 - Communication Of American Political Values |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The Declaration of Independence, The Constitution of the United States, The Federalist Papers, A. Lincoln's "Gettysburg Address," and Martin Luther King's "I Have a Dream" each is a core statement of the values contained in the American political system. Each represents argumentation and persuasion for the values. We are all asked to judge such efforts. To prepare students to analyze and discover the values in each artifact, each will be required to master and apply one of the six methods of scholars who analyze persuasive messages. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| COM 21700 - Science Writing And Presentation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students learn to effectively communicate scientific and technical information both verbally and in writing to a variety of audiences. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Speaking & Listening, UC-Oral Communications
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| COM 22400 - Communicating In The Global Workplace |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This introductory course explores communication issues that arise in the global workplace. The course develops an appreciation of the relationship among culture, communication, and ways of organizing and doing business. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| COM 22500 - Introduction To Rhetoric And Social Influence |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of rhetoric as an agent of social change. Analysis of strategies and techniques of non-oratorical as well as oratorical forms of contemporary rhetorical situations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 22800 - Introduction To Communication Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to Communication Studies will introduce students to the various fields in the Communication discipline including (but not limited to) Interpersonal Communication, Marketing Communication, Organizational Communication, Performance Studies, Public Relations, Rhetoric, and Small Group Communication. This course will survey the basic principles, theories, and processes of each specialized area. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 23600 - Media And Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course surveys film, music, art, popular magazines, television, and other media in terms of their symbolic relationship to diverse cultural practices including among others, religion, romance, dance, sport, recreation, hobbies, and cuisine, and their connection to broader ethic, gender, and class cultural expressions. To understand how media represent, express, and contribute to contemporary culture practices, students will consider mass market novels, professional sports, museums, music videos, talk radio, Hollywood and independent film, narrowcast cable television, websites, and other mass media genre. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| COM 24000 - Introduction To Oral Interpretation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Oral interpretation of prose, poetry, and dramatic dialogue based on careful study of meaning and emotional content. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| COM 24200 - Introduction To Broadcast News |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course assists students in writing for broadcast journalism, ethics in journalism, and broadcast delivery training, and offers a chance for exposure to area television and radio journalists. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 24800 - Introduction To Media Criticism And Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to major critical approaches of media studies. Includes standard terminology of media analysis used to discuss form and technique of film, video, and audio productions. Instructor may require additional screening times outside scheduled class meeting times. No credit for both COM 24800 and COM 25100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| COM 25000 - Mass Communication And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the print, broadcast, and film media in their relationship and influence on society. Study topics include: mass communication theories, documentaries, commercialism, news media, media effects and control, feedback, educational broadcasting, and audience analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:ICM 1102 Introduction To Mass Communication
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
|
| COM 25100 - Communication, Information, And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to information and communication technologies, including media and computer-related technologies. Basic information and technical literacy skills are developed, while discussing fundamental concepts of mediated communication in 21st century contexts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Information Literacy, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Information Literacy, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Discuss implications of new technologies for individuals, institutions, and society.
2. Exercise basic information literacy skills through hands-on exercises involving new technologies.
3. Analyze impact of media technologies on communication behavior.
4. Write and make presentations that include new media technologies.
|
| COM 25200 - Writing For Mass Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Labor intensive course teaches basics of newspaper writing, broadcast writing, news releases, and online journalism. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| COM 25300 - Introduction To Public Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of public relations theory and practice from their origins to the present. From a communication perspective, the course examines public relations environments, audiences, and message strategies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| COM 25500 - Introduction To News Reporting And Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of journalistic writing for the mass media. Emphasis is on style, news reporting, news values, and story construction. Extensive practice in reporting and writing various types of news stories. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 25600 - Introduction To Advertising |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of commercial persuasion from colonial times to the era of mass communication. The course examines the structure of advertising messages, how they are adapted to specific audiences, and the social settings in which they occur. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| COM 25700 - Public Relations Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This class introduces students to a range of public relations techniques, with a focus on writing. From press releases to new media, this class offers practice and feedback on how to use common public relations tools. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Match appropriate PR techniques to a given situation.
2. Write a press release correct in form, content, grammar and spelling.
3. Compose a SWOT analysis for an actual organization.
4. Use at least two new media technologies to create PR messages.
|
| COM 26100 - Introduction To Digital Video Production |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic production principles and practices. Emphasis on preplanning and conceptualizing skills in addition to practical production techniques. Required for admission to all television production courses. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| COM 29000 - Special Topics In Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics will vary.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| COM 30000 - Introduction To Communication Research Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the development and application of historical, critical, and empirical research methods pertinent to communication problems. Fundamental concepts of problem identification, sampling, surveys, historical sources, critical models, reliability and validity of both measurement and research design in communication research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
|
| COM 30100 - Applied Communication Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students in applied Communication Research will be exposed to specific communication research methodologies in more depth and detail than possible in the introductory communication research course, COM 30000. Students in Applied Communication Research will undertake research projects which apply research concepts and methods obtained in COM 30000 and expand their knowledge of the art and practice of communication research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 30101 - Political Economy Of Global Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Political economy of global media studies the structures and practices of media and the functions and uses of the global culture. Media structures, production and programming norms, and diverse regional and international soci-cultural trends and identified. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify the primary and secondary global media firms’ ownership structures and production practices, including distribution of programming and any national regulations.
2. Identify the most popular global programming, including content genre, themes, and technical characteristics.
3. Explain the cultural variations of popular global media programming, including secondary media productions and their audience reception.
4. Outline and describe the history of global media growth and trends from the 1800s through 2010, including their economic, political and cultural contexts and constraints.
5. Anaylize a specific example of global media, including its structure, regional cultural variation and its demonstrable social and cultural effects.
|
| COM 30102 - Media Globalization And Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Media globalization and development explores multiple theories in international developmental history and cultural practice from a media perspective. Media are studied as both the means to development and an industry of development, globally, and nationally. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify leading theories in international development as applied to media practices.
2. Identify media functions and participation in specific cases of national development, e.g. Latin America and Asia.
3. Explain the role of media as an industry contributing to the production and organization of social and cultural life in several regions, e.g., Latin America and Asia.
4. Identify and evaluate competing claims and evidence for media contributions to emerging democratic reforms in several regions, e.g., Eastern Europe and Latin America.
5. Identify the assumptions and practices of business communication as applied to international and intercultural relations.
|
| COM 30200 - Publications Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the design, layout and production of various documents using personal computers. Emphasis is given to principles of publication design and page makeup, typography, and the use of personal computers in business publishing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 30300 - Intercultural Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the complex relationship between culture and communication in a variety of interpersonal, group, organizational, and computer-mediated settings. Application of theory and research to development of the knowledge, attitudes, and skills associated with intercultural communication competence. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Lafayette
|
| COM 30400 - Quantitative Methods For Communication Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the development and application of quantitative research methods pertinent to communication problems. Fundamental concepts of problem identification, reliability and validity of both measurement and research design, and statistical analyses of data. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| COM 30500 - News Editing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of, and practice in, the fundamentals of editing copy for and display of news in the mass media. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 30600 - Advanced News Reporting And Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study of, and practice in, methods of journalistic research and presentation; preparation of in-depth news stories based on student research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 30700 - Written And Oral Communication For Engineers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course focuses on written and oral communication specifically for the environment, with special attention given to purpose, organization, audience analysis, and appropriate situational protocol. Written work emphasizes technical reports, technical descriptions, research skills, principles of document design, collaborative writing, and routine correspondence. Oral work emphasizes project presentations, conference planning and leadership, and small group dynamics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 30800 - Applied Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course explores the varied fields of communication. Students will be exposed to varied fields where they may utilize their degree. Students will also learn and practice job-seeking skills including job search, resume and cover letter preparation, and interviewing protocol and skill. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| COM 30900 - Visual Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Visual language is universal. This course will allow students to define visual language through investigating various visual mediums such as still images, film and television. Art elements of color, texture, space, composition, and design will be addressed. Various symbols and visual cues used to communicate messages will also be discussed. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 31000 - Family Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The application of theories of interpersonal communication to family life. Emphasis on feedback, empathy, and trust as contributing factors to effective communication within families. A case study approach is used. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| COM 31100 - Copy Editing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of, and practice in, copyreading and headline writing. Laboratory practice includes copy editing on video-display terminals. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| COM 31200 - Rhetoric In The Western World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An explanation of major theoretical and philosophical concepts concerning rhetoric; the relationships between rhetoric and political, social, and personal decisions are explored. Ancient and modern authors will be read. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| COM 31300 - Introduction To Health Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course addresses health communication theory and practice. Topics may include health campaigns, provider-patient interactions, communication within health care organizations, ways in which personal relationships impact and are impacted by health issues, support groups, illness narratives, and mass communication influences on health. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and summarize theories related to health communication scholarship: Understand key principles in developing and evaluating health campaigns.
2. Identify communication skills needed for effective provider-patient interactions.
3. Synthesize research on the intersection of health communication and interpersonal relationships.
4. Identify communication issues and developments in health organizations; explain the role of communication in the social support process.
5. Explain health from a social constructionist perspective; identify ways in which the media influence health.
6. Understand the impact of culture and gender on health communication.
|
| COM 31400 - Advanced Presentational Speaking |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of a marked degree of skill in the composition and delivery of various types of speeches including presentations in corporate board rooms, orientation meetings, banquet halls, public forms. Special emphasis on speeches related to the student's major vocational area. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
|
| COM 31500 - Speech Communication Of Technical Information |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The organization and presentation of information of a practical technical nature. Emphasis is placed upon the study, preparation, and use of audiovisual materials in such presentations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| COM 31600 - Controversy In American Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of selected debates in major American controversies of social significance. Critical examination of the arguments, personalities, and oral and written strategies employed in public debates on political, moral, and social issues. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| COM 31700 - Digital Storytelling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the theory and practice of digital storytelling and teaches students how to use digital tools to gather audio and visual material to tell a journalistic story across multiple media platforms. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Be a competent reader, speaker, writer, and listener.
2. Be aware of and skillful in the use of new technologies relevant to the field of journalism.
3. Think critically, creatively and independently.
4. Understand concepts and apply theories in the use and presentation of images and information.
5. Demonstrate an understanding of professional ethical principles and work ethically in pursuit of truth, accuracy, fairness and diversity.
6. Write correctly and clearly in forms and styles appropriate for the communications professions, audiences and purposes they serve.
7. Critically evaluate their own work and that of others for accuracy, fairness, clarity and appropriate style and grammatical correctness.
|
| COM 31800 - Principles Of Persuasion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Persuasion and its effects, ranging from individual influences to societal impacts. Various perspectives and models of persuasion are examined, including classical and modern approaches. Both theoretical and pragmatic considerations are introduced. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. List the major areas of study in the field of persuasion.
2. Analyze and critique persuasive techniques.
3. Apply theories of persuasion to explain everyday circumstances.
|
| COM 31900 - The Rhetorical Tradition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A historical survey of major rhetorical theory as it relates to the development of Western civilization, with major emphasis on Aristotle and the New Rhetoric. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 32000 - Small Group Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of group thinking and problem-solving methods; participation in, and evaluation of, committee, and informal discussion groups. Focus on the roles, networks, and messages employed by small group communicators. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| COM 32101 - Contextual Broadcasting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis and production techniques typical of television and web based content across genres such as sports, fashion, and entertainment. Offers opportunities for the creation of production content in specific genres. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Be aware and skillful in the use of new technologies relevant to your major.
2. Critically analyze media and public communication.
3. Demonstrate a basic understanding of the terminology of mediated and public communication.
4. Identify and analyze the from, structure, and techniques of mediated or public texts in their entirely, and consider how they function in a larger context.
|
| COM 32200 - Leadership In Organization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This program serves as the foundation for developing core leadership skills. Focusing on the dynamics of leadership development within a personal, academic, community, and organizational context, students will learn to apply basic leadership skills through a series of experiential learning sessions and lectures. These core skill areas include written, oral and inter personal communication; processiong experiences into practical application; understanding leadership styles and roles; human behavior; on-going self-assessment; diversity as a value; basic technical competencies; and effective life/time management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 32300 - Business And Professional Speaking |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of oral communication problems and responsibilities in the business-organizational environment. Participation in problem-solving from investigation and informative speaking to advocacy and parliamentary debate. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| COM 32400 - Introduction To Organizational Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to fundamental concepts and basic research related to communication behavior in organizational settings. Units cover message processing, leadership communication, communication climates, communication training, and communication audits. Students participate in an organizational simulation in some sections. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Use the vocabulary of concepts and theories related to organizational communication.
2. List historical, current, and future communication issues facing organizations.
3. Apply theoretical perspectives and concepts to organizational communication situations and settings.
4. Reflect on their own experience with organizations.
|
| COM 32500 - Interviewing: Principles And Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and practice of methods in selected interview settings: informational, employment, and persuasive. Emphasis on communication between two persons, questioning techniques, and the logical and psychological bases of interpersonal persuasion. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| COM 32600 - Speechwriting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. By studying the rhetorical and performative elements for creating a successful speech, students will learn various speechwriting strategies that can be applied in political or organizational contexts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 32700 - International Communications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the historical development of international communication for trade and diplomacy to the globalization of media markets and media models in news and entertainment. Modernization, developmental, dependency, hegemony, free flow of information, political economy, and other historical, administrative, and critical perspectives will also be discussed. Contemporary international media practices, including foreign direct investment, cultural hybridity, and contraflow. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| COM 32800 - Diversity At Work: A Rhetorical Approach |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces students to theories and experiences related to issues dealing with both diversity in the workplace and diversity at work to change or influence the world. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| COM 32900 - History Of The Mass Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of Anglo-American press traditions, including the development of American mass media within socio-cultural environments. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| COM 33000 - Theories Of Mass Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of mass communication theories and theorists. Readings and discussion of McLuhan, Lippman, De Fleur, Lazarsfeld, Schramm, Stephenson, and other significant contributors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| COM 33100 - Audio Production |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic principles of producing, directing, and writing for radio. Treats program types, production methods, techniques of the sound studio, principles of directing radio programs, and laboratory practice in production and direction. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
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| COM 33200 - Television Production |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic principles of producing, writing, and directing for television. Treats program types and television criticism, and explores creative treatment of visual, artistic, and nonverbal elements of communication in television. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Utilize the terminology used in studio production settings.
2. Conceptualize a studio production.
3. Script a studio production using correct industry format.
4. Develop critical viewing/listening skills and analytical abilities necessary to evaluate the content of video productions.
5. Demonstrate the proper operation of studio production equipment.
6. Work constructively as a member of a production team.
7. Produce a television studio program.
8. Direct a television studio program from a prewritten script.
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| COM 33300 - Film Production |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic theory and techniques of motion-picture production. Viewing and evaluation of films illustrating a variety of film techniques. Production experiences in filming, scripting, editing, sound recording, and production planning. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| COM 33400 - Journalism For The Electronic Mass Media |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The development and practice of electronic journalism with projects relating to straight news, feature reports, commentary, editorial, interview, and documentary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
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| COM 33501 - Interviewing For Media Production |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced theory and technique in interviewing in television and film production contexts. This course requires students to focus on research, development, news gathering, and production technique in the conducting of interviews over the phone, in the field, on-camera, and on-set. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Critically analyze media and public communication.
2. Demonstrate a basic understanding of the terminology of mediated and public communication.
3. Identify and analyze the form, structure, and techniques of mediated or public texts in their entirety, and consider how they function in a larger context.
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| COM 33600 - Advertising In The Electronic Mass Media |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and practice of advertising as applied to the electronic mass media. Emphasizes the adaptation of advertising messages to government regulation, client, audience, product, and particular medium. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| COM 33700 - Advanced Digital Video Production |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides experience in writing program proposals and scripts, taping with small-format television equipment, and audio and video editing for various program formats. Special attention to editing, theory and technique, aesthetic considerations, and institutional and community cable outlets. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
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| COM 33800 - Documentary Or Experimental Film And Video |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of experimental or actuality ("documentary") film and video, with emphasis on structural and technical innovation, production considerations, and historical development. May be repeated with a different title for a maximum of 6 credits. Additional screening times will be required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
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| COM 34300 - Fundamentals Of Oral Interpretation |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of basic theories of oral interpretation including the analysis and presentation of literature. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| COM 34700 - Radio And Television Performance |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course addresses the relationship between the producer, the director, and the talent in a production situation. Practice in performing for radio and television, as well as auditioning talent is the focus of this class. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| COM 35000 - Intercultural Communication |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the communication processes used by individuals from various cultures. The class will explore the current theories in intercultural communication which demonstrate strategies for interacting with diverse cultures and ideas. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. This course will promote an understanding of diversity, teaching skills they will use in various contexts.
2. Students will become sensitized to other cultures and learn about communication processes that exemplify these cultures.
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| COM 35100 - Mass Communication Ethics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of various ethical approaches applied to situations confronting contemporary mass communicators, including misrepresentation in newsgathering, protection of sources, suppression of information, reporting of terror and violence, pressure from management and advertisers, and reporter bias. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| COM 35200 - Mass Communication Law |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of Anglo-American traditions and trends as well as current American conditions of the laws of libel, privacy, fair comment and criticism, privilege, property rights, and copyright as such factors affect the print journalist and the broadcaster. Emphasis is on existing state and federal regulations and precedents. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| COM 35300 - Problems In Public Relations |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Approaches to problems in public relations as they occur in industry, government, education, social agencies, and other institutions. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| COM 35400 - Introduction To Health Communication |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of theory and research in health communication, including interaction between patients and providers, communication in health care organizations, health care campaigns, and cultural meanings of health and illness. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and describe the role and importance of health communication theories and concepts.
2. Describe the diversity of health communication research and practice.
3. Understand the ways that effective communication can be used to promote health.
4. Understand the significance of health literacy in health communication.
5. Explore health communication targeted to interpersonal, organizational, community, and social perspectives.
6. Develop critical thinking skills by engaging health communication issues.
7. Create a base of knowledge for further study of health communication.
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| COM 35600 - Problems In Advertising |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Approaches to problems in advertising as they involve the planning, creation, and evaluation of commercial messages. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| COM 35800 - Specialized Reporting |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of, and practice in, methods of journalistic research and presentation; preparation of in-depth newspaper stories based on student research. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the purpose of specialized reporting.
2. Conduct research and gather information responsibly.
3. Edit and evaluate story content carefully.
4. Enhance your research, writing and production skills through writing and producing specialized stories for multiple platforms.
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| COM 35900 - Public Affairs Reporting |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of, and practice in, reporting local and state news, including activities of the state legislature, local school boards, the courts, and the impact of national and international events on local affairs. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| COM 36500 - Communication And Aging |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of communication with and among the elderly, within the contexts of family, social networks, and social and health providers. Effects of communication on the aged and the perception of aging will be discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| COM 36800 - Sociolinguistic Study Of African American English |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (ANTH 36800, AUSL 36800, ENGL 36800, LC 36800, IDIS 37800, LING 36800) A study of the history, structure, uses, and educational concerns of African American English in African American speech communities and the U.S. culture at large. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| COM 37100 - Health Communication |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of the communication competencies needed by health care professionals (doctors, dentists, nurses, social workers, therapists, etc.) in the performance of their health care tasks. The course will emphasize helper-helpee interviewing, verbal and nonverbal skills, group interaction, intercultural communication, health care organizations, and therapeutic communication. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| COM 37200 - Communication In Relationships |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of communication in personal relationships (including dating and marital relationships, friendships, and families) and professional relationships (including co-worker and supervisor-supervisee relationships and relationships in specific professions, such as doctor-patient and attorney-client.). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
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| COM 37300 - Self-Presentation And Social Image |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of history, research, and theory in impression management. People frequently 'package' information about themselves to influence others to draw the 'right' conclusions about them. This course examines how people use interpersonal communication to manage how others perceive them. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| COM 37400 - Social Interaction Skills: Assessment And Development |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of several major communication skills and procedures for their development. Focus is on skill measurement, methods of enhancement, assessment of training programs, and personal skill development. Skills examined include those for conversing, managing conflict, providing support, and influencing. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| COM 37500 - Conflict And Negotiation |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course surveys theory and research focused on the role of communication in conflict and negotiation, and helps students develop skills needed to manage conflict effectively in their personal and professional relationships. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
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| COM 37600 - Communication And Gender |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Course is based on the assumption that studies of gender and communication are intertwined. Focus is on communication processes that create symbols of gender and how those processes recreate the meanings of gender in the lives of individuals and groups. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| COM 38100 - Gender And Feminist Studies In Communication |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the ways in which communication constructs and maintains our conceptions of gender. It explores different approaches to the study of gender and feminist issues in public, organizational, and mass communication. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| COM 39000 - Special Topics In Communication |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics will vary. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| COM 40100 - Rhetorical Criticism |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course traces the major developments in rhetorical criticism and introduces students to the major critical methods used to analyze rhetorical texts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
After completing the course, students will be able to:
Articulate the major forms of criticism and issues in the development of the rhetorical tradition in Western culture;
Produce and deliver sound rhetorical analyses of a variety of rhetorical texts;
Form judgments about the significance of rhetoric for understanding social and political issues as well as the value of citizens understanding the functioning of rhetoric.
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| COM 40101 - Nonverbal Communication |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines theories, concepts, and principles related to nonverbal communication. Topics will include nonverbal codes, such as space and territory, body movements, vocal cues, and physical appearance, as well as the functions of nonverbal communication, including emotional expression deception, power and persuasion, expressing intimacy, and impression formation. The course emphasizes both theory and practical applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and describe the various nonverbal codes and explain the functions of nonverbal communication.
2. List, explain, and apply nonverbal communication theories.
3. Explain the socio-cultural factors that influence nonverbal communication.
4. Explain the individual and biological factors that influence nonverbal communication.
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| COM 40200 - Dark Side Of Interpersonal Communication |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The dark side of communication explores topics in the study of interpersonal relationships that are deemed dysfunctional or pathological. The course is meant to initiate a dialogue and create an understanding about the causes and consequences of the darker aspects of relationships. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to explain the findings from the major areas of study of the dark side of international communications.
2. Students will be able to connect these topics to current interpersonal theories.
3. Students will write an in-depth review and application of one of the topics in the study of the dark side of interpersonal communication.
4. Students will be able to generate meaningful dialogue that demonstrates the distinction between functional and dysfunctional communication patterns in interpersonal relationships.
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| COM 40300 - Communication Ethics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Through research and discussion, students will develop an understanding of the ethical issues confronting the mass media and will formulate a framework which can be used for resolving ethical questions in their professional work. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| COM 40400 - Media And Globalization |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course studies the major debates over world communities with cultural products such as media and pop culture. Applying theoretical approaches to transnational media, students will explore the historical and social contexts of media globalization. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn the major critical debates surrounding media and globalization.
2. Develop an understanding of the complex cultural issues related to globalization.
3. Understand the multifaceted nature of globalization as social, economic and political phenomena.
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| COM 40500 - The Rhetoric Of Women's Rights |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of the major arguments and persuasive techniques used in the American women's movement and continuing through the current struggle for equal rights. Included will be major speeches as well as non-oratorical forms of rhetorical messages. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| COM 40600 - Web Production |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces students to basic theoretical principles of web production and the process of creating web sites. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| COM 40700 - Introduction To New Media/Social Media Production |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An exploration of how new technologies such as Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest, Soundslides, blogs, and audio and video are influencing the dissemination of information to mass audiences and correct practices such technologies. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to use new technologies to professionally disseminate information to mass audiences.
2. Students will be able to determine which technologies are most suitable for various messages.
3. Students will be able to examine current uses of new technologies by mass media.
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| COM 40800 - News Magazine Production |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students plan, write and produce a weekly video news magazine to be aired on Boiler TV. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| COM 40900 - Video Journalism |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students plan, write and produce a weekly news magazine to be aired on Boiler TV. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Discover, conceptualize, shoot and edit stories appropriate for a news magazine.
2. Define and describe basic television terms and concepts and apply them in a production environment.
3. Evaluate the content, production elements and overall effectiveness of television news scripts.
4. Operate basic digital electronic newsgathering equipment provided for this course.
5. Write scripts, shoot and edit non-linear basic television news stories on digital equipment using Final Cut Pro.
6. Demonstrate a working knowledge of television production terms and procedures.
7. Submit usable video and sound bites to professional newscasts.
8. Create a professional-quality resume reel necessary for gaining employment as a TV journalist.
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| COM 41000 - Gender Roles And Communication |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to investigate the relationship between gender roles and communication; i.e., how gender roles are socially constructed, maintained, and enacted. The course also explores gender differences, similarities and gender issues in personal and organizational contexts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| COM 41100 - Communication And Social Networks |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the growing area of networks. The class focuses on understanding how social structure influences our everyday life by examining the ways individuals, groups, and entities are tied together. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. To understand the foundation of social network theory and analysis.
2. Critically read work in the area of networks.
3. Learn how networks are related to the social phenomena of your own personal interest.
4. Gather basic understanding of gathering network data.
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| COM 41101 - Introduction To Writing In Health Sciences |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (ENGL 41101). This course provides an introduction to four areas of writing in the health sciences: patient education materials, pharmaceutical documentation, medical editing, and medical journalism. The course will involve lectures, guest speakers, team work, and a real world project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn to write patient education materials, pharmaceutical documentation, medical editing, and medical journalism.
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| COM 41200 - Theories Of Human Interaction |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An exploration and critique of major theories of human interaction in a variety of contexts; consideration of language, nonverbal behavior, cognition, emotion, social perception, and social relations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| COM 41401 - Multimedia Design And Production |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Multimedia Design and Production is an advanced course that requires students to integrate multimedia storytelling techniques into interactive projects, including audio, photo and video presentations, as well as other forms of technology used in the field of journalism. During the capstone project, students will develop an increased understanding of how digital storytelling both impacts the narrative and expands it into a more interactive, user-driven approach. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Think critically, creatively and independently.
2. Understand concepts and apply theories in the use and presentation of images and information.
3. Be aware of and skillful in the use of new technologies relevant to the field of journalism.
4. Write and produce content correctly and clearly in forms and styles appropriate for the communications professions, audiences and purposes they serve.
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| COM 41500 - Discussion Of Technical Problems |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of speech communication related to interpersonal and group discussions on technical topics and problems; practice in using these modes in situations typically encountered by technologists. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| COM 41600 - United States Politics And The Media |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the roles and influences of the mass media on American politics generally and with particular emphasis on election campaigns and the evolving political culture of the U.S. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| COM 41700 - Training And Development In Organizations |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to enhance student understanding of the design, development, presentation and evaluation of organizational training programs. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Conduct a needs assessment.
2. Develop learning objectives.
3. Design training modules for specific audiences.
4. Deliver training modules through different mediums.
5. Evaluate training programs.
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| COM 41800 - Communication And Gender |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An exploration of how men and women differ in the communication behavior by examination of an array of communication concepts and contexts. An exploration of gender differences as developed through our perceptual processes, our socialization processes, and our communication processes. To provide the student a better understanding and awareness of the gender differences in order to improve combination behaviors and to enable better understanding of why effective communication between men and women is often difficult to accomplish. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 41900 - Judgment And Decision Making |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to foster an understanding, critique and analysis on issues related to judgment and decision processes. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. To encourage the application of theories of judgment and decision making to applied decision contexts.
2. To explore the interplay between communication and decision-making theories.
3. To acquire some practical, general skills for decision-making that are useful in everyday life and work contexts.
|
| COM 42000 - Introduction To Organizational Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of the communication concepts and practices related to the function and success of organizations. Formal and informal channels will be analyzed on the basis of use, source content, potency and trustworthiness. Readings and analyses will focus on goals, reliability and applicability appropriate of organizational settings. Types of organizational settings. Types of organizations to be studied will include industrial giants, governmental agencies, social and educational administrative bodies, and formal task groups. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 42100 - Media Genres |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics varies. Analysis of typical genres in film and television, such as horror, melodrama, westerns, science fiction, situation comedies, etc. Problems of general description or definition; themes and conventions; iconography peculiar to given genres. May be repeated with a different topic for a maximum of six credits. Additional screening times will be required.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| COM 42200 - Women, Men And Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the processes by which gender is constructed in the mass communication media. Students will be asked to consider how the technical, economic, and political constraints and capabilities of the media construct images of gender for audiences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| COM 42300 - Leadership, Communication And Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores leadership from a communication perspective. It examines topics such as leadership styles, leading change, influencing others, emotional intelligence, burnout, and engagement. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to assess leadership styles.
2. Students will examine the relationship between leaders and followers in organizations.
3. Students will critique the literature in the area of communication and leadership.
|
| COM 42500 - Rhetorical Criticism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comparative study of the writings on traditional and contemporary rhetorical criticism. Students will have an opportunity to describe, analyze, interpret, and evaluate persuasive discourse. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 42600 - Identity And Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Identity and Communication explores communication processes and strategies related to race, ethnicity, gender, class, sexuality, international, and liminal identity. The course will focus on identity intersections and how these intersections affect our understanding of communication. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. This course will promote an understanding of diversity, teaching skills they will use in various contexts.
2. Students will become sensitized to other cultures and learn about communication processes that exemplify these cultures.
|
| COM 42700 - Careers, Communication Issues And Strategies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the nature of career from a variety of definitions and strategies for employability, objective or external and subjective or psychological success, entrepreneurship, and advancement in corporate and not-for-profit contexts. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. To introduce students to the nature of, current trends in, and projections for contemporary careers and work in the United States and across the globe.
2. To explore communication approaches to career definitions, forms, metaphors, and values so that students can distinguish among different models/theories/concepts of careers and evaluate underlying assumptions, language, and outcomes for themselves and others.
3. To increase students’ awareness of psychological, sociological, human resources management, management, and alternative approaches to career development and strategies.
4. To enhance students’ research, analysis, writing, and presentational skills.
5. To utilize research to enhance students’ career strategies now and throughout their careers.
|
| COM 42801 - Communication Consulting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the consulting methods for communication problems in organizational settings. Development of analysis, intervention, and training skills used in applying communication theory to organizational practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the role communication consultants play in organizations.
2. Understand common organizational communication problems and techniques used to address them.
3. Analyze a communication situation and design an appropriate intervention.
4. Facilitate active learning techniques commonly used in training.
|
| COM 42900 - Advertising Campaigns |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasizes the preparation of a complete advertising campaign for a business or non-profit organization. The student will be able to integrate marketing research and segmentation, media, and promotion plans, strategy, creative, and presentation in a unified campaign to serve a local or national organization. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| COM 43001 - Documentary Production |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced theory and techniques specific to documentary production. Course offers opportunities for both the study and the production of documentary content. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Critically analyze media and public communication.
2. Demonstrate a basic understanding of the terminology of mediated and public communication.
3. Identify and analyze instances of the interdependent relations between media and society.
4. Identify and analyze the form, structure, and techniques of mediated or public texts in their entirety, and consider how they function in a larger context.
|
| COM 43100 - Practicum In Radio |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Assigned radio production for the advanced student only; usually, but not necessarily, involving assigned work at a professional radio media installation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| COM 43200 - Practicum In TV |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Assigned television production for the advanced student only; usually, but not necessarily, involving assigned work at a professional television media installation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| COM 43300 - Practicum In Film |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Assigned film production for the advanced student only; usually, but not necessarily, involving assigned work at a professional film media installation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| COM 43400 - Practicum In Radio and Television |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students engage in Independent Study projects and actual production of a television program under the direction of a professor or Purdue Calumet Television manager. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| COM 43500 - Communication And Emerging Technologies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Both historical and contemporary perspectives of the reciprocal influence of new and changing technologies and the processes and practices of communication. The impact of print, telegraph, telephone, radio, and television will be surveyed, along with cable systems, direct broadcast satellites, and videotext. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| COM 43600 - Script Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of forms and materials suitable for the electronic mass media; practice in selection, adaptation, and organization of program materials. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| COM 43700 - Performance Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Performance Practicum extends performance knowledge and skills acquired in COM 34300, Fundamentals of Oral Interpretation. Students will participate as scriptors, directors, and performers in a campus and community performances. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 43900 - Focus Group Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In Focus Group Research, students will learn when to use and how to conduct this specific method of qualitative inquiry. Through theory and practice, this course will provide the information necessary for students to conduct focus groups in organizational academic contexts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 44001 - Rhetoric Of Popular Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the idea of popular culture as a predominately rhetorical/persuasive force in our everyday lives. This course will cover a diversity of cultural forms including: literature, film, music, art, theatre, social movements, politics, economics, sports, celebrity, and more. Students will learn rhetorical cultural theories that will equip them to be more conscious of, understand more completely, and accept or resist the forces of popular culture in cultural, economic, political, and social contexts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the rhetorical dimensions of American popular culture.
2. Describe, interpret, and evaluate everyday encounters of popular culture influences.
3. Understand and apply rhetorical theory to popular culture texts.
4. Engage a critical, self-reflexive analysis of how popular culture informs our personal, social, and cultural identity formation, including complex identity negotiation of race, class, sex, gender, and sexuality.
|
| COM 44100 - Advanced Television Production |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An emphasis on remote television production and linear editing. Students will produce, direct, and edit various programs, which will be suitable for airing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 44200 - Problems In Television Directing And Producing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A studio in which students address problems encountered in both dramatic and nondramatic formats as they write, produce, and direct programs during the semester. Emphasis on organizational skills, program analysis, and aesthetic judgment. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| COM 44300 - Advertising Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to advertising media planning in traditional and new media to creatively and effectively reach targeted prospects. Attention is given to media characteristics, media terminology, scheduling, testing, and buying efficiencies. Included is the use of syndicated media research and development of media plans. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| COM 44401 - Nonlinear Editing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced theory and technique in editing for media production across fiction and nonfiction content. Viewing and criticism of production techniques in a variety of contexts as well as experiences developing projects in post-production. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Be aware of and skillful in the use of new technologies relevant to your major.
2. Critically analyze media and public communication.
3. Identify and analyze the form, structure, and techniques of mediated or public texts in their entirety, and consider how they function in a larger context.
|
| COM 44500 - Television Editing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the history of editing and the practical application of current editing techniques. Students will learn to apply both analog and digital non-linear editing techniques to class assignments. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 44600 - Advertising Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course considers advertising from the perspective of managers and practitioners responsible for identifying and solving the advertising problems of a business. The course emphasizes the application of concepts, such as the planning of advertising strategy, the execution of target marketing, budgeting, creative development and media decisions, with the goal of developing integrated marketing communications campaigns. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 44700 - The Television Documentary |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study and application of principles of documentary television formats. Students will research an appropriate topic for documentary treatment and produce that program during the semester. Documentary formats examined include news, biographical, ethnographic, and documentary drama. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| COM 44800 - Applied Mass Media Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Through an examination of current research in mass media, Applied Mass Media Research will provide students with the necessary tools to conduct and critique research that pertains specifically to the mass media. Students will learn how to research a mass media related issue. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| COM 45100 - Feature Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of magazine staff organization, market analysis, and editorial content. Study of, and practice in, the writing of a variety of nonfiction materials for magazines. Emphasis is on the adaptation of topics and presentations to editorial policies and reader groups. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn to write a variety of nonfiction materials, the adaptation of topics and presentation, and about editorial policies and reader groups.
|
| COM 45200 - Practicum In Journalism |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Assigned projects in journalism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| COM 45300 - Reporting Of Science News |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of, and practice in, the techniques of gathering and reporting news of scientific developments to the general public through the examination of samples of science news and regular reporting exercises. Attention given to professional demands made of science reporters. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| COM 45600 - Advertising Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The theory and practice of copy writing in various advertising contexts. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| COM 46000 - Advanced Public Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Research design and implementation skills applied by students individually and in groups to actual business communication problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 46200 - Advanced Newswriting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Combines practical experience with classroom learning. Students will work 10-12 hours weekly at the daily local city newspaper and attend a one hour class weekly, during which their writing assignments are critiqued and readings discussed and applied to work assignments. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| COM 46300 - Mass Media Criticism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Utilizing the current media criticism theories and models, students will learn how to critique a variety of media genres. Students will examine the social and political messages inherent in media messages. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| COM 46500 - Visual Aesthetics In Television and Film |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the visual aesthetics of television and film. Topics covered are picture composition, lighting, acting, directing, continuity, cinematography, editing, story line, and costume. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 47000 - Women In The Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focusing on the contributions made by women in newspaper, television, film and performance, this course will explore how women are shaping societal and cultural values. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 47100 - Communicating Peace |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the processes by which peace and/or violence are constructed at all communicative levels (intrapersonally, ideologically, and internationally) through face-to-face and mediated communication channels. Students gain an understanding of how we use and misuse communication processes to create peace and/or violence and learning skills for communicating peace. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| COM 47500 - Identity In Film |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Identity in Film explores the construction of race, ethnicity, gender, class, sexuality, international, and liminal identity in films created by an individual of that particular identity. The course examines identity and communication processes through the sensibility of the film’s director or writer. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. This course will promote an understanding of diversity, teaching skills they will use in various contexts.
2. Students will become sensitized to other cultures and learn about communication processes that exemplify these cultures.
|
| COM 48000 - Senior Seminar In Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is designed as a capstone for the communication major. It will require students to demonstrate proficiency in oral, written, and mediated communication. Students will synthesize their knowledge of communication theory and content. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| COM 48900 - Research Experience In Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course grants credit to students who participate in structured research projects within the Brian Lamb School of Communication. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain understanding of how communication research is conducted.
2. Students will receive hands-on experience in areas such as data collection, data analysis, interpretive skills, or research writing.
3. Students considering graduate studies will gain insight into whether or not they want to pursue such a direction.
4. Students will develop relationships with faculty members that might lead to mentoring, advice, and/or letters of recommendation.
5. Students will gain experience that might enhance their prospects for graduate studies.
|
| COM 49000 - Internship In Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Experiential, supervised training in public relations, journalism, telecommunication, oral interpretation, speech education, organizational communication, or public communication. Usually given in junior or senior year. Usually gives two credits per internship experience. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will demonstrate ability to apply concepts learned in the classroom to real-world working environments and to develop a realistic view of the workplace through internships.
|
| COM 49100 - Special Topics In Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Intensive study of selected topics, varying from semester to semester, from the literature or practice of communication. Course content will be drawn from areas not dealt with in the regular curriculum and may include such topics as photojournalism, economic reporting, and campaign communication. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
Learning Objectives:
1.Students will develop understanding of a specialized area of communication and its common applications.
|
| COM 49300 - Interdisciplinary Undergraduate Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An undergraduate seminar devoted to an interdisciplinary examination of social, economic, political, and intellectual movements using the faculty resources of the participating departments. Subject matter will vary. Each offering of the seminar will be approved by a committee of department heads from the sponsoring departments. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| COM 49500 - Special Topics In Public Relations And Rhetorical Advocacy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In-depth study of a particular area of public relations and rhetorical advocacy. Students read, discuss, and write about contemporary applications of public relations, advertising and rhetoric. Possible offerings include Integrated Marketing Communication, Persuasion and Social Protest, Communication Campaigns. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| COM 49600 - Special Topics In Corporate Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course offers students the opportunity to explore in-depth, thorough readings, lectures and written assignments on current issue in corporate communication. Topics may include diversity in the workplace, organizational assessments, or spirituality in organizations. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| COM 49700 - Special Topics In Mass Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Offers students the opportunity to explore in-depth, thorough readings, lectures and written assignments, a current topic or trend in Media, Technology and Society. Possible offerings include Media and Social Change, Online Communities, and Technology and International Communication. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| COM 49800 - Practicum In Human Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides students within the Human Relations major an opportunity for an internship or directed research. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop researchable questions about interpersonal communication.
2. Increase familiarity and comfort with different data collection methods for laboratory and field settings.
3. Increase familiarity with widely used analytic approaches in the social sciences.
4. Discern the epistemological groundings for methods choices.
5. Discern personal preferences for conducting research.
6. Articulate the challenges of designing and implementing laboratory and field studies.
7. Explain the methodological choices for practicum projects in terms of epistemological commitments and practical constraints.
8. Explain findings in terms of relevant theory.
9. Articulate directions for future research and/or make practical recommendations for improving interpersonal communication in the context of the internship.
10. Write a research report of findings from the empirical project or field experience.
11. Make oral presentation to faculty and/or community and professional partners concerning core findings.
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| COM 49900 - Capstone Seminar In Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Communication 49900 is the capstone course for communication majors. This course will provide students with the opportunity to: complete and present their academic portfolios; demonstrate proficiency in oral, written, and mediated communication skills; synthesize what they have learned in the degree program; and determine how they might apply their knowledge and skills to both professional and personal lifelong learning situations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in oral, written, and mediated communication.
2. Demonstrate knowledge of core communication theories and concepts.
3. Synthesize and connect knowledge with application.
4. Create electronic portfolio that synthesizes learning.
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| COM 50000 - Introduction To Graduate Studies In Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces basic conventions of the principles and procedures of scholarly research, surveys research methods utilized in the communication discipline, applies research methods to various subjects, and offers an overview of degree requirements. Course restricted to graduate students only. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an understanding of the breadth of the discipline of communication and the diversity of topics and approaches included therein.
2. Apply the full range of library research in communication (e.g., electronic resources, databases, and periodical collections).
3. Chart humanistic and social scientific approaches to scholarly endeavor.
4. Demonstrate competence in using the two acceptable writing style forms in the Department of Communication: The American Psychological Association (APA) and the Modern Language Association (MLA).
5. Evaluate published research from diverse perspectives.
6. Develop and write a research proposal and literature reviews as well as deliver an oral presentation from a specific disciplinary perspective.
7. Demonstrate an understanding of the culminating degree requirements for the master’s degree in Professional Communication.
|
| COM 50200 - Classroom Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to fundamental concepts and basic research related to communicative behavior in the classroom. The primary focus is on the study and application of principles of effective classroom communication through personal inquiry. Among topics discussed are components of classroom communication, systematic observation as a method of studying classroom communication, and applications of systematic observation in a variety of classroom communication settings. Department permission required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| COM 50700 - Introduction To Semiotics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ANTH 51900, AUSL 58900, ENGL 57000, LC 57000) The study of languages, literatures, and other systems of human communication. Includes a wide range of phenomena, which can be brought together by means of a general theory of signs. The course deals with three fundamental areas: 1) verbal communication, 2) nonverbal communication (iconic systems, gestures, body language, etc.), and 3) communication through art forms. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| COM 50800 - Nonverbal Communication In Human Interaction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of theoretical writings and critical studies in selected areas of nonverbal communication, e.g., the environmental influences, space and territory relationships, physical appearance and dress, physical behavior, and vocal cues. One unit will deal specifically with measurement, recording, or transcription methods used in nonverbal study. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| COM 51200 - Theories Of Interpersonal Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of contemporary theories, analysis of concepts, models, and pertinent research across the broad spectrum of interpersonal communication. Typically offered Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| COM 51500 - Persuasion In Social Movements |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the concept of persuasion in social movement theory and the role rhetoric has played historically in selected social movements such as suffrage, women's liberation, civil rights, evangelism, and trade unionism. Typically offered Summer Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| COM 51600 - Analysis Of Persuasive Messages |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of ideational, structural, linguistic, and philosophical dimensions of persuasive messages. Emphasis on both the theoretical and practical components of contemporary persuasion. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| COM 51700 - Communication In Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development and application of critical standards to the rhetoric employed by candidates for public office, study of the campaign strategies employed by parties and their candidates at various levels of government. Typically offered Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| COM 51800 - Theories Of Persuasion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of contemporary theories, including analysis of concepts, models, and pertinent research across the broad spectrum of persuasive communication. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| COM 52000 - Small Group Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey and critical evaluation of theoretical and empirical literature dealing with human communication within small group settings. Typically offered Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| COM 52100 - Theories Of Rhetoric |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comprehensive survey of the principal figures, theories, and movements in rhetoric from the classical era to the present. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| COM 52200 - History And Criticism Of Public Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of speech making and speech criticism as a force in shaping America from colonial times to World War II. The course examines great American speakers in shaping history through the use of rhetoric and oratory. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| COM 52300 - Communication In Personal Relationships |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores the initiation, development, maintenance, and deterioration of family, friend, and romantic relationships. Explores relational phenomena, such as communication and gender differences, computer mediated relationships, attraction, relational culture, and stages of dissolution. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| COM 52500 - Advanced Interviewing And Conference Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of modern communication theory to interview situations, with emphasis upon problems involving superior-subordinate relations, information-getting and interpersonal misunderstanding. Classroom demonstrations based upon real-life cases, supplemented by off-campus interviews; practice in briefing techniques. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| COM 52700 - Introduction To Cultural Studies In Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of selected cultural studies perspectives on mass communication. Covers cultural studies philosophies, theories, and/or approaches to the study of cultural artifacts and practices that may include some of the following: postmodernism, deconstruction, feminism, and postcolonialism, and privileging context as a means of understanding culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| COM 53100 - Special Topics In Mass Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Critical analysis and evaluation of current and continuing problems in both commercial and public mass communication. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| COM 53400 - Comparative Telecommunication Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Historical, sociological, and political aspects of various systems of telecommunication throughout the world. Examination of American, Canadian, British, French, German, Soviet, and other telecommunication institutions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| COM 53700 - Educational/Instructional Television |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of the educational and instructional applications of television materials; analysis of selected problems in the educational uses of the medium; analysis and application of production practices as related to the learning process. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| COM 54000 - Advanced Oral Interpretation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Techniques of oral interpretation for public performances. Emphasis on analysis of materials, program building, and criticism. Utilization of oral reading techniques in the teaching of literature and speech at the secondary level. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 54500 - Theories Of Oral Interpretation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the theories of oral interpretation of literature that have emerged from the classical period of Greece and Rome to the present. Emphasis on the influence of leaders in the field during the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth centuries. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| COM 55700 - Legal Dimensions Of Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of contemporary issues in communication law. Research into selected problems concerning the law and its impact on both face-to-face and mass communication. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| COM 55800 - Historical Trends In Mass Communication Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of research on the process and effects of mass communication. Early studies on radio and film effects, propaganda, attitude formation and change, public opinion and voting, and the interpersonal dimensions of mass communication. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| COM 55900 - Current Trends In Mass Communication Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of current research as it contributes to understanding the process and effects of mass communication. Topics covered include gatekeepers and information control, audience selection processes and uses of the media, persuasive effects of the media, media content and social learning, the effects of adult programming on children, and the effects of the media on the governmental process. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| COM 56000 - Rhetorical Dimension Of Mass Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the ways in which rhetorical elements and processes are embodied in and modified by the media of mass communication. The rhetorical functions of print and electronic media are examined individually as well as within the context of specific campaigns and movements. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| COM 56500 - Sociolinguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ANTH 56500, AUSL 56500, ENGL 56500, LC 56500) An introduction to language in its social context, focusing on uses and users of language. Topics include social class, ethnic group, gender, language attitudes, and bilingualism. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| COM 57400 - Organizational Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of the theoretical and empirical literature dealing with human communication behavior as it occurs within the context of complex organizations. Among topics covered are superior-subordinate communication, communication networks, message distortion, feedback processes, internal corporate mass media, managerial-communication climate, semantic and stylistic dimensions of messages, and communication in decision making. Typically offered Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| COM 57600 - Health Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of health communication theory and research. Examines issues such as patient-provider and everyday communication, broader community-societal discourse, and organizational and mass health communication. Prepares participants for subsequent more specialized seminars and enriched study in allied specialties. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| COM 58200 - Descriptive/Experimental Research In Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the fundamental tools of quantitative research in communication, including data analysis, statistical design and methods, basic measurement concepts, and designs for descriptive and experimental research. Individual and/or group research projects are planned, conducted, and reported. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. You will be able to understand and critically evaluate published research;
2. Be able to make appropriate choices regarding research design which fit within the assumptions of the proposed hypotheses or research questions;
3. You will be able to use basic statistical analysis procedures;
4. You will be able to utilize four research methods;
5. You will be able to write an effective literature review;
6. You will be able to communicate your results via the web.
|
| COM 58300 - Research And Assessment In Organizational Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of applied research methodologies in organizational communication. The course focuses on the design of field investigations and the use of self-report measures, network analysis, and interviewing in organizational communication research. These general methodologies are applied to specific research approaches. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| COM 58400 - Historical/Critical Research In Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to modes of qualitative research in communication, including theoretical assumptions, bibliographical methods, varying approaches to historical and critical inquiry, and the standards and techniques of scholarly writing. Emphasis is placed on historical research during fall semesters and on critical research during spring semesters. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| COM 58500 - Qualitative Methods In Communication Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to qualitative research methods in communication studies. Provides students with an overview of several techniques for, and issues in, gathering, analyzing, writing-up, and using qualitative data. Department permission required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To examine the philosophical assumptions, theoretical traditions and epistemology of qualitative methods in the field of communication.
2. To understand various approaches to qualitative inquiry, particularly entailing narrative research, phenomenological research, grounded theory research, ethnographic research, and case study research.
3. To critique written qualitative research in communication journals and identify ways to improve them.
4. To develop skills and techniques to design a qualitative research project, which includes the process of getting IRB approval, collecting and analyzing qualitative data, and writing up qualitative findings.
|
| COM 59000 - Directed Study Of Special Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Directed study of special problems. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| COM 59700 - Special Topics In Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Seminar of current topics of interest within the discipline of communication. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| COM 59800 - Synthesis Paper Research |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. This course is for students pursuing the research and writing of the synthesis paper required for graduation with an M.A. or M.S. in professional communication. The synthesis paper is a 20-page culminating manuscript demonstrating understanding of communication theory, research, or practice. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| COM 60000 - Foundations Of Human Communication Inquiry I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces doctoral students to major and emerging approaches to understanding human communication and provides them with the theoretical background and analytic skills needed to navigate the tensions among these approaches. Reviews the intellectual history of communication inquiry, overviews traditional and innovative questions about human communication, examines the ways in which these questions can be addressed from different perspectives, addresses some of the varied forms that knowledge about human communication can take, and explores how different research traditions go about making and warranting knowledge claims. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| COM 60100 - Foundations Of Human Communication Inquiry II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Following COM 600, this course continues to introduce doctoral students to major and emerging approaches to understanding human communication and provides theoretical background and analytic skills needed to navigate the tensions among these approaches. Reviews the intellectual history of communication inquiry, overviews traditional and innovative questions about human communication, examines the ways in which these questions can be addressed from different perspectives, addresses some of the varied forms that knowledge about human communication can take, and explores how different research traditions go about making and warranting knowledge claims. Prerequisite: COM 60000. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| COM 60111 - Seminar In Strategic Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This graduate course will survey the theories and processes of strategic communication and its practice by business, government, politicians, and non-profits – in domestic and international arenas. The course will emphasize the application of theory to provide an in-depth understanding of planning, executing, and evaluating strategic communication plans. Prerequisite: Graduate student in communication. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the context in which strategic communication operates and the dynamics changing the profession, its work, and its value to clients and society.
2. Understand the theories which underlie strategic communication.
3. Understand the processes of the development and implementaton of comprehensive communication strategies.
4. Strengthen writing and presentation skills relevant to strategic communication through course assignments.
|
| COM 60211 - Seminar In Global Stategic Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides students with a global perspective in strategic communication and provides knowledge and understanding of how to address communication issues with international audiences. This class emphasizes such questions as how strategic communication plans can be successfully implemented in other countries and how plans can be measured and evaluated. Prerequisites: Graduate student in communication and COM 60111. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the role of theory in international strategic communication.
2. Understand the unique role of ethics when implementing or evaluating strategic communication programs in international contexts.
3. Understand the specific role of strategic communication across a sample of nation states.
4. Understand the unique challenges presented by developing strategic communication plans globally.
5. Evaluate global strategic communication programs.
|
| COM 60311 - Seminar In Crisis Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This graduate course will focus on how to communicate in a time of crisis in order to manage the situation and disseminate key messages to various stakeholders. Prerequisite: Graduate student in Communication and COM 60111. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Have a broad understanding of the crisis communication literature.
2. Be able to formulate solutions to crisis situations from multiple perspectives.
3. Anticipate actions and analyze stakeholders involved in crisis situations.
4. Be aware of and challenge critical assumptions in crisis situations.
5. Evaluate crisis plans.
|
| COM 60411 - Seminar In Communication Research Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This graduate course serves as the methodological foundation of strategic communication. Students in this class will survey core research methods (qualitative and quantitative) in professional and applied settings. This class is fully online. Students will interact with faculty and other students throughout the week. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and describe the major elements of the research process.
2. Formulate meaningful research questions and hypotheses.
3. Identify appropriate research methodologies associated with different types of research questions and hypotheses.
4. Conduct a variety of basic analyses of common communication data sets.
5. Design a research proposal to answer a set of research questions or hypotheses.
|
| COM 60511 - Strategic Communication And Professional Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This graduate course covers topics related to professional writing and strategic communication. Topics include grammar basics, audience considerations, credibility and ethics, and documentation style. In addition, writing will be discussed in a variety of contexts such as media, public relations, advertising, and business communication. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate mastery of writing, grammar, and style as well as various guidelines for academic and professional writing.
2. Articulate the role of credibility and ethics in professional writing.
3. Explain the importance of research and audience analysis in professional writing.
4. Analyze the unique challenges of writing in different contexts (e.g., advertising, public relations, media, business communication, print and online.)
5. Evaluate strengths and weaknesses of various forms of written communication.
6. Produce various types of documents related to strategic communication.
|
| COM 60611 - Seminar In Financial And Investor Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will provide students with a theoretical and practical overview of theory and practice in financial and investor relations. Student will learn about how the potential investors in public companies are and how to reach them. An emphasis will be placed on communicating with investors to facilitate informed investor decision-making. Prerequisite: COM 60111. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Articulate the functions of investor relations.
2. Explain major theoretical concepts informing communication approaches to financial and investor relations.
3. Analyze and critique a corporation's investor relations strategy.
4. Develop an investor and financial relations strategy.
5. Evaluate key metrics for determining the effectiveness of an investor relations strategy.
6. Assess various relationship management strategies with various publics/stakeholders associated with investor relations communication.
|
| COM 60711 - Strategic Communication And Fundraising Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This graduate course serves as an introduction to the concepts, elements, and best practices of fundraising. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate knowledge of communication theory related to fundraising management.
2. Identify best practices of fundraising.
3. Analyze the importance of message design and mediums when creating fundraising campaigns.
4. Assess the implications of an organization's relationships with multiple publics/stakeholder groups for fundraising.
5. Evaluate case studies of fundraising in light of theory and best practices.
|
| COM 60811 - Leadership And Global Strategic Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Over the last decade, the field of strategic communication has grown rapidly. The work of strategic communication professionals requires coordinated responses between distinct organizational units that are often separated by time and space. These conditions necessitate effective leadership. Further complicating leadership in these contexts is the fact that the work of strategic communication has increasingly become global in nature. This course provides students with theoretical background in leadership and global strategic communication, as well as the opportunity to apply what they learn to strategic communication cases and to their own professional experiences. It also encourages them to think proactively about leadership challenges in these contexts and to articulate theoretically-informed analyses and evaluations of leadership in action. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Exhibit mastery of theories related to leadership and to strategic communication in global contexts.
2. Articulate the relationship between theory and the practice of leadership as it relates to global strategic communication, and apply theoretical concepts and principles to real world contexts.
3. Explain the role of leadership and culture in global strategic communication.
4. Compare and contrast notions of leadership, corporate social responsibility, and negotiation across cultural contexts.
5. Identify the unique challenges experienced when leaders engage in strategic communication practices globally.
6. Evaluate the current knowledge base and “best practices” in global strategic communication.
|
| COM 60911 - Strategic Public Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Strategic communication is composed, in part, of integrated marketing communication (IMC), advertising, and public relations. This course highlights public relations scholarship, which is one of the strengths of the Brian Lamb School of Communication. As such, it builds on the general strategic communication course by providing an in-depth understanding of public relations. Specifically, the class will cover public relations theories, ethics, concepts, principles, and applications. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate knowledge of public relations theory.
2. Articulate the roles of ethics in public relations.
3. Assess the research, planning, and evaluation used in public relations practices.
4. Identify the unique challenges associated with developing public relations campaigns.
5. Evaluate public relations campaigns and responses.
6. Identify the various publics that public relations scholarship addresses.
|
| COM 61000 - Seminar: Special Topics In Rhetorical Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive study, varying from semester to semester, of the role of rhetoric in selected movements, crises, historical periods, programs, campaigns, or institutions. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| COM 61011 - Strategic Communication And Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This graduate course introduces the application of ethical principles and decision making. In this course, students will study both philosophical and practical ethical questions related to strategic communication. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Exhibit mastery of diverse philosophical perspectives on ethics.
2. Compare and contrast insights offered by different perspectives when applied to concrete dilemmas encountered in students’ own work experience.
3. Synthesize ethical principles embedded in professional codes of ethics, and their implications for the practice of strategic communication.
4. Highlihght ethical principles pertaining to working in organizational teams.
5. Evaluate ethical guidelines for gathering, analyzing, and presenting research data.
6. Identify challenges that occur when evaluating what constitutes ethical strategic communication across cultures.
7. Articlate possible relationships between ethical and effective strategic communication.
8. Evaluate new ethical questions about the practice of strategic communication arising from the emergence of new social media.
|
| COM 61200 - Seminar: Special Topics In Interpersonal Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive study of selected topics, varying from semester to semester, from the theoretical and research literature of interpersonal communication. Topics may include communication models, information theory, systems theory, general semantics, sociolinguistics, etc., as they relate to the study of interpersonal communication. Prerequisite: COM 51200. Typically offered Summer Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| COM 62100 - Seminar: Special Topics In Rhetorical Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive study of selected topics, varying from semester to semester, from the literature of rhetorical theory. Prerequisite: COM 52100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| COM 62111 - Seminar In Strategic Communication And Social Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will provide an overview of social media and its relationship to strategic communication. Students will learn about the available forms of social media (e.g., Blogs, Social Networks, and Wikis) as well as their uses, strengths and weaknesses for building and managing relationship with stakeholders. Students will also gain exposure to methods for analyzing social media metrics as a framework for evaluating the effectiveness of social media strategies as tools for developing corporate, nonprofit, and governmental images and brands. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate their understanding of current theories of communication technology that bear on the use and impact of social media environments.
2. Articulate changes in strategic communication brought about by changes in technology.
3. Identify and become familiar with the most commonly used social media technologies used in industry to communicate with stakeholders.
4. Demonstrate the ability to use contemporary social media tools.
5. Develop a social media strategy for an organization.
6. Identify, track, and analyze key social media metrics for evaluating the effectiveness of a social media strategy.
|
| COM 62411 - Focus Groups And Interviewing For Strategic Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides students with an overview of qualitative research in public relations with a particular emphasis on focus group and interview methodologies. The course will consider practical applications of these protocols in strategic communication contexts. Prerequisite: COM 60411. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify the types of questions that qualitative research seeks to answer.
2. Determine the relative value of focus groups or interview data as a mechanism for answering research questions and protocols.
3. Develop interview and focus group protocols for collecting qualitative data in strategic communication contexts.
4. Utilize strategies for interpreting qualitative data and reporting it systematically.
5. Conduct effective interviews and focus groups for a strategic communication project.
|
| COM 62511 - Survey Design, Analysis, And Reporting For Strategic Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides students with an overview of quantitative research in public relations with a particular emphasis on survey design analysis. The course will cover the design and delivery of questionnaires, the use and interpretation of descriptive and inferential statistical methods, and reporting of quantitative results. The course will consider practical applications of these methods in professional strategic communication contexts. Prerequisite: COM 60411. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify the types of questions that survey research is best suited to answer.
2. Develop effective survey instruments for measuring a wide range of attitudes, behaviors, and beliefs related to strategic communication.
3. Recognize the pros and cons of different sampling and survey distribution methodologies as they apply to different research protocols.
4. Demonstrate an understanding of common statistical approaches for analyzing survey data.
5. Apply survey methodologies to answer practical questions in the context of strategic communication.
|
| COM 63200 - Seminar: Special Topics In Mass Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive study of selected topics, varying from semester to semester, from the literature of mass communication. Topics may include institutional analysis, mass communication law, information diffusion, uses of mass communication, or other issues. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| COM 67400 - Seminar: Special Topics In Organizational Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive study of selected topics, varying from semester to semester, from the theoretical and research literature of organizational (including business and industrial) communication; analysis of recurring communication problems in complex organizations; critique of research findings and methodologies. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| COM 67600 - Seminar: Special Topics In Health Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive study of selected topics, varying from semester to semester, from the theoretical and research literature on health communication. Prerequisite: COM 57600. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| COM 68200 - Seminar: Special Topics In Quantitative Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive study, varying from semester to semester, of different aspects and applications of quantitative research in communication. Prerequisite: COM 58200. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| COM 69500 - Curricular Practical Training |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Internship providing practical field experience under professional supervision in selected situations related to the student's area of specialization. Good standing in the graduate program of the Department of Communication and an approved plan of study including the internship. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
Course Attributes: Internship
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| COM 69800 - Research MA Or MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MA Or MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| COM 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Communication
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| COMM B2100 - Fundamentals of Public Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles and practice of effective oral communication; analysis and evaluation of the speaking-listening process; preparation in message construction, emphasizing the selection, organization, and delivery of materials.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| COMM B3200 - Persuasion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Concerned with current theories and research related to persuasion and social influence. Specifically examines variables affecting implementation of persuasion principles and strategies. Designed to help students become critical consumers and effective, ethical producers of oral and written communication.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| COMM B3250 - Interviewing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the principles and types of interviews, with application of the principles in informational, persuasive, and employment interviews. Special attention is given to the various communication elements of the employment interview process: resumes, cover letters, selection interviews, and appraisal interviews.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| COMM B3300 - Small Group Decision Making |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on the theories, concepts, and processes of small group decision making and problem solving.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| COMM C1040 - Voice And Diction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Directed primarily toward the improvement of normal speech patterns, with emphasis on normal production, resonation, and articulation.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| COMM C1080 - Listening |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will provide a theory-based understanding of the process of listening; introduce the unique characteristics/challenges of listening within a variety of contexts (i.e., organizational listening, listening in healthcare, relational listening), and increase proficiency as a listener. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| COMM C1100 - Fundamentals of Speech Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and practice of public speaking; training in thought process necessary to organize speech content for informative and persuasive situations; application of language and delivery skills to specific audiences. A minimum of six speaking situations.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| COMM C1250 - Topics In Communications |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| COMM C1800 - Introduction To Interpersonal Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of human dyadic interaction. Perception processes, verbal/nonverbal communication, models of communication, conflict, and interpersonal communication in relationships. Applications of interpersonal communication theory/research, to communication competence. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| COMM C2230 - Business And Professional Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory survey of organizational communication processes; preparation and presentation of interviews, speeches, and oral reports appropriate to business and professional organizations; group discussion and decision-making. This is an intermediate skills course with survey characteristics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| COMM C2270 - Argumentation And Debate |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis, evidence, and argument in logical discourse; study of debate forms; practice in argumentative speaking in class, campus, and intercollegiate debates. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| COMM C2280 - Discussion And Group Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory of and practice in effective participation in and leadership of group, committee, conference, and public discussion; application to information-sharing and problem-solving situations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| COMM C3160 - Human Communication And The Internet |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Required for online certificate: Human Communication in a Mediated World. Students learn how interpersonal group, mass, public, and organizational messages are mediated in Internet environments. Students practice message preparation indifferent modes and contexts. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| COMM C3220 - Advanced Interpersonal Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Covers core components of the study of interpersonal communication: perception, systems, exchange theoretical approaches; methods of research in interpersonal communication; content (topic) areas such as intimate relationships and friendships. Includes applications of interpersonal communication theory/research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| COMM C3250 - Interviewing Principles And Practices |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasizes verbal and nonverbal communication in pre-interview background research preparation, interview schedule design, question construction, and post-interview self-analysis in several interviewing contexts. Course includes significant assignments designed to help the student enhance oral performance competencies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| COMM C3280 - Advanced Topics In Small Group-Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theories of small group communication processes. Explores group communication across cultures, groups in organizations, group decision making, conflict management in groups, and assessing competence in group communication. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| COMM C3450 - Restorative Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course focuses on healing communication -- healing individuals and relationships. Specific topics include healing communication basics, family, couple, group (e.g. support groups) and community healing (restorative justice; peace building). There is a strong focus on research theory and practice. Some assignments involve community participation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| COMM C3750 - Nonverbal Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course examines the influences of nonverbal communication cues: interpersonal dynamics, media, environmental dimensions, and rhetorical strategies. Cross-cultural and gender difference in nonverbal codes will also be explored. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| COMM C3800 - Organizational Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The application of communication theory and research to the study of communication in various types of organizations. Explores reciprocal influence between communication and organizational structures and between communication and managerial styles. Discusses communication designs, superior/subordinate communication, conflict, information management, networks; communication vis-a-vis employee motivation, satisfaction, and productivity; and communication effectiveness in organizations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| COMM C3920 - Health Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of theory and research in Health Communication. Focuses on interpersonal communication between patients and providers, mass communication of health-related messages, and communication within health care organizations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| COMM C3930 - Family Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory/research on the role of communication in creating and maintaining marriages and families. Topics include communication and family life cycles, different family forms, family race/ethnicity, power, and conflict. Covers applications of family communication theory/research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| COMM C3940 - Communication And Conflict |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analyzes conflict as a form of interaction. Examines approaches/perspectives to the study of conflict, the nature of power, face saving, and contentious behaviors. Specific contexts include relational, marital, group, and organizational. Special attention to bargaining and mediation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| COMM C3950 - Gender And Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the meaning of gender in contemporary American culture and its interaction with and relationship to communication. Explores topics such as gender and verbal and nonverbal communication; gender differences in public and private settings; gender and communication in families, schools, organizations, and the media. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| COMM C4000 - Health Provider-Consumer Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to tech communication skills and practices related to health care discourse, by examining transactional communication within health care contexts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| COMM C4660 - Television Direction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Creative management of production elements to translate a program idea into medium requirements. Advanced course in which the experienced student produced substantive programs combining several formats. Emphasis on design and production from first request by client through program distribution.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| COMM C4810 - Current Issues In Organizational Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In-depth exploration of topics and issues at the forefront of research and theory in organizational communication. Topics may include gender issues in organizational communication, sexual harassment, crisis management, organizational culture. Seminar format with research papers and class discussion /presentations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| COMM C4820 - Intercultural Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores the relationships between communication and culture, with special emphasis on cultural differences in communication in a variety of contexts (i.e., health, education, business). Focuses on developing intercultural communication competencies. Typically offered Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| COMM C5910 - Topics In Applied Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| COMM C5920 - Advanced Health Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course designed to teach communication skills and practices related to health care, by examining health care communication theory. Topics covered range across communication levels (interpersonal, intrapersonal, group, organizational, mass media and mediated communication) within a variety of health care contexts.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| COMM C5990 - Independent Study |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Independent Study. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| COMM G1000 - Introduction To Communication Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey course of history, theory, and practice in each of six major areas: Rhetoric and Public Address, Theatre Arts, Interpersonal/Organizational Communication, Small Group Dynamics, Public Communication, and Mass Media Studies. For each of the areas examined, students will apply theory to practice, thereby learning to become more effective communicators. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| COMM G1250 - Topics In Communication Studies |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Select introductory theory and practice in specialized and/or consolidated areas of communication and theatre not directly covered by current curricular offerings. Topics will vary from one semester to another. A student may register for a total of no more than 6 credit hours under this course number. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
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| COMM G2010 - Introduction To Communication Theory |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of theories in the field of human communication. Consideration is given to theories that explain communication behavior between pairs of people, within groups, in organizations, and in societies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| COMM G3000 - Independent Study |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Research or practical experience in communication. Topics are selected by the student prior to registration, outlined in consultation with the instructor, and approved by the department. A student shall take no more than a total of 9 credit hours of G3000 and G4910. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 8 times
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| COMM G3100 - Introduction to Communication Research |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Methodologies and types of data analyses for investigating communication phenomena. Students will acquire knowledge and competencies that will allow them to understand and address the process of communication research and relevant communication research issues.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| COMM G3910 - Advanced Topics In Communication Studies |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Topic announced in prior semester; oriented to current topics in communication studies and/or theatre. May be repeated for a total of 8 credit hours. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| COMM G4000 - Health Provider-Consumer Communication |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to teach communication skills and practices related to health care discourse, by examining transactional communication within health care contexts. Topics covered in this course focus directly upon interpersonal dialogue between health care providers and patients. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| COMM G4990 - Research Seminar |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of methods used by communication researchers for gathering and interpreting information emphasizing the relationship between theory and research, the seminar will explore important issues such as ethics and natualistic vs. laboratory approaches. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| COMM M1500 - Mass Media And Contemporary Society |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A critical overview of the role of electronic mass media in contemporary society. Provides an introduction to such issues as industry structure, organization, and economics; regulation, public interest, and media ethics; impact of programming on individuals; media construction of social institutions; American media in an international context. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| COMM M2100 - Mass Media Design |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the process of message design in the context of institutional media use. Analyses of media messages and communication theory; analyses of the message receiver employ quantitative and qualitative audience research methods. Semester project involves planning and writing of script for use in organizational institutional media context. Typically offered Summer, Fall, Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
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| COMM M2150 - Media Literacy |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals and a general understanding of communication technologies are surveyed and discussed in a nontechnical and nonengineering manner. This course will introduce students to basic terminology and to various types of communication technology systems. It will also help students understand new and traditional communication systems and their theories of operation and application (including advantages and limitations). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| COMM M2200 - Electronic Graphic Production |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of visual aesthetics and critical visual literacy applied to the production of mediated messages. Basic typographic, graphic, and photographic skills are examined and practical techniques in different media are discussed. Several hands-on projects are used to develop individual competencies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| COMM M2210 - Electronic Media Production |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of visual and aural aesthetics and critical visual literacy applied to the production of mediated messages. Basic animation, video, and audio skills are examined and practical techniques in different media are discussed. Several hands-on projects are used to develop individual competencies. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| COMM M2900 - Video Production Workshop |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. The practical application of video production techniques. In a production center atmosphere, students are instructed in and practice equipment operation and crew responsibilities creating video productions for outside clients. Students may register for more than one section in one semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
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| COMM M3700 - History Of Television |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The development of television as an industry, technology, and cultural commodity from its roots in other forms of popular culture to the present, paying particular attention to the social and aesthetic contexts within which programs have been viewed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| COMM M3730 - Film And Video Documentary |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A historical survey of documentary film and video and a consideration of specific problems in documentary theory and practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| COMM M4620 - Television Aesthetics And Criticism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Aesthetic and critical approaches to modes of television expression. Aesthetics of picture composition, audiovisual relationships, visual narrative, and program content. Analysis of selected television criticism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| COMM M4630 - Advanced Graphic Technique |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of problems, methods, and technology in graphics. Consideration of advanced techniques in digital image and illustration manipulation including compositing, lighting effects, and different compression formats for video, multimedia, and the World Wide Web.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| COMM M4640 - Advanced Audio Technique |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of field and studio recording technique with an emphasis on multitrack production. Electronic editing, mixing and signal processing are considered. Group and individual projects.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| COMM M4650 - Advanced Video Technique |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of electronic production and editing with an emphasis in advanced video editing techniques. Current technologies and techniques are examined and practiced. Individual and/or group projects
. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| COMM M4660 - Television Direction |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Creative management of production elements to translate a program idea into medium requirements. Advanced course in which the experienced student produces substantive programs in several formats. Both field and studio production formats are considered. Individual and/or group projects.
Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| COMM R1100 - Fundamentals Of Speech Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and practice of public speaking; training in thought process necessary to organize speech content for informative and persuasive situations; application of language and delivery skills to specific audiences. A minimum of five speaking situations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| COMM R2270 - Argumentation And Debate |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis, evidence, and argument in logical discourse; study of debate forms; practice argumentative speaking in class, campus, and intercollegiate debate. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
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| COMM R3090 - Great Speakers: American Public Address |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course introduces students to historical and contemporary public address. Students will study the speechmaking of notable American speakers. The study will include speeches from a wide range of established genres and will include campaign rhetoric, debates, historical celebrations, lectures, legislative speaking, presidential speaking, public meetings, movement, rhetoric, and sermons. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
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| COMM R3100 - Rhetoric And Public Address |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of theory of oral discourse; the influence of public address; historical and current problems in rhetoric of conflict, in freedom of speech, and in propaganda and persuasion. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
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| COMM R3200 - Public Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Critical analysis of the public communication efforts of individuals and organizations; emphasis on research, clarity of organization, application of argument strategies, and development and presentation of public communication messages. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| COMM R3210 - Persuasion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines classical and current theories and research related to persuasion and social influence; considers variables affecting implementation of persuasion principles with special emphasis on media and persuasion. Designed to help students become critical consumers and effective, ethical producers and presenters of persuasive messages. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| COMM R3300 - Communication Criticism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course will introduce students to criticism as a method of studying persuasive messages in speeches, fiction, mass media, music, political campaigns, art, and other modes of communication in contemporary culture. Typically offered Summer, Fall, Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
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| COMM R3500 - Women Speak: American Feminist Rhetoric |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. To understand the ideological development of American feminist rhetoric, we examine: 1) speeches by well known, “Great Women” from the 1600’s to the present; 2) non-traditional rhetorical forms of “ordinary women”, including diaries, fiction, photography, reading groups; 3) intersections among race, class, ethnicity, sexual preference and gender in public discourse. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| COMM T1000 - Rehearsal And Performance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasizes learning through the preparation and performance of plays and non-dramatic literature adapted for performance. Various approaches may include but are not limited to performance studies, the study and preparation of a short play, and an original play for young audiences. The various steps and processes involved in the preparation and rehearsal will be based on appropriate theoretical concepts. A student may enroll in no more than 6 credits under this course number. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| COMM T1300 - Introduction To Theatre |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the study of theatre; the wide range of critical, historical, aesthetic, and practical interests necessary for a well-rounded view; emphasis on theatre as an art form and elements of dramatic construction. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| COMM T1330 - Introduction To Acting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Acting I, a study of the theories and methods of acting, basic techniques, character analysis, interpretation, and projection. Class scenes. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| COMM T2050 - Introduction To Oral Interpretation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic principles and practice in analysis and performance of selections from prose, poetry, and drama. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| COMM T3050 - Advanced Oral Interpretation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced approach to analysis and oral presentation of literature. Emphasis on group work. Analysis, development, and presentation of readers' theatre or chamber theatre materials. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| COMM T3330 - Acting II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced scene study. Laboratory in body movement and vocal techniques; participation in laboratory theatre. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| COMM T3370 - History Of The Theatre I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Significant factors in primary periods of theatre history through the Renaissance and the effect on contemporary theatre; emphasis on trends and developments; review of representative plays of each period to illustrate the theatrical use of dramatic literature. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| COMM T3380 - History Of The Theatre II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of THTR C3370. May be taken separately. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| COMM T4310 - Playwriting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to playwriting theories, methodology, and skills; principles of dramatic structure; practice in writing, culminating in a one-act play manuscript; class evaluation and conferences. Credit not given for both T431 and T453 (taught on the Bloomington campus). Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| COMM T4370 - Creative Dramatics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Laboratory course in informal dramatics, emphasizing the child rather than the production; includes methods of stimulating the child to imaginative creation of drama with the materials of poetry, stories, choral readings, and music. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| COMM V1480 - Interpersonal Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course providing theory, actual practice, and criticism for examining and changing human interactions in work, family, and social contexts. The course will focus on perception, message encoding and decoding, feedback, listening skills, causes for communication breakdowns, and other elements affecting interpersonal communication. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| CPB 15000 - Clinical Pathology I-DL |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. This course is the first of three courses that provide basic instruction in the concepts of clinical pathology to the veterinary technician student. This course will place an emphasis on the terminology used in clinical pathology, as well as red blood cell production, function, and morphology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 15100 - Clinical Pathology II-DL |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. This course is the second of three courses that provide basic instruction in the concepts of clinical pathology to the veterinary technician student. This course will place an emphasis on white blood cell production, function, as well as white blood cell morphology characteristics and identification. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 15200 - Clinical Pathology III-DL |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is the third of three courses that provide basic instruction in the concepts of clinical pathology to the veterinary technician student. This course will place an emphasis on the basic concepts of clinical chemistry, urinalysis evaluation, as well as the fundamentals of cytological sample handling and evaluation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 22500 - Parasitology for Veterinary Technicians I - DL |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is the first of two courses that provide basic instruction in the concepts of parasitology for the veterinary technician student. This course will place an emphasis on the basic information needed to accurately identify parasites commonly encountered in veterinary medicine. Emphasis will be placed on life cycles and the zoonotic aspects of the parasites. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 22600 - Parasitology for Veterinary Technicians II - DL |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is the second of two courses that provide basic instruction in the concepts of parasitology for the veterinary technician student. This course will place an emphasis on the basic information needed to accurately identify parasites commonly encountered in veterinary medicine. Emphasis will also be placed on life cycles and the zoonotic aspects. Students are expected to be able to make accurate identifications and to communicate effectively. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 22700 - Microbiology for Veterinary Technicians-DL |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is designed to enable the veterinary technician to satisfactorily collect and process specimens, and characterize and identify microorganisms that may be encountered in veterinary practice situations. This course will introduce microorganisms commonly encountered in veterinary medicine. Different laboratory techniques will be illustrated. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 24000 - Public and Occupational Health for Vet Techs I -DL |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This is the first of two courses that provide basic instruction in the concepts of workplace safety related to the veterinary technician. This course will place an emphasis on the basic information needed to recognize hazards commonly encountered and the steps that should be taken to reduce the risk of exposure to hazards. Other practical aspects of public health will be discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 24100 - Public and Occupational Health for Vet Techs II-DL |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This is the second of two courses that provide basic instruction in the concepts of workplace safety related to the veterinary technician. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 25500 - Clinical Pathology For Veterinary Technicians |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Basic instruction in clinical pathology, including theory and techniques of hematology, clinical chemistry, urinalysis, cytology, and specimen handling. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 35100 - Microbiology For Veterinary Technicians |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Biology and laboratory identification of bacteria and fungi that cause infectious diseases in animals. Emphasis will be placed on the collection of specimens for culture, the isolation and identification of pathogenic organisms, and antibiotic susceptibility testing. Procedures and commercial systems available to veterinary practices will be utilized. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 35200 - Parasitology For Veterinary Technicians |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Biology and life cycles of selected protozoan, helminth, and arthropod parasites of veterinary importance. Emphasis will be placed on laboratory procedures for the identification of common parasites of domestic and laboratory animals. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 48000 - Seminar In Animal Welfare And Human-Animal Interaction |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course will be required for students involved in the interdisciplinary "Animal Welfare and Societal Concerns" program of study. Seminar in Animal Welfare and Human-Animal Interaction is for discussion of current topics in animal welfare and other areas involving the interaction of humans and animals. Outside speakers will present their perspectives in various areas. Journal articles will also be presented and discussed. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CPB 56400 - Ecological Health And Wildlife Diseases |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Provides an overview of issues involved with understanding ecological underpinnings of disease and of wildlife diseases common in North America. Presents basic concepts and approaches for identifying, studying, and managing diseases of wild populations and the role of veterinarians in conservation biology, wildlife zoonosis prevention and management, and prevention of transmission between wildlife reservoirs and domestic animals. Permission of instructor is required. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 57500 - Introduction To Animal Experimentation |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A didactic course focusing on basic principles of animal research, including basic tenets of anesthesia, analgesia, euthanasia, surgery, and handling of various species of laboratory animals; introduction to experimental design and hypothesis testing, overview of regulatory aspects of animal experimentation, including provisions of the Animal Welfare Act, the NIH Guide to the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals, and other applicable regulations governing the use of animals, discussion of organizations that support animal experimentation and those opposed to animal research.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 57600 - Biology And Management Of Laboratory Animals |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A didactic course focusing on basic principles of the biology of laboratory animals and how they are managed in a vivarium. Covers regulatory aspects, anatomy, biological techniques, research uses, and management of mice, rats, hamsters, guinea pigs, gerbils, other rodentia, rabbits, dogs, cats, ferrets, and various species of primates, reptiles, and avians, in experimental and educational applications. Offered in alternate years.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 57700 - Diseases Of Laboratory Animals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A didactic course focusing on basic understanding of the diseases of laboratory animal medicine and concentrating on effects of disease on research productivity, prevention programs, and pathogenesis. Etiology, pathogenesis, gross and microscopic pathology, diagnosis, control, and research complications of diseases of rats and mice, primates, rabbits, guinea pigs, hamsters, and ferrets; and health assessment programs. Offered in alternate years.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 57800 - Animal Models Of Human Disease |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A mixed didactic and discussion course focusing on animal models used in biomedical research. Didactic instruction on principles of model development and use will be coupled with student presentations of models currently used in various research disciplines or disease states. Advantages and limitations of research with various spontaneous and experimentally induced models of human disease, including genetically engineered models. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 57900 - Seminar In Comparative Medicine |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A discussion course focusing on current issues of laboratory animal medicine. Review of current activities, health surveillance reports, etc. Selected cases are presented in detail, including clinical presentation, interpretation of diagnostic tests, and gross and microscopic pathology. In addition, this seminar includes discussions on animal resource management; surgery; animal experimentation; current journal reports; zoonoses; and clinical animal disease diagnosis, prevention, treatment, and control, and other species and topics not formally covered in other core courses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 8 times
|
| CPB 58000 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Directed readings, discussions, and other intensive studies in specialized topics of the disciplines of the department. The topic of study will be selected and announced prior to the semester offered and will be indicated in the student's record. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CPB 59000 - Special Topics In Animal Welfare And Human-Animal Interaction |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Individual study and directed readings in specialized areas of interest of animal welfare or human-animal interaction either for advanced undergraduate or beginning graduate students. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CPB 60000 - Special Problems In Pathology |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 4.00. Selected problems in veterinary pathology. The topic will be indicated in the student's record. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CPB 60100 - Advanced Veterinary Clinical Pathology |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. Comparative hematology, clinical chemistry, diagnostic cytology, and surgical microscopic pathology in the diagnosis of diseases of animals, including laboratory application. Prerequisite: DVM degree. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CPB 60200 - Advanced Veterinary Anatomic Pathology |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. Comparative gross and microscopic pathology in the diagnosis of diseases of animals. Prerequisite: DVM degree. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CPB 60300 - Graduate Teaching Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Graduate students assist in running the laboratory sessions in a sophomore DVM course. They also grade exams and may give one lecture in or make a scholarly contribution to the course. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CPB 60400 - Neoplastic Diseases Of Animals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Histogenesis and structure of neoplasms of animals; consideration of clinical and pathological entities within groups of neoplasms. Prerequisite: CPB 55600. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 60500 - Pathology Of Avian Diseases |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Avian diseases presented from a gross and histopathological viewpoint. Pathogenesis and differential diagnosis of avian diseases discussed. Prerequisite: DVM degree. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 60700 - Pathology Of Laboratory Animal Diseases |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Emphasis will be placed upon the etiology and pathology of the diseases of small laboratory animals including rodents, rabbits, primates, and fish. The prevention and control of the diseases produced by viral, bacterial, parasitic, and fungal pathogens also will be included. Prerequisite: DVM degree. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 61000 - Ultrastructural Pathology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The ultrastructural alterations that occur in organelles of damaged cells are described. The basic morphologic alterations in pathology (degeneration, necrosis, inflammation, growth disturbances, and neoplasia) are outlined. The ultrastructural alterations of representative diseases of animals that involve each of the body systems are discussed. Prerequisite: DVM degree. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 61200 - Advanced Morphologic Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Provides advanced study of specialized morphologic techniques used in research and for the diagnosis of diseases. The technical basis of such methods as immuno-chemistry, in situ hybridization, laser capture microdissection, and confocal microscopy will be presented, as well as some of their applications. The goal of this course is to provide a fairly detailed understanding of these techniques. A course in basic biology or immunology. Students should have a basic understanding of these disciplines prior to taking this course. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 61400 - Topics In Advanced General Pathology |
|
Credit Hours: 0.50 or 1.00. Discussion of current topics in the following areas of general pathology: cellular injury, fluid and hemodynamic alterations, inflammation, immunopathology, neoplasia, genetic and developmental disorders, pathogenesis of infectious diseases, and nutritional disorders. Class meets one hour in alternate weeks. Prerequisite: DVM degree. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.500 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CPB 61800 - Ethical Issues In Biomedical Research |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Examination of moral reasoning as it applies to epidemiologic inquiry and the methods of biomedical research. Topics include obligations to human and animal research subjects, ethical considerations in research design, data interpretation and fraud, funding of research, and public policy. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 61900 - Design, Conduct, And Analysis Of Clinical Trials |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Reviews the various types of clinical trials that are used in medical research (e.g., therapeutic and preventive). The stages and activities in a "typical" trial are defined along with factors that influence study design. Key elements of data collection, organization, analysis, and interpretation and reporting of results are discussed and illustrated using published reports of clinical trials. Differences in the design and conduct of trials in human and veterinary medicine are considered, including the ethical concerns and costs. Prerequisite: Graduate level course work in Biostatistics. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 62000 - Advanced Immunology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Teaches advanced concepts in basic immunology and applications to disease prevention and therapy. Emphasis is on recent developments and experimental approaches in this rapidly evolving discipline. Topics include antigen presentation, T-cell development, signal transduction in B and T lymphocytes, immunoglobulin structure, type I hypersensitivity (asthma), neuroendocrine regulation of the immune response, immune response in viral infections (influenza and HIV), and tumor immunology. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 62200 - Microbial Pathogenesis |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Provides advanced study of the concepts of microbial pathogenesis and host-microbe interaction. The virulence factors and molecular mechanisms of infection used by bacteria, viruses, and protozoa to cause disease will be examined. Specific diseases will be studied as examples of how microbes affect animals as well as humans. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 62400 - Advanced Laboratory Animal Medicine |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. Experiential training and practice in laboratory animal medicine. Prerequisite: DVM degree. Restriction: Only CPB graduate students in Laboratory Animal Medicine may enroll in this course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CPB 62500 - Clinical Biostatistics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Intended for veterinary medical and biological science graduate students, this course is designed to familiarize them with the appropriate usage (and reporting) of different statistical tests in biomedical research. Students are taught the basic theories underlying the different tests, the data assumptions underlying the application of those tests, and review/critique published scientific articles that employed these tests. Students have the opportunity to describe the appropriate statistical methods to be used in their proposed research and/or report the usage or appropriate statistical tests on their own data. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 62600 - Design And Analysis Of Epidemiologic Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on epidemiologic study design and applications of statistical software to the analysis of data derived from health research. Includes an overview of epidemiologic study designs, frequency and association measures, generalized linear models and survival analysis. Hands-on computer laboratories are provided using data derived from field studies. Prerequisites: One graduate level course in biostatistics. Typically offered Fall alternate years.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand and apply different epidemiologic study designs to their own disciplines and research.
2. Identify and apply appropriate statistical methods to analyze data collected from different epidemiologic studies.
3. Use available software programs to analyze data collected from health research.
4. Interpret results from analysis of epidemiologic data.
|
| CPB 68000 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Directed readings, discussions, and other intensive studies in specialized topics of the disciplines of the department. The topic of study will be selected and announced prior to the semester offered and will be indicated in the student's record. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CPB 69100 - Seminar In Veterinary Pathology |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 2.00. Discussions of selected current disease problems with emphasis on gross and microscopic tissue changes and pathogenesis. Required of all graduate students in veterinary pathology each semester in residence. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CPB 69400 - Special Topics In Immunology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Understanding of principles of immunology is required. Journal club style class geared to provide graduate students with in-depth knowledge in current immunology. Faculty will participate in class to facilitate the students' understanding and discussion. Students present one-two times depending on the number of participating students. They select a research paper, recently published in the area of immunology, assigned for the semester and have it approved by the course organizer. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CPB 69500 - Seminar In Epidemiology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Discussion of recent research in epidemiology, emphasizing study design, analysis, and public health significance. Discussion topics will be selected from the following areas: clinical epidemiology, infectious disease epidemiology, chronic disease epidemiology, and environmental epidemiology. Required of graduate students with a principal field of study in epidemiology. Prerequisite: Course work in Statistics and Epidemiology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CPB 69700 - Research Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 or 1.00. Discussion of current concepts and research results in epidemiology, immunology, microbiology, parasitology, pathology, virology, host-parasite relationships, and other aspects of veterinary pathobiology. Each graduate student is expected to register each semester for VPB 69700 and to make one oral presentation per year. A grade of pass/not-pass and one credit will be awarded for the semester the presentation is given. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CPB 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CPB 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CPB 81600 - Applied Small Animal Toxicology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A study in the understanding of clinical signs, pathogenesis, treatment, and prevention of important toxicants in veterinary medicine. Emphasis is on toxicants that most commonly affect dogs, cats, pet birds, and pocket pets. Typically offered Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 81800 - Applied Large Animal Toxicology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A study in the understanding of the clinical signs, pathogenesis, treatment, and prevention of important toxicants in veterinary medicine. Emphasis is on toxicants that most commonly affect horses and production medicine operations or individual/small herd swine or ruminant populations. Typically offered Fall Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 84000 - Use And Care Of Laboratory Animals |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Topics will include the history of animal use in research; ethical thought related to animal use in research; alternatives; government regulatory requirements; statistical considerations in designing animal studies; animal models; use of the National Agricultural Library Animal Welfare Information Center; biology, husbandry, techniques, and diseases of common laboratory animal species; hygiene and occupational health; biohazard control; perioperative care and aseptic surgical techniques; anesthesia; analgesia; and euthanasia. Typically offered Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 85100 - General Pathology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of the basic cellular reactions that develop in response to injurious agents. Focuses on the gross and microscopic alterations in tissues, events leading to the development of those alterations, and the consequences of those changes on the health of animals. Includes degenerative, necrotic, inflammatory, and neoplastic changes in various animal species. Typically offered Fall Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 85201 - Veterinary Parasitology I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Covers the important helminth diseases of animals. Emphasis is placed on the pathogenesis, epidemiology, clinical features, diagnosis, control, and zoonotic implications. Typically offered Fall Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 85202 - Veterinary Parasitology II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Covers the important protozoal and arthropod diseases of animals. Emphasis is placed on the pathogenesis, epidemiology, clinical features, diagnosis, control, and zoonotic implications. Typically offered Spring, Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 85300 - Principles Of Veterinary Immunology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An overview of the fundamental concepts of immunology, with an emphasis on the immune system of domestic animals and comparative immunology. Focuses on the interactions between the host and microbial pathogens and on mechanisms that underlie hypersensitivity reactions, autoimmune diseases, and immune deficiencies. Discusses the principles of vaccination and serologic tests. Typically offered Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 85400 - Principles Of Epidemiology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An introduction to the principles of epidemiology as it relates to evaluating and describing the health of human and animal populations. An emphasis is placed on the appropriate use by veterinarians of information derived from epidemiologic studies in making clinical decisions regarding the diagnosis, treatment, prognosis, and prevention of disease in individual patients. A goal is to demonstrate why epidemiology is considered by some as "a basic science for clinicians.". Typically offered Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 85500 - Veterinary Hematology And Cytology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Provides an overview of veterinary hematology and cytology. Normal morphology and function of the cells of the hematopoietic system are reviewed. Laboratory analyses of the different cell types are discussed. The responses of the hematopoietic cells that can be seen during different disease processes are presented. Fundamentals of veterinary diagnostic cytology are introduced. Typically offered Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 85602 - Veterinary Bacteriology And Mycology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The lecture portion provides an introduction to bacterial and fungal agents of animal diseases. The taxonomy, morphology, and physiology of the organisms are discussed. Pathogenic features of the infectious agents and host responses to infection will be emphasized. Epidemiology, diagnosis, and control of the various diseases will be presented. The laboratory portion of the course covers laboratory safety, sterilization and disinfection in addition to microbiological techniques, antimicrobial susceptibility testing and interpretation, and identification of cultured bacteria and dermatophytes. Typically offered Fall Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop basic knowledge of clinically relevant bacterial and fungal agents of disease in animals, including taxonomy, virulence factors, and pathogenesis (including transmission), with less emphasis on diagnosis and treatment (though these will be discussed). The course includes a brief introduction to antimicrobial chemotherapy and judicious use of antimicrobial agents.
2. Learn which agents are considered zoonotic or of other public health importance (e.g. foodborne pathogens, bioterrorism potential, etc.).
3. Will practice basic microbiology laboratory techniques.
|
| CPB 85700 - Veterinary Systemic Pathobiology |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Provides coverage of system specific pathologic terminology and characteristic pathologic responses of the various body systems to injury. This is followed by presentation of representative examples of diseases of various etiologies, including, but not limited to, infectious and noninfectious diseases. Typically offered Spring, Summer.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CPB 86000 - Veterinary Virology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of medical virology and discussions of important viral diseases of animals. Typically offered Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CPB 86100 - Veterinary Clinical Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Laboratory techniques and interpretation of laboratory data as profiled by organ system are presented. Integration of data to explain pathophysiologic changes as an aid to diagnosis, prognosis and progression of disease is emphasized. Typically offered Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CPB 86200 - Clinical Epidemiology For Companion Animals |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Fundamentals of experimental epidemiology and clinical decision making are explored, particularly as they relate to the practice of companion animal medicine. Methods for disease detection and prevention are emphasized in catteries and kennels. The computer laboratories illustrate the software available for problem solving in population medicine. Typically offered Fall, Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 86300 - Epidemiology For Livestock Production |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Study of the fundamental concepts for epidemiologic implications in livestock production, including design of epidemiologic studies in livestock populations, investigation of disease outbreaks, use of diagnostic tests, infectious disease control, and animal health economics. Rationale, strategies, and concepts of animal disease control are emphasized with examples. Typically offered Fall, Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 86900 - Veterinary Public Health And Zoonoses |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A survey of fundamental topics on diseases that are caused by viral, bacterial, rickettsial, and parasitic agents and are known to be transmissible from animals to humans, as well as those diseases that are common to humans and animals. Topics emphasize the epidemiology and methods for prevention and control of these diseases in animal and human populations. Food safety and foodborne diseases, with particular emphasis on foods of animal origin, are discussed. Risk assessment of occupational and environmental health conditions to which veterinarians are likely to be exposed in training or the work place also is covered. Typically offered Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 87000 - Diagnostic Veterinary Cytology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A combination of didactic and wet laboratory microscopic sessions are used to demonstrate applications of diagnostic cytology. Consists of weekly sessions with a brief lecture overview of the basic cytologic features of a particular organ system followed by microscopic review of collected cytology material from that particular organ system. The didactic and laboratory sessions are supplemented by Internet-based and digital-format archived images for student review. Typically offered Spring, Summer.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 88300 - Public Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for senior veterinary students to fulfill their interests in public health and preventive veterinary medicine. There will be a classroom and field component, focusing on topics including epidemiology, food safety, infectious diseases, environmental health and health communications. Visits to various agencies will complement the course material by offering inside views of the day to day operations of the facilities as well as the career experiences of the employees working in them. Students will also gain field experience in actual or devised research projects that will include activities such as study design, questionnaire development, collecting epidemiologic data, date input, analysis, and interpretation. Students will be asked to design a study, produce an information brochure, and prepare a verbal presentation for elementary school children about topics relating to being safe with your pets. Total clinic hours 129. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the varied roles veterinarians play in the physical, mental and social well being of people.
2. Know the state and federal agencies involved in the U.S. public health system.
3. Use their epidemiological skills to investigate disease outbreaks and critically evaluate epidemiological studies.
4. Assess disease risks resulting from animal exposure in targeted human populations.
5. Assess disease risks resulting from food production and drinking water systems.
6. Understand the role of the veterinarian in biosecurity and responding to animal emergencies resulting from natural or man-made disasters.
7. Know how to communicate effectively with the public and media.
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| CPB 88400 - Laboratory Animal Medicine |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will participate in laboratory animal medicine practice which can include facility inspections, protocol review, preventative medicine, monitoring disease status, and diagnosis and treatment of spontaneous diseases in laboratory animals. Total clinic hours 129. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 88501 - Necropsy I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This is one of three concurrent courses (CPB 88501, CPB 88502, CPB 88503) in which senior veterinary students will be enrolled. Students will actively participate in the diagnostic necropsy service within the ADDL. The student is expected to gain basic clinical experience and training in necropsy and diagnostic pathology as they contribute to and support the practice of veterinary medicine. Students are expected to actively assist faculty in performing necropsies, discuss pathophysiology of cases and submit reports of their observation. Total clinic hours 43. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 88502 - Microbiology I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This is one of three concurrent courses (CPB 88501, CPB 88502, CPB 88503) in which senior veterinary students will be enrolled. This course is designed for senior veterinary students to gain additional training in diagnostic microbiology (bacteriology, mycology, virology and molecular diagnostics) in relation to clinical diseases. Students will actively participate in self study and discussion of selected diagnostic microbiology cases as well as hands-on logistically approached laboratory procedures for culture and isolation of microbial agents. The students are expected to be proficient and competent in veterinary diagnostic microbiology at the end of rotation. Total clinic hours 43. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 88503 - Clinical Pathology I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This is one of three concurrent courses (CPB 88501, CPB 88502, CPB 88503) in which senior veterinary students will be enrolled. In addition to clinical pathology, students must be enrolled in microbiology and diagnostic pathology (necropsy). The main goal of this rotation is to insure that each participant is at a level of competency that every graduating senior should have attained. Through a combination of self study and small group periods in a classroom as well as on a multi-headed microscope, a set of core objectives will be explored. These objectives have been chosen as a representation of basic clinical pathology skills that students should have mastered to practice veterinary medicine competently. In addition, an approved journal article or comparable piece of literature will be evaluated and summarized. An objective examination at the end of the rotation will test the student's knowledge of the objectives. Total clinic hours 43. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| CPB 88600 - Diagnostic Pathology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced training in diagnostic approaches to identification of the causes and pathogenesis of disease in mammals. Total clinic hours 129. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 88700 - Avian Medicine |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for senior veterinary students to receive advanced training in avian disease diagnosis and health management in commercial poultry flocks. Critical poultry infectious and non-infectious diseases will be discussed. The student will visit production facilities for layers, broilers, turkeys, or ducks. Vaccination and medication programs for these species will be discussed. Necropsy experience will be gained from poultry, game bird, and pet bird accessions to the Animal Disease Diagnostic Laboratory (ADDL). Total clinic hours 129. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 88800 - Microbiology II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for senior veterinary students to gain advanced training in clinical microbiology in relation to clinical diseases. Microbial diseases of veterinary importance and zoonotic significance will be addressed. Students will actively pursue selected microbiology accessions to the Animal Disease Diagnostic Laboratory (ADDL) in depth by applying problem-based learning approach, using correct laboratory procedures, and searching related literature to reach microbiological diagnosis and conclude the cases. Written reports, oral presentations, case discussion will be highlighted in the rotation to enrich the learning experience and insure the proficiency and competency in veterinary clinical microbiology. Total clinic hours 129. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CPB 88900 - Clinical Pathology II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This advanced clinical pathology rotation is designed to take the core skills mastered in CPB 88503 and expand on them. Through daily interaction to the consulting office on clinical cases, students will learn to critically evaluate cytologic and hematologic specimens as well as laboratory data. Activities that the student will engage in include the resident's journal club, weekly clinical pathology rounds, large animal clinical pathology rounds and other small group sessions with residents and pathologists. The goal for the rotation is to begin building a broad base of experience to continue building on in the future. Total clinic hours 129. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Comparative Pathobiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CPET 10100 - Electrical Circuits |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of DC electrical circuits, Ohm's Law, Kirchoff's Laws, series and parallel circuits, power, magnetism, ammeters, voltmeters, ohmmeters, inductance, capacitance, and an introduction to alternating voltages, currents and reactances. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CPET 16100 - Analog Electronics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of solid state devices and circuits. Topics include eiodes, LEDs, photo-sensitive devices, Zener diodes, bipolar transistors, MOS devices, linear integrated circuits, and related application circuits such as rectifiers, sensing circuits, various transistor amplifiers, transistor switches, linear and nonlinear op-amp circuits. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CPET 18100 - Computer Operating Systems Basics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to computer operating systems, organization and functions of hardware components, and system software. Emphasis on system commands, operating system interface, system utilities, shells programming, file systems and management. Introduction to concepts of graphical user interface, device drivers, memory management, processes, concurrency, scheduling, multitasking and multiprocessing. Laboratory experience include Microsoft Windows, and UNIX. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CPET 19000 - Problem Solving With MATLAB |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. A study of the principles and practice of problem solving using MATLAB. Topics include MATLAB basics, functions and variables, file input and output, user-defined functions and program design, complex data manipulation, graphical user interface, and technical problem solving applications, etc. The students shall gain hands-on experience through several programming assignments, and practice strategies for collaborative problem solving such as creating specifications, brainstorming, sketching an idea, solution evaluation, and solution testing. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 4 credits
|
| CPET 21300 - Web-based Analysis and Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the concepts, processes, and tools used in analyzing and designing Web applications. Object-oriented methods and tools are utilized. Students develop Web-based user interfaces and prototypes. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CPET 28100 - Local Area Networks And Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of issues in local area network (LAN) planning, design, installation, and management. Topics include LAN components and protocols, topologies and network architecture, network system hardware consideration, LAN design and network layout, wiring and installation, network operating systems, network servers, connection and services for clients, network system administration and management. Other topics may include LAN applications, performance tuning, disaster recovery, hybrid networking environment and integration, network monitoring tools, and network management tools. Laboratory experiences include Microsoft Windows NT and UNIX. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CPET 29900 - Selected Computer Engineering Technology Subject |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Hours and subject matter to be arranged by staff. An individual design, special topics course, sophomore-level research and/or analytical project in any one of the following areas: computer-based technical problem solving, digital electronics, analog electronics systems, networking systems, computer programming, computer-based problem solving, embedded systems, and system integration. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| CPET 35500 - Data Communications and Networking |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A survey of data communication and networking techniques, protocols, and standards. Topics include OSI model, TCP/IP protocols and applications, signals, encoding and modulating, transmission of data and interfaces, transmission media, multiplexing, error detection and correction, data link controls and protocols, switching techniques, local area networks, wide area networks and other well known networks services including integrated services digital network (ISDN), X.25 (packet switching), frame relay (virtual-circuit), asynchronous transfer mode (ATM), and synchronous optical network (SONET). Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CPET 36400 - Networking Security |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the analysis, design, implementation, and management issues surrounding effective network security. The business, conceptual, and technological aspects of network security for computer networks are considered. Topics include virus protection, firewalls, authentication, encryption, wireless, security, security protocols, network security policy development and fraud protection. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CPET 37500 - Microcomputer Based Digital Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. A study of the microprocessor system bus; the architecture and interfacing of various processor, memory, and input-output devices; the instruction set; assembly language programming; and design of microprocessor-based digital network. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
|
| CPET 38400 - Wide Area Network Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores wide area network (WAN) planning and design issues. Emphasis on WAN switching methods and technologies, protocols, and services, traffic engineering and capacity planning, design and tradeoffs. Representative case studies will be used. Other topics may include remote access technologies, access networks, backbone networks, enterprise WAN networks, remote monitoring tools and protocol analyzer, trends in WAN design and LAN/WAN integration. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CPET 41100 - Microcomputer Interfacing |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of microprocessor interfacing techniques and components required to assemble a typical microcomputer system. Emphasis on serial I/O and parallel I/O chips; peripheral interfacing: LED display, keyboard, CRT display, floppy disk, D/A's, A/D's, and stepping motor. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
|
| CPET 47000 - Technology Project Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics include project management concepts, project life cycle; project initiation, team building, planning, review, execution, and tracking and control; project related issues, resource, cost, subcontractor control, and risk management; Web-based project management and collaboration, project management and integration tools. A portion of the course is devoted to case studies. Written reports and oral presentations required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CPET 47200 - Automatic Control Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of network analysis using Laplace transforms, classical control systems theory, system stability and compensation, and topics on microprocessor-based control systems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CPET 48600 - Robotics And Control Electronics With Microcomputers |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of robots, robotic sensors, robotic components, and controlling robots with microcomputers. Topics include sensor-based real-time robot control systems; interfacing the following types of sensors: proximity sensors, force sensors, motion sensors, sound sensors, and vision sensor; low-level data acquisition and communication, high-level communication, coordinate transformation, coordinated path generation, and robot motion programming. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CPET 49000 - Senior Design Project I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An extensive individual design and/or analytical project performed in consultation with one or more faculty advisors. Collaboration with representatives of industry, government agencies, or community institutions is encouraged. Evidence of extensive and thorough laboratory performance is required. Phase I includes, but is not limited to: (1) faculty acceptance of project proposal, (2) defining and limiting project objectives, (3) initial research and source contacts, (4) project proposal management, (5) procurement of materials, and (6) periodic progress reports. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CPET 49100 - Senior Design Project II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Phase II includes, but is not limited to: (1) continued research and finalized design, (2) project management process, (3) project analysis, design, modeling and prototyping, and testing, (4) oral presentation to faculty and other interested parties, (5) standard-format written technical report. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CPET 49300 - Wireless Networking |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers both theoretical issues related to wireless networking and practical systems for both wireless data networks and cellular wireless telecommunication systems. Students will also work on a project that addresses some recent issues in wireless and mobile networking. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CPET 49400 - Java Programming Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course covers design and implementation of modern embedded, stand-alone, Web-based, and distributed Java applications. Topics include definition of classes and objects; Java basics, array and string classes; exceptions and debugging; graphics user interface; file I/O streams; Java multi-threading; Java applets and servlets; Java database connectivity; Java RMI (remote method invocation); Java native interface through C/C++; Java industrial and enterprise applications. Students develop application-oriented final projects. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CPET 49500 - Web Engineering and Design |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An introduction to problems involved in analyzing and designing Web applications from small-scale, short-lived services, to large-scale enterprise applications distributed across the Internet, and corporate intranets and extranets. Major topics include Web standard protocols and interfaces, Web security, Web engineering methodology, Web architectures and Web components (Web server, application servers or environments, the client, and persistent server), E-commerce infrastructures, database, and Web integration, Web services standards and technologies and Web-based application development. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CPET 49900 - Computer Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Hours and subject matter to be arranged by staff. An extensive individual design, special topics course, research and/or analytical project in any one of the following areas: networking operating systems, computer networking, distributed computing, client/server applications, wireless communications, wide area network design, network system management, computer and network security. Internet system programming, and industrial applications of networking, control, and monitoring. Collaboration with representatives of industry, government agencies, or community institutions is encouraged. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 12 credits
|
| CPET 54500 - Service-Oriented Architecture And Enterprise Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intensive and comprehensive introduction to all essential aspects of the Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA) and enterprise applications, including modeling, methodologies, and processes, enabling technologies in support of integrated and collaborative enterprise computing applications. Topics include XML and Web service protocols, enterprise application and data integration issues, service-oriented architecture, SOA analysis and design (SOAD), and enterprise SOA realization, SOE-driven project management, and case studies. Student participation in presenting technical papers from the recent literature, class discussion, and a team-based final project and presentation are expected. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CPET 56500 - Mobile Computing Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction of the system architecture, technologies, and applications of mobile computing. Topics covered include: mobile and wireless environment; mobile device technology; mobile computing architecture and protocols; mobile computing security; and applications in wireless and mobile computing, including distribution applications, mobile middleware, mobile information and database access, mobile multimedia, and remote execution. A combination of lectures, reading, presentation and reports, case studies, and group discussions is used. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CPET 57500 - Management Of Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction of the conceptual foundation of and the method for managing technology and innovation. Topics include technology and society; technology development infrastructure; technology and strategy; technology competitive analysis, forecasting and assessment; techniques for dealing with risk, uncertainty and change; tools and best practices for technology lifecycle management; government, societal, and international issues. A combination of lectures, reading, presentation and reports, a variety of case studies, and group discussions is used. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CPET 58100 - Workshop In Computer Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. Advanced study of technical and professional topics. Emphasis is on new developments relating to technical, operational, and training aspects of industry and technology education. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
|
| CPET 59000 - Special Problems In IT And Advanced Computer Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Independent study of a special problem under the guidance of a member of the staff (or student's academic advisor). Does not substitute for either M.S. thesis or M.S. project credit. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CPET 59800 - Directed MS Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A formal investigation of a particular problem under the guidance of the advisory committee. Not applicable to a thesis-option plan of study. Enrollment during at least two consecutive terms for a total of three credits is required. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CPSY B2300 - Human Relationship Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the basic psychological principles and techniques of enhancing relationships with self and others. Emphasizes understanding self-limiting behavior, self-understanding, and skill development and knowledge in the dynamics of interaction with others. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
|
| CRJU J1000 - Foundation Of Criminal Justice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Historical and philosophical development of Criminal Justice Systems. Principals involved in the social control process with emphasis on legal systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CRJU J1010 - The American Criminal Justice System |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the Criminal Justice System of the United States and its function in contemporary society. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CRJU J2000 - The American Criminal Justice System |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to major elements of the Criminal Justice System – the Police, Courts, and Correction – as they function in contemporary American society. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CS 10000 - An Introduction To Computer Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is intended to: integrate freshman computer science majors into the department; help them adjust to university life; assist them in developing their academic and intellectual capabilities; introduce them to contemporary issues in computer science; provide an overview of the careers open to those with degrees in computer science. this course must be taken pass/no pass only. Credit by examination is not available for this course. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CS 10200 - Computer Science Concepts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course emphasizes computing concepts of special interest to first-year students. Hands-on applications are stressed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 10700 - Introduction To Computers For Science Majors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A general introduction to computers and their applications. A fundamental understanding of Information Systems, components, terminology, programming concepts and representative applications. Contemporary issues. Hands-on experience with operating systems; information gathering systems; word processing; spreadsheets, including presentation graphics and statistical functions database systems; statistical packages; and programming principles a final, capstone project required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 11000 - Introduction To Computers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Computer applications and how they can be used for solving problems in everyday life. The Internet with an emphasis on obtaining information from the World Wide Web, use of a database with an emphasis on data storage and retrieval, spreadsheets, word processing, presentation software, integration of multiple software packages. May not be taken for credit by Computer Science majors. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
TSW-Lafayette
|
| CS 11200 - Survey Of Computer Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide a broad and realistic idea of what computer professionals do and how they do it. It will prepare students for later computing courses, including software development courses, by providing both individual and team hands-on lab experiences with web design, markup languages (HTML) and JavaScript. Students will be introduced to various professional opportunities and work environments. Current topics in computer science as they relate to society will be covered. Students will gain sufficient programming experience to enable a smooth transition to CS 16000 Java Programming. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 11400 - Introduction to Visual Basic |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to programming using the Visual Basic language and its integrated development environment. Topics to be covered include: the syntax and structure of the VB language; controls dialog boxes, and other interface tools; menu design; multiple forms; error-trapping, and arrays. Other topics which may be covered include object linking and embedding (OLE); VB for applications; database development using recordsets and databound controls; data handling; grids; validation and selection; drag and drop; and graphics, and new revisions for interoperability with other languages. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 12300 - Programming I: Java |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to computer science and computer programming with an emphasis on their scientific basis and applications. The primary language for this course is Java. The topics of the course includes: indentifiers, basic data types, operators, expressions, control statements, methods, recursion program structure, arrays, objects, classes, inheritance, polymorphism, and the design of simple graphical user interfaces. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CS 12400 - Programming II: C++ |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an extension of CS 12300 that introduces the C++ programming language. The topics of the course include: functions, program structure, pointers, objects, classes, and inheritance in C++, standard template library, files, streams, and the preprocessor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CS 14000 - Introduction To Data Processing (Visual Basic) |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Not available for credit toward graduation in the School of Science or for computer technology majors. Intended for students who expect to use computers outside the physical sciences and engineering. Introduction to the Visual Basic programming language and the development of event-driven programs.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| CS 14900 - Web Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. HyperText Markup Language, JavaScript, Active Server Pages, Java Serves Pages, Java servlets, Cascading Style Sheets, Extensible Markup Language (XML), website security. May not be taken for credit by majors in Computer Sciences. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 15500 - Cobol Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the COBOL programming language with emphasis on file organization and processing. Topics covered include data types, data definition, subprograms and parameter passing. Emphasis on developing program structure and style. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 15800 - C Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to structured programming in C. Data types and expression evaluation. Programmer-defined functions including passing parameters by value and by address. Selection topics include if/else/else-if, conditional expressions, and switch. Repetition topics include while, do-while, for, and recursion. External file input and output. Arrays, analysis of searching and sorting algorithms, and strings. Pointers and dynamic memory allocation. Students are expected to complete assignments in a collaborative environment. CS 15800 may be used to satisfy College of Science requirement of participation in at least one team-building and collaboration experience. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate competency in the fundamental principles, concepts and methods of programming (C and MATLAB), with emphasis on developing solutions in the domains of physical sciences, mathematics, and engineering.
2. Demonstrate the ability to function as part of a technical team to generate the solution to a programming problem.
3. Explore common programming concepts in various computing environments and implement those concepts across more than one language.
4. Analyze alternative algorithm designs to implement a solution designed to make efficient use of limited resources of the computer.
|
| CS 15900 - Programming Applications For Engineers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental principles, concepts, and methods of programming (C and MATLAB), with emphasis on applications in the physical sciences and engineering. Basic problem solving and programming techniques; fundamental algorithms and data structures; and use of programming logic in solving engineering problems. Students are expected to complete assignments in a collaborative learning environment.
Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| CS 16000 - Introduction To Computer Science I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An introduction to the fundamental concepts and techniques of Computer Science. Students will learn to program using an object-oriented language. They will learn how to translate a real problem into a program description, and how to write and test a program to implement their description. The emphasis will be on developing a professional style at an elementary level. CS 16000 will carry syntax as far as interacting classes, arrays of one dimension, and simple file i/o. Students with no programming background should instead consider CS 11200. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 16100 - Introduction To Computer Science II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course continues CS 16000. Students will design larger programs to solve more complicated problems. The emphasis is on deepening students¿ abilities to deal with abstraction, problem decomposition, and the interaction between program components. Students will develop their professional practice through analysis of more general problems, debugging and testing of their programs, and written presentation of their solutions. Topics include multidimensional arrays, event-driven programs, GUI's, class inheritance and interfaces, and libraries. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 17000 - C And Data Structures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course will introduce the C programming language including the language syntax, the programming environment, basic data types, complex data types (pointer, array, structures, bit fields and unions), macros, i/o, and functions. Program development will emphasize modularization, data abstraction, and selection and analysis of algorithms. Other topics include recursion, files, linked lists, stacks, queues, and binary trees. Course projects are related to common engineering and computer science applications. Course will not count toward graduation in the computer science department. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 17200 - Introduction To C |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The course will introduce the C programming language including the language syntax, the programming environment, basic data types, complex data types (pointer, array, structures, bit fields and unions), macros, i/o, and functions. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 17700 - Programming With Multimedia Objects |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to computers and programming: number representations, primitive data types and operations, basic control structures, programming applets and applications using graphical user interfaces, programming for detecting events and performing actions, processing multimedia objects such as images and sounds. Throughout the course, examples are drawn from a variety of fields in the natural sciences. Not open to CS majors with a grade of C or better in CS 18000. Not open to non-CS majors with a grade of C or better in any course in computer programming. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| CS 18000 - Problem Solving And Object-Oriented Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Problem solving and algorithms, implementation of algorithms in a high level programming language, conditionals, the iterative approach and debugging, collections of data, searching and sorting, solving problems by decomposition, the object-oriented approach, subclasses of existing classes, handling exceptions that occur when the program is running, graphical user interfaces (GUIs), data stored in files, abstract data types, a glimpse at topics from other CS courses. Intended primarily for students majoring in computer sciences. Credit cannot be obtained for both CS 18000 and any of 15600, 15800 and 15900. Not open to students with credit in CS 18100 or 24000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students have an understanding of solving problems by analyzing the problem, designing an algorithm, and programming the solution.
|
| CS 18200 - Foundations Of Computer Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Logic and proofs; sets, functions, relations, sequences and summations; number representations; counting; fundamentals of the analysis of algorithms; graphs and trees; proof techniques; recursion; Boolean logic; finite state machines; pushdown automata; computability and undecidability. Typically offered Spring Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students understand discrete mathematical tools, facts, and reasoning relevant to computer science.
|
| CS 18300 - Professional Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional Practice. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 18400 - Professional Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional Practice. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 19000 - Topics In Computer Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CS 19100 - Freshman Resources Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is intended to integrate freshman majors in computer sciences into the department, help them adjust to university life, and assist them in developing academic and intellectual survival skills. Weekly recitation sections enable the students to work in teams. Strongly recommended for freshmen. The credit may be used only toward free electives. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 19700 - Freshman Honors Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A seminar dealing with the history, context, and future of computer science. Open only to students in the Computer Sciences Honors Program. The credit may be used only toward free electives. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| CS 20200 - RPG Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Programming of representative business applications using the RPG (Report Programming Generator) programming language. Emphasis on reports, external data handling and files. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 20300 - Advanced Visual Basic |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course continues the study of Visual Basic begun in C S 11400/EET 11400. Topics to be covered include: reading and writing of sequential and direct files; custom controls; arrays, objects and collections; database concepts and applications; use of the data report designer; and the distribution of applications. Additional topics may include the use of built-in ActiveX controls; advanced SQL; the creation of on-line help; object linking and embedding (OLE); calling DLL procedures (Windows API); class modules; and an introduction to ActiveX components. Students will learn the skills needed to create stand-alone and www-based Visual Basic applications for personal computer use. This course will provide guidance in preparing for the Microsoft Certified Systems Designer exam. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 20600 - Computer Algebra And Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Using a computer algebra system to solve mathematics problems, leaning how to translate mathematical notation and procedures into the language of the computer algebra system. Learning the basic concepts of programming languages, comparing programming concepts with mathematical concepts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
|
| CS 22000 - Programming I For Engineers And Scientists |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to programming in C++. Course topics include data types, control flow, operators, and expressions. Applications for engineers and scientists.
. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| CS 22300 - Computer Architecture And Assembly Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the fundamental concepts of computer architecture progressing from the digital logic level to the microarchitecture level and then to the instruction set level. Assembly language and the assembly process will also be included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CS 22700 - Introduction To C Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to programming in C to solve engineering problems. Topics covered include primitive data types, control structures, standard input/output, file input/output, mathematic library, procedural programming, problem-solving, user-defined functions, arrays, and pointers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
The goal of this course is to introduce to programming in C to solve engineering problems. Specific learning outcomes are listed below. The letters in parentheses refer to ABET Program Learning Outcomes. A student who successfully fulfills the course requirements will have demonstrated:
1. An ability to use C programming language to solve elementary engineering problems. (a, c, e, k)
2. An understanding of and an ability to use data types, variables, and arithmetic operators. (a, e)
3. An ability to use conditional statements and loops structures. (c, e, k)
4. An understanding of the use of arrays and pointers. (c, e, k)
5. An ability to develop function-oriented programs. (a, c, e, k)
6. An understanding of the distinction for passing arguments among functions. (c, k)
7. An ability to use standard input-out/put and file input/output operations. (c, e, k)
8. An understanding of the object-oriented programming. (c, k, j)
|
| CS 22800 - Object Oriented Programming In C++ |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will introduce the fundamentals of objected oriented programming in C++. Students should gain understanding of the implementation of inheritance, composition, method overloading and overriding, polymorphism, templates, and standard template library. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
The goal of this course is to introduce to programming in C++ to solve engineering problems. Specific learning outcomes are listed below. The letters in parentheses refer to ABET Program Learning Outcomes. A student who successfully fulfills the course requirements will have demonstrated:
1. An ability to use object oriented programming in C++ to solve basic engineering problems. (a, c, e, k)
2. An understanding of the use of classes and access control to class members. (c, e, f, k)
3. An ability to use class inheritance and composition. (c, e, k)
4. An understanding of the object oriented principles in C++: method overloading, overriding, and polymorphism. (e, k)
5. An ability to use templates and standard template library. (c, e, k)
|
| CS 23200 - Introduction to C and Unix |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to the C language and the Unix operating system. It presumes fluency in a high-level language. The course will focus on standard C and Unix tools, rather than a proprietary version of either. C topics include: data types, the syntax for arithmetic, logical and relational functions, control functions, scope, communications with the shell, file I/O, pointers, arrays, structs, typedefs, macro and preprocessor functions, and the use of libraries and multiple source files. Unix topics include the file and directory structures, permissions, shells, standard tools such as history, sort, vi, grep, sed, tar, and make, and simple shell scripting. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 23500 - Introduction To Organizational Computing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. People and organizations, decision-making, information systems, telecommunications, desktop systems, integration tools, collaboration and groupware, multimedia, authoring multimedia documents, emerging technologies. May not be taken for credit by Computer Science majors. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 24000 - Programming In C |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The UNIX environment, C development cycle, data representation, operators, program structure, recursion, macros, C preprocessor, pointers and addresses, dynamic memory allocation, structures, unions, typedef, bit-fields, pointer/structure applications, UNIX file abstraction, file access, low-level I/O, concurrency. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students understand programming principles and techniques for problem solving in the C programming language.
|
| CS 25000 - Computer Architecture |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Digital logic: transistors, gates, and combinatorial circuits; clocks; registers and register banks; arithmetic-logic units; data representation: big-endian and little-endian integers; ones and twos complement arithmetic; signed and unsigned values; Von-Neumann architecture and bottleneck; instruction sets; RISC and CISC designs; instruction pipelines and stalls; rearranging code; memory and address spaces; physical and virtual memory; interleaving; page tables; memory caches; bus architecture; polling and interrupts; DMA; device programming; assembly language; optimizations; parallelism; data pipelining. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students understand the function of basic hardware, including fundamentals of digital logic, processors, memory, and I/O.
|
| CS 25100 - Data Structures And Algorithms |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Running time analysis of algorithms and their implementations, one-dimensional data structures, trees, heaps, additional sorting algorithms, binary search trees, hash tables, graphs, directed graphs, weighted graph algorithms, additional topics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students understand fundamental data structures, fundamental algorithms, and their implementation.
|
| CS 25200 - Systems Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Low-level programming; review of addresses, pointers, memory layout, and data representation; text, data, and bss segments; debugging and hex dumps; concurrent execution with threads and processes; address spaces; file names; descriptors and file pointers; inheritance; system calls and library functions; standard I/O and string libraries; simplified socket programming; building tools to help programmers; make and make files; shell scripts and quoting; unix tools including sed, echo, test, and find; scripting languages such as awk; version control; object and executable files (.o and a.out); symbol tables; pointers to functions; hierarchical directories; and DNS hierarchy; programming embedded systems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students have an appreciation and ability for low-level (systems) programming and debugging.
|
| CS 25600 - Application Software Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Project course requiring implementation of an integrated application system from a structured design. Emphasis on structured development techniques and on system and user documentation. Other topics include indexed and relative file organization, JCL, Reportwriter, and introduction to information and business systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 26000 - Data Structures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to the common data structures (ADT's) of computer science and the algorithms which maintain and operate on them. These include arrays, stacks, queues, linked lists, trees, graphs, and more general structures like maps and dictionaries. The relevant algorithms include additions, deletions, sorts, searches, traversals, and others appropriate to the structure. The course includes an introduction to the prediction and testing of algorithm performance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 27000 - Assembly Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Computer hardware organization, the fetch-execute cycle, machine language and data representation. Assembly language programming, addressing techniques, input/output, calling conventions, procedures and parameter passing, macros, and conditional assembly. Assembler concepts. Emphasis on the development of well structured programs in assembly language. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| CS 27100 - Computer Architecture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to computer organization and architecture. Fundamentals of digital logic and representation of numeric and nonnumeric data. Assembly level organization and programming, including instruction formats, addressing modes, and subprogram call/return. Design of main memory, cache memory, and virtual memory. Interrupt basics, interrupt-driven I/O, DMA, and bus protocols. Processor organization, data paths, the control unit, microprogramming, pipelining, and performance enhancements. Multiprocessor and alternative architectures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 27400 - Data Communications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of data communication techniques. Topics include communications media, synchronous and asynchronous transmission, coding, error detection and correction, communications protocols and formats, modulation and demodulation, multiplexing and networking, and the OSI model with emphasis on the physical and data link layers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 27500 - Data Structures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Data structures describe the way that computer programs organize and store information. This course introduces the specification, representation and manipulation of the basic data structures common to much of computer programming such as: linked lists, arrays, stacks, queues, strings, trees, graphs, search trees, heaps, hash tables, and B-trees. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate understanding of the abstract properties of various data structures such as stacks, queues, lists, and trees, and use them effectively in application programs.
2. Implement data structures in various ways and compare these different implementations.
3. Demonstrate understanding of various sorting algorithms and compare the efficiency of them in terms of time and space.
|
| CS 28000 - Survey Of Information Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to information technology development from a perspective using business fundamentals that relate to information systems and the analysis and design of those systems. Topics include competitive, strategic, and technological advantages; collaborative partnerships within e-business; decision making; and databases. Supply chain management, customer relationship management, enterprise resource planning, and other applications will be surveyed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 28400 - Professional Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional Practice. Permission of instruction required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 28401 - Professional Practice Part-Time |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional Practice Part-Time. The instructor determines the adequacy of the student's preparation for the work assignment proposed by the prospective employer for the student. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CS 29000 - Topics In Computer Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CS 29100 - Sophomore Development Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Presentations by corporate partners about careers in computer science. Presentations by faculty about careers in academia and research. Students learn about upper-division courses, tour research laboratories, and attend job fairs. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 29200 - Intermediate Topics In Computer Science |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Intermediate seminar addressing current topics or issues in Computer Science or Information Systems. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 12 credits
|
| CS 29500 - Industrial Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Practical problems in local industry limited to about 10 to 20 hours per week for which the student may receive some renumeration. May be repeated but the total combined credit that may be applied to a degree is limited to three. Open only to full-time students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Practicum
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 5 times
|
| CS 30100 - Language Competency |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A course intended to give the student experience in an additional high-level language. Each section of this course is the responsibility of a particular faculty member who will advise the student and assign programming projects. A student may receive credit for at most three of these sections, but for no section whose language was a major component of a course for which credit has already been attained. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CS 30200 - Operating Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An operating system manages all of the hardware and software resources of a computer. This course provides an introduction to the basic concepts and terminology of operating systems. Topics will include multiprogramming, CPU scheduling, memory management, file systems, concurrent processes, multiprocessors, security, and network operating systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CS 30303 - Internship In Computer Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Directed in-service experience with employers that may include but not limited to government agencies, private industry, and community organizations. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Student will experience how computer science skills are used in the job.
2. Student will experience working as part of a team.
|
| CS 30600 - Computers In Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Case study analysis of the social impacts of computerization and networking. Topics include computer ethics, crime, privacy, security, reliability, and vulnerability. Other topics include cyberphilia, cyberphobia, censorship, depersonalization, disenfranchisement, automated decision making, artificial intelligence, cognitive science, and ergonomics. Students present projects applying these issues to today's environment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 30700 - Software Engineering I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the methods and tools of software engineering; software life cycle; specification and design of software, software testing, cost and effort estimation; laboratory exercises with design, testing, and other tools. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 30900 - Discrete Mathematical Structures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is the study of finite and discrete mathematical structures relating to the theory of computation. Topics will include directed and undirected graphs and their relation to these structures, combinatorial problems inherent in computation, Boolean algebra, and recurrence relations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CS 31000 - Topics In Computer Languages |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of data structures including two-dimensional arrays, pointer variables, linked lists, stacks, queues and trees. Brief introduction to other high-level programming languages. Algorithms for searching and sorting. Recursion. Not open to majors in the department of computer science. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 31400 - Numerical Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Iterative methods for solving nonlinear equations; direct and iterative methods for solving linear systems; approximations of functions, derivatives, and integrals; error analysis. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 31600 - Programming Languages |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of programming language features and their implementation in different types of programming languages. The design goals and motivations for various languages will be discussed. Topics will include a comparison of block-structured, object-oriented, functional, and logic programming languages. The advantages and disadvantages of each type of language will be considered. Specific examples of each type of language will be included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CS 32100 - Introduction To Computer Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introductory course in computer graphics. This course introduces fundamental concepts of computer graphics technology and principles to create three-dimensional graphics. Fundamental graphics algorithms are discussed, as well as graphics programming, using a modern graphics standard. Students are expected to complete several programming assignments that implement fundamental computer graphics techniques in the Unix operating system environment. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 33100 - Introduction To C++ And Object Oriented Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the C++ language with emphasis on features supporting object oriented programming. Fundamental data type and operations. Expression evaluation. Selection and iteration constraints. Functions, procedures, and macro. Standard libraries. Classes: declaration and definition; instances; member functions; constructors and destructors; function overloading; inheritance and polymorphism. Stream input and output. Using classes to encapsulate data structure and implementation details. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 33200 - Algorithms |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An algorithm is a procedure for solving a problem in a finite number of steps. Algorithms, along with data structures, form the fundamental building blocks of computer programs. The types of algorithms discussed will include sorting, searching, probabilistic, graph, and geometric algorithms. The following algorithm techniques are covered: backtracking, divide and conquer, branch and bound, greedy method, and dynamic programming. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CS 33400 - Fundamentals Of Computer Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental principles and techniques of computer graphics. The course covers the basics of going from a scene representation to a raster image using OpenGL. Specific topics include coordinate manipulations, perspective, basics of illumination and shading, color models, texture maps, clipping and basic raster algorithms, fundamentals of scene constructions. C S 314 is recommended. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 34200 - Introduction To Computer-Based Biomedical Image Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to image, manipulation and analysis. Biomedical materials to be analyzed include electrophoretic gels, bacterial agar plates, cells and tissues, x-ray films and CAT scan images. Personal computer systems and the basic programming skill of the C language also will be introduced. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CS 34800 - Information Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. File organization and index structures; object-oriented database languages; the relational database model with introductions to SQL and DBMS; hierarchical models and network models with introductions to HDDL, HDML, and DBTG Codasyl; data mining; data warehousing; database connectivity; distributed databases; the client/server paradigm; middleware, including ODBC, JDBC, CORBA, and MOM. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 35000 - Programming Language Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of language design issues and their implications for translation and run-time support. Examination of modern programming languages and features: Abstract data and control structures, procedures, parameter passing mechanisms, block structuring and scope rules, input/output, concurrent execution and storage management. Models of run time behavior. Comparison of imperative and declarative programming languages. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 35200 - Compilers: Principles And Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Should not be taken concurrently with CS 354. The theory and practice of programming language translation, compilation, and run-time systems, organized around a significant programming project to build a compiler for a simple but nontrivial programming language. Modules, interfaces, tools. Data structures for tree languages. Lexical analysis, syntax analysis, abstract syntax. Symbol tables, semantic analysis. Translation, intermediate code, basic blocks, traces. Instruction selection, CISC and RISC machines. Liveness analysis, graph coloring register allocation. Supplemental material drawn from garbage collection, object-oriented languages, higher-order languages, dataflow analysis, optimization, polymorphism, scheduling and pipelining, memory hierarchies. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Provides students with an understanding of how a computer program is converted into elementary code that causes the computer to produce the output intended by the programmer.
|
| CS 35300 - Principles Of Concurrency And Parallelism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Important concepts, models, algorithms, abstractions, and implementation aspects of concurrent and parallel programs. Topics include: techniques used to describe concurrent programs (e.g., threads, events, co-routines, continuations), abstractions for shared-memory and message-passing programs, relaxed memory models, livestock and deadlock detection, lock-free algorithms, data races and atomicity, scheduling techniques, process calculi, and software transactions. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. This course provides students the vocabulary and concepts to better understand how to design and program scalable multicore processors.
|
| CS 35400 - Operating Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Should not be taken concurrently with CS 35200. Introduction to operating systems. Computer system and operating system architectures, processes, inter-process communication, inter-process synchronization, mutual exclusion, deadlocks, memory hierarchy, virtual memory, CPU scheduling, file systems, I/O device management, security. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Provides students with an understanding of the fundamentals of computer operating systems.
|
| CS 35500 - Introduction To Cryptography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to cryptography basics: Classic historical ciphers including Caesar, Vigenere and Vernam ciphers; modern ciphers including DES, AES, Pohlig-Hellman, and RSA; signatures and digests; key exchange; simple protocols; block and stream ciphers; network-centric protocols. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 36000 - Software Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An introduction to software engineering using an object-oriented approach. The software development process. Iterative and incremental development. Team organization and project management. Object-oriented analysis and design. Representation of software models using UML; use cases, class and interaction diagram. Metrics for design evaluation. Software quality assurance. Testing planning and specification; unit and integration test methods. Software tools for analysis and design. Ethics and professionalism. Typically offered Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Gain knowledge of the historical background and fundamental principles of software engineering.
2. Gain an understanding of the process of software developments and the variety of contemporary development models.
3. Learn and apply skills critical to software development with focus on object-oriented analysis, design, implementation and testing.
4. Understand the advantages and disadvantages of alternative team organizations for software development.
5. Understand issues of ethics and professionalism and the impact of computing on individuals and society.
|
| CS 36400 - Introduction To Data Base Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and application of database systems for information organization and retrieval based on the relational model. Includes database models, query languages, data dependencies, normal forms, and database design. Projects include use of commercial mainframe and microcomputer databases. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 36500 - Advanced Data Base Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The first part of the course includes theory of SQL, implementation of some components of DBMS, and comprehensive project. The second part of the course includes such advanced topics as recovery; concurrency; and distributed, deductive, and knowledge databases. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 36600 - Structured Analysis Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Methods used in analyzing information systems. Topics include user interviewing and observation, event analysis, data flow diagrams, data dictionaries, mini-specifications, decision trees, decision tables, and both logical and physical models. Students practice these techniques in a major structured analysis project resulting in a requirements specification document. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 36700 - Structured Design Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Methods used in designing information systems. Topics include structure charts, module specifications, pseudocode, coupling, cohesion, transform analysis, transaction analysis, and user interface design. Includes the detailed design of an information system and the implementation of a prototype of that design. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 36800 - Human-Computer Interaction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to general issues surrounding human-computer interaction (HCI). The course presents principles, design methodologies, tools, and evaluation techniques with an emphasis on human-centered interface design and implementation. Other issues covered include HCI aspects of multimedia systems, World Wide Web, computer-supported cooperative work, and recent paradigms of HCI. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 37000 - Systems Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design and operation of systems programs including assemblers, loaders, linkers and macroprocessors. Issues in language translation; expression evaluation, forward referencing, symbol table manipulation, data conversion and code generation. Lexical and syntactic analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 37200 - Web Application Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to web application development. Characteristics of web and application servers; web engineering principles and application architectures; web page construction; client and server-side scripting; database interaction; web application deployment and management; security and performance issues; overview of application-layer protocols. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 37400 - Computer Networks |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The design and implementation of data communications networks. Topics include network topologies; message, circuit and packet switching; broadcast, satellite and local area networks; routing; the OSI model with emphasis on the network, transport and session layers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 37600 - Computer Architecture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comparative study of computer systems and hardward organization. Topics include processor and memory organization, microprogramming, architectural support for operating systems and high-level languages and I/O organization. Examples of representative architectures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 38000 - Artificial Intelligence |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental concepts and techniques of artificial intelligence. Search techniques, including local search and constraint satisfaction. Knowledge representation concepts and methods of reasoning. Software agents, machine learning and neural networks, and AI planning systems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 38100 - Introduction To The Analysis Of Algorithms |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Techniques for analyzing the time and space requirements of algorithms. Application of these techniques to sorting, searching, pattern-matching, graph problems, and other selected problems. Brief introduction to the intractable (NP-hard) problems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 38400 - Numerical Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Iterative methods for solving nonlinear equations; direct and iterative methods for solving linear systems; interpolation and extrapolation; approximation of derivatives, integrals and functions; numerical techniques for ordinary differential equations; error analysis. Use of mathematical subroutine libraries. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 38600 - Professional Practice IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional Practice. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 39000 - Topics In Computer Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CS 39100 - Junior Resources Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This seminar course engages a number of outside speakers who typically present information on the role of research in computer science, how the research components of computer science relate to each other, approaches to software development in industry, different types of application development paradigms, technological trends, and societal, ethical, and legal issues. The credit may be used only toward free electives. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 39500 - Industrial Practicum I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Practical problems in local industry limited to about 10-20 hours per week. May be repeated, but the total combined credit that may be applied to a degree is limited to six. Open only to full-time students. Permission of the department is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
|
| CS 39700 - Honors Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. A seminar for all sophomores, juniors, and seniors in the Computer Sciences Honors Program. Meets eight times each semester under the supervision of the Honors coordinator. The meetings focus on honors research projects, helping students to identify appropriate projects and form groups, and providing a forum for juniors and seniors to report on their projects as required in the honors program. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CS 40400 - Distributed Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A distributed system is two or more computers working together as a single unit. These systems are essential to the understanding of present and future computer applications. This course will include the following topics: concurrent processing, threads, network programming, distributed file systems, remote procedure calls, sockets, distributed objects, client-server models, and Internet protocols. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CS 40700 - Software Engineering II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Because of the nature of the project, CS 40700 is an extension of CS 40600. The emphasis is on the development of a large software system in a team environment. Knowledge of methods and tools acquired in CS 40600 are put to use in a carefully controlled and guided project. Some advanced topics such as reliability estimation and methods, and tools for the design and verification of parallel programs are covered during the lectures. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| CS 40800 - Software Testing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Preliminaries: errors and testing; software quality, requirements, behavior, and correctness; testing, debugging, verification; control flow graphs, dominators; types of testing; Test selection: from requirements, finite state models, and combinatorial designs; regression testing and test minimization; Test adequacy assessment: control and data flow; mutation based; testing tools. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the basic technology related to software testing and debugging.
2. Differentiate between reliability and correctness.
3. Understand the impact of the saturation effect on the test process and its cost.
4. Understand the relationship between software development and test processes.
5. Apply a variety of black box test generation methods manually and using tools.
6. Use test adequacy criteria and understand their respective cost and effectiveness.
7. Select appropriate software test tools for a given testing task
|
| CS 41000 - Automata And Computability |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A finite automaton is a mathematical model for a computational system. Computer science embodies many examples of finite state systems. This course will cover the basic principles of deterministic and non-deterministic finite automata, Turing machines, formal language theory, regular expressions, context-free grammers, the halting problem, and unsolvability. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CS 41600 - Software Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Software engineering is the study of the theory, methods, and tools which are needed to develop large, complex software systems. This course covers the specifications, design, documentation, implementation, and testing of software systems. Software life cycles, principles of project management, and case studies are covered. A group project will be assigned. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CS 42000 - Senior Design Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The objectives of this course is to provide students with concrete experience in writing advanced computer programs for practical application in science or industry. The student develops necessary software using appropriate techniques and prepares documentation for the use and support of the completed system. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CS 42100 - Advanced Computer Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced topics in computer graphics such as three-dimensional rendering, curve and surface design, anti-aliasing, animation, and visualization. Other topics will be selected depending on current research trends. Through development of projects, students will gain practical experience about modern computer graphics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 42200 - Computer Networks |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Undergraduate-level introduction to computer networks and data communication. Low-level details of media, signals, and bits: time division and frequency division multiplexing; encoding; modulation; bandwidth, throughput, and noise. Packet transmission: Local Area Network (Ethernet, FDDI) and Wide Area Network technologies (ATM); wireless networks; network interconnection with repeaters, bridges, and switches; DSU/CSU; xDSL and cable modems. Internetworking: router-based architecture; IP addressing; address binding with ARP; datagram encapsulation and fragmentation; UDP and TCP, retransmission; protocol ports; ICMP and error handling. Network applications: client/server concept; port demultiplexing; program interface to protocols (API); use by clients and servers; domain name system; TELNET; Web technologies including HTTP, CGI, Java; RPC and middleware; network management. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 42600 - Computer Security |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the fundamentals of information security. Risks and vulnerabilities, policy formation, controls and protection methods, database security, encryption, authentication technologies, host-based and network-based security issues, personnel and physical security issues, issues of law and privacy. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 43400 - Advanced Computer Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced concepts and techniques of computer graphics. The course covers, in complete detail, going from a scene representation to a raster image without using OpenGL or other graphics packages. The course develops a complete graphics implementation in which the students implement every aspect of the graphics pipeline. This involves a substantial software project in C/C++. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 44200 - Database Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A database is a system whose purpose is to organize, retrieve, and maintain large amounts of information. This course introduces the concepts and structures used in designing and implementing database systems. Topics include hierarchical network, relational, and object-oriented data models, database design principles, normalization, data dictionaries, query languages and processing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CS 44500 - Computer Security |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the fundamentals of computer security. Topics include risks and vulnerabilities, policy formation, controls and protection methods, survey of malicious logic, database security, encryption, authentication, intrusion detection, network and system security issues, personnel and physical security issues, security design principles, issues of law and privacy. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 44800 - Introduction To Relational Database Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An in-depth examination of relational database systems including theory and concepts as well as practical issues in relational databases. Modern database technologies such as object-relational and Web-based access to relational databases. Conceptual design and entity relationship modeling, relational algebra and calculus, data definition and manipulation languages using SQL, schema and view management, query processing and optimization, transaction management, security, privacy, integrity management. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 45500 - Interactive Computer Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Computer graphics provides a mechanism for creating and manipulating images by means of a computer. This course covers two-dimensional curve drawing, view transformations, geometric modeling, projects, ray tracing, surface patch, three-dimensional object rendering, shading, and animation. Windows programming using OpenGL and MFC will also be introduced. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CS 45600 - Programming Languages |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Concepts for structuring data, computation, and whole programs. Object-oriented languages, functional languages, logic- and rule-based languages. Data types, type checking, exception handling, concurrent processes, synchronization, modularity, encapsulation, interfaces, separate compilation, inheritance, polymorphism, dynamic binding, subtyping, overloading, beta-reduction, unification. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 46000 - Senior Capstone Project I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The first course of a two-semester sequence. Student teams will participate in the development of a substantial application-oriented or research-oriented software project utilizing a formal software process model. Emphasis on teamwork, project management, and oral and written communication. Student teams will conduct review activities and develop artifacts appropriate for the software project and process model chosen. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply software engineering principles and skill to a team-oriented software project.
2. Construct a software project schedule and track its progress.
3. Construct artifacts appropriate to demonstrate completion of each phase of software process.
4. Conduct formal technical reviews.
5. Utilize a repository for project artifacts.
|
| CS 46200 - Introduction To Artificial Intelligence |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic problem-solving strategies, heuristic search, problem reduction and AND/OR graphs, knowledge representation, expert systems, generating explanations, uncertainty reasoning, game playing, planning, machine learning, computer vision, and programming systems such as LISP or PROLOG. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| CS 46400 - Computer System Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The planning and design of computer systems, including the formulation of corporate requirements, configuration of hardware to satisfy stated requirements, comparison and evaluation of equipment, installation considerations and implementation procedures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 46500 - Senior Capstone Project II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The second course of a two-semester sequence. Student teams will complete the development of a substantial application-oriented or research-oriented software project begun in CS 46000. Emphasis on teamwork, project management, and oral and written communication. Student teams will conduct review activities and develop artifacts appropriate for the software project and process model chosen. Students will be required to conduct a final formal review and demonstration to project stakeholders and other interested persons. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply software engineering principles and skill to a team-oriented software project.
2. Construct a software project schedule and track its progress.
3. Construct artifacts appropriate to demonstrate completion of each phase of software process model.
4. Conduct formal technical reviews.
5. Utilize a repository for project artifacts.
|
| CS 46600 - Strategic Issues For Information Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics in information systems management including strategic planning for competitive advantage, chargeback, systems portfolio risk analysis, security, and assimilating technology advances. Students develop an information systems strategic plan. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 46700 - Project Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Covers the techniques required to manage systems development. Topics include project proposals, planning, estimating, organizing, controlling, and completion. Students practice these techniques on a major project using project management software. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 47100 - Introduction to Artificial Intelligence |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students are expected to spend at least three hours per week gaining experience with artificial intelligence systems and developing software. Basic problem-solving strategies, heuristic search, problem reduction and AND/OR graphs, knowledge representation, expert systems, generating explanations, uncertainty reasoning, game playing, planning, machine learning, computer vision, and programming systems such as Lisp or Prolog.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 47200 - Operating Systems Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The design and implementation of modern multiprocessing operating systems. Topics include concurrent programming, real and virtual storage allocation, resource allocation and deadlock prevention and avoidance, job scheduling, and analytic modeling. Students will complete projects involving concurrency and implement a portion of a multiprocessing operating system. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 47300 - Web Information Search And Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course teaches important concepts and knowledge of information retrieval for managing unstructured data such as text data on Web or in emails. At the same time, students will be exposed to a large number of important applications. Students in the course will get hands on experience from homework and a course project. The first part of the course focuses on general concepts/techniques such as stemming, indexing, vector space model, and feedback procedure. The second part of the course shows how to apply the set of techniques on different applications such as Web search, text categorization, and information recommendation. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the important concepts and techniques of information retrieval and how to apply these techniques to a set of important or real world applications.
|
| CS 47400 - Compiler Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Techniques for the syntax-directed translation of modern high-level languages. Topics include: grammars and language specification, language design issues, lexical analysis, LL and LR parsing techniques, semantics, symbol table design, code generation and local optimization. Students are required to implement a compiler for a subset of a structured high-level language such as Pascal or Ada. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 47800 - Introduction to Bioinformatics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (BIOL 47800 and STAT 47800) Bioinformatics is broadly defined as the study of molecular biological information, targeting particularly the enormous volume of DNA sequence and functional complexity embedded in entire genomes. Topics will include understanding the evolutionary organization of genes (genomics), the structure and function of gene products (proteomics), and the dynamics of gene expression in biological processes (transcriptomics). Inherently, bioinformatics is interdisciplinary, melding various applications of computational science with biology. This jointly taught course introduces analytical methods from biology, statistics and computer science that are necessary for bioinformatics investigations. The course is intended for junior and senior undergraduates from various science backgrounds. Our objective is to develop the skills of both tool users and tool designers in this important new field of research.
Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 48000 - The Practicum In Computer Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The practicum course consists of a small team (faculty adviser and 1 to 4 students) working on a real problem obtained in conjunction with business or industry. Not more than two terms of MA 480 and/or C S 480 may be taken for credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| CS 48300 - Introduction To The Theory Of Computation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Turing machines and the Church-Turing thesis; decidability; halting problem; reducibility; undecidable problems; decidability of logical theories; Kolmogorov complexity; time classes; P, NP, NP-complete; space classes; Savitch's theorem, PSPACE-completeness, NL-completeness; hierarchy theorems; approximation theorems; probabilistic algorithms; applications of complexity to parallel computation and cryptography. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 48600 - Analysis Of Algorithms |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Techniques for analyzing the time and space requirements of algorithms and problems. Application of these techniques to sorting, searching, pattern- matching, graph problems and other selected problems. Brief introduction to the intractable (NP-hard) problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 48700 - Professional Practice V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional Practice. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 48800 - Theory Of Computation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Mathematical models of computation including finite and pushdown automata and Turing machines and equivalence of different general-purpose models. Grammars and their relation to automata, Church's Thesis and limits of computation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 49000 - Topics In Computer Sciences For Undergraduates |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Supervised reading and reports in various fields. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CS 49200 - Topics In Computer Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Seminar addressing current topics or issues in computer science or information systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
|
| CS 49400 - Directed Study |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Independent study for students who desire to execute a complete computer- oriented project. Course may be repeated for credit up to nine hours toward graduation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
|
| CS 49500 - Cooperative Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. For cooperative program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 12 credits
|
| CS 49700 - Honors Research Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. One semester of the project may be counted as one of the seven computer science courses at or above the 300 level required for the bachelor's degree. One more semester, if approved by the honors coordinator, can be used as a free elective. A group research project directed by Computer Sciences faculty members. Each group must submit a technical report describing its work and the results obtained. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| CS 50100 - Computing For Science And Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Credit in this course may not be used toward a graduate degree in Computer Sciences. Computational concepts, tools, and skills for computational science and engineering scripting for numerical computing, scripting for file processing, high performance computing, and software development. Project may be required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To prepare graduate students outside Computer Science to write computer programs in support of their studies and research.
|
| CS 50200 - Compiling And Programming Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic principles of compilers and compiler design; control of translation, loading, and execution; symbolic coding systems; lexical and syntactic analysis, design and operation of assemblers and macroprocessors; design of interpretive systems. Students are expected to complete a large programming project as part of the course. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Deeper understanding of the syntactic rules and the functionality of modern programming languages, as well as the use of the compiler for enhancing program quality.
2. Opportunity to practice the implementation of certain key components in the compiler front-end and back-end.
|
| CS 50300 - Operating Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic principles of operating systems: addressing modes, indexing, relative addressing, indirect addressing, stack maintenance; implementation of multitask systems; control and coordination of tasks, deadlocks, synchronization, mutual exclusion; storage management, segmentation, paging, virtual memory; protection, sharing, access control; file systems; resource management; evaluation and prediction of performance. Students are expected to spend at least three hours per week gaining hands-on experience in using and modifying a small operating system. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| CS 50500 - Distributed Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Foundations for building reliable distributed systems, including failure and system models, and basic communication and agreement problems; crash failures, recovery, partition, Byzantine failures; asynchronous systems, failure detectors, communication channels, wireless and sensor networks; software clocks, causality, and cuts. Examples of problems include reliable broadcast consensus, leader election, group communication, and replication. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 51000 - Software Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Software life cycles, requirements engineering, software design, design of distributed systems, verification and validation, software architecture, process metrics and models, and research methods in software engineering. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| CS 51400 - Numerical Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (MA 51400) Iterative methods for solving nonlinear equations; linear difference equations, applications to solution of polynomial equations; differentiation and integration formulas; numerical solution of ordinary differential equations; roundoff error bounds. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| CS 51500 - Numerical Linear Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Direct and iterative solvers of dense and sparse linear systems of equations, numerical schemes for handling symmetric algebraic eigenvalue problems, and the singular-value decomposition and its applications in linear least squares problems. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| CS 51501 - Parallelism In Numerical Linear Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines both theoretical and practical aspects of numerical algorithm design and implementation on parallel computing platforms. In particular, it provides an understanding of the tradeoff between arithmetic complexity and management of hierarchical memory structures, roundoff characteristics if different from the sequential schemes, and performance evaluation and enhancement. Applications are derived from a variety of computational science and engineering areas. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
The students will (a) become quite knowledgeable in handling these parallel numerical linear algebra algorithms that arise in computational science and engineering, (b) acquire problem-solving skills in this field, and (c) through written and oral presentations of their projects will be able to clearly communicate their solution strategies and the performance realized on parallel computing platforms.
|
| CS 52000 - Computational Methods In Optimization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A treatment of numerical algorithms and software for optimization problems with a secondary emphasis on linear and nonlinear systems of equations: unconstrained and constrained optimization; line search methods; trust region methods; Quasi-Newton methods; linear programming; calculating derivatives; quadratic programming; global optimization, including simulated annealing. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| CS 52500 - Parallel Computing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Parallel computing for science and engineering applications: parallel programming and performance evaluation, parallel libraries and problem-solving environments, models of parallel computing and run-time support systems, and selected applications. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| CS 52600 - Information Security |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (CSCI 52600) Basic notions of confidentiality, integrity, availability; authentication models; protection models; security kernels; secure programming; audit; intrusion detection and response; operational security issues; physical security issues; personnel security; policy formation and enforcement; access controls; information flow; legal and social issues; identification and authentication in local and distributed systems; classification and trust modeling; and risk assessment. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 53000 - Introduction To Scientific Visualization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Teaches the fundamentals of scientific visualization and prepares students to apply these techniques in fields such as astronomy, biology, chemistry, engineering, and physics. Emphasis is on the representation of scalar, vector, and tensor fields; data sampling and resampling; and reconstruction using multivariate finite elements (surfaces, volumes, and surfaces on surfaces). Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 53100 - Computational Geometry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Computational geometry studies how to compute with and reason about geometric objects. The subject is playing an increasingly important role in computer graphics, game software, geometric modeling, geographic information systems, and many other applications. Course topics include convex hull, segment manipulations, triangulations, range searching, Voronoi diagrams, window queries, Delaunay triangulation, and duality. Some key algorithms are implemented. Questions of floating-point accuracy and robust algorithm design are considered throughout the course. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 53500 - Interactive Computer Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ME 57300) The principles of computer graphics and interactive graphical methods for problem solving. Emphasis placed on both development and use of graphical tools for various display devices. Several classes of graphics hardware considered in detail. Topics include pen plotting, storage tubes, refresh, dynamic techniques, three dimensions, color, modeling of geometry, and hidden surface removal. Part of the laboratory involves use of an interactive minicomputer graphics system. Knowledge of programming required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 53600 - Data Communication And Computer Networks |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Data communications: communication hardware technologies including local area and longhaul network hardware, circuit and packet switching, interfaces between computer and network hardware, and performance issues. Network architecture: protocol software and conceptual layering, reliable delivery over an unreliable channel, transport protocols, virtual circuits, datagrams, internetworking as a fundamental design concept, the client-server paradigm, naming and name binding, name servers, addressing and address resolution, routing and routing algorithms, congestion and flow control techniques, network file systems, distribution of computation, and DARPA internet protocols (TCP/IP) as examples of protocol organization. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Network services and applications, including DNS and HTTP .
2. The socket API .
3. Network transport architectures, TCP, UDP and TCP congestion control.
4. Routing and forwarding, intra-domain and inter-domain routing algorithms.
|
| CS 54100 - Database Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals for the logical design of database systems. The entity-relationship model, semantic model, relational model, hierarchical model, network model. Implementations of the models. Design theory for relational databases. Design of query languages and the use of semantics for query optimization. Design and verification of integrity assertions, and security. Introduction to intelligent query processing and database machines. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 54200 - Distributed Database Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental issues in distributed database systems that are motivated by the computer networking and distribution of processors and databases. The theory, design, specification, implementation, and performance of distributed database systems. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 54300 - Introduction To Simulation And Modeling Of Computer Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Simulation: discrete event simulation, process oriented simulation, generating random numbers, simulation languages, simulation examples of complex systems. Nondeterministic models: random variables, Poisson process, moment generating functions, statistical inference and data analysis. Modeling: elementary queuing models, networks of queues, applications to performance evaluation of computer systems. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| CS 54701 - Information Retrieval |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic principles and practical algorithms used for information retrieval and text mining: statistical characteristics of text, several important retrieval models, text categorization, recommendation system, clustering, federated text search, link analysis, etc. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn the theories and techniques behind Web search engines, E-commerce recommendation systems, etc.
2. Get hands on project experience by developing real-world applications, such as intelligent tools for improving search accuracy from user feedback, email spam detection, recommendation system, or scientific literature organization and mining.
3. Learn tools and techniques to do cutting-edge research in the area of information retrieval or text mining.
|
| CS 55500 - Cryptography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (CSCI 55500) Concepts and principles of cryptography and data security. Cryptography (secret codes): principles of secrecy systems; classical cryptographic systems, including Vigenere and Vernam ciphers; the Data Encryption Standard (DES); public-key encryption; privacy-enhanced email; digital signatures. Proprietary software protection; information theory and number theory; complexity bounds on encryption; key escrow; traffic analysis; attacks against encryption; basic legal issues; e-commerce; and the role of protocols. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 56500 - Programming Languages |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An exploration of modern or unconventional concepts of programming languages, their semantics, and their implementations; abstract data types; axiomatic semantics using Hoare's logic and Dijkstra's predicate transformers; denotational semantics; functional, object-oriented, and logic programming; concurrency and Owicki-Gries theory. Example languages include ML, Ada, Oberon, LISP, PROLOG, and CSP. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 56900 - Introduction To Robotic Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ECE 56900) The topics to be covered include: basic components of robotic systems; selection of coordinate frames; homogeneous transformations; solutions to kinematic equations; velocity and force/torque relations; manipulator dynamics in Lagrange's formulation; digital simulation of manipulator motion; motion planning; obstacle avoidance; controller design using the computed torque method; and classical controllers for manipulators. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 57200 - Heuristic Problem Solving |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design and development of heuristic problem-solving systems. The emphasis is on the development of general data representations, heuristics, and problem-solving strategies that can be applied to a wide class of problems. The task areas explored include game playing, theorem proving, pattern recognition, semantic information processing, cognitive psychology, design synthesis, robotology, and integrated artificial intelligence systems. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CS 57300 - Data Mining |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (CSCI 57300) Data Mining has emerged at the confluence of artificial intelligence, statistics, and databases as a technique for automatically discovering summary knowledge in large datasets. This course introduces students to the process and main techniques in data mining, including classification, clustering, and pattern mining approaches. Data mining systems and applications are also covered, along with selected topics in current research. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 57800 - Statistical Machine Learning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This introductory course will cover many concepts, models, and algorithms in machine learning. Topics include classical supervised learning (e.g., regression and classification), unsupervised learning (e.g., principle component analysis and K-means), and recent development in the machine learning field such as variational Bayes, expectation propagation, and Gaussian processes. While this course will give students the basic ideas and intuition behind modern machine learning methods, the underlying theme in the course is probabilistic inference. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Have students prepared to either conduct PhD research in the machine learning area or apply it to other application domain, such as computational biology, materials science and social science.
|
| CS 57900 - Bioinformatics Algorithms |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of Genomes, DNA, RNA, proteins, proteomes. Biological Sequences: dynamic programming; pairwise global, local, and semi-global alignments of genes and proteins; constant, affine, and general gap penalties; RNA alignments; BLOSUM and PAM scoring matrices. Multiple alignment of proteins: approximation algorithms; iterative and progressive alignment methods. Database search for sequences: BLAST and variants. Phylogentic Trees: distance-based methods, ultrametric and additive distance functions; parsimony, and maximum likelihood methods. Whole Genome Alignment: suffix trees and suffix arrays. Systems Biology: Module discovery in biological networks, spectral algorithms for graph clustering. Network alignment: quadratic programming formulations and graph matching. Genetic Variation: haplotype inference, the perfect phylogeny problem and chordal graphs. Additional topics such as next-generation sequencing, analysis of multidimensional data from flow cytometry, and gene expression data, if time permits. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn how to design algorithms.
2. Students will learn how to solve computational problems from the new biology, the data-rich field that biological sciences is becoming.
|
| CS 58000 - Algorithm Design, Analysis, And Implementation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic techniques for designing and analyzing algorithms: dynamic programming, divide and conquer, balancing. Upper and lower bounds on time and space costs, worst case and expected cost measures. A selection of applications such as disjoint set union/find, graph algorithms, search trees, pattern matching. The polynomial complexity classes P, NP, and co-NP; intractable problems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| CS 58400 - Theory Of Computation And Computational Complexity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The theory of general purpose programming systems. Recursive and partial-recursive functions; recursive and recursively enumerable sets. The Church-Turing thesis. The recursion theorem, Rogers' translation theorem, Rice's undecidability theorem. The general theory of computational complexity: there are no general solutions to natural optimization problems. Complexity for specific models of computation: the polynomial complexity classes P, NP, and PSPACE; NP-hard and PSPACE-hard problems, inherently exponential problems. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 59000 - Topics In Computer Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Directed study for students who wish to undertake individual reading and study on approved topics. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CS 59100 - Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A weekly seminar presented by faculty and invited speakers, normally in a specific area. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CS 60300 - Advanced Topics In Distributed Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (CSCI 60300) Design and control of distributed computing systems (operating systems and database systems). Topics include principles of naming and location, atomicity, resource sharing, concurrency control and other synchronization, deadlock detection and avoidance, security, distributed data access and control, integration of operating systems and computer networks, distributed systems design, consistency control, and fault tolerance. Prerequisite: CS 50300, 54200. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 61400 - Numerical Solution Of Ordinary Differential Equations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Numerical solution of initial-value problems by Runge-Kutta methods, general one-step methods, and multistep methods; analysis of truncation error, discretization error, and rounding error; stability of multistep methods; numerical solution of boundary- and eigen-value problems by initial-value techniques and finite difference methods. Prerequisite: CS 51400. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 61500 - Numerical Methods For Partial Differential Equations I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (MA 61500) Finite element method for elliptic partial differential equations; weak formulation; finite-dimensional approximations; error bounds; algorithmic issues; solving sparse linear systems; finite element method for parabolic partial differential equations; backward difference and Crank-Nicolson time-stepping; introduction to finite difference methods for elliptic, parabolic, and hyperbolic equations; stability, consistency, and convergence; discrete maximum principles. Prerequisite: CS 51400, MA 52300. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 62600 - Advanced Information Assurance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced topics in information assurance, including selections from the following: penetration testing, formal verification of systems, formal models of information flow and protection, distributed system authentication, protocol design and attack, computer viruses and malware, intrusion and anomaly detection models, multi-level security, active defenses, investigation and forensics, network firewalls, anonymity and identity, e-commerce support, and database security models and mechanisms. Offered every third semester. Prerequisite: CS 52600, 55500. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 63500 - Capturing And Rendering Real-World Scenes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced techniques for automated modeling and visualization of complex environments, such as rooms, buildings, urban scenes, and landscapes. Topics covered are at the confluence of computer graphics, computer vision and engineering, and include: capture technologies, acquisition device calibration, view registration, panoramic images, 3D reconstruction from images, view morphing, 3D image warping, lightfield modeling and rendering, visual hulls, point-based modeling and rendering, view dependent texture mapping, and application development issues and examples. Prerequisite: CS 58000, CS 53500 or a solid foundation in computer graphics, programming proficiency in C or C++ and basic linear algebra. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 63600 - Internetworking |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of Internetwork architecture and communication protocols underlying interoperable systems. Topics include universal interconnection, Internet addressing and routing, address binding, control of Internet congestion and flow, examples of Internet protocol suites (TCP/IP and XNS), round trip time estimation, naming and name resolution, Internet applications programs, and the ISO/OSI model. Prerequisite: CS 50300. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 63800 - Multimedia Networking And Operating Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. For graduate students in computer sciences who have a background in networking and operating systems and are interested in research in networked multimedia systems. The course consists of a selection of networking and operating system topics for realizing high performance, predictable, scalable, flexible, and secure multimedia systems. Topics may vary to reflect timely research issues and the current interests of the instructor(s). Students are expected to complete a term project. Presentations also may be required. Undergraduate background in computer science required. Prerequisite: CS 53600 or 50300. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 64100 - Multimedia Database Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Prepares students for research in multimedia database systems. Students are exposed to a variety of emerging innovative techniques to store, manipulate, communicate, visualize, and reason with multimedia systems. Prerequisite: CS 54100 or 54200. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 65500 - Advanced Cryptology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced topics in cryptography and cryptanalysis, including selections from the following: Steganographic methods, Cryptanalytic techniques, including differential cryptanalysis, and chosen plaintext attacks. Message digest algorithm construction. Digital cash. Quantum cryptography. N-key systems. Minimal and zero-knowledge systems. Protocol design and failure. Verification of algorithms. Key generation and management. Traffic analysis. VPN construction and operation. Politics, espionage, and law enforcement concerns. Offered every third semester. Prerequisite: CS 52600, 55500. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 66100 - Formal Compiling Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of concepts developed in formal language and automata theory to the design of programming languages and their processors. Models of syntactic analysis, including canonical precedence, LR(k) and LL(k) parsing methods and variants; efficiency of each. Synthesis techniques, including symbol tables, storage administration, parameter mechanisms, garbage collection; optimization considerations. Models of synthesis, including level, affix, attributed grammars; prospects of fully automating compiler design. Applicative vs. procedural languages and their implementations based on semantic definition of a language (LISP, Lucid) and on proof-like techniques (PROLOG, equational systems); merits of such approaches. Prerequisite: CS 50200. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 66200 - Pattern Recognition And Decision-Making Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ECE 66200) Introduction to the basic concepts and various approaches of pattern recognition and decision-making processes. Topics include various classifier designs, evaluation of classifiability, learning machines, feature extraction, and modeling. Prerequisite: ECE 30200. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CS 69000 - Seminar On Topics In Computer Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 5.00. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CS 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CS 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Computer Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CS B1040 - Introduction To Microcomputers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the microcomputer as a word processing, spreadsheet, database, and communications tool. Intended for those in other disciplines. Hardware and software trends, opportunities, and responsibilities in computing are discussed. Lecture and laboratory. Not open to students who have credit in CS 102.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CS B1160 - Visual Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction for non-computer science majors in structured computer programming using a language such as Visual Basic. Modular programming techniques with emphasis on the creation of graphical user interfaces.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CS B1200 - Computer Science I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to programming using a high-level language and an established programming paradigm. Emphasis on developing problem-solving skills and programming techniques. Topics include control structures, built-in data structures, simple sorting and searching, procedural abstraction, and paradigm-specific concepts and constructs. Required open-lab and closed-lab assignments bring theory to practice.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI 10000 - Principles Of Computer Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. General survey of the entire field of computer science. Principles of human/machine interface, object-oriented programming, data storage, machine architecture, limits of computing, artificial intelligence, social and ethical implications of computing. Fall, spring, summer.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 12000 - Windows On Computer Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A first year seminar for beginning majors in Computer Science. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 20100 - Computer Literacy: Application And Concepts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Not normally accepted for credit in computer science programs. An introduction to the use of computers intended for students in nontechnical disciplines. A survey of the computer and its role in society. The use of computer software, including a programming language, in various applications of interest to the generalist. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 20600 - Computer Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Not normally accepted for credit in computer science programs. An introduction to computers and computer programming. Emphasis on problem solving and algorithm development using the BASIC and Pascal programming
languages on microcomputers and mainframe computers. Primarily for education majors.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 20700 - Computers In The Social Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Not normally accepted for credit in computer science programs. An introduction to computers and computer programming. Elements of computer hardware and software; emphasis on problem solving, algorithm development,
and programming in BASIC. Use of standard statistical packages. Social impact and ethical issues of computing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 20800 - Computers In Business |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Not normally accepted for credit in computer science programs. Introduction to computers and their use in organizations. Elements of computer system, spreadsheet, and database organization. Strategies for using computers to solve problems in data management, forecasting, and communication. Computers in information systems. The impact of computers on society.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 22000 - Problem Solving With Computers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Not accepted for credit in the computer science department's major or minor programs. An introduction to computer science with emphasis on using computers to solve problems with a high-level programming language. Emphasis on algorithm development and structured programming. Computer system organization, number representation, round-off
errors, logic control structures, input/output, files, data structures, subprograms, modularization, error avoidance.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CSCI 23000 - Computing I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The context of computing in history and society; information representation in digital computers; introduction to
programming in a modern high-level language; introduction to algorithms and data structures; their implementation as programs.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI 24000 - Computing II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Continues the introduction of programming begun in CSCI 23000, with a particular focus on the ideas of data abstraction and object oriented programming. Topics include programming paradigms, principles of language design, object-oriented programming, programming and debugging tools, documentation, recursion, linked data structures, and an introduction to language translation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CSCI 24200 - Computing II For Engineers |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Overview of fundamentals of operating systems; introduction to programming languages, file organization, and database concepts.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 26500 - Advanced Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Learn advanced programming skills and concepts. Introduction to software engineering: problem specification and program design with emphasis on object-oriented programming, programming style, debugging, and documentation. A significant software project is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 30000 - Systems Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Assembly language programming and structure of a simple and a typical computer. Pseudo operations, address structure, subroutines, and macros. File I/O and buffering techniques. Interfacing with high-level languages. Assemblers: one and two pass assemblers, system dependent and independent assembler features, design options. Loaders, linkers, and macro processors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 34000 - Discrete Computational Structures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and application of discrete mathematics structures and their relationship to computer science. Topics include mathematical logic, sets, relations, functions, permutations, combinatorics, graphs, Boolean algebra, digital logic, recurrence relations, and finite-state automata. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CSCI 34050 - Honors Discrete Computational Structures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discrete structures introduces students to the vocabulary, notation, formalisms, constructs, and methods of abstraction in which almost all of the advanced thinking in and about computer science is carried out. Topics include basic logic, proof techniques, recursion and recurrence relations, sets and combinations, probability, relations and functions, graphs and trees, Boolean algebra, and models of computation. An advanced project is expected in this course. Departmental permission required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Students are expected to understand and effectively utilize the vocabulary, notation, formalisms, constructs, and methods of abstraction in which almost all of the advanced thinking in and about computer science is carried out.
|
| CSCI 35500 - Introduction To Programming Languages |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Programming language concepts and different paradigms of programming. Topics include syntax and semantics of high-level languages, parsing methods, subprograms and their implementation, data abstraction, language translation overview including lexical analysis, syntax-directed translation, symbol table handling, code generation, functional programming, logic programming, and object-oriented programming. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 36200 - Data Structures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the design and analysis of data structures and algorithms. Abstract data types: arrays, stacks, queues, lists, trees, graphs, etc. Algorithms: sorting, searching, hashing. File structures: organization and access methods. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CSCI 36250 - Honors Data Structures And Algorithms |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course includes fundamentals of data structures and algorithms, such as algorithm analysis, lists, stacks and queues, trees, hashing and heaps, sorting, graph algorithms, and file structures. An advanced project is expected. Departmental permission required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Know the basic concepts of various data structures.
2. Undestand the merits and demerits of these structures.
3. Understand algorithms to manipulate data structures.
4. Be able to perform complexity evaluation for different algorithms.
5. Be able to us the C++ Standard Template Library (or equivalent) to compose algorithms.
6. Undertsand file structures in dealing with information saved in secondary devices.
6. Develop and design small-scale software projects, including mapping a problem to specific architecture, including implementing a solution in a high-level language.
|
| CSCI 40200 - Architecture Of Computers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic logic design. Storage systems. Processor organization: instruction formats, addressing modes, subroutines, hardware and microprogramming implementation. Computer arithmetic, fixed and floating point operations. Properties of I/O devices and their controllers. Interrupt structure. Virtual memory structure, cache memory. Examination of architectures such as microcomputers, minicomputers, vector and array processors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CSCI 40300 - Introduction To Operating Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Operating system concepts; history, evolution and philosophy of operating systems. Concurrent processes, process coordination and synchronization, CPU scheduling, deadlocks, memory management, virtual memory, secondary storage and file management, device management, security and protection, networking, distributed and real-time systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CSCI 41400 - Numerical Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Error analysis, solution of nonlinear equations, direct and iterative methods for solving linear systems, approximation of functions, numerical differentiation and integration, numerical solution of ordinary differential equations. Not open to students with credit in CSCI 512. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 43200 - Security In Computing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to computing security to include Cryptography; Identity and authentication; Software security; Operating system security; Trusted operating system design and evaluation; Network threats and defenses; Security management; legal aspects of security; Privacy and ethics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 43500 - Multimedia Information Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Multimedia information systems concepts, evolution of multimedia information systems, media and supporting devices commonly associated, image databases, techniques for presenting visual information, video databases, multi-models, audio databases, text databases, multimedia information systems architecture. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 43600 - Principles Of Computer Networking |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of underlying principles, fundamental problems, and their solutions in designing computer networks. Laboratory projects include using network systems and network simulation environments. Topics include: motivations, networking topologies, layered open systems protocols, transmission capacity, circuit and packet switching, packet framing and error correction, routing, flow and congestion control, and internetworking. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CSCI 43700 - Introduction To 3D Game Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to 3D programming with emphasis on game engine development using 3D graphics techniques and the standard and platform independent OpenGL library. Topics include: lighting, shading, texture mapping, coordinaty systems and transformations, collision detection, 3D geometric and physically-based modeling, and animation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 43800 - Advanced Game Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced game design and development principles and technologies. Students will gain practical experience through an extensive game development project. Topics include: character animation, special effects, user interface design, networking for computer games, game engine components and variations, game performance considerations, artificial intelligence, and ethics in computer games. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 44100 - Client-Server Database Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Database system concepts, data models, database design, CASE tools, SQL, query processing and query optimization, transaction processing, reliability and security issues, database interaction on the World Wide Web. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 44300 - Database Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Relational database systems: architecture, theory, and application. Relational data structure, integrity rules, mathematical description, data manipulation. Standard SQL and its data manipulation language, engineering aspects of database design in industry, introduction to non-relational database systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CSCI 44600 - Introduction To Microprocessor Architecture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to programmable logic; elements of microprocessor system design; interrupt structures; interfacing using LSI devices; hardware timers; interactive debugging; physical device I/O programming; vectored and polled service; microprocessor architecture; self-paced laboratory using A/D converters, D/A converters, etc. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 44800 - Biometric Computing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Biometrics is capturing and using physiological or behavioral characteristics for personal identification. It is set to become the successor to the PIN. This course will introduce computational methods for the implementation of various biometric technologies including face and voice recognition, finger print and iris identification, and DNA matching. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 45000 - Principles Of Software Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Tools and techniques used in software development. Lifecycle concepts applied to program specification, development, and maintenance. Topics include overall design principles in software development; the use of structured programming techniques in writing large programs; formal methods of program verification; techniques and software tools for program testing, maintenance, and documentation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CSCI 45200 - Object-Oriented Analysis And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the object-oriented paradigm in software development. Basic concepts: objects, classes, messaging, inheritance, methodologies. Analysis: defining objects, structures, attributes, services. Design: transforming the analytic model into the design model. Implementation: comparison of the support features provided by languages such as Smalltalk, C++, Eiffel, and CLOS. A significant design project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 46300 - Analysis Of Algorithms |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Techniques for analyzing and comparing algorithms. Average case analysis in sorting and searching; dynamic programming: greedy algorithms, amortized analysis, and applications; matrix algorithms: polynomials, discrete Fourier transforms, and fast Fourier transforms; parallel algorithms: examples in sorting, searching, graphs, and matrices; computational complexity, polynomial complexity classes P, NP. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 47000 - Automata And Formal Languages |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to formal languages and automata theory: finite automata and regular expressions, context-free grammars and languages, pushdown automata, equivalence of CFGs and pushdown automata, application of pushdown automata in parsing, closure properties, pumping lemmas, decision procedures, Turing machines, computability, undecidability, and a brief survey of the Chomsky hierarchy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 47500 - Scientific Computing I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Solving scientific problems on computers. Languages for scientific computing. Software development on workstations: using tools the environment provides, organization of programs. Computer architecture: impact on software and algorithms. Problem formulation: model selection/simplification, relationship to numerical methods. Solution of linear equations: methods and packages. Nonlinear equations and optimization problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 47600 - Scientific Computing II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Elementary statistical computing: time series analysis, model fitting, robust methods, generation of pseudorandom numbers, and Monte Carlo methods. Interpolation and curve fitting; numerical integration. Solving ordinary differential equations. Use of packaged environments and symbolic computation for scientific purposes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 47700 - High Performance Computing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Architecture of supercomputers: pipelined, vector, SIMD, MIMD; implications for algorithm and program design; vectorization, parallelization, loop restructuring, nonstandard language features. Splitting computation between supercomputers and workstations; interactive analyses of remote machines' output. Numerical methods for large-scale problems: examples from continuum mechanics, graphical visualization, statistical computing. A project is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 48100 - Data Mining |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to data warehousing and OLAP technology for data mining; data processing; data mining primitives, languages and systems; descriptive data mining; characterization and comparison; association analysis; classification and prediction; cluster analysis; mining complex types of data; applications and trends in data mining. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CSCI 48400 - Theory Of Computation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to formal languages and automata theory; finite automata, regular expressions, regular languages, context-free languages and pushdown automata, context sensitive languages, Turing machines, undecidability, P and NP. Design and analysis techniques for divide-and-conquer algorithms, greedy algorithms, dynamic programing, amortized analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand how deterministic and nondeterministic finite automata work.
2. Create an equivalent deterministic finite automata from a nondeterministic finite automata.
3. Convert between the set recognized by a finite automata, a regular expression for that set, and a regular grammar to generate that set.
4. Understand how deterministic and nondeterministic pushdown automata work.
5. Convert between the set recognized by a nondeterministic pushdown automata and a context-free grammar to generate that set.
6. Use pumping lemmas for regular, context-free, and linear languages to prove that a given language does not belong to those families.
7. Understand how Turing machines work.
8. Create a Turing machine recognizer for a given language.
9. Understand the Chomsky language hierarchy.
10.Prove and state the importance of the halting problem.
11.Understand the P=NP problem.
12.Understand algorithm design techniques of divide-and-conquer, dynamic programming, greedy algorithms, and amortized analysis; write simple programs using these techniques and analyze their efficiency.
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| CSCI 48500 - Expert System Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of artificial intelligence; expert system technology; early expert systems: MYCIN, DENDRAL; theoretical foundations, uncertainty measures, knowledge representation, inference engines; reasoning mechanisms: forward and backward chaining; explanation systems, expert system shells, tools, and intelligent hybrid systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 48700 - Artificial Intelligence |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of key concepts and applications of artificial intelligence. Problem-solving methods, state space search, heuristic search, knowledge representation: predicate logic, resolution, natural deduction, nonmonotonic reasoning, semantic networks, conceptual dependency, frames, scripts, and statistical reasoning; advanced AI topics in game playing, planning, learning, and connectionist models. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 49000 - Topics In Computer Sciences For Undergraduates |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Supervised reading and reports in various fields. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CSCI 49500 - Explorations In Applied Computing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Explorations in Applied Computing is an undergraduate capstone experience. Students will work in teams, advised by faculty and external liaisons, to solve real-world computing problems. This hands-on experience will cultivate technical expertise, utilization of analytical thinking, quantitative reasoning, project management skills, and communication skills. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CSCI 50300 - Operating Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic principles of operating systems: addressing modes, indexing, relative addressing, indirect addressing, stack maintenance; implementation of multitask systems; control and coordination of tasks, deadlocks, synchronization, mutual exclusion; storage management, segmentation, paging, virtual memory, protection, sharing, access control; file systems; resource management; evaluation and prediction of performance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 50400 - Concepts In Computer Organization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of computer hardware for computer scientists. An overview of organization of modern computers, ranging from sequential to advanced machines. CISC, RISC, and vector processors; multiprocessors; virtual storage, hierarchical memory; interaction with O/S: connection models; high-level programming support; and cost/performance analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 50600 - Management Of The Software Development Process |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the fundamental principles and concepts of managing a software project. Topics include: life cycle models, standards and goals, cost estimation, risk analysis, tool use, component reuse, traceability, metrics, process control, and improvement. Students are required to apply management concepts using a project-based approach. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 50700 - Object-Oriented Design And Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced exploration of the object-oriented model and programming. Topics range from a review of the object model to advanced concepts, such as abstraction mechanisms, standard library/packages, 00 design using an 00 language, the syntax, and the semantics of constructs. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 52600 - Information Security |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (CS 52600) Basic notions of confidentiality, integrity, availability; authentication models; protection models; security kernels; secure programming; audit; intrusion detection and response; operational security issues; physical security issues; personnel security; policy formation and enforcement; access controls; information flow; legal and social issues; identification and authentication in local and distributed systems; classification and trust modeling; and risk assessment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Employ classical and contemporary methods in information security to solve technological problems faced during their professional careers, including the use of classical and contemporary ciphers, software and operating system security, access control, and defenses against malware and other malicious attacks.
2. Use these methods in other areas of specialization within computer science.
3. Be prepared to perform advanced research in the area of information security.
|
| CSCI 53600 - Data Communication And Computer Networks |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Data communications: communication hardware technologies including local area and long-haul network hardware, circuit and packet switching, interfaces between computer and network hardware, and performance issues. Network architecture: protocol software and conceptual layering, reliable delivery over an unreliable channel, transport protocols, virtual circuits, datagrams, Internet working as a fundamental design concept, the client-server paradigm, naming and name binding, name servers, addressing and address resolution, routing and routing algorithms, congestion and flow control techniques, network file systems, distribution of computation, DARPA Internet protocols (TCP/IP) as examples of protocol organization. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 53700 - Introduction To Distributed Computing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the principles and methods in the design of distributed computing systems. Covers the fundamentals of distributed computing from four perspectives: underlying communication media, protocols and their implications; operating system issues; high-level language constructs; and distributed algorithms. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 54100 - Database Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals for the logical design of database systems. The entity-relationship model, semantic model, relational model, hierarchical model, network model. Implementations of the models. Design theory for relational databases. Design of query languages and the use of semantics for query optimization. Design and verification of integrity assertions, and security. Introduction to intelligent query processing and database machines. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 54800 - Introduction To Bioinformatics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analyze biological data employing various computational methods to obtain useful information in the emerging area of bioinformatics. Topics include: structures, functions and evolution of proteins and nucleic acids, retrieval and interpretation of bioinformation from the Internet, learning principles, algorithms and software for sequence alignment, similarity search of sequence databases, estimation of phylogenetic trees, structural prediction, and functional inference. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 54900 - Intelligent Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers problems in the area of intelligent systems. Topics include: the formalisms within which these problems are studied, the computational methods that have been proposed for their solution, and the real-world technological systems to which these methods have been applied. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
To introduce the students with both established methodologies as well as some of the more recent advances in the area. This will enable them to:
(i) employ these methods to solve technological problems faced during their professional careers,
(ii) use these methods in other areas of specialization with computer science, and
(iii) become prepared to perform advanced research in the area of learning and intelligent systems.
|
| CSCI 55000 - Computer Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to computer graphics.Topics include: the concepts, principles, algorithms, and programming techniques in 3D interactive computer graphics. Emphasis is on the development and applications of 3D graphics algorithms and methods. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 55200 - Advanced Graphics And Visualization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to data visualization methods and tools and the related graphics techniques. Students explore a variety of data representation and modeling techniques, their corresponding visualization algorithms, and practical visualization applications in scientific, engineering, and biomedical fields. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 55500 - Cryptography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (CS 55500) Concepts and principles of cryptography and data security. Cryptography (secret codes): principles of secrecy systems; classical cryptographic systems, including Vigenere and Vernam ciphers; the Data Encryption Standard (DES); public-key encryption; privacy-enhanced email; digital signatures. Proprietary software protection; information theory and number theory; complexity bounds on encryption; key escrow; traffic analysis; attacks against encryption; basic legal issues; e-commerce; and the role of protocols. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Equip students with knowledge in cryptograph and information security and enhance students¿ skills in critical thinking, problem-solving, ethical and scientific. research and communication.
|
| CSCI 55700 - Image Processing And Computer Vision |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Image processing and computer vision. Topics may include image input and transformation, feature detection and recognition in 2D image processing, as well as 3D dynamic images. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Employ these methods to solve technological problems faced during their professional careers.
2. Use these methods in other areas of specialization within computer science.
3. Become prepared to perform advanced research in the area of computer vision and image processing.
|
| CSCI 56500 - Programming Languages |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An exploration of modern or unconventional concepts of programming languages, their semantics, and their implementations; abstract data types; axiomatic semantics using Hoare's logic and Dijkstra's predicate transformers; denotational semantics; functional, object-oriented, and logic programming; concurrency and Owicki-Gries theory. Example languages include ML, Ada, Oberon, LISP, PROLOG, and CSP. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 57300 - Data Mining |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (CS 57300) Data Mining has emerged at the confluence of artificial intelligence, statistics, and databases as a technique for automatically discovering summary knowledge in large datasets. This course introduces students to the process and main techniques in data mining, including classification, clustering, and pattern mining approaches. Data mining systems and applications are also covered, along with selected topics in current research. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Employ these methods to solve technological problems faced during their professional careers.
2. Use these methods in other areas of specialization within computer science.
3. Become prepared to perform advanced research in the area of data mining.
|
| CSCI 58000 - Algorithm Design, Analysis And Implementation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic techniques for designing and analyzing algorithms: dynamic programming, divide-and-conquer, balancing, upper and lower bounds on time and space costs, worst case and expected cost measures. A selection of applications such as disjoint set union/find, graph algorithms, search trees, pattern matching. The polynomial complexity classes P, NP, and co-NP; intractable problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI 59000 - Topics In Computer Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Directed study for students who wish to undertake individual reading and study on approved topics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CSCI 60300 - Advanced Topics In Distributed Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (CS 60300) Design and control of distributed computing systems (operating systems and database systems). Topics include principles of naming and location, atomicity, resource sharing, concurrency control and other synchronization, deadlock detection and avoidance, security, distributed data access and control, integration of operating systems and computer networks, distributed systems design, consistency control, and fault tolerance. Prerequisite: CS 50300. Recommended: CS 54200. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Employ these methods to solve technological problems faced during their professional careers.
2. Use these methods in other areas of specialization within computer science.
3. Become prepared to perform advanced research in the area of distributed systems.
|
| CSCI 69500 - MS Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 9.00. Students integrate and apply knowledge gained from formal coursework to formulate and execute a solution to a problem of practical importance. The faculty advisor and sponsoring organization mentor, if applicable, provide guidance and evaluation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CSCI 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CSCI 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CSCI A1060 - Introduction to Computing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Look at the use of computers in everyday activities. Learn how computers work; use of packaged programs for word processing, spreadsheets, file management, communications, graphics, etc. Both Lecture and laboratory are required. No credit given for both CSCI A1060 and BUS K2010 or CSCI A2000
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI A1100 - Introduction to Computers and Computing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. No computing experience assumed. How computers work, word processing, spreadsheets, file management, Web browsing, etc. Emphasis on problem solving techniques. Lecture and laboratory. Credit given for only one of A106, A110, and A111. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI A1210 - Cyberspace Influences On Privacy, Security And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the impacts of computerization in the U.S. From family life, private organizations, and public organizations to government at all levels, computerization is affecting and creating the complex interdependencies between technology and social groups. We will survey recent changes to many topics including: intellectual property rights, e-government, online security, online privacy, digital currency, online gambling, universal access, online education, medical devices, and media convergence. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| CSCI A2010 - Introduction to Programming I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Fundamental programming constructs, including loops, arrays, classes, and files. General problem-solving techniques. Emphasis on modular programming, user-interface design, and developing good programming style. Not intended for computer science majors. Credit not given for both A201 and A597. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI A2020 - Introduction To Programming II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced programming techniques; user-defined functions and types, recursion vs. iteration, parameter-passing mechanisms. Classic abstract data types and algorithms. Programming style. Object-oriented programming. May be used in place of C2120 to satisfy computer science major requirements. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
|
| CSCI A2110 - Word Processing Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the student to word processing techniques used in creating letters, forms and reports. The student will use styles, outlines, tables, and field codes in documents and templates. Advanced topics include merging documents, customizing the Word environment, and integrating the features of Word with other software applications.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI A2120 - Spreadsheet Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the student to spreadsheet techniques used in creating professional looking worksheets. Students will use formulas, functions, charts, graphs, and logical functions. Advanced topics include advanced filtering, importing data, creating pivot tables, database functions, and integrating Excel with other software applications.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI A2130 - Database Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Covers advanced Database Applications. Database techniques used in creating tables, forms and reports will be learned. The student will develop custom forms, reports, and queries. Advanced topics include developing ASP pages for the WWW, developing and understanding relationship database design, automating tasks with macros, managing and securing a database, integrating Access with the web and other programs, and enhancing Access with Visual Basic for Applications.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI A2210 - Multimedia Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. This course introduces the student to creating dynamic web pages. Emphasis is placed on problem solving techniques using a web based programming language. This course can be repeated for credit for variable subtitles. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| CSCI A2470 - Network Technologies and Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Introduction to network principles and current network technology, both hardware and software. Network administration tools and techniques. Laboratory provides practical experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI A2900 - Adventures In Computing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. A web-based course to prepare students to have an in-depth understanding of information systems in business, industry, government, non-profit organizations or civil service. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI A3400 - Introduction To Web Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to programming web documents, including HTML, JavaScript and Perl. Creation of a simple web site, including a home page with dynamic elements, using both client-side and server-side techniques. This course is not intended for computer science majors.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI A5040 - Introductory C++ Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Topics include aspects of C++ that are not object-oriented, basic data structures, standard libraries, and Unix tools for project management. Credit not given for both A3040 and either A3040, T5010 (discontinued), A2010, A5010, A5120, C2120, H212, or Business K2100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI B4380 - Fundamentals Of Computer Networks |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. History, theory and design of data communications between devices. Topics include history of computer networks, network architecture and topology, local- and wide-area networks, ISO network layers, current and future IEEE standards for networks, and network operating systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| CSCI C1000 - Computing Tools |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 or 1.00. An introduction to computing applications useful in college work. Microcomputer systems, word processing, spreadsheets, graphics, e-mail and Web browsers are used. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CSCI C1010 - Computer Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Fundamental concepts of algorithm development, computer programming, and data structuring.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI C1050 - Introduction To C Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to computer programming using the "C" language. The emphasis is on structured programming principles, and understanding the basic concepts that apply to engineering problems. Among topics covered in this course are: problem solving using top down design, using flowcharts to explain the program logic, selection structure, repetition structure, bitwise operations, arrays, pointers, strings, passing arguments, and sequential files. The assignments in this course are appropriate for ECET students. Not available for credit to Computer Technology majors. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI C1060 - Introduction to Computers and Their Use |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to computer science for non-technical students. History of computing, survey of computer applications, user interfaces, computer networks, elementary programming concepts, programming languages and translation, computer hardware, theory of computability, artificial intelligence, computers and society. Lab exercises in HyperCard.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI C1510 - Multiuser Operating Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Survey of the operating system facilities and commands. Installation and maintenance of operating systems such as Linux. Understanding process management, file systems, memory and virtual memory management issues. Understanding networking and its role in modern computing environment. Operating system security. Writing shell scripts and batch files.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI C1750 - Computers: Adobe Tools |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course provides personal computer users a brief introduction to the power and usefulness of Adobe Programs. Examples of adobe tools that might be covered include: Premigre elements for movie creation and editing; Photoshop elements for editing still images; and Fireworks for graphic creation and animation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| CSCI C2010 - Introduction to Computer Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Intended for students needing a rigorous introduction to computer science. Introduction to algorithm design, programming, and analysis. Using the Scheme programming language, course covers procedural and data abstractions and use of several programming paradigms including functional, imperative and object-oriented.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI C2020 - Introduction to Computer Software Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Design of computer software systems and introduction to programming in the environment of a contemporary operating system. Topics include: C systems programming language and its data structure facilities, building and maintaining large projects, understanding the operating system interface including shell tools and system calls. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI C2430 - Introduction to Data Structures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Introduction to data structure concepts and common applications. Structures to be discussed include strings, lists, queues, stacks, graphs, trees, sequential files, random files, and indexed sequential files. Practical applications and algorithms are stressed. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI C2510 - Foundations of Digital Computing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Boolean algebra and propositional logic. Set algebra including mappings and relations. Elements of graph theory and statistical analysis. Applications of all topics to computer programming.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI C2970 - Sophomore Topics in Computer Science |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Selected topics in computer science appropriate for the student in or nearing the end of the sophomore year. Course may cover a topic selected from but not limited to the following list: programming languages, computer graphics, artificial intelligence, ethics in data processing, and database systems.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI C3080 - System Analysis And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The software development life cycle, structured top-down and bottom-up design, data flow diagramming, entity relationship modeling, study of computer-aided software engineering, I/O design and validation, file and database design, design of user interfaces, comparison of structured vs. object-oriented design. A team project is completed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI C3090 - Object-oriented Programming C++ |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to objected-oriented programming in C++ or Java. Covers the transition from structured programming to OOP techniques to support encapsulation, inheritance, and polymorphism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI C3110 - Organization Of Programming Languages |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design and implementation of programming languages: syntax; semantics; comparison of programming paradigms such as imperative, functional, logic, and object-oriented. Implementation of concepts such as binding, scope, looping, branching, subprograms and parameter passing, tasks and concurrency, heap management, exception handling, templates, inheritance, overloading. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI C3350 - Computer Structures |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Structure and internal operation of computers. The architecture and assembly language programming of a specific computer are stressed, in addition to general principles of hardware organization and low-level software systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI C4350 - Operating Systems I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Design and implementation of operating systems: the process model, process synchronization, semaphores, deadlock management, multi-tasking, multi-threading, interprocess communication, process scheduling, memory management, paging, segmentation, virtual memory management, file system design and implementation, I/O device drivers, interrupt handlers and spoolers. Students complete the design and implementation of a simulated. multi-tasking, operating system.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI C4420 - Database Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of fundamental concepts, theory and practices in design and implementation of database management systems. Topics include data independence, data modeling, ER modeling, functional dependencies, normalization, relational, hierarchical, network and object oriented data models, relational algebra, relational calculus, data definition and manipulation languages, recovery, concurrency, security, and integrity of data. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI C4450 - Information Systems Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Concepts, theory, and practice in systems design and analysis. Tools of systems analysis used with computer
systems to define data flow, control, and process requirements. Includes object-oriented analysis techniques.
. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI C4460 - Information Systems Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. This course focuses on an analysis and implementation of information systems. Hardware organization and relationship to software constructs such as sequential vs. direct access, coding and indexing strategies, inverted files, rings, trees, and multilinked structures.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI C4810 - Interactive Computer Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Computer graphics techniques. Introduction to graphics hardware and software. Two-dimensional graphics methods, transformations, and interactive methods. Three-dimensional graphics, transformations, and viewing geometry. Three-dimensional object modeling and interactive manipulation methods. Basic lighting and surface shading. Introduction to video and animation methods. Typically offered Fall, Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI C4900 - Seminar In Computer Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Special topics in computer science. May be repeated up to a maximum of 6 credit hours. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| CSCI C5910 - Research Seminra |
|
Credit Hours: 0.0 or 1.0. Research Seminar.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI N1000 - Introduction To Computers And Computing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. No computing experience assumed. How computers work, word processing, spreadsheets, file management, and Internet skills. Emphasis on problem solving techniques. Lecture and laboratory. Credit given for only one of CSCI N1000, CPT 10600, or BUS K2010. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI N1990 - Introductory Computing Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Seminars in emerging technologies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CSCI N2000 - Principles Of Computer Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explore the Big Ideas of Computer Science (CS) and Computational Thinking (CT) through hand-on explorations with social networking, gaming, big data, robots, programming and more. Learn about the creativity, usefulness and breadth of Computer Science in a fun way that can enhance any field of study. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Better understand the breadth and depth of Computer Science.
2. Acquire introductory competencies in computational thinking, including algorithmic problem solving, programming and data analysis.
3. Work in teams to create solutions to technical problems.
4. Develop skills in communicating technical problem and solutions.
|
| CSCI N2010 - Programming Concepts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Summary of basic computing topics, problem solving techniques, and their application to computing. Introduction to programming concepts with a focus on language-independent principles such as algorithm design, debugging strategies, essential control structures, and basic data structure concepts. Lecture and laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI N2070 - Data Analysis Using Spreadsheets |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Summary of basic computing topics. An introduction to data analysis using spreadsheets. Emphasis on the application of computational problem solving techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI N2110 - Introduction To Databases |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Summary of basic computing topics. Introduction to database design concepts, creation of user forms, development of databases, querying techniques, and building reports. Focus on relational database systems from development and administration point of view. Lecture and laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-New Albany
|
| CSCI N2310 - Visual Basic Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to programming with a focus on rapid application development environments, event-g\driven programming, and programming in the Windows environment. Course will demonstrate how the major application types (spreadsheets, databases, text editors) are written. This course will be used to facilitate transfer credit from the Community College of Indiana system. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI N2410 - Introduction To Web Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to writing content for the Internet and World Wide Web. Emphasis on servers, hand-coded HTML, Cascading Style Sheets and extending HTML with other Web technologies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI N2990 - Survey Of Computing Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An introduction to an emerging technology in the computing field. It will emphasize the various problems technology helps to solve and specific problem-solving strategies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CSCI N3000 - Mobile Computing Fundamentals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of programming & application development for mobile computing devices. Topics include mobile technology, location-based technology, mobile security, mobile platforms, programming languages & application development for mobile devices. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI N3010 - Fundamental Computer Science Concepts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to fundamental principles of computer science, including hardware architecture, algorithms, software engineering, and data storage. Lecture and laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI N3050 - C Language Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The basics of computer programming concepts using the C programming language. Emphasis on problem solving and algorithm implementation using a universal subset of the C programming language. Lecture and laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| CSCI N3070 - Introduction To Programming Using Java |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to programming concepts focusing on the Java language. Essential algorithm design, basic program control concepts, essential data concepts, debugging and testing programs. The course will also include object-oriented programming, creating user interfaces, event handling, and multi-platform programming issues. This course is primarily for students in the School of Informatics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI N3110 - Advanced Database Programming, Oracle |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focus on the concepts and skills required for database programming and client server development. Concepts will apply to any modern distributed database management system. Emphasis on developing Oracle SQLPlus scripts, PL/SQL server side programming, and Oracle database architecture. Students with programming experience in ODBC compliant languages will be able to practice connecting such languages to an Oracle database. Lecture and laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| CSCI N3210 - System And Network Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental concepts of system administration. Design and administration of network servers and workstations. Focus on basic network concepts such as user account administration, resource allocation, security issues, and Internet service management. Lecture and laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI N3250 - Design And Implementation Of Local Area Networks |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The design, implementation, and configuration of local area networks. Working in groups, students
install the necessary hardware and software to set up a LAN server with several clients. Students will explore topics including inter-networking, network management, network performance, and security.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI N3310 - Visual Basic Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to programming with a focus on rapid application development environments, event-driven programming, and programming in the Windows environment. Course will demonstrate how the major application types (spreadsheets, databases, text editors) are written. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI N3350 - Advanced Programming, Visual Basic |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Databases and VB, object-oriented design and practice, the component object model, inter-object communication, related RAD environments such as VB for Applications and ActiveX using the Windows API, and generating online help. Lecture and laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI N3410 - Introduction To Client-Side Web Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to programming with a focus on the the client-side programming environment. Programming using languages commonly embedded in web browsers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI N3420 - Server-Side Programming For The Web |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designing and building applications on a web server. Focuses on the issues of programming applied to web servers. Emphasis on relational database concepts, data design, languages used on the server, transaction handling, and integration of data into web applications. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| CSCI N3430 - Object Oriented Programming For The Web |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Algorithm design and development within the object oriented paradigm. Students will utilize Java to create web-based application software with strong user interaction and graphics. In addition, students will utilize Oracle and SQL to learn introductory database design principles, coupling backend database operation to application software. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI N3450 - Advanced Programming, Java |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A Java language course designed for students familiar with programming and the World Wide Web. Focus on the unique aspects of Java, Applet, and GUI design, object-oriented programming, event-handling, multi-threaded applications, animation, and network programming. Lecture and laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI N3510 - Introduction To Multimedia Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An integration of computing concepts and multimedia development tools. An introduction to the science behind multimedia (compression algorithms and digital/audio conversion). Use of authoring tools to create compositions of images, sounds, and video. Special emphasis given to using the Web as a multimedia presentation environment. Lecture and laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI N3550 - Introduction To Virtual Reality |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explore concepts of 3D imaging and design including primitive shapes, transformations, extrusions, facesets, texture mapping, shading, and scripting. Lecture and laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| CSCI N3610 - Fundamentals Of Software Project Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Tools and techniques used to manage software projects to successful completion. Problem solving focus to learn specification development and management, program success metrics, UML modeling techniques, code design and review principles, testing procedures, usability measures, release and revision processes, and project archival. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI N3990 - Topics In Computing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An investigation of an emerging language or topic in computing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CSCI N4100 - Mobile Computing Application Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focus of this course is to give programmers information they need to develop new applications to handheld devices and other resource-constrained hardware. All programming is done via Visual Basic .NET or C#. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI N4200 - Mobile Computing Cross-Platform Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of programming & application development for mobile and wireless computing devices. Topics include: recommended practices using the J2 platform for micro devices such as cell phones and PDA's, the implementation of cross-device GUI's, using event handlers, and remote server access. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI N4300 - Mobile Computing And Interactive Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to programming with emphasis on the Flash ActionScript environment as used in mobile devices. Topics include interface design for mobile devices, use of Flash as an application environment, game and multimedia development, communication with a web server, and parsing XML data.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI N4310 - E-Commerce With ASP NET |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics include basic web controls, form validation, connecting to an Enterprise-level database, SSL, and sending email within an ASP.NET web page. A significant software development final project creating a functional web store is featured. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI N4350 - Data Management Best Practices With ADO NET |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of managing data in the .NET environment. Focus on strategies to efficiently manage data for large-scale projects. Topics include XML, DataSets, SQL, and Error-Management. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI N4430 - XML Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of XML programming language. After mastering fundamental XML scripting syntax, the course focuses on narrative-centric and data-centric XML applications. Narrative content includes CSS, DTD, and XSLT, and X-path, -link, and -pointer tools; data-centric content includes the DOM, Schemas, and ADO/ASP. A required masterpiece project summarizes course competencies. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI N4500 - Mobile Computing With Web Services |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental Concepts of data transport between client devices and a server. Topics include Web Services, SOAP (simple object access protocol), and XML. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI N4510 - Web Game Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of basic game development principles with a focus on client-side web delivery. Topics to include creation of sprite objects, user interaction concepts, basic intelligence concepts, game data structures, and basic game physics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI N4610 - Software Engineering For Applied Computer Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a survey course covering software engineering concepts, tools, techniques, and methodologies. The topics covered include software engineering; software process and its difficulties; software lifecycle models; project planning including cost estimation; design methodologies including structured design; data-structure oriented design; object-oriented design; and software testing. This course is intended for non-majors and credit will not be awarded to computer science majors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI N4850 - Capstone Project In Applied Computing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides students with a mechanism for producing and integrating technical achievement meritorious of
program culmination. The project shall demonstrate subject matter mastery in project development guidelines, and reflect both a breadth and depth of technically focused problem-solving skills.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| CSCI N4990 - Topics In Applied Computing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An investigation and examination of an emerging discipline in applied computer science. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CSCI Y3980 - Internship In Professional Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00-6.00. Designed to provide opportunities for students to receive credit for selected, career-related, full-time or part-time work. Evaluation by employer and faculty sponsors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| CSD 11500 - Introduction To Communicative Disorders |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Nature, symptoms, and causes of communicative disorders and the principal methods used for remediation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CSD 18100 - First Course In American Sign Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic manual communication skill including the American manual alphabet, approximately 550 basic signs, and the history and place of manual communication in society. Designed to give the students minimum vocabulary and skills in communicating with individuals who are dependent on this form of communication. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CSD 18200 - Second Course In American Sign Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of conversational skills, vocabulary, and basic grammar of sign language. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CSD 28300 - Intermediate American Sign Language III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is the third semester of intermediate level American Sign Language. This course builds on skills in the first year of ASL courses to develop more complex ASL grammatical features, vocabulary, short stories, narratives and dialogues. Included is an awareness for and information related to Deaf culture and local Deaf community. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will engage in ASL discourse with confidence on topics including locating things around the home; commenting on experiences; making suggestions; exchanging personal information about life events; future and past; and readily communicate with members of local Deaf community.
2. Students will narrate a two paragraph story using specified ASL structures including non-manual markers, topicalization, conditionals, contrastive structure, reference points, spatial locations and classifiers related to storytelling around a variety of topics.
3. Students will demonstrate intermediate level mastery of receptive and expressive fingerspelling as well as an understanding of when to use and when not to use fingerspelling.
4. Students will comfortably integrate numbers into ASL conversations.
|
| CSD 28400 - Intermediate American Sign Language IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a fourth semester of American Sign Language designed to continue the development of expressive and receptive skills in ASL. Specifically, more advanced syntax, grammar and vocabulary will be used to develop and comprehend lengthier narratives. A variety of ASL literature will be studies to enhance awareness and knowledge of the Deaf culture and local Deaf community. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will expand their understanding of key structures of ASL including using conceptually correct vocabulary, correct ASL grammar and syntax, and use of specific ASL features with particular focus on prosodic information such as sentence boundary markers, rhythm, and facial expressions and body language commonly used to help language flow and transition.
2. Students will apply learned knowledge in functional everyday conversations and storytelling to create narratives and of at least three paragraphs or longer related to a variety of topics.
3. Students will continue to build receptive skills in ASL by being exposed to a variety of ASL literature.
4. Students will apply knowledge of Deaf culture and demonstrate ability to readily communicate with members of local Deaf community.
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| CSD 30200 - Acoustic Bases Of Speech And Hearing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The physical characteristics of speech sounds and the psychophysical processes involved in hearing. Restricted to CSD majors only, unless departmental permission granted. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CSD 30400 - Anatomy And Physiology Of The Speech And Hearing Mechanism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The physical characteristics of speech sounds and the psychophysical processes involved in hearing. Restricted to CSD majors only, unless departmental permission granted. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CSD 30600 - Introduction To Phonetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to articulatory phonetics, speech sounds in languages of the world, and principles and symbols of the International Phonetic Alphabet. Extensive practice in phonetic transcription. Restricted to CSD majors only, unless departmental permission granted. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CSD 30900 - Language Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Specific nature, sequence, and pattern of oral language development from birth through adolescence. Nature of language acquisition and approaches to the study of children's language are presented. Linguistic and psychological explanations of the sequence of development are discussed. Restricted to CSD majors only, unless departmental permission granted. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CSD 32100 - Introduction To Phonological Disorders In Children |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to phonological and phonemic development and disorders of speech sounds in children. Basic methods of assessment and intervention for phonological errors are discussed. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. To describe typical phonological development; KASA III - C&D.
2. To describe types of phonological disorders: KASA III - C&D.
3. To describe the theories and best practice methods of intervention; KASA - III E.
4. To experience using and analyzing a phonological assessment tool; KASA - III E.
5. To develop intervention plans and collect basic intervention materials; KASA - III E.
6. To develop practice oral facial exam and transcription of child with phonological delay; KASA - III ill.
|
| CSD 39900 - Directed Study In Audiology And Speech Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Special projects such as directed readings, independent and/or cooperative research on professionally relevant topics under the guidance of an CSD faculty member. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CSD 40500 - Augmentative And Computer Applications In Speech And Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory overview with emphasis on potential application in assessment, treatment, research, and administrative functions related to communication disorders. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CSD 41600 - Introduction To Assessment Of Communication Disorders |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the basic principles of assessment as it applies across the age and disorder spectrum. Specific assessment tools and tests are discussed and practiced. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. To demonstrate knowledge of communication assessment concepts and procedures.
2. To demonstrate knowledge of the process for evaluation of clients with standardized assessment tools.
3. To demonstrate knowledge of the process for evaluation of clients with non-standardized assessment probes.
4. To demonstrate knowledge of the process for using assessment information to write objective client goals.
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| CSD 41900 - Special Topics In Audiology And Speech Pathology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Study of special topics, drawn from areas not covered in permanent courses. Topics may vary from semester to semester. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the underlying conception that literacy is a meaning making activity.
2. Describe the emerging development of reading, writing and spelling.
3. Apply this knowledge to assess literacy and facilitate the use of literacy, this will include choosing materials, designing an intervention context to support literacy development, and empowering students who have experienced difficulty learning to read.
|
| CSD 42000 - Introduction To Developmental Speech And Language Disorders |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to disorders of speech and language in children. Characteristics of these disorders, methods of evaluation, and intervention procedures are discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CSD 43000 - Speech And Language Disorders In Healthcare Settings |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Presents speech-language disorders across the lifespan encountered in a variety of healthcare settings. Discusses the etiology, evaluation, and management of these disorders. Addresses administrative structures, team approaches, and reimbursement issues in healthcare settings. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CSD 44900 - Introduction To Clinical Practice In Speech-Language Pathology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. The first in a series of practicum courses designed to provide instruction and practical experience in basic diagnostic procedures and therapeutic approaches to speech and language disorders. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CSD 46000 - Introduction To Assessment Audiology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. History of audiology; normal and abnormal processes of hearing; basic methods of audiological assessment; and introduction to the development and management of hearing- conservation programs. Laboratory provides practical instruction in the procedures discussed in class. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CSD 51600 - Foundations Of Assessment In Communication Disorders |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to general principles of evaluation and assessment of communication disorders and to specific assessment tests. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CSD 52100 - Phonetic And Phonological Disorders In Children |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A detailed study of phonetic and phonological aspects of speech sound disorders in children. Recent research findings dealing with normal and disordered development are reviewed. Advanced procedures for diagnosis and intervention are discussed. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CSD 54900 - Clinical Practice In Speech-Language Pathology I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. The second in a series of practicum courses designed to provide instruction and practical experience in fundamental diagnostic and therapeutic approaches to speech and language disorders. Prerequisite: CSD 44900, overall GPA of 3.5, Requisite: CSD 43000. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CSD 55000 - Aural Rehabilitation For Adults |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theoretical and clinical implications associated with the rehabilitation of hearing loss in adults and geriatric adults. Discussion centers on a family centered team approach, built upon the effective use of amplification and other assistive devices. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CSD 55100 - Aural Rehabilitation For Children |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of the effects of hearing impairment on language, speech, academic, and psychosocial development. Topics include communication modalities, and principles and current practices for assessment and intervention. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| CSD 59000 - Directed Study Of Special Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CSR 10000 - Introduction To CSR |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A workshop to familiarize students with the CSR department, department majors, advising resources, and major requirements. Special emphasis on basic freshman survival skills. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 10100 - The Global Consumer 2050 |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course will focus on the tools students will need to be successful in the diverse world of the future. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 12000 - Introduction To Apparel Industry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory course that explores all facets of the apparel industry from its historical beginnings to concept of design and product development, to marketing, to manufacturing, to distribution, to retailing. Throughout the course, the student will learn about the career opportunities within the apparel industry. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 19000 - First Year Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A one-credit (each semester) first-year honors seminar consists of guest speakers and discussions of broad intellectual issues. Admitted high school students who have either a 1200 combined SAT score ( equivalent ACT score ) and graduate in top 10 percent of class and letter of invitation from the CFS dean. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Presentation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| CSR 19700 - First Year Honors Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A one-credit (each semester) first-year honors seminar consisting of guest speakers and discussions of broad issues within Consumer and Family Sciences. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| CSR 20000 - Professional Development In Consumer Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Professional Development in Consumer Sciences & Retailing is a required course that will provide the necessary techniques to manage job search skills and career development for both current and future professional needs. The covered topics will expose students to on-campus resources, opportunities to gain key networking skills, and establish their professional identity to better prepare students for the current job market. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Provide life-long job search skills.
2. Enable students to effectively navigate career fairs & networking events.
3. Educate students about Purdue’s resources regarding career and academic development.
4. Develop student’s professional documents.
5. Assist students in creating their personal professional brand.
6. Perpare students on the transition from college to the professional world.
|
| CSR 20900 - Introduction To Retail Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Retail career paths, management training, merchandise control, organization and service structure, and a comparison of store types. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 21500 - Textiles |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A basic textiles course dealing with the properties of textile fibers and fabrics and their impact on product performance and consumer satisfaction. Emphasis on retail, apparel, and interior design applications. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 21501 - Textiles Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory work to accompany CSR 21500. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 22000 - Apparel Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory course that deals with the evolution of apparel design through the principles of flat pattern design, three-dimensional draping, and computer-aided design (CAD for pattern design). Fundamentals for apparel design. Students create designs for a basic, sleeveless, collarless top. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Recognize and apply the creative process: inspiration, designer’s resources, visual consumer, garment engineering, and fashion sketching.
2. Recognize, name, and use pattern making tools, equipment, and terminology.
3. Produce and apply the use of a croquis (sketch/design/inspiration) book.
4. Create and continuously add personal designs and inspirations of design to a croquis book.
5. Understand and apply proper use of fabric grain in pattern making and draping.
6. Drape a set of basic block patterns to properly fit an industrial model form: bodices, skirts and sleeves.
7. Understand and apply the use of design principles #1 dart manipulation, and other patternmaking design details.
8. Create and sketch an original design, complete the patterns, and complete the assembly of: a sleeveless/collarless garment to fit the upper torso only or both upper and lower torso.
|
| CSR 22100 - Apparel Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continued development of apparel design from concept to finished product through the application of flat pattern design, draping, and computer-aided design. Building on the introductory course to create apparel wear design that includes sleeves, collars, blouses/shirts, dresses, pants, and skirts. Introduction to pattern grading manually and through CAD, and marker for apparel production. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. List, define, and apply sewn products industry and patternmaking terminology as related to apparel design.
2. Measure the human figure and industrial model form for the development and drafting of patterns for apparel.
3. Identify and appropriately make sure of various patternmaking / drafting tools.
4. Apply principles of flat pattern drafting to the production of patterns for original design apparel items of pants, collars, sleeves, and skirts.
5. Apply the principles of draping to the production of patterns for original design apparel items of skirt, pants, collars, sleeves, and torso.
6. Render presentation boards for color story, design inspirations / sketches, target customer profile, item selection of line or collection, fabric trim selection, and technical sketches (flats or production drawings).
7. Create, render, and continuously add personal designs and inspirations of design to a croquis book.
8. Create original design garments from conception of design through rendering to drafted patterns to assembled garment.
|
| CSR 22200 - CAD For Apparel Pattern Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of computer-aided-design for apparel pattern making, pattern grading, and marker making for the manufacture of apparel and other sewn products. Operation of CAD systems from Gerber Technology AccuMark PDS & GMS, and PDM (Product Data Management) are incorporated in this course. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 22300 - Apparel Assembly |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Experimentation of basic professional techniques for apparel assembly utilizing both domestic and industrial equipment. Course includes apparel construction, fitting, and finishing of a variety of garments. Students gain insight into the relationship between creative design and quality of a finished product. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 25500 - Apparel Showcase |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Production of annual apparel showcase of apparel original designs and artwork of Apparel Design majors. All students in the Apparel Design major work on teams to produce the annual event. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
|
| CSR 28200 - Customer Relations Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course that provides insight into the structure and working of customer relations management and its role in business and government agency. Analysis of how consumer needs, complaints, and education are handled. Customer relations' management in the real world and techniques used in managing customer relations toward the goal of maximizing customer satisfaction. This course has a real world focus and is more applied than the usual introductory course. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 29000 - Seminar On Current Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Class will focus on current consumer science issues facing households and businesses. The emphasis is placed on exploring current research issues in consumer sciences. Admittance into the CSR Honors Program. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 2 credits
|
| CSR 29700 - Introduction To Honors Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduces students to the design and implementation of an honors research project. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| CSR 30000 - Field Experience In Retail Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Approved in-service training, a total of 140 hours; development of activities plan; and report of activities. Recommended for semesters 3,4,5, or 6. Advance approval of director and employer and attendance at pre- and post-organizational meeting is required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Experiential 1, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 30700 - Field Experience In Selling And Sales Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Approved in-service training and supervised work experience in selling and sales management. Total of 140 hours required with in-depth report and analysis of activities. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Experiential 1
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Provide exposure to career options in a real world setting through direct practice or by observation and interaction with colleague at the internship site.
2. Apply theory and relevant coursework in a professional setting, where the student will combine academic and work site assignments.
3. Advance skills and professional experience to enhance the student's career development.
|
| CSR 30800 - Independent Business I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the financial processes involved in successful operation of a small business. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 30900 - Leadership Strategies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides knowledge of humanistic processes that contribute to development of effective leadership. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 31500 - Relationship Selling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on long term relationship selling. The course is organized around a seven step selling process which has proven to be effective. The course adds to this process some principles of marketing and business strategy. The elements are necessary for the success of professional salesperson both in successful prospecting and making strategic choices as to how to allocate their time within the territory. Important to the learning process is actually practice of principles. Students will do various exercises of principles such as prospecting and negotiation. At the end of the semester, students will hone the skills learned through the semester with a series of roll plays designed to put them in position of both seller and buyer. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Recognition that selling is a process which can be taught versus an innate trait.
2. An organized approach to the process of selling which can be applied to any industry.
3. Principles of marketing and strategy which students can apply to the selling process.
4. Principles of negotiation and handling objections both through class assignments and role playing.
5. How to do effective product presentation and frame benefits to the clients through a series of role play scenarios.
|
| CSR 32200 - Field Experience In Apparel Design And Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Approved in-service in the apparel industry and any related sewn product company and/or theatrical production. This field experience is intended to provide the opportunity for a student to apply skills and expertise gained through the study in apparel design courses. Required report of daily responsibilities plus a final report. Minimum of 140 hours of work per credit hour; Required 2 credits minimum. Advanced approval of director and employer; and attendance at organization meeting. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
|
| CSR 32300 - Visual Merchandising |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Creative experimentation, production, and analysis of promotional formats for merchandising of product in a retail setting. Study of the elements and principles of design and their application for promotion of retail merchandise and/or services. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 32700 - History Of Fashion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of the historical development of western world fashion from the ancient world through the 21st century. Students learn to understand the impact and influence of society, culture, art, work, economics, politics, and technology on the style of fashion - past, present, and future. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 32800 - Apparel Art And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration and experimentation of creative rendering of apparel design through the use of various media. Opportunity for the students to develop their own unique style of illustrating fashion. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 33100 - Consumer Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An interdisciplinary survey of consumer behavior theory focused on psychological, sociological, and cultural influences on consumer choice and use of products and services. Credit will not be given for both CSR 33100 and PSY 28500. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 33200 - Cross-Cultural Marketing And International Retailing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of marketing/retail practices used to target domestic and global consumer market segments. Development of successful retail and marketing strategies is stressed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 34200 - Personal Finance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The class covers a comprehensive discussion of investments, consumer credit, insurance and retirement issues. The goal is to show how these components are interconnected in order to create a complete picture of financial health of an individual. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
CTL:IPO 1811 Personal Finance
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
TSW-Lafayette
|
| CSR 34400 - Fundamentals Of Negotiations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to be relevant to the broad spectrum of bargaining “problems” that are traditionally faced by the manager, sales personnel and financial advisors. The course explores the processes of bargaining and negotiation as social and managerial activities. Special emphasis will be given to the areas of interpersonal and interpersonal and intergroup conflict, in addition to the interpersonal influence techniques and the tactics and strategies involved with improved bargaining and negotiation. The major purpose of the course is for each student to gain insight into his or her own negotiating style and to become a more effective negotiator, as well as a more astute observer of social process. The course will involve extensive use of cases, role-plays, and related participative activities, enhanced by rigorous self-review and introspection. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Explore the major concepts and theories of the psychology of bargaining and negotiation.
2. Understand the dynamics of interpersonal and intergroup conflict and its resolution.
3. Help develop the sophistication to analyze bargaining and conflict relationships.
4. Learn about your own individual “bargaining style”.
5. Development appropriate negotiation strategies and tactics for specific situations.
|
| CSR 35500 - Apparel Showcase |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Planning of annual apparel showcase of apparel original designs and artwork of Apparel Design majors. All juniors and seniors in the Apparel Design major work with co-leaders to plan the annual event. This course will be an avenue to work with special projects as requested by outside interest groups. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| CSR 38600 - Risk Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course includes principles of insurance, analysis and evaluation of risk exposures, legal aspects of insurance, insurance needs and analysis, policy selection, and insurance company selection and due diligence. Types of insurance that are studied include: property and casualty, health, life, long-term care, disability and general business liability. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 39000 - Undergraduate Special Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Individual participation, supervised reading, laboratory or field experiments, or research in special areas of the field. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Research
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
|
| CSR 39100 - Undergraduate Structured Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Group participation in an organized class, a structured workshop, or research problem in a particular area of the field. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CSR 39500 - Special Projects |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Individual participation in supervised undergraduate project. Open to qualified upperclassmen. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| CSR 39700 - Directed Honors Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Directed independent honors research for CFS Honors Program students. Students must select a faculty advisor for the course. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| CSR 39800 - International Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Course taken during an International experience that is recognized by the University. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CSR 39900 - Undergraduate Special Topics In CSR |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Various topics that may change from semester to semester are presented by CSR faculty. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| CSR 40100 - Buying Of Merchandise |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of volume buying applicable to department, chain, specialty, and independent stores. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 40300 - Retail Management Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A supervised full-time internship in retail and related industries. This experience will enable students to further develop their professional interests and skills. Prior field experience and completion of application and pre-approval of internship by internship director and attendance at pre- and post-organization meetings is required. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 40400 - Strategic Issues For Sales And Retailing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of selected retail organizations and their channel partners through in-depth discussion of contemporary paradigms in strategic marketing for both sales and retailing perspectives and their applications to management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 40600 - E-Retailing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. To provide understanding of the technological and retail infrastructure that underlines doing retailing over the internet. Build an understanding of business strategies over the net. To identify management issues and consumer issues in e-retailing. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 40900 - Promotional Strategies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of promotional techniques and strategies used by sellers to present a company or its product to target markets. Emphasis placed on planning a promotional campaign. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 41500 - Sales Force Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to sales force management. An examination of the sales force management process, including principles of recruiting and selecting, training, compensation, motivation, supervision, and evaluation. Planning skills, including sales force deployment and the role of the sales force in sales forecasting, are also covered. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 41800 - Selling And Sales Management Capstone |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A capstone course in advanced professional selling taught in a seminar format and designed to prepare students for the transition from student to professional. Students are introduced to practioner-focused issues involved in long-term, major B2B account sales and an emphasis is placed on professional presentation skills. Students will complete a senior group research project and a major account sales project. Professional dress code from business-casual to full-business attire required based on the scheduled day-to-day activity. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Construct a complete selling and sales management program (term project).
2. Demonstrate the ability to analyze selling and sales management situations, and apply skills to solving selling and sales management problems and developing effective selling strategies (exams; quizzes; class exercises).
3. Identify how diversity, ethical, global, and multicultural considerations affect the selling and sales management decision-making processes (exams; class exercises).
4. Demonstrate effectively communication skills by the presentation of a research project in an oral presentation and in a written paper (term project presentations and project updates).
|
| CSR 42100 - Apparel Design III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Creation of apparel product line or collection from concept to consumer. Application of principles of apparel design from rendering, technical sketches, pattern design, pattern grading, marker making, and construction of several apparel garments from the line or collection. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 42300 - Apparel Portfolio/Professional Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of employment-seeking skills including cover letters and resume writing, networking, job-seeking organization and interview practice. Creation and development of various forms of computer generated art for the portfolio including fashion illustration, textile design, story boards, and line brochures as well as stationary and business card design. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 48000 - Financial Counseling and Planning Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Supervised internship in the financial services industry. The experience will enable students to develop their professional interest and skills. Attendance at a pre-planning meeting required. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Experiential 1
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 48100 - Ethics And Compliance in Financial Counseling & Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Examination of the ethical and compliance issues in the basic areas of investments, risk management, taxation, retirement and estate planning. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 48400 - Consumer Investment And Savings Decisions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of consumer investment alternatives, with emphasis on financial assets. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 48500 - Case Studies In Financial Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Financial planning principles and practice. Course utilizes a case study approach toward financial planning for upper- and middle-income households. Business calculator required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 48600 - Retirement Planning and Employee Benefits |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of employee benefit plans, retirement needs analysis, and types of retirement plans including employer sponsored plans and participant directed plans. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 49000 - Independent Study |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Independent study. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Research
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| CSR 49700 - Honors Research Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. The completion of the independent honors research project for CFS Honors Program students. Must have an approved Honors Project Proposal. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 59000 - Special Problems In Consumer Sciences And Retailing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Credit variable. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CSR 60000 - Introduction To Research In Consumer Sciences And Retailing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to research development, evaluation and analysis in the consumer sciences and retail management. Emphasis on preliminary stages of the research process including critical reading, preparation of literature reviews, scholarship standards, and preliminary proposals for research. Required of all graduate students entering CSR. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 63100 - Consumer Behavior Theories |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of research methods, principles, and theories of social science as they apply to the study of consumer behavior and marketing sciences. Prerequisite: STAT 50100, 50200, or PSY 60000, 60100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 68100 - Consumption Theories |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of theories of consumption with emphasis on their relation to current practices and to the history of economic thought. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 68200 - Analytical Tools For Consumer Economists |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Economic and analytical skills needed to interpret and conduct research in family and consumer economics. Focuses on consumer theory and includes theory of the firm, price theory, and welfare economics. Prerequisite: ECON 25100, 25200 and 3 credit hours at the lower division undergraduate level in Economics. Enrolled in Selling & Sales Mgmt, Retail Management, Apparel Design & Tech or Financial Counsel & Planning. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 69000 - Independent Study In Consumer Sciences And Retailing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Topic and credit to be arranged. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| CSR 69500 - Behavioral Research Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis and critical evaluation of behavioral and economic research design and development of research proposals. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| CSR 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CSR 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| CSR 90000 - ADTC Program Orientation |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Mandatory Attendance for all students entering the Apparel Design and Technology major. Orientation to plan of study, presentation of expectations for success in this major, question and answer session with upper class men, and opportunity to learn about activities with the major, the CSR Dept., the HHS college, and Purdue University as a whole. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Department of Consumer Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Success within the major: academically; development as a young adult in the university.
|
| DANC 10100 - Modern Dance I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An introduction to the techniques and principles of modern dance. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| DANC 10200 - Ballet I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An introduction to the techniques and principles of classical ballet. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| DANC 10300 - Jazz Dance I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An introduction to the principles of jazz dance techniques: alignment, isolations, rhythmic patterns, and basic locomotion. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| DANC 12100 - Tap Dance I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The emphasis in this course will be on learning basic steps and tap progressions. Class will include barre work, across the floor and center floor combinations. Graded technique will be incorporated to monitor progress. Credit may be granted by audition. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| DANC 13000 - Fundamental Principles Of Dance Technique |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is designed to provide conceptual and experiential understanding of the integration of functional anatomical principles applied to dance technique. Through dance exercises the students will learn to re-pattern movement so that it is efficient, effective, and aesthetic. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| DANC 13400 - The Study Of Movement In Human Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Through the cross-cultural lens of dance anthropology, ethnology, aesthetics, and performance, we will study the meaning dance holds for its community of participants as well as how it functions in a particular society. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. To deepen an understanding and appreciation for the expressive nature and physical intelligence of the human body.
2. To explore connections among movement, culture, and spirituality.
3. To learn about the development and functions of movement within specific communities.
4. Increase power of movement observation through dance viewing in the dance studio, on video, and in the theatre.
5. Investigate related issues such as gender, culture, community, and diversity.
|
| DANC 13500 - World Dance Forms |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to and participation in selected dance forms from various cultures and historical periods. Dance will be explored as cultural identity, personal expression, worship, ritual, and political power through lectures, readings, DVD viewings, demonstrations, and movement sessions. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| DANC 13600 - Teaching Dance: Theories And Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduce students to theories and practices of teaching dance and creative movement to a variety of populations in diverse settings. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Deepen and expand knowledge of body mechanics.
2. Examine theories of learning.
3. Survey methodology for creating movement experiences.
4. Investigate related issues such as gender and diversity.
5. Inspect K-12 curriculum development.
6. Form a resource file.
7. Explore dance advocacy.
8. Acquire teaching strategies.
9. Practice thinking, and writing articulately about teaching and learning.
|
| DANC 14000 - Dance Improvisation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A study of the elementary principles used in the design of modern dance movements. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| DANC 14400 - Contact Improvisation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is both a physical practice and philosophical exploration of the contemporary partnering dance form Contact Improvisation. This form uses movement, touch, momentum and weight-sharing to explore dancing with other people. We will find moments of balance, inversion and flight by learning to support and be supported by other bodies. We will focus on connections and sensorial awareness as we practice rolling, lifting, falling, jumping, catching and finding the body's center. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| DANC 20100 - Modern Dance II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A continuation and refinement of the modern dance techniques and principles addressed in DANC 10100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| DANC 20200 - Ballet II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A continuation of the principles and techniques of classical ballet addressed in DANC 10200. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| DANC 20300 - Jazz Dance II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A continuation and refinement of the jazz dance concepts and movement vocabulary addressed in DANC 10300. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| DANC 22100 - Tap Dance II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The emphasis in this course will be on building upon the basic steps and progressions achieved in beginning tap. Class will include barre work, across the floor and center combinations. As in Tap I, graded technique will be incorporated to monitor progress. Credit may be granted by audition. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| DANC 23000 - Biomechanical Approaches To Ballet Movement |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course will provide conceptual and experiential understanding of biomechanical approaches to ballet technique. Through studio, lecture, movement exercises and assignments, the students will learn to perform ballet movement with ease, strength and economy of motion. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. The student will have integrated movement patterns from anatomically un-sound habits to anatomically sound habits that provide for naturally efficient, strong, flexible, mobile and stable movement.
2. The students will have gained knowledge of biomechanical exercises that promote injury-prevention movement patterns and will have an ability to execute these exercises with physical proficiency.
3. The student will have developed the ability to identify problem areas in alignment and movement in other dancers as well as in themselves. Therefore, students develop a critical eye for teaching and a knowledge base for addressing difficulty in ballet movement.
4. The student will be able to perform ballet movement with greater ease and expressive capacity and have developed a broader physical range for exploring artful performing.
5. The student will develop a vocabulary and means for understanding and communicating biomechanical principles.
|
| DANC 24000 - Fundamentals Of Dance Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the theory and practice of the principles and utilization of choreographic tools; movement exploration, manipulation of basic dance elements, development of movement themes, and application of compositional dance forms. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| DANC 24500 - Practicum In Dance Performance And Production |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Open through audition. The study and practice of dance rehearsal, performance, and basic concert production techniques, culminating in a main-stage dance concert. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division, Practicum
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
|
| DANC 24600 - Intermediate Choreography |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A study of selected principles underlying the design of group performance in modern dance. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| DANC 25000 - Dance Appreciation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Understanding and appreciation of dance as an art form. Topics include compositional forms; movement styles; elements of dance; and influential choreographers, dancers, and theorists representative of various historical periods and aesthetic points of view. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| DANC 25100 - Dance History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to expose students to dance as a fundamental form of human expression. Varied forms of dance will be analyzed and discussed within a sociological, cultural, and historical framework. The focus of this course is the development of Western theatrical dance from the birth of ballet in the Renaissance courts through the eclectic marriage of dance forms found in 20th century America. Throughout this course, students should develop an understanding of dance as an art form. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| DANC 30100 - Modern Dance III |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A continuation and refinement of the modern dance techniques and principles addressed in DANC 20100. Emphasis placed on expressive qualities of movement. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| DANC 36800 - Dance Sound Design |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The study and application of sound design for dance, with emphasis on creation of sound scores for Modern Dance concerts. Instructor permission required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 7 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Feel comfortable researching sound and music.
2. Feel more comfortable using an audio sequencer and other associated software to create a dance sound design.
3. Gain valuable experience integrating the finished design into the dance performance.
4. Add an important credential to the resume and portfolio.
|
| DANC 39000 - Introduction To Dance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the fundamentals of various dance forms to improve body awareness/performance. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1) To deepen an understanding and appreciation for the expressive nature and physical intelligence of the human body.
2) To learn basic fundamentals and appreciation for various dance forms including ballet, modern, jazz, hip-hop, tap, ballroom and improvisation.
3) To achieve basic steps and combinations and become more comfortable with personal range of motion.
4) To practice thinking, talking and writing about body awareness, movement concepts and dance as an art form.
5) To learn about the history of dancing.
6) To develop artistry and musicality in the execution of various styles of dancing.
7) To talk about and view the creative process of putting a dance works on stage.
|
| DANC 49000 - Special Problems In Dance |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individual readings, topics, or projects in dance. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| DAST A1010 - Anatomy And Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A basic understanding of human anatomy and physiology providing explanations of how structures function and examples of how they work together to maintain life. This course will help students learn about the cells, tissues, integument, skeletal, muscular, nervous, endocrine, circulatory, respiratory, digestive, urinary, and reproductive systems as an integrated unit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DAST A1110 - Anatomy Physiology and Oral Pathology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. An overview study of the structure and function of the body starting with the basic tissues, organs, and organ systems followed by the mechanisms of disease with emphasis on oral pathology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DAST A1120 - Dental And Medical Emergencies And Therapeutics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A course including recognition and clinical experience of systemic emergencies. Comprehensive study of the physiological, toxicological, and therapeutic effects of drugs on living organisms, with emphasis on their rational application in the treatment of disease. Content includes discussions of drugs which are widely prescribed by physicians and dentists. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DAST A1130 - Oral Path, Physiology And Anatomy II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. An overview of the structure, function, and diseases of the human body including basic cells, tissues, organs, and organ systems, with special emphasis on diseases of the face and mouth. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DAST A1210 - Microbiology And Asepsis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. An overview of microbiological aspects of health and disease with emphasis on sterile procedures and disinfection techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DAST A1220 - Introduction to Dentistry |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An overview of the specialties of dentistry with specific lectures on cavity classification and nomenclature. Instrument nomenclature, principles of cavity preparation, the space-maintenance concept, management of the child patient, use of the rubber dam in direct and indirect pulp therapy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DAST A1310 - Dental Materials I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Lecture and laboratory courses designed to familiarize the student with the basic mechanical, physical and chemical properties of dental materials. The role of the assistant in selection, manipulation and biological considerations of dental materials is stressed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DAST A1320 - Dental Materials II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Lecture and laboratory courses designed to familiarize the student with the basic mechanical, physical and chemical properties of dental materials. The role of the assistant in selection, manipulation and biological considerations of dental materials is stressed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DAST A1410 - Preventive Dentistry And Nutrition |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Etiology of prevalent oral diseases and prevention, with particular emphasis on plaque, plaque control, and fluorides. The effects of major nutrients on the physiologic body processes; applied nutrition in dental caries and periodontal disease. Clinical and laboratory experiences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DAST A1510 - Radiology Clinic I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Clinical experience in the exposing and processing of intra-oral and panoramic dental radiographs. Radiation safety and film interpretation are also emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DAST A1610 - Behavioral Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An introduction to psychology applicable in the dental office, emphasizing communication, personal and interpersonal relations; the role of the dental assistant as seen by the dentist, auxiliaries, and patient. Attitude, personality, motivation, and habit formation are discussed from a dental perspective. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DAST A1620 - Written And Oral Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Instruction and practice in gathering and organizing material for written and oral presentation. Individual and group projects in communication, including table clinics, posters, and professional articles for publication, telephone techniques, and resumes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DAST A1710 - Clinical Science I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00 to 6.00. A core course in dental nomenclature; historical developments in dentistry; role of assistant as member of the dental health team; dental specialties; charting the mouth; identification and utilization of instruments and equipment; principles of dental procedures and instrument transfer. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DAST A1720 - Clinical Science II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Clinical chair side experience, including an extramural assignment; allows for refining of student skills. A seminar provides students opportunities to share experiences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DAST A1820 - Practice Management,Ethics And Jurisprudence |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Dental practice management in reception procedures, appointment control, and clinical and financial records; purchasing and inventory control. Study of the legal and ethical aspects of dentistry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DAST A1900 - Expanded Restorative Functions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Lecture, laboratory and clinical course designed to teach more extensively certain concepts of dental materials and their use in intra-oral techniques. The principles of dental auxiliary utilization and the manipulation and placement of dental materials used in delegated intra-oral functions are taught. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DAST A2730 - Advanced Clinical Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides continued performance on clinical practice experiences with patients in extramural dental offices. The students will utilize critical thinking skills and evidence-based decision making as they perform clinical treatment with their patients. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DAST A3000 - Special Topics In Dental Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. An advanced course for dental education majors. Supervised reading or projects on approved topics in dentistry. Hours, subject matter, and evaluation to be determined by faculty. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| DAST A3010 - Advanced Orthodonic Procedures |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. An advanced course in orthodontics for allied dental professionals. Tooth morphology, occlusion, instrumentation, intraoral procedures, appliances, cephalometric tracing, and panoramic and cephalometric radiographic techniques will be discussed. Laboratory experiences will be included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DAST A4010 - Restorative Dentistry Clinical Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00 to 6.00. An advanced senior course preparing students in the knowledge and practice of clinical restorative dentistry. The course will provide students evidence-based decision making practices by applying the clinical application of contemporary interdisciplinary restorative dentistry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DHYG D4010 - Clinical Supervision I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Supervisory experience in clinics and laboratories involved in teaching students enrolled in dental hygiene curriculum; problems incident to patient-student and instructor-student relationships. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DHYG D4020 - Practicum In Dental Sciences Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Experience in teaching in the Department of Dental Education under the direction of a supervising instructor. Students will learn strategies in curriculum development, effective evaluation methods, teaching-learning styles, student-faculty relationships, and problem-solving strategies in a didactic setting. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DHYG H2040 - Periodontics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Study of the normal periodontium at the clinical, histologic, and biochemical levels; procedures involved in carrying out a comprehensive periodontal examination and performing a periodontal prophylaxis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| DHYG H2050 - Medical And Dental Emergencies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. A study in emergency situations in the dental office, including predisposing factors, drugs, and treatment to include the support of the cardiopulmonary system. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DHYG H2060 - General Pathology I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Mechanisms of disease at the cellular, organ, and systemic levels with special references to specific disease processes; includes general concepts, terminology, and pathology of organ systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| DHYG H2070 - General Pathology II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Mechanisms of disease at the cellular, organ, and systemic levels with special references to specific disease processes; includes general concepts, terminology, and pathology of organ systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| DHYG H2110 - Head And Neck Anatomy |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A detailed study of the anatomy of the head and neck. Some attention is given to oral embryology and the growth of tooth structure. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DHYG H2140 - Oral Anatomy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the morphology, structure, and function of deciduous and permanent teeth and surrounding tissues, also including osteology of maxilla and mandible, nerve and vascular supply of teeth, muscles of mastication, with reinforcing laboratory procedures and clinical application. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DHYG H2150 - Pharmacology & Therapeutics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Actions and uses of drugs and theory of anesthetics; emphasis on drugs used in dentistry. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DHYG H2160 - Chemistry and Nutrition-First Year |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Specific ideas in chemistry are correlated with working principles in dentistry. Previous knowledge of chemistry required. Dental aspects of nutrition and dietetics are given special attention. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DHYG H2170 - Preventive Dentistry: Second Year |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Detection and prevention of dental diseases; included is a study of dental surveys, dental indices, and flouride therapy. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| DHYG H2180 - Fundamentals Of Dental Hygiene |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. An introduction to the dental and dental hygiene professions, including the basic didactic and laboratory clinic practice for the performance of dental hygiene services. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DHYG H2190 - Clinical Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Application of dental prophylaxis technique to child and adult patients; Clinical experience in oral inspection of hard and soft tissues; Taking complete medical and dental histories; fluoride application procedures; x-ray exposure and development; patient education; sterilization techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DHYG H2210 - Clinical Dental Hygiene Procedures |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A continuation of dental hygiene concepts and techniques introduced in DHYG H2180. Emphasis on individualized patient care will be emphasized. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| DHYG H2220 - Advanced Clinical Dental Hygiene Procedures |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Clinical application of dental prophylaxis, fluoride application, and dental radiographs, for children and adult patients in a mock dental office setting. Special emphasis on mastery of skills, speed, and accuracy. Instruction in procedures for OSHA and infection control guidelines. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DHYG H2240 - Oral Histology And Embryology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Study of the histological aspects of the tooth and periodontium; embrylogic development of the face and teeth. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DHYG H2400 - Introduction To Dental Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. This course provides background in ethical issues that impact dental healthcare providers and their patients. Emphasis will be on developing critical thinking skills and evidence based decision making. Case studies providing examples of legal and ethical issues relevant to dental patient care will be explored. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DHYG H2420 - Introduction To Dentistry - Specialties |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. An overview of the field of dentistry with emphasis on the specialties in dentistry, and introduction to common dental procedures with information a hygienist needs in patient education, as well as issues related to access to dental care and the dental workforce. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. List and describe issues facing our nation related to dental care.
2. Describe steps that can be taken to improve oral health in America.
3. Describe the ADHA’s outlook on the profession of dental hygiene.
4. Describe ADA’s outlook on the future of dentistry.
5. List and describe the specialties of dentistry, as well as the educational requirements for each specialty.
6. Describe procedures performed by each specialist within the dental profession.
7. Discuss commonly asked questions within the dental profession which patients might ask of a dental professional.
8. Define or recognize general terminology associated with each specialty.
9. Demonstrate the use of traditional and electronic resources in support of evidence-based inquiry/research strategies.
10. Demonstrate knowledge of the laws and regulations related to dental hygiene practice in the state of Indiana.
11. Demonstrate understanding of plagiarism and the ramifications of its use in writing.
12. Develop critical thinking skills in analyzing an article utilizing a template.
13. Demonstrate knowledge of vocabulary terminology related to the dental profession.
|
| DHYG H2500 - Local Anesthesia And Pain Control |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Local Anesthesia and Pain Control. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| DHYG H2520 - Introduction To Evidence-Based Dental Hygiene Care |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Foundational knowledge to implement evidence-based decision-making strategies in the provision of patient/client care. It includes basic knowledge and skills related to research terminology, library and computer-based information retrieval systems, approaches to reviewing and evaluating scientific literature, and dental indices used in the description of oral health and disease. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| DHYG H3010 - Clinical Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00 or 5.00. Continuation of H2190, including taking of study models,dietary surveys, application for other preventive measures, root planing and periodontal charting; the inclusion of expanded functions of the hygienist. H3010 must precede H3020. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DHYG H3020 - Clinical Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00.H302 Clinical Practice III is a combination of clinical experiences, professional organization activities and community health education. The didactic information obtained through the curriculum is designed to complement student's advanced clinical work and experiences. These experiences will include evaluating patient's nutritional status and identifying treatment modifications necessary for patients with special needs. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DHYG H3030 - Radiology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Principles associated with production of x-rays and manipulation of x-ray equipment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DHYG H3040 - Oral Pathology-Second Year |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Developmental abnormalities and acquired disorders of teeth and surrounding structure. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DHYG H3050 - Radiology Clinic |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Clinical application of intra-oral and extra-oral radiographs.
. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 TO 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DHYG H3060 - Radiology Clinic II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Clinical application of intra-oral and extra-oral radiographs. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DHYG H3070 - Radiology Clinic III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Clinical application of intra-oral and extra-oral radiographs. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DHYG H3080 - Dental Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Composition, physical and chemical properties of materials used in dentistry with opportunity for experience in their manipulation. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DHYG H3090 - Community Dental Hygiene |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A supervised field experience in various community settings, including dental health instruction and treatment in schools, and dental health education to community organizations. This course is designed to cover didactic information in the first half of the course to prepare students for the National Board Examination. During this time students are orientated to community fieldwork experiences, with the majority of service hours completed in the latter half of this course. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DHYG H3100 - Technical Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Evaluation and reporting of research in dentistry; educational writings. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DHYG H3110 - Dental Health Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to basic communication and motivation skills, instructional objectives, learning theory, evaluation of educational materials, and special needs patients. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| DHYG H3200 - Practice Management, Ethics, and Jurisprudence |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. The study of the organization, administration, and prudent operation of professional and financial resources for a successful dental practice in a community. Ethical and legal issues related to dentistry are emphasized. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DHYG H3210 - Periodontics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. A study of periodontal disease including the anatomy, classification, etiology, treatment, and relationship to systemic condition. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DHYG H3440 - Senior Hygiene Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Systematic and comprehensive review of basic dental science courses with emphasis on their relationships to clinical practice; current concepts in comprehensive patient assessment and treatment will be included. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DHYG H3470 - Community Dental Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. A study of public health principles as they relate to dentistry. Oral health program assessment, implementation and evaluation are emphasized. Biostatistical evaluations are given special attention. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DHYG H4000 - Evidence-Based Decision Making |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Evidence-Based Decision Making (EBDM) is based on scientific evidence, clinical skill and judgment, and individual patient case studies. This approach to evidence-based decision making in oral healthcare will include judicious integration of systematic assessments of scientific evidence. Foundational knowledge to implement future clinical strategies will be discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DHYG H4050 - Introduction To Health Care Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of current literature related to periodontics, oral pathology, preventive dentistry and the current practices of dental hygiene. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| DHYG H4080 - Practicum In Community Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Structured practical experience coordinating, and evaluating instruction in an educational setting and/or assessing, planning, implementation, and evaluation of public health programs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DLTP D1110 - History, Ethics and Organization |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. History and background of dental laboratory technology, including dental practice acts, work authorization, dental ethics as applicable to dental auxiliaries. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DLTP D1120 - Dental Anatomy |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of individual tooth morphology; its relationship, alignment, and function in the oral cavity. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DLTP D1130 - Basic Physics, Chemistry and Dental Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. The chemical and physical properties and requirements of restorative and prosthetic materials will be taught. Manipulative procedures are performed in the laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DLTP D1140 - Occlusion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The interdigitation of teeth and their relationship to function, phonetics, and esthetics will be introduced. Waxing techniques to obtain these desired results will be utilized in the laboratory. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DLTP D1250 - Crown and Bridge Prosthodontics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the types oand sues of fixed restorations and techniques of fabrication. The theories and concepts for the use of different types of restorations will be included. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DLTP D1260 - Orthodontics and Pedodontics Appliances I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the basic laboratory skills pertinent to fabrication of orthodontic and pedodontic appliances. Special emphasis will be placed on various wire bending techniques and designs. Students will also be introduced to the pouring and trimming of diagnostic casts. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DLTP D1270 - Complete Denture Prosthodontics I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An introduction to the setup and arrangement of artificial teeth. Waxing, investing, processing, and finishing procedures will also be taught. The basics of denture reparir will be introduced. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DLTP D1280 - Partial Denture Prosthodontics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to teh theories and procedures of partial framework fabrication. The procedures of design, duplicating, waxing, investing, casting, and finishing will be introduced. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DLTP D1290 - Dental Ceramics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the types and uses of fixed restorations and techniques in the fabrication of porcelain to metal restorations. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DLTP D2150 - Crown and Bridge Prosthodontics II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Fixed procedures are continued with emphasis on multiple unit castings. Theory and techniques to be included are pontic design, acrylic veneer design, and soldering. Typically offered Fall.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DLTP D2160 - Orthodontics and Pedodontics Appliances II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The skills introduced in the basic course will be amplified. More intricate wire bending exerciese will be used. Acrylic placement, basic soldering, and welding techniques will be introduced. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DLTP D2170 - Complete Denture Prosthodontics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Setup and arrangement procedures using various degrees of posterior teeth will be covered. The characterization of dentures using tooth arrangement, waxing, and finishing procedures will be introduced. Students will also be taught refitting techniques such as relines and rebases. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DLTP D2180 - Partial Dentrue Prosthodontics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The fabrication of various designed frameworks will be utilized. The arrangement and processing of artificial/ teeth and the repairing of frameworks will be introduced. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DLTP D2190 - Dental Ceramics II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Porcelain to metal procedures are continued iwth emphasis on multiple unit restorations. An intoduction to soldering techniques and porcelain jacket crowns will be included. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DLTP D2210 - Dental Laboratory Business Procedures |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Practical laboratory management procedures and theories will be taught. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DLTP D2220 - Practical Laboratory Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00 to 6.00. A practicum in dental laboratory procedures in one of the five specialty areas. This practicum may be given on campus or at an extramural site. Typically offered Spring.
4.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| DLTP D2240 - Maxillo-Facial Rehabilitation |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to the field of maxillo-facial prosthetic constructions, to include appliance constructions, various fabricating techniques, and the curing and coloring of appliances. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DLTP D2250 - Specialty Crown and Bridge Prosthodontics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course will offer the student an opportunity to specialize in crown and bridge fabrication. Speed and accuracy in the procedures of fabrication will be stressed. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DLTP D2260 - Specialty In Orthodontics and Pedodontics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course will offer the student an opportunity to specialize in orthodontic and pedodontic appliance fabrication. Speed and accuracy in the procedures of appliance fabrication will be stressed. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DLTP D2270 - Specialty Complete Denture Prosthodontics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course will give students the opportunity to specialize in complete denture fabrication. Emphasis will be placed on speed and accuracy in all phases of denture fabrication. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DLTP D2280 - Specialty Partial Denture Prosthodontics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course will give students the opportunity to specialize in framework fabrication. Speed and accuracy in the procedures of framework fabrication will be stressed. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DLTP D2290 - Specialty In Dental Ceramics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course will give students the opportunity to specialize in dental ceramic restoration fabrication. Emphasis will be placed on speed and accuracy in all phases of restoration fabrication. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DLTP D3000 - Specialty In Orthodonic Prosthesis |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course will give students advanced knowledge in the fabrication of orthodontic prosthesis. It will allow students to test and develop their problem solving skills by providing them with theoretical information and challenge them to convert it into practical application through construction of orthodontic appliances. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DLTP D3010 - Specialty In Fixed Prosthodontics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00 to 8.00. This course will give students advanced knowledge in the fabrication of fixed prosthesis. It will allow students to test and develop their problem solving skills by providing them with theoretical information and challenge them to convert it into practical application through construction of fixed prosthesis. Computer-aided design of dental prosthetic restorations will be emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DLTP D3020 - Specialty In Removable Prosthodontics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00 to 8.00. This course will give students advanced knowledge in the fabrication of fixed prosthesis. It will allow students to test and develop their problem solving skills by providing them with theoretical information and challenge them to convert it into practical application through construction of partial and complete dentures. Computer-aided design of dental prosthetic restorations will be emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DLTP D4000 - Advance Dental Science In Dental Laboratory Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will highlight competencies and achievements learned during preceding laboratory practices. Students will be required to construct an eportfolio along with a project portfolio. This portfolio will include projects, journal article critique of new dental technology practices and procedures, reflection papers, externship journals, and a dental research project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| DPIS D2500 - Multimedia |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Covers the development of CD and graphics-based presentations such as would be made by corporate trainers, system developers, elementary/secondary school teachers, and marketing professionals. Students will use image capture, scanning, and audio capture to create projected presentations in class. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| DPIS D3350 - Computer Hardware, System Software, and Architecture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A functional, systems-level review of computing equipment and the organization of components and devices into architectural configurations. The principles of system software, operating system design, and components as
they relate to the coordinated functioning of a computer.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| DPIS D3450 - Database Systems Management and Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The theory and practice of database management systems (DBMS); information management; database models hierarchical, network, relational; distributed processing; database administration, design, evaluation, acquisition,
and implementation; use of DBMS by analysts, programmers, and end users. Database used is Oracle.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| DPIS D4900 - Current Directions In Data Processing And Information Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of current computer systems, and an examination of state-of-the-art applications that significantly
improve workplace productivity. Students will investigate one area in depth.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| EALC C1010 - Elementary Chinese I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. An introductory course that lays groundwork for the study of modern Chinese. It aims at fostering proficiency in all four language skills (aural understanding, speaking, reading, and writing), and helping students handle simple tasks in daily routines. Basic sentence patterns, vocabulary, and characters are all practiced in meaningful contexts. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| EALC C1020 - Elementary Chinese II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 4.00. Introduction to Chinese language, grammar, and sentence patterns. Emphasis on comprehension and oral expression. Stress will shift steadily from spoken to written language. (C101 Fall, C102 Spring). Typically offered Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| EALC C1170 - Basic Chinese I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory language course in Chinese with emphasis on comprehension and oral expression, grammar, reading, script, elementary composition, and culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| EALC C1180 - Basic Chinese II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory language course in Chinese with emphasis on comprehension and oral expression, grammar, reading, script, elementary composition, and culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| EALC C1190 - Basic Chinese III |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introductory language course in Chinese with emphasis on comprehension and oral expression, grammar, reading, script, elementary composition, and culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| EALC C1310 - Beginning Chinese I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Introduction to Chinese language, grammar, and sentence patterns. Emphasis on comprehension and oral expression. Stress will shift steadily from spoken to written language.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EALC C1320 - Beginning Chinese II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EALC C2010 - 2nd Year Chinese I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Both spoken and written aspects stressed. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-South Bend
|
| EALC C2020 - 2nd Year Chinese II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Both spoken and written aspects stressed. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-South Bend
|
| EALC C3010 - Third-Year Chinese I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Intensive reading of modern Chinese writings. Course conducted in Chinese. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| EALC C3020 - Third Year Chinese II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Continuation of C3010. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EALC E1000 - East Asia: An Introduction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic introduction to China, Japan and Korea. Intended to help students understand the unique character of each of these three cultures within the general framework of East Asian civilization, to comprehend the historical importance of the three countries, and to appreciate the crucial role they play in the world today. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| EALC E2020 - Issues In East Asian Traditions And Ideas |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey and analysis of selected issues pertinent to changes in thought and religion of general import. Topics vary, but are generally on broad subjects that cut across fields, regions, and periods. May be repeated with a different topic for a maximum of 6 credit hours. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| EALC E2030 - Issues In East Asian Cultural History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey and analysis of selected issues pertinent to changes in the human condition over time in East Asia. Topics vary, but are generally on broad subjects that cut across fields, regions, and periods. May be repeated with a different topic for a maximum of 6 credit hours. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| EALC E2040 - Issues In East Asian Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey and analysis of selected issues pertinent to changes in East Asian political, economic, and cultural institution of society. Topics vary, but are generally on broad subjects that cut across fields, regions, and periods. May be repeated with a different topic for a maximum of 6 credit hours. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| EALC E2310 - Japan: The Living Tradition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the patterns of Japanese culture: society, history, visual arts, literary masterpieces, performing arts, and living religious traditions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| EALC E2320 - China: The Enduring Heritage |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Chinese culture and its modern transformations. Intellectual, artistic, and literary legacies of the Chinese people. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| EALC E2520 - Modern East Asian Civilization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Contrasting patterns of indigenous change and response to Western imperialism in East Asia during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. China and Japan receive primary consideration; Korea and Vietnam, secondary. Emphasis on the rise of nationalism and other movements directed toward revolutionary change. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EALC E2710 - Modern And Contemporary Japanese Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of a range of Japanese culture expressions of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, such as literature, theater, film, popular culture, and their historical contexts. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| EALC E3340 - Contemporary Chinese Cinema |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces representative films from mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan since the 80s. Students analyze film form, meaning and style in social and cultural conotexts, get acquainted with Chinese literary and aesthetic standards, and observe the changes in value and belief systems as China moves into modernity. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EALC E3350 - Studies In Chinese Martial Arts Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course surveys the history and style of Chinese martial arts and explores their theoretical bases of Confucianism, Daoism, Buddhism, Chinese medicine, and health preservation practices. Students also study the literary tradition and aesthetic conventions of martial arts fiction and analyze cinematic expressions of martial arts skills, chivalry and love. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EALC E3510 - Studies in East Asian Thought |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected issues and problems of importance to the understanding East Asian culture, taught within one of the humanistic disciplines. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EALC J1010 - Elementary Japanese I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An introductory, skills-oriented course emphasizing learning language in context. Development of listening and speaking in simple interactional situations, and controlled reading and writing skills. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| EALC J1020 - Elementary Japanese II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Introduction to the spoken and written Japanese language and to Japanese culture and civilization. Emphasis on practical use and understanding of everyday Japanese language and customs to prepare the student for life in Japan or for interacting with Japanese people in the United States.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| EALC J1170 - Basic Japanese I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course for students who have not had prior training and who desire to study Japanese at a pace slower than Japanese 131-132/ Three semesters are required to fulfill the 10 credit hour foreign language requirement. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| EALC J1180 - Basic Japanese II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of 117. An introductory course for students who have not had prior training and who desire to study Japanese at a pace slower than Japanese 131-132/ Three semesters are required to fulfill the 10 credit hour foreign language requirement. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| EALC J1190 - Basic Japenese III |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Continuation of 118. This is an introductory course for students who have not had prior training and who desire to study Japanese at a pace slower than Japanese J131 and J132. Three semesters are required to fulfill the 10-credit-hour foreign language requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| EALC J1310 - Beginning Japanese I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Introductory language courses designed for students who have not had any prior training in Japanese. Drills for basic skills in listening, speaking, reading, and writing of Japanese. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| EALC J1320 - Beginning Japanese II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Introductory language courses designed for students who have not had any prior training in Japanese. Drills for basic skills in listening, speaking, reading, and writing of Japanese. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| EALC J2010 - Second-Year Japanese I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Continuation of emphasis on communicative skills. Increased attention to reading and writing skills. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| EALC J2020 - Second-Year Japanese II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Continuation of J2010. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| EALC J3010 - Third-Year Japanese I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Review of grammatical points acquired in the first and second year of Japanese. More advanced level of speaking, reading, writing, and listening proficiency. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-South Bend
|
| EALC J3020 - Third-Year Japanese II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Review of grammatical points acquired in the first and second year of Japanese. More advanced level of speaking, reading, writing, and listening proficiency. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| EALC J3100 - Japanese Conversation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to develop conversational skills through controlled linguistic patterns, reports, and group discussion. More advanced level of oral communication. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-South Bend
|
| EALC J4010 - 4th Year Japanese |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced level of communications skills in speaking and writing. Study of advanced grammar and reading of newspaper articles.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-South Bend
|
| EALC J4020 - 4th Year Japanese |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced level of communications skills in speaking and writing. Study of advanced grammar and reading of newspaper articles.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EALC J4980 - Individual Studies In Japanese |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| EAPS 10000 - Planet Earth |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the Geosciences-Earth science, oceanography, atmospheric science and astronomy. The course emphasizes topics (earthquakes, volcanoes, ocean pollution, climate change, severe weather, etc.) that are of general interest and relevance, and the interconnections between various Earth processes. Typically offered Fall Spring.
CTL:IPS 1730 Earth Science
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| EAPS 10200 - Earth Science For Elementary Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental earth science concepts appropriate for future elementary teachers are presented. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 10400 - Oceanography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Origin of the oceans and marine life. Seafloor spreading and marine geology; currents, waves, and tides; marine organisms and ecology; beaches and nearshore life. Man's use and abuse of the sea, including contemporary problems and future opportunities. The role of oceans in climate and evolution of the biosphere. Recommended for both science and nonscience majors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 10500 - The Planets |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course deals with current knowledge of the physical, chemical, and geological nature of the planets and their atmospheres derived in part from data provided by manned and unmanned space probes and other techniques. Similarities and differences between the earth and other planets are described and discussed within the role of planetary formation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 10600 - Geosciences In The Cinema |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to earth and atmospheric sciences based on depictions in popular and documentary cinema. Topics will include: earthquakes, volcanoes, severe weather, dinosaurs, climate change, evolution, meteor impacts, and earth's interior. Lectures will focus on discussion of the relevant science, separating fact from fiction, and disaster management. Assignments will consist of viewing of films and answering questions about the science contained therein. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 10700 - American Landscapes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to geology and to the geologic history of the United States. The purpose is to understand and appreciate the wide range of beautiful and sometimes spectacular landscapes in different regions as illustrated, in most lectures, by slides. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 10900 - The Dynamic Earth |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the formation and development of the solid earth, atmosphere, hydrosphere, and bio-sphere. The course studies the whole earth as a system of many interacting parts and focuses on the changes within and between these parts. This course is intended for all majors in earth and atmospheric sciences. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 11100 - Physical Geology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Geologic processes and the development of land forms. Laboratory covers the study of minerals and rocks, the interpretations of topographic and geologic maps, and field investigations. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 11200 - Earth Through Time |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The history of the planet Earth from its beginnings to the present. This course will explore the causes and effects of processes that have changed the Earth's surface and subsurface through time, the impacts of these changes on the evolution of life, and how scientist interpret Earth history from the geologic record. The laboratory will provide hands-on experience in interpreting various geologic and fossil records. This course may be taken on its own, or as a year-long lab series with EAPS 11100. EAPS 11100 and EAPS 11200 will fulfill the two course sequence laboratory experience outside the major department. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 11300 - Introduction To Environmental Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (NRES 29000, AGRY 29000) An introduction to environmental science, including issues such as climate change, energy resources, air and water pollution, toxic waste disposal, soil erosion, natural hazards, and environmental planning. Includes extensive in-class discussion of case studies. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 11500 - Dinosaurs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Dinosaur discovery, preservation, excavation, and extinction, and current research on the Mesozoic animals that dominated earth for 125 million years. Early 19th century discoveries illustrate how personalities and scientific-religious dogma influenced original reconstruction and classification. Concepts of geologic time, stratigraphy, continental drift, paleontology, and evolution trace a lineage from archosaurs to dinosaurs and the coeval flying and marine reptiles and birds. The Cope-Marsh feud and great dinosaur hunts. Dinosaur anatomy and lifestyles, with emphasis on climatic, food chain, and metabolic controls. Each major taxon is described and amply illustrated. Changing views of dinosaurs as depicted in films, TV, and fictional literature. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 11600 - Earthquakes And Volcanoes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey class on earthquakes and volcanoes. Topics include earthquake hazards and forecasting, the use of seismic waves to investigate the earth's interior, volcanoes and tectonics, volcanic hazards, and the influence of volcanoes on climate. Examples of recent and historic earthquakes and volcanic eruptions are presented. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 11700 - Introduction To Atmospheric Science |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The weather/climate system. Solar variability and Milankovitch Theory. Atmospheric scales of motion. Chemistry of greenhouse gases and aerosols. Fundamental laws of meteorological dynamics and radiation. Weather systems, air masses and fronts. Severe storms, hurricanes and tornadoes. (Required for atmospheric sciences majors.). Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 11800 - Introduction To Earth Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to a range of topics in Earth Science, including: Origin and geological history of Earth, including geological records of climate and evolution; Earth materials (minerals and rocks); Chemical and physical composition and structure of the Earth; Rock weathering, erosion, and sedimentary processes; Geological timescale; Geologic structures including their map and field expression; Tectonic processes; The hydrological cycle with emphasis on groundwater and physical and chemical oceanography; Energy and mineral resources; Astrobiology. (Required for Geology and Geophysics and Earth and Space Science Teaching majors.) Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 12000 - Introduction To Geography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the systematic study of location and spatial variation of natural features. Elements of place, time, distance, and area are considered in relation to man's perception of environment, his organization of cultural activities, and his utilization of natural resources. A one-day field trip is required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: College of Science Admin
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 13700 - Freshman Seminar In Earth And Atmospheric Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Seminar presented by guests in different fields of the Earth and Atmospheric Sciences to expose students to the range of topics included in the department and in possible career paths. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 13800 - Thunderstorms And Tornadoes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Not open to juniors and seniors majoring in atmospheric science. An elementary treatment of the physical structure of the atmosphere and the dynamical conditions that lead to the development of convective clouds, thunderstorms, and severe weather (including tornadoes, hail, wind, rain, lightning, and flash floods). This course will also focus on storm climatology, the socioeconomic impact of severe weather, as well as prediction, detection, warnings, and safety procedures. Analysis of severe weather events will include tornado movies and case studies of ground/aerial surveys of storm damage. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 17100 - History Of Life |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the origin and evolution of life through geologic time, from the simplest one-celled organisms to humans, with emphasis placed on the basic evolution and geologic principles that enable us to understand the history of life. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 18300 - Cooperative Work Experience I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Cooperative Work Experience. Must be accepted for the program by the department cooperative education representative. For Cooperative Education Program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 18400 - Cooperative Work Experience II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Cooperative Work Experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 19100 - Introductory Topics In Earth And Atmospheric Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Introductory special topics in earth and atmospheric sciences. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture 1, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EAPS 19700 - EAS Freshman Honors Special Assignment |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Selected interdisciplinary topics available for supervised reading, research, or reports. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| EAPS 22100 - Survey Of Atmospheric Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (NRES 23000) An introductory course for both science and nonscience students. A general study of the atmosphere, basic meteorological principles, and weather systems. Relationships of the changing atmosphere to climate ozone depletion, and other contemporary issues. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 22500 - Science Of The Atmosphere |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of the physics and dynamics of the atmosphere. Quantitative study of the energy balance of the atmosphere, condensation and precipitation processes, atmospheric motion and global circulation, severe storms, atmospheric chemistry. Contemporary issues such as human impact on climate, ozone depletion, numerical weather prediction and climate simulation, and modern measurement systems. Not available to students with credit in EAPS 22100. Intended for Science and Engineering majors only. Prior course work in calculus is required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 22600 - Introduction To Atmospheric Science Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students work on two different research projects designed by EAPS faculty. Research topics are complimentary to topics covered in EAPS 22500 and may include observational analysis, numerical modeling, or both. Each module includes introducing the research problem and learning pertinent software and statistical analysis, performing the research and discussing outcomes, student-designed revising or extending of the experimental design to explore results of interest, and presenting the findings to the class and interested EAPS faculty. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| EAPS 23000 - Laboratory In Atmospheric Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A laboratory course that introduces the fundamentals of atmospheric science through quantitative exercises. The theoretical exercises include the vertical structure of the atmosphere, the Earth's energy budget, atmospheric moisture, saturation and stability, clouds and precipitation and atmospheric motion. Data and map analysis exercises include mid-latitude cyclones, thunderstorms and tornadoes, hurricanes and controls of climate. Prior or current course work in introductory atmospheric science is required. This course may not be taken for credit by students in the atmospheric science option of the Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 24300 - Earth Materials I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Elements of crystallography, physical and chemical properties of rock-forming minerals, and minerals of economic importance. Origin and occurrence of minerals. Prior course work in dynamic earth or physical geology is required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 24400 - Earth Materials II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The study of common igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic rocks. The origin and occurrence of rocks, weathering, and alteration processes. Prior course work in earth materials or mineralogy is required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 28400 - Cooperative Work Experience III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Cooperative Work Experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 30100 - Oil ! |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Petroleum is a common thread that interweaves Geoscience with the Political-Economic history of the 20th century. Its dominance in current society has major repercussions on our current and future society and environment. The unequal distribution of petroleum and natural gas, coupled with innovative geologists and engineers, has set the stage for the modern geo-political world. This course is a unique survey into the multitude of aspects of petroleum -- from its formation to "resource wars". Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Great Issues – This course is designed for all science and engineering majors, plus upper-level business, political science and other students to enlighten and enable self-discovery of this major past, present and future issue in human civilization. For these diverse audiences, the necessary geological and environmental concepts will be explained – basics of geologic time, plate motions and collisions, sea-level change, ocean fertility, hydrocarbon maturation and migration, role of super-greenhouse conditions, and other factors are essential to understand the selected major oil-gas basins.
2. Technical writing (communication skills) – A peer-reviewed literature-research paper (ca. 10-15 single-spaced pages) constitutes 30% of the grade. The peer-review/submission procedure was developed with Dr. Fosmire. In addition to the pre-requisite of a technical writing course; we provide additional exercises and guidance for proper searching for peer-reviewed publications, acceptable citation methods for science papers, bibliographic style, etc.
3. Ethics – We examine case examples of past unethical corporate or private behaviors and how these were eventually resolved or remain a concern (e.g., monopoly building and later bread-up of Standard Oil; Ecuador pollution cases;; CIA involvement with Iranian government overthrow in 1950s to restore oil company monopoly; corruption in African and other “oil-cursed” nations; atmospheric pollution of cities; major oil spills; etc.). Politics of “peak oil” are especially examined. We encourage the students to directly discuss situations with guest speakers from petroleum companies; who often welcome the chance to present the story from their side. We include guests from Middle East and other affected petro-exporting nations.
4. Multi-disciplinary (Breadth of knowledge in related fields) – This course has equal amounts of geology, history, and international politics as we examine a set of oil-basins (e.g., Saudi Arabia, Libya, Iraq, Indonesia, Angola, Mexico, Russia/Soviet Union, etc.). In general, each lecture concentrates on the unique geologic/tectonic situation of particular oil-rich region, the story and controversies of the rise of oil in that nation/region, and current social-political pressures and foreign policy implications. For the environmental and alternative-vehicle presentations, the appropriate chemical, engineering and ecological principles are included (e.g., exactly how a hydrogen-fuel car would function, including engineering costs; or exactly how ozone is produced in car-dominated cities in the summer). This multidisciplinary course also includes aspect of social change, role of oil-gas in national politics, climate effects, and the petrochemical industry products.
5. Depth in Major – For EAS students, understanding petroleum basins and the importance of hydrocarbons in history/society/climate is essential; but is usually not covered in their core curriculum. This OIL! Course is unique in placing the geological aspects into the broader context of social, international and environmental concerns.
6. Exposure to professional and career activities – This is a specific desired outcome for EAS courses. Therefore, we have guests from major petroleum (Exxon, Chevron, Shell, etc.) and gas (Chesapeake) companies that highlight forefronts of exploration, and career options for geosciences and other fields. Some Purdue alumni in petro-chemicals and other related fields have also given presentations. However, to balance these guests from the hydrocarbon industry, we include guest speakers from Purdue Energy Center (non-oil alternative fuels), oil-producing nations (on social and environmental problems caused by the extraction industry), and environmental science.
7. Breadth of knowledge in related fields – This multi-disciplinary course includes extensive sections on history, social change, international and national politics, environment and climate effects, and the geology-paleontology-chemistry topics associated with the wide range of petroleum-related topics.
|
| EAPS 30900 - Computer-Aided Analysis For Geosciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of computer analysis techniques including error analysis, line and surface fitting, spatial and temporal correlations, contouring, interpolation, and map projections. These methods are discussed in terms of specific geologic applications. All exercises and examples are developed using commercial mathematical software package. A three-hour-per-week computer laboratory tutorial provides hands-on experience with the techniques discussed in class. Prior course work in computer programming is required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 31200 - Capstone Environmental Science For Elementary Education |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Provides elementary education majors with an integrated science capstone experience using environmental themes and drawing on material covered in prerequisite science classes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrating depth in major.
2. Ability to think scientifically.
3. Ability to work as a team.
|
| EAPS 31300 - Applied Geomorphology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers those aspects of surface processes and land form and landscape development of importance in applied environmental geology. With an emphasis on understanding process dynamics and acquiring skills and techniques used in applied work, the course will examine soil erosion by water and wind, surface water runoff, landslides, slope stability, mass movement, streams and rivers, channel stability and sediment transport. Two required one-day field trips. Prior course work in dynamic earth or physical geology is required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 31900 - Exploring Earth Through Time |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course will explore the history of the Earth from its beginning 4.5 billion years ago to the present. Our understanding and insight into the history of the Earth has greatly expanded during the last several decades. Emphasis will be placed on the relationships of tectonic processes that shaped the surface of the Earth and the evolution of the Earth's biosphere. The course will also examine how the role of evolution of life has played in the history of the atmosphere and oceans. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 32000 - Physics Of Climate |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Open to majors in the Schools of Science, Agriculture, and Engineering. To understand climate we describe and synthesize physical processes in the atmosphere and their coupling to the ocean, ice, and land. We quantitatively explore climatology with an equal balance of physical principles and scrutiny of available modern data. Topics include: visualization of atmospheric/land surface/oceanographic climatological data sets; theories of climate dynamics; and climate change. Beginning with radiative balance and simple energy balance models, the course progresses toward understanding the effects of radiative-convective forcing and rotation on the fluid envelopes. Analysis of data in an interactive computer-enabled environment is an important part of the course. By the end of this course, the student should know how the Earth System behaves at large scales and grasp the physical understandings of why. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 32500 - Aviation Meteorology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for students who have an interest in topics in meteorology applied to aviation operations with emphasis on meteorological hazards for instrument flight. Topics covered include obtaining and evaluating weather data, review of synoptic meteorology, map analysis, the ICAO standard atmosphere, pressure and altimetry, atmospheric thermodynamics, moisture and stability, low-IFR operations, aircraft icing, turbulence, thunderstorms and associated hazards, and interpretation and use of radar and satellite imagery. Prior course work in introductory atmospheric science and pre-calculus is required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 32700 - Climate, Science And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will examine the broad problems of climate change by examining the relationship between science, politics, and society by using climate change as a lens through which to examine larger issues. Students will be encouraged to identify similar themes in their own experiences as emerging scientists, engineers and global leaders. Adequate preparation to write essays and perform basic arithmetic calculations needed. Prior knowledge of climate change science is not necessary. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Ability to think and function as a scientist:
1. Ability to think logically and creatively.
2. Ability to apply knowledge to practical situations.
3. Ability to respond flexibly as situation changes.
Demonstrated breadth of knowledge:
1. Understanding of ethical issues, particularly in Science.
2. Appreciation for diverse experiences, thoughts, backgrounds.
3. Understanding and appreciation of Science in the world environment.
|
| EAPS 34300 - Optical Mineralogy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the theory of optical crystallography and its relationship to the optical properties of non-opaque crystalline substances, particularly minerals. Laboratory work is concerned with examination and characterization of minerals in grain mounts and thin-sections. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 35100 - Structural, Tectonic, And Basin Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Recognition, description, and origin of deformational and sedimentary structures. Analysis of folds, faults, metamorphic facies, paleocurrents, and deposystems. Emphasis on the relationship between tectonics, basin development, and sedimentation in eastern North America. The course is centered on application of field techniques to understanding the regional geology of Tennessee. A 10-day field investigation in Tennessee is required. Regional synthesis of structural, sedimentary, geophysical, and geochemical data sets from the southern Applachian orogenic belt. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 35200 - Structural Geology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of stress, strain, deformation mechanisms and microstructures, joints, faults, folds, foliation, igneous structures, gravity structures and tectonics of orogenic belts. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 35300 - Earth Surface Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to a variety of topics in sediment transport and deposition, emphasizing linkages between active processes, landscape evolution, and the rock record. Topics include: introductory fluid mechanics; sediment transport by water, ice, and wind, and the development of fluvial bedforms, glacial landscapes, and sand dunes; groundwater geochemistry and the development of karst and caves. Each major topic is accompanied by field projects that emphasize local geologic history. A weekend field trip is required. (Required for Geoscience and Earth Science teaching majors.) Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 35400 - Plate Tectonics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will explore plate tectonic processes from the scale of plate motions to the individual stresses that deform rocks. Emphasis will be focused on sources of stress and how this stress is manifested in the lithosphere through faulting, folding, earthquake generation, and place motions. Seismic waves and what information they provide about the interior of the Earth will be discussed. Additionally, extensional, compressional, and transform plate boundaries will be covered. This course is an introduction to geophysical processes and serves as a stepping-stone to upper level geophysics course such as 35200 and 45000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 37500 - Great Issues - Fossil Fuels, Energy And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Prosperity of the 20th century was based on abundant and cheap energy; during the 21st century we will be faced with difficult challenges. Our society will face higher energy prices, decline of petroleum based fuels supplies, increased environmental effects of fossil fuels usage, and the challenge of solving the technological problems of developing alternative fuels. This course will review the structure, economics, and geopolitical issues faced by fossil fuel industries and the mitigation strategies that will be needed to change to low fossil fuel use society based on low polluting renewable energy sources. Counts for Great Issues course in College of Science for Juniors and Seniors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 38100 - Geology For Engineers I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of physical, structural, and historical geology applied to engineering. Rocks and rock-forming minerals; engineering properties of rocks; weathering, soil formation, and soil classification; topographic and geologic maps; aerial photographs, subsurface investigation; field methods and engineering applications. Field investigations are required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 38500 - Principles Of Engineering Geology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of geology to evaluation of design and construction problems relating to dams, highways, tunnels, and reservoirs; review of construction material sources and their utilization. A field investigation is required. Prior course work in mineralogy, petrology or geology for engineers is required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 38600 - Cooperative Work Experience IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Cooperative Work Experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 39000 - Geologic Field Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to geologic mapping principles on quadrangle (7 1/2 min., 15 min., 1:250,000 scales) maps. Application of aerial photography, GPS, and GIS techniques. Emphasis on construction of cross sections, measurement of stratigraphic sections, and preparation of geologic reports. Several weekend field exercises will be required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 39100 - Topics In Earth And Atmospheric Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Intermediate special topics in the earth and atmospheric sciences. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EAPS 40300 - Physical Oceanography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for upper-level undergraduates in science and engineering who have an interest in an advanced-level introduction to physical oceanography. Topics include physical and chemical properties of the ocean, geophysical structure of the sea, and oceanic stability. Global heat, salt, and water balance. Advective and convective circulation of the oceans. Ocean current systems and deep circulation. Surface waves and tides. Prior course work in multivariate calculus and second semester physics is required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 40900 - Application Of Microcomputers To Meteorology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed primarily for undergraduate majors in atmospheric science but may be elected by other students. Topics covered include meteorological data acquisition, decoding, interactive computing, weather analysis, and computer graphics. Individual microcomputer workstations are configured on an ETHERNET LAN in a dedicated microcomputer laboratory. Meteorological applications software using satellite-communicated data sets will be developed in C language. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 41900 - Internship In Environmental Geosciences |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. This course provides students with an opportunity to gain practical work experience in environmental geoscience. The student works with a faculty advisor to set up an internship consisting of the equivalent of at least six weeks of full-time employment with a government agency, business, or consulting company. Internships typically involve field, laboratory, and office work. A portion of the internship may be part-time work during a regular semester, but at least three consecutive weeks must be full-time work. One credit hour per week of unpaid internship. Six week internship. Prior course work in upper level EAPS courses is required. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 42000 - Global Change Modeling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Understanding, monitoring, and modeling global environmental change. Each session examines the response of the interrelated earth systems to different geological, ecological, atmospheric, oceanic, or societal impacts. Topics include global warming, major biogeochemical cycles, atmospheric ozone, coevolution of life and climate, asteroid impacts, and ecological disruptions. The laboratory uses object-oriented modeling software and current NASA satellite data. No prior knowledge of computer programming is required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 42100 - Atmospheric Thermodynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (AGRY 43100) Structure and composition of the atmosphere. Thermodynamics of dry and moist air, including adiabatic and pseudo-adiabatic processes, hydrostatic stability, and air mass determination. Prior course work in introductory atmospheric science, second semester physics or thermodynamics is required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 42200 - Atmospheric Dynamics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (AGRY 43200) A study of the general system of equations governing mass and momentum changes in the atmosphere; special horizontal wind representations, thermal wind relationships; circulation, vorticity, divergence, and vertical motion. Prior course work in atmospheric thermodynamics and differential equations is required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 42300 - Atmospheric Dynamics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (AGRY 43300) An extension of EAPS 42200, with emphasis on perturbation theory and hydrodynamics stability, air mass and frontal theory, barotropic and baroclinic models, wave cyclone theory, and numerical weather prediction. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 43100 - Synoptic Laboratory I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. (AGRY 44100) Analysis of vertical distributions of temperature and moisture with applications to adiabatic and pseudo-adiabatic processes, hydrostatic stability, and air mass determination. Prior course work in atmospheric thermodynamics is required. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 43200 - Synoptic Laboratory II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Analysis of horizontal distributions of pressure, temperature, wind, vorticity, and vertical motions. Applications to synoptic-scale wave propagation. Prior course work in atmospheric thermodynamics and synoptic lab I is required. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 43300 - Synoptic Lab III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. (AGRY 44300) Diagnoses of midtropospheric wave propagation and growth. Analysis of surface pressure fields and fronts and their relationships to upper air features. Extensive use is made of teletype and facsimile weather information. Prior course work in atmospheric dynamics and synoptic lab II is required. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 43400 - Weather Analysis And Forecasting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (AGRY 44400) In-depth study of contemporary weather analysis and forecasting techniques and problems. Extensive use is made of teletype and facsimile data and numerical weather prediction guidance provided by the National Meteorological Center. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 44000 - Geochemistry Of Earth Elements |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an overview of the processes controlling the distribution of elements within the earth's lithosphere, hydrosphere, atmosphere, and biosphere. The two lecture hours per week stress how elements' distributions within our planet are dictated by periodicity and affinity for reactions. These lectures are supplemented by a 3-hour problem-solving session used for discussion of quantitative problems assigned as homework. Prior course work in second semester chemistry and second semester physics is required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 44400 - Cosmochemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Nucleosynthesis and chemical abundances. Origin, composition, and structure of the earth and extraterrestrial objects. Isotope geology, geo- and cosmo-chronology with particular emphasis upon the moon and meteorites. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 45000 - Physics And Chemistry Of Solid Earth |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Physics of the earth's interior, including seismic velocity and density structure, seismic wave propagation, and gravitational and magnetic fields. Thermal history of the earth. Chemical and mineralogical composition of the earth, radioactivity, isotopes, and geochronology. Magma generation, crustal evolution, and tectonic models. Prior course work in chemistry, physics, calculus, earth materials, and plate tectonics is required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 45500 - Geophysical Exploration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the principles of geophysical exploration methods, including seismic, electrical, gravity, and magnetic techniques. Field studies require reduction and interpretation of data observed by students using professional instrumentation. Prior course work in dynamic earth or physical geology and second semester physics is required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 47300 - Invertebrate Paleontology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction of invertebrate paleontology. Survey of basic biologic and geologic principles related to preservation, classification, paleoecology, and biogeography of invertebrates. Emphasis of laboratory is on a survey of the major groups of invertebrate groups encountered in the fossil record. Field project is required. Prior course work in historical geology is required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 47400 - Sedimentation And Stratigraphy |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Systematic study of continental and marine depositional environments. Interpretation of sedimentary facies, structures, and microfacies. Principles and applications of stratigraphy, including applications of paleontology, field relations, paleomagnetism, well logs, seismic reflections, and chemistry. Field investigations may be required. Prior course work in earth materials, mineralogy and petrology is required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 48700 - Cooperative Work Experience V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Cooperative Work Experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 49000 - Field Geology In Rocky Mountains |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Field studies in sedimentary, igneous, and metamorphic terrains. Studies may involve geologic mapping, stratigraphic section measuring, structural analysis and interpretation, geomorphic interpretation, and interpretation of geologic history. Field excursions include visits to several classical geologic localities in the Colorado Plateau, Great Basin, and Rocky Mountains with discussions and interpretations of features observed. Transportation fee plus room and board at field station required. Rigorous field work requires physical conditioning. Six-week session, including field excursion. Prior course work in earth materials, surface processes, and plate tectonics is required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 49400 - Earth And Atmospheric Sciences Undergraduate Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An informal course, which features discussion of research in major areas of the earth and atmospheric sciences. Students are required to give an oral presentation. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EAPS 49700 - Earth And Atmospheric Sciences Undergraduate Readings And Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Supervised reading and/or research in various fields. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EAPS 50000 - Seminar On Graduate Study And Scientific Research |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Group discussion of graduate study, particularly the nature of scientific research, in Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, based on detailed study of texts written for students of experimental medicine and forestry. Designed for students for whom graduate study is impending here or elsewhere. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 50500 - Advanced Field Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on a study of a well-defined problem by using field methods. Review of literature on the problem, which is chosen in a given year, is carried out during the first half of the semester. After the field session, the field observations and their interpretation are discussed. A field report is required. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 50800 - Electron Microprobe Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Electron optics, generation of X-rays, X-ray spectrometry including counting systems. Wavelength dispersive and energy dispersive analysis; collection of X-ray intensity data and data statistics; selection of standards; limitations of microprobe analysis; fluorescence, absorption, and atomic number corrections; reduction of raw analytical data. Preparation of samples and use of microprobe as scanning electron microscope. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 50900 - Data Analysis Techniques In Earth And Atmospheric Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of statistical and numerical analysis techniques to geoscience data including error analysis, confidence intervals, least squares methods, correlation, filtering, spectral analysis, trend surface analysis, cluster analysis, interpolation, and surface fitting. These methods are discussed in terms of problems of sampling and map analysis inherent to geoscience investigations. Application of the computer to solve geoscience problems is emphasized. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 51100 - Introduction To X-Ray Crystallography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (BIOL 511) Analysis of two- and three-dimensionally ordered structures by optical, electron, and X-ray diffraction methods. Geometry of diffraction. Detection of diffraction. Intensity of diffracted waves. Symmetry of crystals. The phase problem. The heavy atom method. Isomorphous replacement. Direct methods. Molecular replacement. Helical diffraction. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 51200 - Methods In X-Ray Crystallography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced treatment of the use and limitations of single crystal and polycrystalline techniques in X-ray crystallography. Includes use of Laue, rotation, oscillation, Weissenberg, and precision X-ray goniometers and cameras as well as powder cameras and diffractometers. The emphasis will be on the use of this equipment for geoscience purposes. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 51300 - Aerogeology And Remote Sensing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Genesis and development of landforms. Elements of classical and modern landform models in explanation of planar surfaces and form families in temperate, tropical, and arid regions. Fluvial processes and related morphologic and morphometric problems. Landform development processes in eolian, volcanic, karst, glacial, and permafrost terrains. Introduction to field and laboratory techniques of geomorphic research. Applications of geomorphology in soil science, economic geology, engineering construction, urban and environmental problems. Laboratory includes a three-day field investigation. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 51400 - Glacial And Quaternary Geology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Formation, dynamics, and regimen of glaciers. Erosional and depositional processes and landforms developed by alpine and continental glaciation. Glaciation of North America during the Ice Age, with emphasis on stratigraphy, soils, climates, biology, and physical changes resulting from glacial processes and environments. Application of glacial studies to agronomy, life sciences, climatology, oceanographic studies, and engineering problems. A one-day field investigation is required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EAPS 51900 - Applications Of Environmental Geosciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides practical project experience in the real-world applications side of environmental geology. Working as teams, students undertake environmental management and design projects that contribute to the solution of local-scale environmental problems. Projects will include engineering geology, hydrogeology, geophysics, and applied geomorphology. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 52000 - Theory Of Climate |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A general introduction to the theory of climate at an intermediate level. A brief survey of physical climatology and paleoclimates. Theoretical development of climate models. Theories of climatic stability and climatic change. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 52100 - Atmospheric Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the chemistry of the earth's atmosphere. Covers evolution of the earth's atmosphere, its physical and chemical structure, its natural chemical composition and oxidative properties, and human impacts, including increasing tropospheric ozone, decreasing stratospheric ozone, climate change, and acidic deposition. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 52200 - Chemistry Of Earth's Upper Atmosphere |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (CHM 582) Emphasis on chemical concepts that apply to the Earth's upper atmospheric regions and what may be learned from available measurements. An examination of the chemical composition and chemical processes of importance are covered. Topics include: stratospheric chemistry, chemistry in the mesosphere, chemistry in the thermosphere, the importance of positive and negative ion chemistry in the upper atmosphere, and the dynamics of transport of chemical species between the upper regions of the atmosphere. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 52300 - Radar Meteorology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Origin and evolution of radar. Modern weather radar systems and their component parts. Propagation of microwave energy in the atmosphere. Rayleigh and Mie scattering theory, with application to scattering by precipitation. Utilization of radar systems in forecasting quantitative analyses and cloud physics research. Recent refinement and future potential. Prior coursework in synoptic meteorology labs and atmospheric physics is required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 52500 - Boundary Layer Meteorology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (AGRY 53500) A study of the physical nature of the lowest layers of the atmosphere. The energy balance concept and the turbulent transfer of heat, momentum, and water vapor are discussed in detail. Some specific microclimates are studied in this context. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 52600 - Introductory Geofluid Dynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides a fluid dynamics background for graduate students interested in atmospheric sciences, oceanography, mantle convection, hydrology, turbulence, or pollution. Topics covered include: basic assumptions and deviations of Navier Stokes equations, conservation laws, vorticity, divergence, waves, and applications in atmosphere, ocean, and geophysics. Typically offered Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Provide students a rigorous foundation in geofluid dynamics as well as the connections among math, physics, and real natural phenomena.
2. Students will become accustomed to applying the physical equations to real phenomena, and to presenting them in a concise way.
3. Understand the basic equations and physics in existing models which provides a broader and deeper understanding of the earth sciences.
|
| EAPS 53200 - Atmospheric Physics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Cloud and precipitation physics and basic atmospheric radiative transfer. Introduction to computer aided problem solving. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 53300 - Atmospheric Physics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of EAPS 53200, covering the following selected advanced topics in atmospheric physics: gaseous absorption, Mie scattering, the equation of transfer, and radiative transfer in cloudy and hazy atmospheres. The application of radiative transfer in active and passive remote sensing. Advanced topics in atmospheric thermodynamics, such as heterogeneous systems, kinetic theory of gases, and planetary atmospheres. Basic ozone photochemistry applied to stratospheric and tropospheric pollution. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 53400 - Tropical Meteorology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Tropical climatology; stability, convection, clouds, and precipitation processes; horizontal and vertical motions; life cycle and energetics of tropical cyclones; large-scale tropical circulations; interactions between small-scale and large-scale circulations; general circulations of the tropics; results of tropical experiments; outlook for future experiments. Prior course work in synoptic meteorology labs and atmospheric physics is required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 53500 - Atmospheric Observations And Measurements |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course that introduces students to direct and remotely sensed observations of the atmosphere. Directly measured quantities discussed include temperature, pressure, moisture, wind, solar radiation, chemical properties of the atmosphere, etc. Remote sensing of cloud, precipitation, and air motion by weather radars, satellites, profilers, lidars, and other emerging technologies is reviewed. Students will gain experience in observation techniques and data interpretation, and will learn uncertainty and error assessment. Prior course work in atmospheric science and statistics is required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lab 1, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 53600 - Introduction To General Circulation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction of the fundamental principles that govern the large-scale physical processes and circulation patterns of the global atmosphere. Topics include: the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ), Rossby waves, heat and moisture balances for the earth-atmosphere system, maintenance of the temperature and wind distributions, jet streams, El Nino, and intraseasonal oscillations. Prior course work in synoptic meteorology labs is required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 53800 - Cumulus Dynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Thunderstorm and tornado climatology. Stability concepts and convective theories; thunderstorm modeling. Application of potential flow theory to severe storm phenomena; cumulonimbus-environmental interactions. Rotational properties of severe thunderstorms. Tornado funnel observations and vortex theory. Prior course work in synoptic meteorology labs is required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 54200 - Economic Geology: Petroleum |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental principles of the origin, migration, accumulation, exploration, and development of petroleum. Study of reservoir fluids, reservoir mechanics, and primary and secondary production techniques. Methods of prospect and leasehold evaluation and economic appraisal. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Practice Study Observation, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 54300 - Advanced Petrology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of the methods of chemical thermodynamics to the analysis of the paragenesis of igneous and metamorphic rocks. Topics include the thermodynamics of minerals of common geological interest, characterization of the conditions of formation from the analysis of element partition and reactions between minerals and silicate melts, and mechanisms and rates of crustal and mantle processes inferred from the analysis of chemical gradients, reaction structures, and other records of chemical disequilibrium. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 54400 - Structure And Composition Of The Earth's Crust |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Deals with current knowledge of the geophysical structure of the earth's crust and the interpretation of the geophysical measurements in terms of petrology. Topics covered include: reflection and refraction crustal structure, crustal and upper mantle seismic anisotropy, petrology of oceanic dredge rocks, ophiolites, fault zone reflectivity, exposed continental crustal cross sections, crustal xenoliths, and evolution of the crust. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 54600 - Sedimentary Petrology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Microfacies and chemistry of clastic, carbonate, and chemical sediments. Interpretation of depositional environments and diagenetic histories of sedimentary rocks from microscope, isotope, chemical, and other methods. Offered in alternate years. Prior course work in sedimentology and stratigraphy is required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 54900 - Isotope Geology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Stable and radioactive isotopes and the applications of the variations of isotopic abundances to the study of geologic problems, including geochronology, geothermometry, petrogenesis, and crustal evolution. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 55000 - Advanced Geophysical Field Studies. |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individual geophysical field investigations including organizing, conducting and reducing, and interpreting data under the guidance of a staff member. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
|
| EAPS 55100 - Gravity Exploration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and practice of the gravity method as applied to geological problems and subsurface exploration. Particular emphasis on isolation and enhancement of anomalies and gravity interpretation. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 55200 - Magnetic Exploration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of magnetic instrumentation and surveying, reduction of magnetic data, interpretation of magnetic anomalies, and application of the magnetic method of geologic problems and subsurface exploration. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 55300 - Seismic Exploration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Seismic reflection and refraction techniques applied to investigation of shallow earth structure. Propagation of body waves in layered media. Seismic field techniques, principles and application of seismic data processing techniques including correlation, convolution, filtering, deconvolution, and spectral analysis. Geologic interpretation of seismic record sections. Laboratory will include field investigations. Application of computer techniques will be emphasized. Prior course work in physical geology, seismology, and differential equations is required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 55400 - Topics In Geotectonics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Discussion of current research or advanced topics concerning the description, origin, and evolution of continents, ocean basins, and orogenic belts based on geochemical, geophysical, and geologic evidence. Specific topics to be selected on basis of student and staff interests and backgrounds. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EAPS 55500 - Global Tectonics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Large-scale motions and deformations of the earth's crust and mantle: present theories and historical development. Continental drift, marine geology, sea-floor spreading, plate kinematics, the driving mechanism of plate tectonics, mantle convection, subduction zones and hotspots, structure and composition of the earth, the evolution of plate tectonics and thermal history of the earth, and the earth in comparison to other planets and satellites. Prior course work in surface processes and plate tectonics is required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 55600 - Planetary Geology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The application of petrology and structural geology to other planets. Topics include: theories of star and solar system formation, orbital dynamics and Kepler's laws, petrology and geochemistry of meteorites, age dating techniques, structure and composition of the terrestrial, giant, and icy planets, planetary surfaces, planetary atmospheres, and theories of the formation of the moon. Offered in alternate years. Prior course work in earth materials is required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 55700 - Introduction To Seismology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory of propagation to seismic waves in elastic media. Solution of wave equations for compressional, shear, and surface waves. Analysis of travel-times, amplitudes, and attenuation of seismic waves in terms of ray and wave theory. Principles of the seismograph. Structure of the earth as determined by seismological studies. Investigation of the causes, effects, distribution, and characteristics of earthquakes. Earthquake prediction. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 55900 - Topics In Seismology |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course covers current topics in seismology. Recent topics have included seismic structure of the crust and mantle, seismic anisotropy, and earthquake sources. Professor Nowack. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| EAPS 56000 - Seismotectonics And Lithospheric Deformation |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores plate tectonic processed from the scale of plate motions to the individual stresses that deform rocks. Emphasis is placed on sources of stress and how this stress is manifested in the lithosphere through faulting, folding, earthquake generation, and plate motions. Seismic waves and the information they provide about the interior of the Earth is discussed. Additionally, extensional, compressional, and transform plate boundaries are covered. Students are required to read, present, and discuss recent and important research papers relating to the lecture topics. Typically offered Fall semesters in alternating years.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Expanding the knowledge base of the students in the areas of seismology, plate tectonics, and geodynamics.
2. The students will improve their skills in critical thinking while reviewing and discussing research papers.
3. These discussions will provide opportunities for the students to gain experience in oral communication, as their presentation on their final research project.
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| EAPS 57000 - Paleoclimate Reconstruction |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Paleoclimatology, the study of past climate states and climate change, is fundamental to understanding and predicting recent and future changes in Earth's climate. This course will explore how paleoclimatologists reconstruct and understand past climate through the investigation of biological, hydrological, and sedimentalogical archives. The course combines lectures with reading and discussion of the recent literature, and will emphasize informed critical evaluation of paleoclimate data and illustration of multi-disciplinary approaches to significant problems in contemporary paleoclimatology. Although no formal prerequisites are required, introductory-level familiarity with inorganic and organic chemistry, biology and calculus will benefit students in the class. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Train students who have adequate understanding of important methods for reconstructing paleoclimate that they are able to critically read and discuss the paleoclimate literature and make informed decisions about the application of paleoclimate reconstruction techniques within their own research.
2. Introduce students to a subset of 2-3 current, high-profile, research problems in paleoclimatology. Students should leave the course with a working understanding of the current state of knowledge with respect to these problems, important unknowns or uncertainties that are to focus on ongoing work, how various paleoclimate reconstruction methods discussed in class have been applied to the problems, and the relevance of the problems to the broader geosciences and to society.
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| EAPS 57200 - Paleoecology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of the principles of paleoecology to the interpretation of past environments, including an interdisciplinary treatment of pertinent concepts and techniques in paleontology, sedimentation, ecology, oceanography, geochemistry, and allied fields. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 57300 - Basin Analysis |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study of tectonic evolution and stratigraphic history of sedimentary basins. Topics include formative mechanisms of different sedimentary basins; tectonic, eustatic, and climatic controls on basin stratigraphy; relationship of depositional systems to basin types; subsidence and thermal histories; and application of basin analysis to petroleum reservoir and ground water aquifer assessment. Required field trips. Offered in alternate years. Prior course work in sedimentology and stratigraphy is required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 57500 - Ancient Sedimentary Environments |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Seminar course in depositional environments as recognized in the stratigraphic record. Each student will assemble a detailed bibliography and prepare and present to the class one or more in-depth reports on assigned topics, such as alluvial fans, fluvial environments, lakes, deserts, deltas, clastic shorelines, shallow-water carbonate environments, deep marine environments, or glacial environments. Students will also gain experience in literature search procedures, preparation of visual aids, oral presentation, and report writing. One weekend field trip may be required. Prior course work in sedimentology and stratigraphy is required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 57700 - Geologic Remote Sensing And Spectroscopy |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The objectives of this course are: 1) to develop awareness and knowledge of the various types of remote sensing data that are used to study the evolution of the Earth’s surface; 2) to understand how these tools work and the range of geologic topics that they are applied to; 3) to develop critical thinking skills essential for interpretation of multidimensional spatial data; 4) to provide a supervised research experience; 5) to strengthen scientific communication skills; and 6) to develop some of the fundamental practical skills (computer-based experience) that are needed to analyze these data. General background in geology, geophysics, and/or planetary science desirable. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To develop awareness and knowledge of the various types of remote sensing data that are used to study the evolution of the Earth’s surface.
2. To understand how these tools work and the range of geologic topics that they are applied to.
3. To develop critical thinking skills essential for interpretation of multi-dimensional spatial data.
4. To provide a supervised research experience.
5. To strengthen scientific communication skills.
6. To develop some of the fundamental practical skills(computer-based experience) that are needed to analyze this data.
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| EAPS 57800 - Biostratigraphy |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Stratigraphic and biologic concepts involved in establishing biostratigraphic and chronostratigraphic zonations. Application of zonal concepts to correlations and geochronology. Includes the role of biostratigraphy in petroleum exploration and production. Prior course work in invertebrate paleontology is required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 58000 - Geodynamics I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will provide students with a first order understanding of geophysical processes by developing analytical solutions to a variety of geophysical problems. Topics will include stress and strain, rheology, elasticity and flexure, faulting, and conductive heat transfer. We will develop governing analytical equations based on first order principles, such as the conservation of mass, energy, and momentum, and solve these equations for a number of boundary conditions. The development of these solutions will provide students with the background to understand the basis for more complex numerical solutions of geophysics problems. The course will also serve as a review for differential and integral calculus required to develop an analytical understanding of the natural world. Typically offered every other year in Fall or Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Give students a first order understanding of geophysical processes by developing analytical solutions to a variety of geophysical problems.
2. The background to understand the basis for more complex numerical solutions of geophysics problems.
3. Critical thinking, oral communication and written communication skills will be developed.
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| EAPS 58100 - Structural And Engineering Geology Of Argillaceous Sediments |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Structure, formation, and diagenesis of clay minerals, and engineering properties of argillaceous sediments. Geotechnical methods and plasticity are applied to analysis of natural deposits and geologic phenomena: glacial and lacustrine deposits, quick clays, debris flows, deltaic sediments, mudlumps, submarine slumps and flows, down-to-the-coast normal faults, mud volcanoes, shale diapirs, valley bulges, decollement tectonics. Prior course work in geology for engineers or surface processes, physical geology, and differential equations is required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 58300 - Geology Of Landfills |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course consists of the application of the geological sciences to the siting, exploration and site evaluation for solid waste disposal landfills, plus the evaluation of existing landfill facilities as they pertain to soils, bedrock, stratigraphy, landforms, geologic processes, and hydrogeology. Included are soil and rock exploration, laboratory testing, installation of ground water monitoring devices, and evaluation of contaminant transport. Both attenuation and confinement landfill systems are considered. Geological aspects of solid waste disposal regulations are reviewed and compared to those for hazardous waste disposal. Classroom discussions include evaluation of specific landfill examples and a semester project on a landfill evaluation. A one-day field investigation is required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 58400 - Hydrogeology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigates the qualitative and quantitative aspects of ground water location, occurrence, movement, evaluation, and development, and the influence of man upon this resource. Geologic and engineering aspects of ground water systems are discussed. Classroom teaching is complemented by problem sets and field trips. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 58500 - Hydraulic Analysis Of Ground-Water Systems |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigates the general theory and application of hydraulic testing and analysis of aquifer and aquitard properties for such parameters as porosity, permeability, hydraulic conductivity, transmissivity, storativity, specific yield, dispersivity, and others. Theory of porous media flow is taught with applications to hydraulic testing. Confined, unconfined, semi-confined, transient, and steady-state flows are analyzed. Pump tests, slug tests, tracer tests, and regional analyses of flow nets are stressed. Classroom teaching is complemented with numerous problem sets. Offered in alternate years. Prior course work in hydrogeology and differential equations is required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 58600 - Engineering Geology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis on application of geology to engineering works including dams, tunnels, shoreline protection, slope stability, building foundations, and urban planning. Related case histories of major projects emphasizing methods of investigation and interpretation. Consideration of collection and application of geological data required by designers for major engineering works; analysis of specific problems. Term paper and field investigation required. Prior course work in engineering geology is required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 58700 - Chemical Evolution Of Ground Water |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. Examines the processes by which ground waters acquire their solutes during passage from recharge to discharge zones and the influence of rock types on aquifer chemistry. Topics covered are mineral dissolution, ion exchange, organic complexing, and membrane properties of clays. Prior course work in chemistry and earth materials is required. Typically offered Fall.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 58800 - Analytical Hydrogeochemistry |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. A "hands-on" course teaching the proper way to take field samples for chemical, isotopic, and head-gas analyses of ground waters. Sampled waters are then analyzed by a variety of techniques: gravimetry, titrimetry, colorimetry, and atomic absorption spectrometry, and ion chromatography. Prior course work in groundwater chemistry is required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 58900 - Numerical Modeling Of Ground Water Systems |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigates the general theory and application of numerical solutions of partial differential equations of flow through porous media and the simulation of ground water flow by computer methods, using both finite difference and finite element methods with a short introduction to boundary integral equation methods. Both transient and steady-state flow; confined, unconfined, and semi-confined flow are treated. Solute transport simulation methods include random walk, method of characteristics, and other methods. Classroom teaching and "hands on" computer experience is utilized. Offered in alternate years. Prior course work in hydrogeology and differential equations is required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 59000 - Field Geology North America |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Advanced study of tectonic evolution and stratigraphic history of specific geologic provinces. Particular emphasis on the relationship between tectonics, basin development, and sedimentation. Field component deals with application of field techniques used in basin analysis and structural studies. A 10-day field trip is required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| EAPS 59100 - Advanced Topics In Earth And Atmospheric Sciences |
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Arrange Hours and Credit. Specialized study offered on an individual basis or through specially arranged courses. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| EAPS 60000 - Writing Successful Science Proposals |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to teach graduate students the skills necessary to successfully garner extramural graduate, postdoctoral, and project funding. Topics will include identification of funding sources and development of research objectives and strategies. Emphasis will be on writing concise fellowships and full NSF-type research proposals. Class meetings will be interactive with an emphasis on peer review. Each student will complete a quality research proposal based upon their own research. Any graduate student with a nascent idea for a science or engineering project is encouraged to enroll. We have found that this course works especially well to help newer MS or PhD graduate students develop a research project, improve communication with their advisor, and organize their research priorities regardless of whether they use this course to submit a proposal. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop an understanding of their own research significance, novelty, and plan, be able to communicate these concepts both in the written from (proposal) and be able to orally communicate these ideas to their peers.
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| EAPS 61300 - Advanced Topics In Geomorphology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Special and current topics in geomorphology not available in EAPS 52300. Content will vary dependent on special interests and needs of students enrolled. Examples of potential topics for intensive investigation include: fluvial processes and morphology, regional geomorphic studies, quantitative methods and techniques, karst morphology and hydrology, soils geomorphology, and structural geomorphology. Prerequisite: EAPS 52300. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| EAPS 62000 - Aerosols, Clouds And Climate |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An exploration of the complex relationships between aerosols, clouds and climate, including the so-called “direct effect” of aerosol on the radiation balance and their numerous influences upon relevant cloud properties called “indirect effects”, the impact of different cloud types upon incoming solar radiation and outgoing longwave radiation, the effects of anthropogenic aerosol and climate change on precipitation efficiency, and the representation of aerosol, clouds and cloud processes in climate models. Prerequisites: EAPS 53200 or 53300 or 63100. Typically offered in alternating years Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will add to their base knowledge regarding the interaction of aerosols, clouds and climate.
2. Students will also develop their critical thinking skills and written communication skills.
3. Students will also improve their oral communication skills.
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| EAPS 63000 - Atmospheric Remote Sensing |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the quantitative retrieval of meteorological variables from satellite-borne sensors. Satellite orbital mechanics and sensor technology. Review of radiative transfer in the atmosphere. Fredholm integral equations of the first kind and their solution; linear and nonlinear, statistical and physical retrieval algorithms. Applications of satellite remote sensing in atmospheric science. Course grade will be based in part on the computer programming project in which the student develops and implements algorithms for inverting observed or simulated satellite observations. Prior course work in atmospheric physics and C or Fortan programming language is required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 63100 - Cloud Physics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines current research in cloud physics and related fields. Content will vary, depending on special interests and needs of students enrolled. Examples of potential topics for intensive investigation include: molecular structure and properties of water, kinetics of nucleation, hydrodynamics of hydrometeors, stochastic collection, interactions between cloud dynamical and microphysical processes, numerical cloud models, cloud parameterization in larger-scale models. Prior course work in vector calculus or advanced atmospheric physics and advanced differential equations is required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 63200 - Advanced Topics In General Circulation |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics include: conservation principles, the angular momentum and heat budgets of the earth-atmosphere system, heat and energy transports, atmospheric energy budget, results from global experiments, general circulation models, and laboratory modeling of the general circulation. Prior coursework in general circulation is required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 63300 - Synoptic Scale Dynamics |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. A review of the climatology of synoptic scale systems. An in-depth study of their kinematic properties, including horizontal wind, vorticity, divergence, and vertical motion fields. An analysis of processes influencing the growth and decay of synoptic systems with emphasis on the energetics of open atmospheric systems. Prior coursework in synoptic labs and advanced differential equations is required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 63400 - Numerical Modeling Of Atmospheric Systems |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to numerical schemes for differential and integral equations. Von Neuman's analysis of linear stability. Nonlinear stability. Numerical methods for solving geofluid dynamics equations. Simulation of microscale, mesoscale and large-scale weather systems. Prior course work in synoptic labs and vector calculus is required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 63600 - Mesoscale Meteorology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of the theories applied in mesoscale meteorology, including semi-geostrophic systems and frontogenesis, symmetric instability, rainbands and inertia-gravity waves, sea-breeze, terrain effects, mountain waves, lee-vortices and cyclogenesis, convection, convective instability, low-level jets, drylines, and squall lines. Prior course work in synoptic labs and vector calculus is required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 63700 - Geofluid Dynamics In Rotating Systems |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A theoretical analysis of large-scale motions in the atmosphere and oceans, including shallow water theory, waves, potential vorticity, barotropic and baroclinic instability, frontogenesis and nonlinear instability. Prior course work in synoptic labs and vector calculus is required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 63800 - Atmospheric Radiation |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Concepts of solid angle, intensity, flux density, and attenuation coefficients. Kirchoff's law, Planck's law and consequences. The radiative transfer equation and its formal solution. Infrared radiative transfer of energy, absorption processes, and departures from thermodynamic equilibrium. Atmospheric optics and visibility, radiative effects of pollutants. Prior course work in synoptic labs, vector calculus, and advanced differential equations is required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 63900 - Atmospheric Fluid Dynamics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of basic concepts; complete fundamental hydrodynamic equations; principles of irrotational flow; rotating fluid motion; hydrodynamic instability, perturbation dynamics, Boussinesq assumptions, Rayleigh instability theorem; thermal convection, linear and nonlinear theories, Benard cells, atmospheric convection, satellite observations. Prior course work in synoptic labs, vector calculus, and advanced differential equations is required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 64000 - Petrography Of Aggregates |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Following an introduction of the application of optical mineralogy to aggregates, aggregate materials are identified optically and their performance evaluated with respect to those fundamental properties which may be observed petrographically. Laboratory will include a one-day field investigation. Prior course work in earth materials is required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 65000 - Advanced Topics In Geophysics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Specialized topics in geophysics such as heat flow, rock magnetism, and marine geophysics; varied depending on interest. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
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| EAPS 65200 - Folding Of Rocks |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and application of finite strain to the study of folded rocks, with numerous illustrations from literature. Presentation of modern theories of folding and density instability of single- and multi-layered rocks, with special emphasis on basic folding mechanisms. Treatment of linear viscous and power-law fluids. Second- and third-order analysis of causes of basic fold forms, such as concentric, chevron and kink folds, and mullion structure. Causes of drag folds and reverse drag folds. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 65300 - Fracturing Of Rocks |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Description and analysis of joints and faults from the point of view of field geology and fracture mechanics. Three basic modes of fracture and their analogs in the Earth's crust. Also examined are structures, such as folds, pressure solution surfaces, basins, and mountain ranges associated with faults. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: differential equations. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 65700 - Geophysical Inverse Theory |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigates problems of determining physical parameters of the earth from remote observations of wave and potential fields. The theoretical topics include spectral and singular value decompositions, maximum likelihood and stochastic inversion, Backus and Gilbert theory, Green's function and linear operators, and the physics of layered media. Geophysical applications include seismic tomography, deconvolution, gravity and magnetics, earthquake sources, geodetics, and remote sensing. Offered in alternate years. Prior course work in advanced differential equations, physics, and chemistry of the earth is required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 65800 - Quantitative Seismology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced methods for theoretical seismology; elastodynamic theorems; seismic source theory for earthquakes and explosions; scattering of plane waves and spherical waves; physics of layered and radially varying media; seismic attenuation; asymptotic ray methods and finite difference methods for the calculation of seismic waves in laterally varying media. Offered in alternate years. Prior course work in advanced differential equations, physics, and chemistry of the earth is required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EAPS 68000 - Contaminant Hydrogeology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Covers the basic theory and applications of problem-solving exercises in hydrogeology, fluid mechanics, and chemistry of contaminated sites; flow and transport equations and models; investigational methods; remediation methods; case studies; and pertinent environmental laws. Prior course work in chemistry, computer programming, differential equations, and hydrogeology is required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EAPS 69000 - Seminar In Atmospheric Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. (AGRY 69000) Presentations and discussions by staff and graduate students on subjects of contemporary interest in atmospheric science. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EAPS 69100 - Seminar In Earth Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Presentations and discussions by staff and graduate students on subjects of contemporary interest in the geologic sciences. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EAPS 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EAPS 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Dept Erth Atmos & Planetry Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EAS 10000 - Planet Earth |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the Geosciences-Earth science, oceanography, atmospheric science and astronomy. The course emphasizes topics (earthquakes, volcanoes, ocean pollution, climate change, severe weather, etc.) that are of general interest and relevance, and the interconnections between various Earth processes. Typically offered Fall Spring.
CTL:IPS 1730 Earth Science
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| EAS 10400 - Oceanography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Origin of the oceans and marine life. Seafloor spreading and marine geology; currents, waves, and tides; marine organisms and ecology; beaches and nearshore life. Man's use and abuse of the sea, including contemporary problems and future opportunities. The role of oceans in climate and evolution of the biosphere. Recommended for both science and nonscience majors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| EAS 10500 - The Planets |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course deals with current knowledge of the physical, chemical, and geological nature of the planets and their atmospheres derived in part from data provided by manned and unmanned space probes and other techniques. Similarities and differences between the earth and other planets are described and discussed within the role of planetary formation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| EAS 11000 - Survey Of Geology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of concepts, methods, and materials of physical and historical geology of professional and cultural interest to students who do not need the rigorous treatment of EAS 11100 or 11200. Laboratory will illustrate the methods and materials used in geologic studies. Not available for credit to students with credit in EAS 11100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
|
| EAS 11300 - Introduction To Environmental Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (NRES 29000, AGRY 29000) An introduction to environmental science, including issues such as climate change, energy resources, air and water pollution, toxic waste disposal, soil erosion, natural hazards, and environmental planning. Includes extensive in-class discussion of case studies. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| EAS 12000 - Introduction To Geography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the systematic study of location and spatial variation of natural features. Elements of place, time, distance, and area are considered in relation to man's perception of environment, his organization of cultural activities, and his utilization of natural resources. A one-day field trip is required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| EAS 13000 - Introductory Earth Science for Elementary Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Origins of the earth and solar system, evolution and history of earth forms, geological processes, and the history of life with its interdependence with the earth are discussed in a context appropriate for teaching in an elementary school setting. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| EAS 19100 - Introductory Topics In Earth And Atmospheric Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Introductory special topics in earth and atmospheric sciences. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture 1, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EAS 22000 - Survey Of Physical Geography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of landforms, climates, soils and resources that comprise the world's natural environments. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| EAS 22200 - Weather Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Online Weather Studies covers the composition and structure of the atmosphere, the flow of energy to, from, and through the atmosphere, and the resulting motions. The basic physical principles of atmospheric conditions are stressed through the study of weather from meteorological data delivered via the Internet. Particular attention is given to severe weather topics and the effects of weather and climate on global societies. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| EAS 22300 - Ocean Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Online Ocean Studies examines the ocean as it interacts with other components of the Earth. Basic physical and chemical properties of the ocean are stressed through oceanographic data delivered via the Internet. Topics include the flow and transformations of water and energy into and out of the ocean, ocean circulation, marine life and its adaptations, climate change, and the human/societal impacts pertaining to the ocean. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| EAS 39100 - Topics In Earth And Atmospheric Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Intermediate special topics in the earth and atmospheric sciences. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EAS 49000 - Field Geology In Rocky Mountains |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Field studies in sedimentary, igneous, and metamorphic terrains. Studies may involve geologic mapping, stratigraphic section measuring, structural analysis and interpretation, geomorphic interpretation, and interpretation of geologic history. Field excursions include visits to several classical geologic localities in the Colorado Plateau, Great Basin, and Rocky Mountains with discussions and interpretations of features observed. Transportation fee plus room and board at field station required. Rigorous field work requires physical conditioning. Six-week session, including field excursion. Prior course work in earth materials, surface processes, and plate tectonics is required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECE 15200 - Programming For Engineers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory C programming course. Students will be introduced to basic syntax, standard mathematics library, control structures, user-defined functions, arrays, pointers, structures, and file I/Os. Laboratory exercises will accelerate learning of fundamental materials through supervised practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECE 19000 - Introduction To Electrical And Computer Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is intended to provide an introduction to electrical and computer engineering for students in their freshman year. A goal is to provide some historical background of the respective sub-areas within ECE, a description of analytical tools that will be developed throughout their curriculum, the motivation for the tools, and to inform students of elective courses in ECE. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 19595 - Selected Topics In Electrical And Computer Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Topics vary. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
Topics will vary due to the experimental nature of the course; therefore the Learning Outcomes will be established at the time of the experimental course offering. These outcomes will be based on a subset of the below ABET criteria:
1. An ability to apply knowledge of mathematics, science and engineering.
2. An ability to design and conduct experiments, as well as to analyze and interpret data.
3. An ability to design a system, component, or process to meet desired needs.
4. An ability to function on a multidisciplinary team.
5. An ability to identify, formulate, and solve engineering problems.
6. An understanding of professional and ethical responsibility.
7. An ability to communicate effectively.
8. The broad education necessary to understand the impact of engineering solutions in a global and societal context.
9. A recognition of the need for, and an ability to engage in, life-long learning.
10. A knowledge of contemporary issues.
11. An ability to use the techniques, skills, and modern engineering tools necessary for engineering practice.
|
| ECE 20000 - Electrical And Computer Engineering Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. An introduction to the School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, ECE program objectives and outcomes, BSEE & BSCmpE degree requirements, and professional development. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 20100 - Linear Circuit Analysis I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Volt-ampere characteristics for circuit elements; independent and dependent sources; Kirchhoff's laws and circuit equations. Source transformations; Thevenin's and Norton's theorems; superposition, step response of 1st order (RC, RL) and 2nd order (RLC) circuits. Phasor analysis, impedance calculations, and computation of sinusoidal steady state responses. Instantaneous and everage power, complex power, power factor correction, and maximum power transfer. Instantaneous and average power. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Exempt, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to define and explain the meaning/function of charge, current, voltage, power, energy, R, L, C, the op amp, and the fundamental principles of Ohm’s Law, KVL and KCL.
2 An ability to write the equilibrium equations for a given network and solve using appropriate software as needed for the steady state (dc and ac/phasor) solution.
3. An ability to state and apply the principles of superposition, linearity, source transformations, computation of responses.
4. An ability to qualitatively predict and compute the step responses of first order (RL and RC) and second order (RLC) circuits.
5. An ability to qualitatively predict and compute the steady state ac responded of basic circuits using the phasor method.
6. An ability to compute effective and average values of periodic signals and compute the instantaneous and average powers delivered to a circuit element.
7. An ability to compute the complex power associated with a circuit element and design a circuit to improve the power factor in an ac circuit.
8. An ability to determine the conditions for maximum power transfer to any circuit element.
9. An ability to analyze resistive and RC op amp circuit and design simple amplifiers using op amps.
|
| ECE 20200 - Linear Circuit Analysis II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of ECE 20100. Use of Laplace Transform techniques to analyze linear circuits with and without initial conditions. Characterization of circuits based upon impedance, admittance, and transfer function parameters. Determination of frequency response via analysis of poles and zeros in the complex plane. Relationship between the transfer function and the impulse response of a circuit. Use of continuous time convolution to determine time domain responses. Properties and practical uses of resonant circuits and transformers. Input - output characterization of a circuit as a two-port. Low and high-pass filter design. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to compute impedances and admittances of components and circuits.
2. An ability to compute responses of linear circuits with and without initial conditions via one-sided Laplace transform techniques.
3. An ability to compute responses to linear circuits using transfer function and convolution techniques.
4. An ability to analyze and compute responses of linear circuits containing mutually couples inductors and ideal transformers in the s-domain.
5. An ability to analyze basic two port circuits using the various types of two port parameters and be able to construct such parameters from a given circuit.
6. An ability to analyze and design basic LP, BP, HP and resonant circuits in the s-domain.
|
| ECE 20400 - Introduction To Electrial And Electronic Circuits |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Students will learn basics of electrical and electronic circuits including introduction to analog and digital electronic circuits. Measurement of electrical signals using meters, probes, and oscilloscopes are covered in the laboratory component of the course. Circuits are designed for minimum hardware with emphasis on understanding analog and digital electronics with particular use of digital and analog microchips. Non-ECE majors who complete this course can continue the digital course sequence offered by the ECE department including microprocessor systems and interfacing, and digital signal processing. No credit will be given for ECE majors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECE 20500 - Introduction To Electrical And Electronic Circuits |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will learn basics of electrical and electronic circuits including introduction to analog and digital electronic circuits. Circuits are designed for minimum hardware with emphasis on understanding analog and digital electronics with particular use of digital and analog microchips. Non-ECE majors who complete this course can continue the digital course sequence offered by the ECE department including microprocessor systems and interfacing, and digital signal processing. No credit will be given for ECE majors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECE 20700 - Electronic Measurement Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Experimental exercises in the use of laboratory instruments. Voltage, current, impedance, frequency, and wave form measurements. Frequency and transient response. Elements of circuit modeling and design. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 20800 - Electronic Devices And Design Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory experiments in the measurement of electronic device characteristics. Design of biasing networks, small signal amplifiers, and switching circuits. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 21000 - Electrical And Computer Engineering Sophmore Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An introduction to the School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, ECE program objectives and outcomes, BSEE and BSCmpE degree requirements, and professional development. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECE 21800 - Linear Circuits Laboratory II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A continuation of EE/ECE 20700, with the introduction of advanced measurement methods and more sophisticated instrumentation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECE 23300 - Microcomputers In Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to microcomputers and microcontrollers with emphasis on single board embedded systems: gates, memory, microcomputer hardware, data representation, programming, input/output, interfacing, analog to digital conversion, digital to analog conversion, transducers, sensors, actuators, and the design and development of turnkey systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECE 25100 - Object Oriented Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The C++ and Java programming languages are presented. Students will be introduced to classes, inheritance, polymorphism, class derivation, abstract classes, interfaces, function overloading and overriding, container classes and template classes. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECE 25500 - Introduction To Electronic Analysis And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Diode, bipolar transistor, and FET circuit models for the design and analysis of electronic circuits. Single and multistage analysis and design; introduction to digital circuits. Computer-aided design calculations, amplifier operating point design, and frequency response of single and multistage amplifiers. High-frequency and low-frequency designs are emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to identify and correctly utilize the external lead structure and basic electrical characteristics of common semiconductor devices (pn junctions, MOSFETs, ad BJTs).
2. The ability to analyze and design d.c. bias circuits.
3. The ability to utilize d.c. and a.c. models of semiconductor devices in both analysis and design.
4. The ability to analyze and design single and multistage amplifiers at low, mid and high frequencies.
5. The ability to use a CAD tool (e.g., SPICE) in circuit analysis and design.
|
| ECE 26100 - Engineering Programming Lab |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to problem solving using software tools, in particular the C programming language. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop algorithms to solve Engineering problems by using a step-by-step process.
2. Use the Matlab to solve Engineering problems.
3. Use a standard C program development environment.
4. Use loops, selection structures, arrays, functions and input/output commands in structured C programs.
5. Read and write C programs that use pointers.
6. Read and write C programs that use structures.
7. Read and write C programs to use files.
8. Read and write C programs that use dynamic data structures.
|
| ECE 26200 - Programming For Engineers |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to programming, problem solving and the C programming language. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECE 26300 - Introduction To Computing In Electrical Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course in computing programming with an emphasis on program decomposition and program structure. The objective of the course is to introduce the student to problem solving using high-level languages. The students are also introduced to number concepts fundamental in electrical engineering. Programming will be in "C" in order to develop a structured approach to problem solving. Problems drawn from the field of electrical engineering will require no prior engineering experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Students should be able to develop algorithms using a step-by-step process.
2. Use a standard C program development environment.
3. Read and write C programs that use pointers.
4. Read and write C programs that use structures.
5. Read and write C programs that use files;
6. Read and write C programs that use dynamic data structures.
|
| ECE 26400 - Advanced C Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of a first programming course. Topics include files, structures, pointers, and the proper use of dynamic data structures. A basic knowledge of the UNIX operating system and an introductory C programming course; C programming knowledge should include basic syntax, control structures, and file I/O, as well as experience in declaring and using functions. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to read and write C programs that use files.
2. An ability to read and write C programs that use structures.
3. An ability to read and write C programs that use dynamic data structures.
|
| ECE 26600 - Digital Logic Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to logic design, with emphasis on practical design techniques and circuit implementation. Topics include Boolean algebra; theory of logic functions; mapping techniques and function minimization; logic equivalent circuits and symbol transformations; transistor-transistor-logic (TTL)/metal oxide semi-conductor (MOS) logic into gate implementations; electrical characteristics; propagation delays; signed number notations and arithmetic; binary and decimal arithmetic logic circuits; theory of sequential circuits; timing diagrams; analysis and synthesis of SR-, D-, T-, and JK-based sequential circuits; clock generation circuits; algorithmic state machine method of designing sequential circuits. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECE 26700 - Digital Logic Design Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A series of logic circuit experiments using TTL integrated circuits. Designed to reinforce material presented in ECE 266 lecture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECE 27000 - Introduction To Digital System Design |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An introduction to digital system design and hardware engineering, with an emphasis on practical design techniques and circuit implementation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture 1, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 27500 - Analog and Digital Electronics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Electronic amplifiers; operational amplifier circuits; diode characteristics and circuit applications; bipolar junction transistor (BJT) and MOSFET characteristics, operating modes biasing, linear amplifier configurations; ideal characteristics of logic devices; basic logic devices using BJTs and MOSFETs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECE 27900 - Sophomore Participation In Vertically Integrated Projects In Electrical And Computer Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. This course provides an opportunity for undergraduate students to explore and develop comprehensive applications of electrical and computer engineering technologies, especially as they relate to active research areas of Purdue faculty members. Students will learn about the underlying research, and will work on teams to formulate applications of the research that address real-world needs. Students will attend a weekly lecture that provides an introduction to a broad range of applicable technologies and development tools – some associated with the activities of specific teams, and some addressing topics of more general value to students enrolled in the course. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to apply knowledge of electrical and computer engineering to the design of applications solutions.
2. An understanding of design as a start-to-finish process.
3. An awareness of the customer in engineering design.
4. An ability to function as part of a team and an appreciation for the contributions of other individuals on the team.
5. An ability to communicate effectively with both technical and non-technical audiences.
|
| ECE 28200 - UNIX Programming For Engineers |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to the UNIX operating system, including the UNIX file system, UNIX tools, and utilities. Introduction to Shell programming. The emphasis will be on how these tools/utilities are utilized in the Computing Engineering field. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECE 29100 - Industrial Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. For cooperative education program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 29199 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 29200 - Industrial Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. For cooperative education program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 29299 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 29300 - Measurements And Instrumentation |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. (M E 293) Introduction to the theory and application of sensors/devices and their instrumentation for measurements problems in engineering and science. Experiments utilizing basic circuits and sensors are performed. Methods for recording, interpretation, and presentation of experimental results are illustrated. Statistics and design of experiment are emphasized. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ECE 29595 - Selected Topics In Electrical And Computer Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Topics vary. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
Topics will vary due to the experimental nature of the course; therefore the Learning Outcomes will be established at the time of the experimental course offering. These outcomes will be based on a subset of the below ABET criteria:
1. An ability to apply knowledge of mathematics, science and engineering.
2. An ability to design and conduct experiments, as well as to analyze and interpret data.
3. An ability to design a system, component, or process to meet desired needs.
4. An ability to function on a multidisciplinary team.
5. An ability to identify, formulate, and solve engineering problems.
6. An understanding of professional and ethical responsibility.
7. An ability to communicate effectively.
8. The broad education necessary to understand the impact of engineering solutions in a global and societal context.
9. A recognition of the need for, and an ability to engage in, life-long learning.
10. A knowledge of contemporary issues.
11. An ability to use the techniques, skills, and modern engineering tools necessary for engineering practice.
|
| ECE 29600 - Electrical And Computer Engineering Projects |
|
Credit Hours: 0.0 to 18.0. Projects in Electrical and Computer Engineering. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Ability to apply knowledge of mathematics, science, and engineering.
2. Recognition of the need for, and an ability, to engage in life-long learning.
3. Ability to use techniques, skills, and modern engineering tools necessary for engineering practice.
|
| ECE 30001 - Signs And Systems Lab |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Experiments covering the analysis and design of systems in both the time and frequency domains. Continuous-time linear systems. Discrete-time nonlinear systems: median-type filters and threshold decomposition and covered along with system design examples such as the compact disc player and AM radio. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Provide an experiential (or experimental) experience for our students.
2. Provide a practical experience to support theoretical concepts presented in the lecture course.
|
| ECE 30010 - Introduction To Machine Learning And Pattern Recognition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intelligent information processing, search and retrieval, classification, recognition, prediction and optimization with machine learning and pattern recognition algorithms such as neural networks, support vector machines, decision trees and data mining methods, current models and architectures, implementation topics especially in software, applications in areas such as information processing, search and retrieval of internet data, forecasting (prediction), classification, signal/image processing, pattern recognition, optimization, simulation, system identification, communications, control, management and finance. Topics covered will also be illustrated with the software package MATLAB and related toolboxes. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to apply knowledge of mathematics, science, and engineering.
2. An ability to design and conduct experiments, as well as to analyze and interpret data.
3. An ability to design a system, component, or process to meet desired needs within realistic constraints such as economic, environmental, social, political, ethical, health and safety, manufacturability, and sustainability.
4. An ability to function on multi-disciplinary teams.
5. An ability to identify, formulate, and solve engineering problems.
6. An ability to use the techniques, skills, and modern engineering tools necessary for engineering practice.
7. The broad education necessary to understand the impact of engineering solutions in a global, economic, environmental, and societal context.
|
| ECE 30100 - Signals And Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Classification, analysis and design of systems in both the time- and frequency-domains. Continuous-time linear systems: Fourier Series, Fourier Transform, bilateral Laplace Transform. Discrete-time linear systems: difference equations, Discrete-Time Fourier Transform, bilateral Z-Transform. Sampling, quantization, and discrete-time processing of continuous-time signals. Discrete-time nonlinear systems: median-type filters, threshold decomposition. System design examples such as the compact disc player and AM radio. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to classify signals (e.g., periodic, even) and systems (e.g., causal, linear) and an understanding of the difference between discrete and continuous time signals and systems.
2. An ability to determine the impulse response of a differential or difference equation.
3. An ability to determine the response of linear systems to any input signal by convolution in the time domain.
4. An understanding of the definitions and basic properties (e.g., time-shift, modulation, Parseval’s Theorem) of Fourier series, Fourier transforms, bilateral Laplace transforms, Z transforms, and discrete time Fourier transforms and an ability to compute the transforms and inverse transforms of basic examples using methods such as partial fractions expansions.
5. An ability to determine the response of linear systems to any input signal by transformation to the frequency domain, multiplication, and inverse transformation to the time domain, an ability to apply the Sampling theorem, reconstruction, aliasing, and Nyquist’s theorem to represent continuous-time signal in discrete time so that they can be processed by digital computers.
|
| ECE 30200 - Probabilistic Methods In Electrical And Computer Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory treatment of probability theory, including distribution and density functions, moments, and random variables. Applications of normal and exponential distributions. Estimation of means, variances, correlation, and spectral density functions. Random processes and responses of linear systems to random inputs. Typically offered Fall Summer Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 30500 - Semiconductor Devices |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces and explains terminology, models, properties, and concepts associated with semiconductor devices. Provides detailed insight into the internal workings of the "building-block" device structures such as the pn-junction diode, Schottky diode, BJT, and MOSFET. Presents information about a wide variety of other devices including solar cells, LEDs, HBTs, and modern field-effect devices. Systematically develops the analytical tools needed to solve practical device problems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 30600 - Electronic Circuits And Systems Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Experiments in electronic circuits and systems, including spectral analysis techniques, sampling, distortion measurements, random signals, signal-to-noise ratio and correlation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 30700 - Electromagnetic Fields And Waves Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Experimental exercises illustrating concepts in electric and magnetic fields, transmission lines, electromagnetic fields, simple waveguides, and antennas. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 30800 - Systems Simulation And Control Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction and laboratory exercises in the solution of differential equations that arise in the modeling of physical systems. Instruction in the principles of operation and design of linear control systems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 30834 - Fundamentals Of Computer Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental principles and techniques of computer graphics. The course covers the basics of going from a scene representation to a raster image using OpenGL. Specific topics include coordinate manipulations, perspective, basics of illumination and shading, color models, texture maps, clipping and basic raster algorithms, fundamentals of scene constructions. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. An understanding of the design issues for creating raster graphics.
2. An ability to apply rendering techniques to an actual computer graphics problem and associated datasets.
3. An understanding of object transformations, representations, transformations and perspective projections.
4. An understanding of color, illumination, and shading techniques.
5. An understanding of the rendering and rasterization techniques.
6. An understanding of the application of computer graphics techniques to visualization, animation, and computer aided design.
|
| ECE 30862 - Object-Oriented Programming In C++ And Java |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. C++ and Java programming languages, including classes, inheritance, encapsulation, polymorphism, class derivation, abstract classes, interfaces, static class members, object construction and destruction, namespaces, exception handling, function, overloading and overriding, function name overload resolution, container classes, and template classes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. An understanding of the concepts of inheritance and polymorphism.
2. An ability to overload operators in C++.
3. An understanding of the difference between function overloading and function overriding.
4. An ability to incorporate exception handling in object-oriented programs.
5. An ability to use template classes and the STL Library in C++.
6. An ability to write object-oriented programs of moderate complexity in Java.
7. An ability to write programs with multiple threads and use synchronization among threads.
|
| ECE 31100 - Electric And Magnetic Fields |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continued study of vector calculus, electrostatics, and magnetostatics, and Maxwell's equations. Introduction to electromagnetic waves, transmission lines, and radiation from antennas. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 31200 - Engineering Economics And Project Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ME 31100). Introduction to principles of engineering project management and techniques. Topics include technical feasibility studies, project specifications, scheduling, validation, lifecycle costing, and economic analysis. The focus is on managing an engineering project through scheduling, budgeting, resource management, execution and control. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECE 32100 - Electromechanical Motion Devices |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The general theory of electromechanical motion devices relating electric variables and electromagnetic forces. The basic concepts and operational behavior of DC, induction, brushless DC, and stepper motors used in control applications are presented. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 32300 - Electromechanical Motion Devices and Systems Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Experiments closely coordinated with ECE 32100 involving measurement of fundamental parameters of various electromechanical devices using modern instrumentation techniques. Computer simulation is used to predict steady-state and dynamic operating characteristics. Comparison of predicted and measured performance is emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 32400 - Introduction To Energy Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this course, fundamentals of electrical machines, power circuit analysis techniques, concepts including torque, speed, DC machine equivalent circuit, synchronous and asynchronous AC machines, rotating fields, application of electronics on electrical machines, smart grids and their applications in power engineering, use of composite materials in energy applications, and alternative energy methods including solar energy. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Basic knowledge of DC Machines.
2. Basic knowledge of AC Machines.
3. Understanding of power circuit analysis techniques.
4. Basic knowledge of application of electronics on electrical machines.
5. Basic knowledge of smart grids.
6. Basic knowledge of alternative energy methods.
|
| ECE 32600 - Engineering Project Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ME 32600) Project management is an important skill that is needed in the private and public sectors as well as specialty businesses. This course will explore the challenges facing today's project managers and will provide a broad understanding of the project management environment focused on multiple aspects of the project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
Upon successful completion of the course, students should be able to
1. Use library resources and internet resources to find information necessary for the project.
2. Use critical thinking in its design process.
3. Use creative approaches when necessary to obtain project objectives.
4. Analyze and interpret data.
5. Function effectively on a multi-disciplinary team through mutual support, consensus seeking, cooperation, and sharing responsibility.
6. Write a project report, adhering to the specified format using an appropriate writing style, grammar, and spelling.
7. Make an oral presentation using effective visual aids.
8. An understanding of professional and ethical responsibility.
9. The broad education necessary to understand the impact of engineering solutions in a global, economic, environmental, and societal context.
10. An ability to use the techniques, skills, and modern engineering tools necessary for engineering practice.
|
| ECE 32700 - Engineering Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ME 32700) Engineering Economics is designed as an overview of economics with a focus on how it relates to the practice of engineering. Topics include interest formulas, rate of return, life cost analysis, depreciation, taxes, and cash flow. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
Upon successful completion of the course, students should be able to
1. Understand the terminology used in engineering economic analysis.
2. Understand time-value-of-money concepts such as net present worth analysis, equivalent uniform annual worth analysis, benefit/cost analysis, internal rate of return analysis, loans, leveraging, and fixed-income investment analysis.
3. Understand the criteria for making economic-based decisions.
4. Analyze before-tax and after-tax cash flows.
5. Understand economic risk analysis techniques.
6. Conduct minimum life cycle cost tradeoffs between initial and repair costs.
7. Formulate economic solutions to real-world case study problems.
8. Demonstrate capability to use Excel spreadsheet analysis in solving economic problems.
9. Experience working in a project team to solve an economic problem and make a presentation of the solution using Powerpoint.
10. Write a project report, adhering to the specified format for business reports using appropriate writing style, grammar, and spelling.
11. Learn how to estimate costs and perform an economic analysis in support of capstone design and other term projects.
12. Develop cash flow analysis problem solving techniques for passing exams including the Engineering Economics portions of the EIT exam.
|
| ECE 33000 - Microcomputer Programming And Interfacing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Assembly language, C++ programming, and interfacing techniques; control of digital hardware and peripheral devices by software; software structures and tools used in accomplishing low level hardware control. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECE 33300 - Automatic Control Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ME 33300) Analysis and design of control systems, from modeling and computer solutions to stability and performance issues with an orientation toward electrical and mechanical systems. Classical control system concepts are emphasized but an introduction to modern techniques is also provided. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
This is an introductory course in control systems. The aim is to provide both ME and EE students with the background needed to model and design automatic control systems for electrical, mechanical, and electromechanical systems using the classical concepts of root locus, Bode plots, and Nyquist diagrams, and to assess the stability and performance of such systems. An introduction to the state space techniques is also provided. Matlab and Simulink are used as the primary computer aided design tools for control systems. Multidisciplinary team projects will be assigned.
|
| ECE 33500 - Electronics-Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics in multistage amplifiers, feedback amplifiers, oscillators, operational amplifiers, analog systems, power amplifiers and systems, communication systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECE 33700 - ASIC Design Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to standard cell design of VLSI (Very Large Scale Integration) digital circuits using the VHDL hardware description language (Very High Speed Integrated Circuits Hardware Description Language). Emphasis on how to write VHDL that will map readily to hardware. Laboratory experiments using commercial grade computer-aided design (CAD) tools for VHDL based design, schematic based logic entry, logic and VHDL simulation, automatic placement and routing, timing analysis, and testing. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand and use major syntactic elements of VDHL – entities, architectures, processes, functions, common concurrent statements, and common sequential statements.
2. Design combinational logic in a variety of styles including: schematic, structural VHDL, and behavioral VHDL, as well as demonstrate an awareness of timing and resource usage associated with each approach.
3. Design common sequential functions: flip-flops, registers, latches, and state-machines.
4. Create a VDHL test bench and use it to test/verify a sequential VHDL design of moderate complexity.
5. Place, route, and verify timing of a standard cell design.
6. Draw, given commented VHDL code of moderate complexity, a corresponding RTL level block diagram.
7. Use, modify, and create scripts to control the synthesis process.
8. Use different design styles, constraints, and optimization options to achieve required synthesis results.
9. Explain the difference between various ASIC design approaches, - standard cell, full custom, and programmable devices.
10. Prepare functional and interface requirements for a sequential design project of the student’s choosing.
11. Create the hierarchical decomposition of a sequential design.
12. Gain experience in the oral presentation of their work to others.
13. Work in a team and negotiate the division of labor.
14. Gain familiarity with the use and purpose of design reviews.
15. Prepare final design documentation sufficient for another engineer to use, test, or enhance the design.
|
| ECE 34000 - Simulation, Modeling, and Identification |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigation and evaluation of design problems through simulation of systems described by ordinary differential and difference equations. Development of simulation models from physical parameters and from experimental data. Topics include continuous, discrete, and hybrid models of electrical, mechanical, and biological systems. Laboratory experiences demonstrate concepts studied in text and lecture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECE 35100 - Software Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to give students in Computer Engineering group design project experience in the engineering of large scale software. Tools and techniques for requirements analysis, resource estimation, project management, design, implementation, testing, quality assurance, and maintenance will be used in projects that simulate real-world software engineering work environments. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ECE 35400 - Software Engineering Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The design and implementation of larger scale software in Java. Introduction of software engineering design concepts. Application of fundamental concepts and programming strategies useful in the context of any programming language. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECE 35700 - VLSI Chip Design Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to standard cell design of VLSI digital circuits using VHDL hardware description language. Emphasis on how to write VHDL that will map readily to hardware. Laboratory experiments using commercial grade computer-aided design (CAD) tools for VHDL based design, schematic based logic entry, logic and VHDL simulation, automatic placement and routing, timing analysis, and testing. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 35800 - Introduction To VHDL |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the design of digital systems using VHDL hardware description language. Emphasis on how to write VHDL that will map readily to hardware. Projects assigned using commercial grade computer-aided design (CAD) tools for VHDL based design, VHDL simulation and synthesis. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ECE 35900 - C And Data Structures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory level course on C, a general purpose high-level language with features to facilitate such tasks as systems programming and structuring of data. Students becoming proficient in C language programming will learn techniques of structured programming data structures and how to develop programs that are used regularly in many applications. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| ECE 36200 - Microprocessor Systems And Interfacing |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An introduction to basic computer organization, microprocessor instruction sets, assembly language programming, and microcontroller peripherals. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture 1, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to write programs for a microcontroller in assembly language.
2. An ability to interface a microcontroller to various devices.
3. An ability to effectively utilize micrcontroller peripherals.
3. An ability to design and implement a microcontroller-based embedded system.
|
| ECE 36400 - Software Engineering Tools Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. To acquaint the students with a variety of current software engineering tools, scripting languages, and application programming languages. Students are expected to use their previous programming experience to design and test software programs using the techniques learned in this course. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 36500 - Introduction To The Design Of Digital Computers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The hardware organization of computer systems including the following topics: instruction set selection, arithmetic/logic unit design, hard-wired and microprogrammed control schemes, memory organization, IO interface design. The course will involve computer simulation of digital systems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| ECE 36800 - Data Structures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides insight into the use of data structures. Topics include stacks, queues and lists, trees, graphs, sorting, searching, and hashing. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. An understanding of various basic data structures, including stacks, queues, and trees.
2. An ability to analyze time complexity and space complexity of algorithms.
3. An ability to apply appropriate sorting and searching algorithms for a given application.
4. An ability to apply graph theoretic techniques, data structures and algorithms for problem solving.
5. An ability to design and implement appropriate data structures and algorithms for engineering applications.
|
| ECE 36900 - Discrete Mathematics For Computer Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces discrete mathematical structures and finite-state machines. Students will learn how to use logical and mathematical formalisms to formulate and solve problems in computer engineering. Topics include formal logic, proof techniques, recurrence relations, sets, combinatorics, relations, functions, algebraic structures, and finite-state machines. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 37000 - Digital Systems-Logic Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the logical design and analysis of digital systems; Boolean algebra; combinational logic; minimization techniques; Karnaugh mapping. Introduction to sequential systems analysis and design using VHDL. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECE 37100 - Computer Organization And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design of computer systems with emphasis on computer hardware. Topics discussed include: Introduction to Basic Design Concepts, Computer Abstraction and Technology, Role of Performance, Instruction Language, Arithmetic for Computers, Processor Data Path and Control, Enhancing Performance with Pipelining, and Exploiting Memory Hierarchy. Students design and implement a RISC processor in the laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand major components of computers and associated technology.
2. Identify issues on measuring performance.
3. Describe the MIPS instruction set.
4. Identify the difference between RISC vs. CICS.
5. Design arithmetic logic units.
6. Implement efficiently addition, subtraction, and multiplication algorithms.
7. Use floating point representation and arithmetic.
8. Design single and multi-cycle control unit.
9. Explain hardwired vs. microprogrammed control approach.
10.Understand the pipelining concept.
11.Understand issues concerning data and branch hazards.
12.Understand the fundamental of memory hierarchy.
13.Explain virtual memory and address mapping.
|
| ECE 37300 - Numerical Methods For Engineers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to numerical methods for engineers. Topics include solution methods for nonlinear algebraic equations, sets of linear and nonlinear algebraic equations, eigenvalue problems, interpolation and curve fitting, numerical differentiation and integration, and techniques to solve ordinary and partial differential equations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ECE 37500 - Digital Integrated Circuits |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis and design of digital integrated circuits. Bipolar and MOS device modeling. MOS integrated circuit design and timing considerations. Bipolar, BiCMOS and GaAs digital circuits. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECE 37900 - Junior Participation In Vertically Integrated Projects (VIP) In Electrical And Computer Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.0. This course provides an opportunity for undergraduate students to explore and develop comprehensive applications of electrical and computer engineering technologies, especially as they relate to active research areas of Purdue faculty members. Students will learn about the underlying research, and will work on teams to formulate applications of the research that address real-world needs. Students will attend a weekly lecture that provides an introduction to a broad range of applicable technologies and development tools – some associated with the activities of specific teams, and some addressing topics of more general value to students enrolled in the course. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to apply knowledge of electrical and computer engineering to the design of applications solutions.
2. An understanding of design as a start-to-finish process.
3. An awareness of the customer in engineering design.
4. An ability to function as part of a team and an appreciation for the contributions of other individuals on the team.
5. An ability to communicate effectively with both technical and non-technical audiences.
|
| ECE 38000 - Computers In Engineering Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and application of computers in simulation, data acquisition control, instrumentation, and in the solution of engineering problems. Development of mathematical models suitable for computer solutions, and numerical techniques. Traditional and modern software such as FORTRAN, C, LabVIEW, MATLAB, Lotus 1-2-3, and Excel will be used. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECE 38199 - Professional Practice Co-Op I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 38200 - Feedback System Analysis And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this course, classical concepts of feedback system analysis and associated compensation techniques are presented. In particular, the root locus, Bode diagram, and Nyquist criterion are used as determinants of stability. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 38299 - Professional Practice Co-Op II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 38399 - Professional Practice Co-Op III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 38400 - Linear Control Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. (ME 48500). Introduction to classical control theory. Transfer functions, block diagram manipulation, and signal flow graphs. Transient and steady state responses; characteristics and design. Sensitivity analysis and disturbance rejection. System stability. Root locus analysis and design. Frequency response analysis using Bode and polar plots. Nyquist criterion and Nichols chart. Controller design using Bode plots. Laboratory will include design, simulation of topics covered, and a number of practical experiments. Credit not allowed for both ECE 38400 and ME 48500. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand major components involved in the analyses and design of control system.
2. Model systems in the frequency domain and to obtain a block diagram.
3. Model systems in the time domain and to obtain a block diagram.
4. Analyze time responses for the first and second order systems.
5. Analyze and design of feedback systems.
6. Reduce multiple blocks to a single block or closed-loop system.
7. Perform system stability analysis.
8. Calculate system steady-state errors.
9. Sketch root locus and use it to find the poles of a closed-loop system.
10. Use root locus to describe qualitatively the changes in transient response and stability.
11. Design control systems via root locus.
12. Design control systems via frequency domain.
13. Use Matlab and Matlab control toolbox to solve control system problems.
|
| ECE 38700 - Electronics And System Engineering Through Robotics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to robotics; microcontrollers, motion actuators, sensors, electric circuits and interference, electronic devices and interfacing, switch elements, electric ladder diagrams. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ECE 38800 - Electronics And System Engineering Through Robotics Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Experiments in building, programming, and testing mobile robots; DC motors; shaft encoders and telemetry. Multidisciplinary mobile robot team projects involving mechanical, electrical and computer engineering designs. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ECE 39300 - Industrial Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. For cooperative education program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 39399 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 39400 - Industrial Practice IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. For cooperative education program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 39499 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 39500 - Industrial Practice V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. For cooperative education program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 39595 - Selected Topics In Electrical And Computer Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Topics vary. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
Topics will vary due to the experimental nature of the course; therefore the Learning Outcomes will be established at the time of the experimental course offering. These outcomes will be based on a subset of the below ABET criteria:
1. An ability to apply knowledge of mathematics, science and engineering.
2. An ability to design and conduct experiments, as well as to analyze and interpret data.
3. An ability to design a system, component, or process to meet desired needs.
4. An ability to function on a multidisciplinary team.
5. An ability to identify, formulate, and solve engineering problems.
6. An understanding of professional and ethical responsibility.
7. An ability to communicate effectively.
8. The broad education necessary to understand the impact of engineering solutions in a global and societal context.
9. A recognition of the need for, and an ability to engage in, life-long learning.
10. A knowledge of contemporary issues.
11. An ability to use the techniques, skills, and modern engineering tools necessary for engineering practice.
|
| ECE 39599 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 39600 - Industrial Practice Seminar I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A special seminar for cooperative education and curricular practical training students. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| ECE 39699 - Professional Practice Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 4 times
|
| ECE 40000 - Professional Development And Career Guidance |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A lecture-demonstration series emphasizing evaluation of career options, identification and development of professional skills. Examples of career-related topics include choosing a job, and post-graduate education in engineering or other disciplines. Examples of professional skill topics covered include interviewing, writing, intellectual property and ethics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to communicate ideas in a written form.
2. An awareness of skills necessary to achieve success in the workplace.
3. The ability to research and evaluate current events in an engineering context.
4. An understanding of the role of ethical engineering in the work environment.
|
| ECE 40020 - Sound Reinforcement System Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to computational tools used in the measurement and analysis of electro-acoustic systems, and their application to sound reinforcement system engineering. Service learning based projects, serving the needs of community clients, provide the context for application of sound reinforcement system design principles and practices. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to apply knowledge obtained in earlier coursework and to obtain new knowledge necessary to design a sound reinforcement system.
2. An understanding of the engineering design process.
3. An ability to function on a multidisciplinary team.
4. An awareness of professional and ethical responsibility.
5. An ability to communicate effectively, in both oral and written form.
|
| ECE 40100 - Engineering Ethics and Professionalism |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Some ethical, social, political, legal, and ecological issues that practicing engineers may encounter. (ECE 401 and ME 401 are cross-listed courses; students may not get credit for both ECE 401 and ME 401.). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECE 40200 - Electrical Engineering Design Projects |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Lecture sessions provide the student with background information on the design and management of projects. Formal lectures cover, for example, design for manufacturability, design for quality, test and evaluation, reliability and ethics, patents and copyrights, plus case studies. During the laboratory sessions, the students work in teams on a challenging open-ended electrical engineering project that draws on previous coursework. Projects routinely involve standard design facets (such as consideration of alternative solutions, feasibility considerations, and detailed system descriptions) and include a number of realistic constraints (such as cost, safety, reliability, and aesthetics). Completion of BS EE or BS CmpE core curriculum. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 40400 - Introduction To Computer Security |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to security issues related to the operation of computers and the workings of computer networks. Topics covered include introduction to cryptography, authentication protocols, digital signature algorithms, internet vulnerabilities, worms and virus propagation, denial of service attacks, etc. The students will also learn how to design firewalls to protect a system against unwanted intrusions. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 40500 - Senior Engineering Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The first course of a two-semester sequence of senior capstone design. Provides students with experience in the process and practice of electrical/computer component/system design from concept through final design. Emphasis on teamwork, project management, oral and written communication. General lectures on issues important to the engineering profession, such as professional and ethical responsibility, the impact of engineering solutions in a global and societal context, and other contemporary issues. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ECE 40600 - Senior Engineering Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design II is an extension of Design I and includes, but is not limited to: (1) continued research, design and implementation; (2) oral presentation and/or demonstration of the project to faculty and other interested parties; (3) answer appropriate questions related to the project; (4) generation of a final technical report documenting design, development and performance of project. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ECE 40700 - Semiconductor Measurements Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Experiments incorporating state-of-the-art equipment and measurement techniques are performed to collect electrical characteristics exhibited by a representative set of semiconductor devices including the pn-junction diode, Schottky diode, photo devices (solar cell, photo detectors, LEDs), BJTs, the MOS-Capacitor, MOSFETs, and special resistor-like structures. The devices are subjected to d.c., a.c., and pulse biastry, magnetic fields, optical excitation, and/or temperature ranging. The measured characteristics are subsequently used to deduce information about the internal nature and/or operation of semiconductor devices. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 40800 - Operating Systems And Systems Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will learn to design and construct operating systems for both individual computers and distributed systems, and to apply and utilize operating system functionality to their application development. The course will cover basic concepts and methods for managing processor, main memory, storage, and network resources, including their system functions. Detailed examples are taken from a number of operating systems, emphasizing the techniques used in networked UNIX and embedded Linux. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECE 40900 - Professional Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Value and use of money; depreciation, economic selection, cost estimation procedures, and cost determination. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECE 41000 - Introduction to Digital Signal Processing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory treatment of digital signal processing algorithms and implementation using high-speed digital signal processors. Sampling, architecture, addressing modes and instruction set of digital signal processors, discrete Fourier transform, fast Fourier transform, and digital filtering. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECE 41100 - Advanced Techniques in Digital Signal Processing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and algorithms for processing stochastic signals. Review of discrete-time transforms and stochastic process. Introduction to optimum and adaptive filtering, and to classical and modern spectral analysis. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECE 41200 - Introduction To Engineering Optics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The control and characteristics of optical radiation are covered. Applications to optical instrumentation, thin films, holography, and polarizing optics are discussed. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 41300 - Introduction To Optics Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A set of laboratory experiments dealing with fundamentals and applications of geometrical optics, polarization optics, wave optics, and Fourier optics. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 41400 - Elements Of Electro And Fiber Optics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the use of lasers, fiber and integrated optical components and devices in communication and sensory applications. Topics include generation, transformation, modulation, deflection, and detection of laser beams, and their applications in fiber communication sensory systems. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 41437 - ASIC Fabrication And Test I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The first semester of a two-semester sequence to give teams of 3 to 6 students the experience of designing an ASIC (Application Specific Integrated Circuit), having the chip fabricated and testing it. The team of students will develop requirements for a design, prepare the design using VHDL ((VHSIC(very high speed integrated circuit) Hardware Description Language)), Verilog, or schematic entry tools, create and use test benches to functionally verify the design, use automated tools to prepare a circuit layout, verify the final layout, submit the layout for fabrication, prepare a physical test bed, test or demonstrate the chip, and document all aspects of the design and test results. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain critical steps in the preparation of an ASIC design for fabrication and the tools required to perform these steps: functional verification, logical synthesis, physical layout, physical verification, and timing verification.
2. An ability to use advanced ASIC design software for at least two of the following: functional verification, logical synthesis, physical layout, physical verification, and timing verification. Create or use scripts to automate repetitive aspects of the process.
3. An ability to define functional and physical requirements for an ASIC design of the team’s choosing.
4. An ability to define a circuit architecture that can be expected to meet functional requirements subject to performance and area constraints.
5. An ability to estimate speed, throughput, and expected circuit area to ensure that constraints are satisfied.
|
| ECE 41438 - ASIC Fabrication And Test II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The second semester of a two-semester sequence to give teams of 3 to 6 students the experience of designing an ASIC (Application Specific Integrated Circuit), having the chip fabricated and testing it. The team of students will develop requirements for a design, prepare the design using VHDL ((VHSIC(very high speed integrated circuit) Hardware Description Language)), Verilog, or schematic entry tools, create and use test benches to functionally verify the design, use automated tools to prepare a circuit layout, verify the final layout, submit the layout for fabrication, prepare a physical test bed, test or demonstrate the chip, and document all aspects of the design and test results. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Create testbenches and verify the functionality of the design in source code after logic synthesis and after layout.
2. Create an ASIC layout that is verified and ready for fabrication.
3. Design, implement, and use a hardware testbed for verification of functionality and performance of the chip after fabrication. Use a reconfigurable logic prototype for early testing and in lieu of a fabricated custom IC if necessary.
4. Communicate effectively by means of an oral presentation of the project either to students in another course or at a technical conference.
5. Communicate effectively in writing by means of a collective technical report on the project and individual reports on how each outcome was satisfied.
|
| ECE 41500 - Electro- And Fiber Optics Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory exercises in lasers, hologram, modulation and deflection of laser beams, fiber components, and systems. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 41700 - Multimedia Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory treatment of multimedia algorithms and implementation using high-speed multimedia processors. Detailed discussion of architecture, addressing modes and instruction set of multimedia processors, entropy coding, transform coding, speech compression, image compression, and video compression. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECE 41800 - Introduction To Computer Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to Computer Graphics using OpenGL software interface. Topics include primitives, 2D and 3D transformations, line clipping, animation, text, Bezier curves, and fractals. Assignments involve computer programming in a C environment. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ECE 42100 - Advanced Digital Systems Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced topics in digital design. Boolean logic. Logic optimization, VLSI and ASIC design basics. Design. Simulation. Placement and routing. Logic synthesis. FPGA structure. FPGA implementation. FPGA design flow. Verilog and VHDL coding. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECE 42300 - Electromechanical Motion Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The operation, analysis, and control of electromechanical systems are covered, including a treatment of electromechanical devices, power electronics, and control systems. Sample applications include servo-systems, propulsion drives, and variable-speed rotational equipment. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 42301 - Power Electronics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the design and analysis of switch mode power converters. Topics include: switching characteristics of MOSFET’s and IGBT’s, properties of DC-DC switch mode power converters and regulation of the output voltage, rectification of utility inputs and power factor correction, review of magnetic circuits, design of high frequency inductors and transformers, design of switch mode DC power supplies, soft switching, synthesis of DC and low frequency AC voltages with application to motor drives and uninterruptible power supplies, and thyristor converters. Use of circuit simulations and hardware. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the role of power electronics in various applications.
2. Design and analyze switching power-poles.
3. Use pulse-width modulation to synthesize a desired output (voltage and frequency).
4. Use Circuit Simulation to model power electronic devices and systems.
5. Have a sold background on the fundamentals of power electronics.
6. Design and simulate power electronic systems for specific applications.
|
| ECE 42400 - Electromechanical Systems And Applied Mechatronics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design, optimization and control of electromechanical and mechatronic systems. Comprehensive dynamic analysis, modeling, and simulation of electric machines, power electronics, and sensors. Application of advanced software and hardware in mechatronic systems design and optimization. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECE 42500 - Electric Machines |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the energy conversion principles and operating behavior of AC and DC electric machines. Develops circuit models to study their steady-state characteristics and simple mathematical models to study their transient responses. Considers engineering aspects of practical machines. Examines industrial methods of starting and controlling these machines. Emphasis on formulations that lend themselves readily to digital computational techniques. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 42600 - Electric Drives |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to Electric Drives And Power Electronics. Magnetic circuits and transformers. Principles of DC, synchronous, induction, and stepper motors; equivalent circuits and operating characteristics. Applications to drive systems. Laboratory experiments to illustrate principles. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECE 42700 - Semiconductor Power Electronics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to power semiconductor devices, characteristics, and ratings. Emphasis on analysis and design of circuits with power semiconductors and associated devices. Power rectification, inversion, AC-to-AC power control, firing circuits, and microcomputer control of power circuits. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECE 42800 - Modern Communication Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of the basic principles of communication systems with emphasis on digital modulated systems. The analysis of the performance of these systems in an additive noise channel is studied so as to make comparisons between the different types of digital modulation systems. The principles of forward error correction are studied along with the concepts of performance bounds and optimum receiver performance. The use of Matlab simulation models is introduced as a companion technique for communication systems analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. An understanding of how to represent communication signals in time and frequency using complex analysis and Fourier analysis techniques.
2. An understanding of the effects of noise and channel properties on communication system performance.
3. An understanding of the difference in performance among the basic digital modulation systems.
4. An understanding of the basic functions required of a digital communications receiver.
5. An understanding of the effects of band-limiting and the tradeoffs of performance and capacity.
6. A basic understanding of information theory and bounds on communication system performance.
7. An understanding of the basic forward error correction coding techniques of convolutional and block codes.
8. The application of computer modeling and simulation techniques to compliment communication system performance analysis.
|
| ECE 42900 - Senior Engineering Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ME 42900, CE 42900). The senior engineering design courses I and II constitute a two-semester sequence of an interdisciplinary activity. The objective of these courses is to provide engineering students with supervised experience in the process and practice of engineering design. Projects are chosen by the students or the faculty. Students working in teams pursue an idea from conception to realistic design. The course concludes with a substantial written and oral design review before a faculty team. Class discussions will include the ethical responsibility of engineers, impact of engineering solution in a global/societal context, and small-group interactions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn material needed for a project that was not taught in courses taken.
2. Identify goal(s), the necessary activities, and the key problems.
3. Prioritize tasks, manage time, control expenses, and prepare plans to complete a project on schedule and within budget.
4. Work cooperatively as part of a team (interdisciplinary as in industry).
5. Communicate effectively, both orally and in writing.
6. Design (and build and test) a system, process, or components related to a project.
7. Demonstrate the multiple engineering skills necessary for a 21st century engineer.
8. Formulate and solve engineering problems, recognize relevant parameters, identify principles, and make appropriate and reasonable simplifying assumptions and approximations.
|
| ECE 43200 - Elements Of Power System Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental concepts of power system analysis, transmission line parameters, basic system models, steady-state performance, network calculations, power flow solutions, fault studies, symmetrical components, operating strategies, and control. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. An understanding of the function of the main components in a power system, and the basis of their circuit models.
2. An ability to build a system representation from components’ circuit models and to apply solution techniques to certain operational needs.
|
| ECE 43300 - Power Electronics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the fundamental operating principles of power conditioning circuits that are currently being used to effect power flow from AC to DC and vice versa. Emphasis is on the relationship between form and function of these circuits. Circuits discussed will include AC/DC line-commutated converters, DC/DC converters, DC/variable frequency converters, resonant converters, and AC/AC converters. Computer simulations will be used as a part of the coursework. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 43400 - Power Engineering Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The laboratory consists of experiments on power measurement techniques, power flow control, and on common components, such as transformers, rectifiers, induction and synchronous machines. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 43500 - Object-Oriented Design Using C++ And Java |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of OO design with C++ and Java. Difficulties caused by multiple inheritances in C++. Taking advantage of Run-Time Identification in C++. Multi-threading, AWT, and Network Programming in Java. Discussion of Java applets, beans, and servlets. Unified modeling language. Use-case analysis. Constructing conceptual models. System sequence diagrams. "Gang of Four" design patterns. Case studies. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 43600 - Digital Signal Process |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to discrete systems and digital signal processing. Topics include sampling and reconstruction of continuous signals, digital filter design, and frequency analysis including the Fourier transform, the Z transform, the discrete Fourier transform, and the fast Fourier transform. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ECE 43700 - Computer Design And Prototyping |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An introduction to computer organization and design, including instruction set selection, arithmetic logic unit design, datapath design, control strategies, pipelining, memory hierarchy, and I/O interface design. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 43800 - Digital Signal Processing With Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The course is presented in five units. Foundations: the review of continuous-time and discrete-time signals and spectral analysis; design of finite impulse response and infinite impulse response digital filters; processing of random signals. Speech processing; vocal tract models and characteristics of the speech waveform; short-time spectral analysis and synthesis; linear predictive coding. Image processing: two-dimensional signals, systems and spectral analysis; image enhancement; image coding; and image reconstruction. The laboratory experiments are closely coordinated with each unit. Throughout the course, the integration of digital signal processing concepts in a design environment is emphasized. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 43900 - Senior Engineering Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The senior engineering design courses I and II constitute a two-semester sequence of an interdisciplinary activity. The objective of these courses is to provide engineering students with supervised experience in the process and practice of engineering design. Projects are chosen by the students or the faculty. Students working in teams pursue an idea from conception to realistic design. The course is climaxed by the presentation of a substantial written report and a formal oral presentation before faculty and students. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECE 44000 - Transmission Of Information |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Analysis and design of analog and digital communication systems. Emphasis on engineering applications of theory to communication system design. The laboratory introduces the use of advanced engineering workstations in the design and testing of communication systems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 44100 - Distributed Parameter Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Transient and steady-state behavior of transmission lines, wave guides, antennas, propagation, noise, microwave sources, and system design. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 44200 - Transmission Of Information |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Applications of the principles of signal analysis to amplitude, phase, and frequency modulation systems. Behavior of receivers in the presence of noise. Pulse code modulation and multiplex systems. Emphasis on engineering applications of theory to communication system design. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ECE 44300 - Communications Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Experiments are related to modulation and detection, AM, FM, PWM, time-division multiplexing and noise analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ECE 44500 - Modern Filter Design |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Solution to the filtering approximation problem via Butterworth, Chebyshev, Elliptic, etc., approaches. Transfer function scaling and type transformations. Effects of A/D and D/A conversion. Digital filter design methods. Active filter design using operational amplifiers. Operation and design of switched capacitor filters. A laboratory for the construction of digital filters is provided. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 44600 - Digital Computational Techniques for Electronic Circuits |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Algorithmic and computational aspects of electronic circuit analysis, both linear and nonlinear. Numerical methods such as Newton-Raphson and various integration formulas. Sparse matrices and implicit integration techniques. Worst-case and tolerance analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECE 44700 - Modern Filter Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Solution to the filtering approximation problem via Butterworth, Chebyshev, elliptic, etc., approaches. Transfer function scaling and type transformations. Effects of A/D and D/A conversion. Digital filter design methods. Active filter design using operational amplifiers. Understanding and calculation of filter sensitivities with respect to element variations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ECE 44800 - Introduction To Communication Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Signal analysis, introduction to digital communication and pulse code modulation. Introduction to amplitude modulation and frequency modulation. Introduction to information theory. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the theory of continuous-time and discrete-time signals and systems.
2. Be able to apply knowledge of signals and systems to the analysis and design of analog communication systems.
3. Express signals in the frequency and time domains.
4. Evaluate signal bandwidth and its relationship with noise.
5. Understand the properties and use of analog modulation techniques.
6. Understand the properties and use of digital modulation techniques.
7. Know the bandwidth requirements for time-multiplexed signals.
|
| ECE 45100 - Industrial Automation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Operating principles, design, and application of programmable logic controllers. Data acquisition and data analysis using PCs; A to D and D to A converters, sensors and actuators, process variable measurement, signal conditioning; data acquisition and control software applications. Typically offered Summer Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECE 45300 - Fundamentals Of Nanoelectronics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Nanoelectronic devices are an integral part of our life, including the billion-plus transistors in every smartphone, each of which has an active region that is only a few hundred atoms long. This course is designed to convey the key concepts developed in the last 25 years which constitute the fundamentals of nanoelectronics and mesoscopic physics, assuming a minimal set of prerequisites. Topics covered include the new Ohm’s law, conductance quantization, the nanotransistor, spin valves, thermoelectricity, quantum systems and the non-equilibrium Green’s function (NEGF) method. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Ability to perform semiclassical analysis of charge flow in nanoelectonic devices.
2. Ability to perform semiclassical analysis of spin flow and heat flow in nanoelectronic devices.
3. Ability to perform quantum analysis of nanoelectonic devices.
|
| ECE 45400 - Software Engineering Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design methods utilized in the development of complex software systems, and their application in concurrent, real-time, and distributed object-oriented software environments. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECE 45500 - Integrated Circuit Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis, design, and fabrication of silicon bipolar and MOSFET monolithic integrated circuits. Consideration of amplifier circuit design and fabrication techniques with circuit simulation using Spice-2. Integrated operational amplifiers with difference amplifiers, current sources, active loads, and voltage references. Design of IC analog circuit building blocks. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 45600 - Digital Integrated Circuit Analysis And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. As applied t digital integrated circuits, the MDs transistor is studied in depth-from its fabrication to its electrical characteristics. Combinational, sequential, and dynamic logic circuits are considered. While the focus of the course is on CMOS technology, bipolar, nMOS, and BiCMOS circuits are introduced as well. SPICE is used as both an analysis and design tool. Semiconductor memory circuits are also discussed. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 45700 - Electronic Design Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory exercises illustrating the design and application of electronic circuits. Case studies of circuits presently in existing instruments, such as the color television receiver sampling oscilloscope, are used as a basis for the circuits investigated or designed. Pulse and analog circuits studied, as well as high voltage and power supplies. Signal processing, modulation, and sampling are used to demonstrate the circuits as interconnected into a complete system. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 45900 - Advanced Digital System Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design, simulation, and testing of digital systems using a hardware description language and programmable logic devices. Complex programmable logic devices (CPLDs) and field programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) will be studied and utilized. Laboratory will include design, simulation, implementation, and testing of designs on available FPGA/CPLD boards. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECE 46000 - Power Electronics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to power semiconductor devices, their characteristics and ratings. Analysis and design of power electronics circuits are emphasized. Topics include diode rectifiers, controlled rectifiers, a.c. voltage controllers, thyristor commutation techniques, choppers, pulse-width modulated (PWM) and resonant pulse inverters, static switches, and power supplies. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ECE 46100 - Software Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to software engineering principles, with special emphasis on the process, methods, and tools needed to develop and test quality software products and systems. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 46300 - Introduction To Computer Communication Networks |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the design and implementation of computer communication networks. The focus is on the concepts and the fundamental design principles that have contributed to the global Internet success. Topics include: digital transmission and multiplexing, protocols, MAC layer design(Ethernet/802.11), LAN interconnects and switching, congestion/flow/error control, routing, addressing, performance evaluation, internetworking (Internet) including TCP/IP, HTTP, DNS etc. This course will include one or more programming projects. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. An understanding of the fundamental principles underlying packet switching networks, and different Local Area Network technologies.
2. An ability to implement network protocols using network socket programming.
3. An understanding of the key principles behind retransmission protocols, congestion control algorithms, and TCP.
4. An understanding of the basic concepts of routing.
|
| ECE 46400 - Computer Architecture And Organization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design of computer systems with emphasis on computer architecture. Topics discussed include: Fundamentals of Computer Design, Instruction set principles and Examples, Pipelining, Advanced Pipelining and Instruction-Level Parallelism, Memory-Hierarchy Design, I/O Systems, Buses and Arbitration Techniques, Interconnection Networks, and Multiprocessors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify issues concerning performance analysis and cost vs. performance.
2. Understand the instruction set principles.
3. Describe the pipelining concept.
4. Understand data and control hazards.
5. Design approaches overcoming data hazard with dynamic scheduling.
6. Identify challenges of instruction-set parallelism.
7. Use thread level parallelism.
8. Understand issues involved in memory-hierarchy design, cost vs. speed.
9. Understand the concept of virtual memory and address mapping.
10.Describe cache memory and reducing cache misses.
11. Identify types of buses and explain bus arbitration schemes.
12.Explain I/O operating system based on polling, interrupts and DMA.
13.Understand issues concerning computer interconnection network.
14.Understand the fundamental of multiprocessors system.
15.Identify centralized vs. distributed shared-memory architectures.
|
| ECE 46500 - Embedded Microprocessors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Hardware and software design of small microprocessor-based systems, data acquisition, control, communication, I/O interface, small real-time operating systems, etc. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to learn to program in a high level programming language for embedded applications.
2. An ability to learn the hardware of the 8051 family of microcontrollers.
3. An ability to develop the mindset of multitasking and interrupt driven programming.
4. An ability to develop the mindset of data communications in the lower network layers.
5. An ability to develop the ability of embedded system co-design of both hardware and software.
6. An ability to develop an appreciation for efficiency of use of computing resources.
|
| ECE 46700 - Advanced Digital Systems/Embedded Microcontroller Design Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Advanced topics in digital system design, focusing on use of programmable logic devices and highly integrated embedded microcontrollers. Topics include use of programmable logic devices and their associated hardware/software development tools, and implementation of real-time control applications on an embedded microcontroller. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ECE 46800 - Introduction To Compilers And Translation Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The design and construction of compilers and other translators. Topics include compilation goals, organization of a translator, grammars and languages, symbol tables, lexical analysis, syntax analysis (parsing), error handling, intermediate and final code generation, assemblers, interpreters, and an introduction to optimization. Emphasis is on engineering a compiler or interpreter for a small programming language - typically a C or Pascal subset. Projects involve the stepwise implementation (and documentation) of such a system. Department permission required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| ECE 46810 - Operating Systems |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The design of systems programs, in particular, operating systems, assemblers, loaders, and compilers. The role of systems programs as the link between computer hardware and software is emphasized. Topics include: multiprogramming, CPU scheduling, memory management, file systems, concurrent processes, multiprocessors, security, and network operating systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| ECE 46900 - Operating Systems Engineering |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. The design and construction of operating systems for both individual computers and distributed (networked) systems. Basic concepts and methods for managing processor, main memory, block-structured storage, and network resources are covered. Detailed examples are taken from a number of operating systems, emphasizing the techniques used in networked versions of UNIX. These techniques are applied to design improvements of portions of a simplified, networked, UNIX-based operating system; the improvements are implemented and their performance is evaluated in laboratory experiments. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
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| ECE 47000 - Curricular Practical Training |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. An electrical and/or computer engineering work experience. This internship experience is intended to complement the student's academic plan-of-study and help prepare him/her for his/her future role as a practicing engineer. A letter from the prospective employer stating the period of employment, hours per week, job title, job qualifications, and job minimum period of employment is required. This course may not be taken in successive semesters. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ECE 47100 - Embedded Microcontroller, Microprocessor, and DSP-Based Systems |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A structured approach to the development and integration of embedded microcontroller/microprocessor/DSP-based systems. The course provides students with design experience of embedded systems. The course covers the microprocessor selection, the configuration of peripheral components, and the hardware abstraction techniques. The course also covers the C programming techniques for embedded systems and using a fixed point microprocessor for floating point calculations. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| ECE 47200 - Digital System Design VHDL |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the Very high speed integrated circuit Hardware Description Language (VHDL) programming, VHDL language constructs to build combinational and sequential logic circuits, data flow modeling, timing and physical parameters, mapping state flow diagrams to VHDL state machine descriptions, VHDL based synthesis and simulation, VHDL based digital logic design for implementation in programmable logic devices (PLDs), field programmable gate arrays (FPGAS), and application specific integrated circuits (ASICS), optimizing data paths including pipelining, resource sharing, etc. Some programming background is assumed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| ECE 47300 - Introduction To Artificial Intelligence |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The course introduces fundamental areas of artificial intelligence: knowledge representation and reasoning; machine learning; planning; game playing; natural language processing; and vision. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ECE 47400 - Introduction To Radio Frequency Circuit Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course for the analysis, design and simulation of radio frequency (RF) circuits and components for communication systems and industrial applications. It concentrates on such topics as fundamental concepts of transmission line theory, high frequency circuit behavior, designing tuning and matching networks, filter networks, power amplifiers, smith chart, two port networks and S-parameters. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. A basic knowledge of general RF circuits, components and systems.
2. An understanding of resonant circuits.
3. An ability to use Smith Chart in RF applications.
4. An ability to design impedance matching networks and passive RF filters.
5. An understanding of two port networks and S-parameters.
6. An understanding of RF power amplifiers.
7. An ability to use CAD tools in RF circuit design.
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| ECE 47600 - Digital Signal Processing |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and implementation of real time digital signal processing. Survey or continuous filter design using Butterworth, Chebychev, inverse Chebychev, elliptic, and Bessel approximations; type transformations; review of sampling theory, discrete time signals and systems, and Z-transforms; design of IIR filters using impulse invariance, bilinear transform, and a survey of direct techniques; design of FIR filters using Fourier series and windows, least squares error, and optimal equiripple techniques; properties and applications of discrete and fast Fourier transforms. Overview of spectual estimation techniques. Laboratory includes implementation of lecture topics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| ECE 47700 - Digital Systems Senior Project |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. A structured approach to the development and integration of embedded microcontroller hardware and software that provides senior-level students with significant design experience applying microcontrollers to a wide range of embedded systems (e.g., instrumentation, process control, telecommunications, and intelligent devices). The primary objective is to provide practical experience developing integrated hardware and software for embedded microcontroller systems in an environment that models one which students will most likely encounter in industry. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ECE 47900 - Senior Participation In Vertically Integrated Projects (VIP) In Electrical And Computer Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.0. This course provides an opportunity for undergraduate students to explore and develop comprehensive applications of electrical and computer engineering technologies, especially as they relate to active research areas of Purdue faculty members. Students will learn about the underlying research, and will work on teams to formulate applications of the research that address real-world needs. Students will attend a weekly lecture that provides an introduction to a broad range of applicable technologies and development tools – some associated with the activities of specific teams, and some addressing topics of more general value to students enrolled in the course. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to apply knowledge of communications, signal processing, and computer engineering to the design of applications solutions.
2. An understanding of design as a start-to-finish process.
3. An awareness of the customer in engineering design and professional and ethical responsibility.
4. An ability to function as part of a team and an appreciation for the contributions of other individuals on the team.
5. An ability to communicate effectively with both technical and non-technical audiences.
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| ECE 48300 - Digital Control Systems Analysis And Design |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The course introduces feedback computer controlled systems, the components of digital control systems, and system models on the z-domain (z-transfer functions) and on the time domain (state variable representations.) The objectives for system design and evaluation of system performance are considered. Various discrete-time controllers are designed including PID-controllers, state and output feedback controllers, and reconstruction of states using observers. The systems with the designated controllers are tested by simulations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| ECE 48500 - Embedded Real-Time Operating Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An introduction to embedded real-time operating systems, with an emphasis on embedded system software development, tasks, inter-task communications and synchronization as well as network software. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Familiarity with many of the issues involved with embedded systems.
2. Familiarity with key Real-Time Operating System terms and concepts.
3. Ability to program using system calls in a uC/OS-II environment.
4. Ability to program an embedded system with tasks and executive.
5. Understanding and ability to use tools to build an embedded real-time system.
6. Ability to specify, design and implement a small embedded system.
7. Ability to present design information effectively in the forms of technical reports and oral presentations.
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| ECE 48600 - Sensor-Based Robot Control Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Laboratory experiments and project illustrate the techniques and concepts of integrating sensory information (vision images from a CCD camera) into a real-time, computer-controlled robotic system. Topics include manipulator kinematics, simple computer vision techniques such as histograming, thresholding, and connectivity analysis, searching and game trees, and system communications. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ECE 48700 - Senior Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A real-life experience in engineering problem solving in a group setting from identification, planning and execution to professional-quality written and oral presentations. This is the first semester of a two semester course sequence. Prerequisites: Intent to graduate within two semesters. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| ECE 48800 - Senior Design II |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. A real-life experience in engineering problem solving in a group setting from identification, planning and execution to professional-quality written and oral presentations. This is the second semester of a two semester course sequence. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECE 48900 - Introduction to Robotics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Homogeneous transformations; kinematics of manipulator arms; dynamic equations using Newton-Euler and Euler-Lagrange formulations; inverse kinematics; trajectory generation; task planning; manipulator control; robot languages; robot sensing and vision; and industrial applications of robots. Lab experiments and final project are required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECE 49000 - Senior Participation In Engineering Projects In Community Service |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Together, the courses ECE 290 and ECE 390, and ECE 490 create a vertical project track under which students work in teams on long-term engineering projects. Each team consists of a mix of sophomores, juniors, and seniors. Projects of at least one-year duration are intended to solve real problems that are defined in consultation with "customers" from Purdue or the community. ECE 490 students are responsible for the management tasks of planning and organizing their team project activity and interacting with the faculty advisors and customer representatives. Their technical responsibilities include system design, solving technical problems, and training, monitoring, and directing the sophomores and juniors in the tasks of system construction, testing and deployment. Students are encouraged to participate in an EPOCS project team for two or more semesters via enrollment in ECE 290 while a sophomore, ECE 390 while a junior, and ECE 490 while a senior. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ECE 49100 - Engineering Design Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. The student selects an engineering design project and works under the direction of the faculty sponsor. Suitable projects may be from the local industrial, municipal, state, and educational communities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECE 49200 - Senior Design |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. General design methodology, consideration of alternative solutions, and project planning in design. Influence of safety, reliability, economics, and aesthetics on design of engineering systems. Interpretation of specifications and requests for proposals. Early in the course, teams of students will be assigned a major design problem that will be the focus throughout the course. Oral presentation and report writing required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| ECE 49500 - Selected Topics In Electrical And Computer Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Topics vary. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ECE 49595 - Selected Topics In Electrical And Computer Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Topics vary. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
Topics will vary due to the experimental nature of the course; therefore the Learning Outcomes will be established at the time of the experimental course offering. These outcomes will be based on a subset of the below ABET criteria:
1. An ability to apply knowledge of mathematics, science and engineering.
2. An ability to design and conduct experiments, as well as to analyze and interpret data.
3. An ability to design a system, component, or process to meet desired needs.
4. An ability to function on a multidisciplinary team.
5. An ability to identify, formulate, and solve engineering problems.
6. An understanding of professional and ethical responsibility.
7. An ability to communicate effectively.
8. The broad education necessary to understand the impact of engineering solutions in a global and societal context.
9. A recognition of the need for, and an ability to engage in, life-long learning.
10. A knowledge of contemporary issues.
11. An ability to use the techniques, skills, and modern engineering tools necessary for engineering practice.
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| ECE 49600 - Electrical Engineering Projects |
|
Arrange Hours and Credit. Topics vary. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECE 49700 - Research In Electrical Engineering I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individual research projects for students with honors classification. Requires prior approval of, and arrangement with, a faculty research advisor. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECE 49800 - Research In Electrical Engineering II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Continuation of ECE 497. Requires submission of a written thesis, public presentation, and oral defense of the research project. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECE 50100 - Introduction To Digital Processing Of Speech Signals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course on digital processing of speech signals expands and enhances the capabilities of electrical and computer engineering graduates. It is particularly useful for those specializing in areas including communication, signal processing and multimedia processing. The introductory topics in speech processing with computer projects are suitable for graduate students planning to advance their education and career in fields such as audio engineering, human-machine interfacing, speech and speaker recognition applications and multimedia applications. The course is aimed primarily to ECE graduate students specializing in communication and signal processing area. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the basics of speech signal characteristics and classification.
2. Apply different time and frequency domain techniques to analysis speech.
3. Extract features to classify and recognize speech and speakers.
4. Undertsand speech enhancements methods.
5. Understand and apply speech coding and compression techniques for storage and transmission.
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| ECE 50201 - Information Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a graduate-level introduction to information theory. Information theory is probably the most elegant mathematical theories, with the most direct and significant engineering impacts to our life in the information age. Information theory has found its applications in many areas, including statistics, computer sciences, biology, economics, etc. The focus of this course will be on the direct application of information theory in digital communications. We believe that the most important part of learning information theory is to learn a new way of thinking about engineering problems. In this sense, this course is beneficial not only to communication majored students, but also to students in other engineering disciplines. Prerequisites: a basic course in probability/statistics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. The students will be able to define what is meant by information.
2. The students will be able to show how we can compress the information in a source to its theoretically minimum value and show the tradeoff between data compression and distortion.
3. The students will be able to prove the Channel Coding Theorem and derive the information capacity of different channels.
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| ECE 50300 - Numerical Methods In Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Numerical methods, solutions of equations of one variable, interpolation and polynomial approximation, numerical integration and differentiation, numerical solution of initial-value problems, solution of linear systems, iterative methods for solving linear systems, approximation theory, approximating eigenvalues, solutions of systems or nonlinear equations, boundary-value problems for ordinary differential equations, numerical methods for partial-differential equations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Solve equations of one variable.
2. Apply interpolation and polynomial approximation.
3. Integrate and differentiate numerically.
4. Solve initial-value problems.
5. Solve linear systems exactly and using iterative techniques.
6. Understand approximation theory and approximating eigenvalues.
7. Solve systems of nonlinear equations.
8. Solve boundary-value problems for ordinary differential equations.
9. Solve partial-differential equations using numerical methods.
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| ECE 50500 - Networking Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will cover practical aspects of computer network programming, with emphasis on the Client/Server, P2P and distributed applications. The goal of this course is to introduce the students to the basics of computer networks and internet programming. We will introduce the students to the TCP/IP protocol stack and some of its important protocols. Students will also be introduced to multi-tier application development and RPC technologies including: RMI, CORBA, EJB, and Web Services. We will also look at industry trends and discuss some innovative ideas that have recently been developed. Some of the course material will be drawn from the web, industry white papers and internet RFCs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Assessing and demonstrating the impact on distributed applications of different transport layer protocols (UDP and TCP)
2. Identifying and assessing the impact of different protocol and applications platforms on distributed applications (such as sockets, RPC, RMI, JDBC, CORBA, COM/DCOM, etc.)
3. Demonstrating the platform independence of distributed applications developing and testing applications written in various languages (e.g. C, C++, Java)
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| ECE 50600 - Biomedical Instrumentation Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers engineering aspects of detection, acquisition and processing of signals from human body. Microcontrollers are used for common biomedical instrumentation design and implementation. The analog and digital electronics, analog to digital and digital to analog conversion, and interfacing with computers via microcontrollers are emphasized. The course is aimed primarily to graduate students specializing in interdisciplinary engineering. Recommended prerequisites: Circuits and Electronics; Analog and Digital Signal Processing; and Programming in C. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Analyze and design bioinstruments using microcontrollers.
2. Understand the origin of biosignals from various sources.
3. Acquire biological signals for analysis with microcontrollers or computers.
4. Understand biosensor and electrode design and apply them for signal acquisition.
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| ECE 50700 - Introduction To Biomedical Imaging |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the major aspects of modern medical imaging systems including x-ray imaging computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, ultrasound imaging, single-photon emission tomography and positron emission tomography. The main emphasis is to explain and exam the fundamental physics and engineering underlying each imaging modality, and the image acquisition, reconstruction and artifact correction. Students will gain technical knowledge and an overview of current status of medical imaging technologies. The course is aimed primarily to graduate students specializing in interdisciplinary engineering. Prerequisite: college level physics, signals and systems, and programming experience in MatLab or C. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the physical principles of modern medical imaging systems.
2. Understand data acquisition, image reconstruction and image processing in biomedical imaging.
3. Gain experience in clinical applications of each medical imaging modality.
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| ECE 50900 - Advanced Electric Drives |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers topics related to advanced methods for DC and AC electric drives control systems. The emphasis is on AC drives vector control techniques that are used when high performances are required to control torque, acceleration, speed and position: hybrid and electric vehicles, wind-electric energy generation, industrial robots, biomedical application, etc. Simulink-MATLAB based computer models are used to study the vector control of induction and synchronous AC machines, and real-time simulations are performed using dSPACE prototyping tool. The course is aimed primarily to ECE graduate students specializing in electric drives, power electronics and power systems area. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Use MATLAB-Simulink to analyze, model and simulate advanced electric drive systems.
2. Design observers for sensor-less motion control.
3. Design advanced control systems for DC electric drives.
4. Modeal, simulate and design vector control systems for AC electric drives.
5. Execute real time simulations of electric drives using the dSPACE DS 1104 controller board.
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| ECE 51000 - Introduction To Biometrics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Biometrics is an emerging technology for automatic human identification and verification using unique biological traits. Compared to traditional identification and verification methods, biometrics is more convenient for users, reduces fraud, and is more secure. It is becoming an important ally of security, intelligence, law enforcement, and e-commerce. The principle of various biometric technologies and systems is introduced. Especially, students analyze and design fingerprint recognition, face recognition, iris recognition, voice recognition, and multimodal biometric systems. Students have hands-on experience in designing and analyzing biometric systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| ECE 51100 - Psychophysics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (PSY 51100) An examination of the relationship between physical stimuli and perception (visual, auditory, haptics, etc.). Includes a review of various methods for studying this relationship and of the mathematical and computational tools used in modeling perceptual mechanisms. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ECE 51200 - Power Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers topics which are becoming increasingly important in present and future power systems such as: electric energy sources including renewable and the environment, AC transmission lines and underground cables, power flow, transformers in power systems, high voltage DC transmission lines, distribution systems, power quality, synchronous generators and reactive power, voltage regulation and stability, transient and dynamic stability, control of power systems, economic dispatch, transmission line faults, and transient over-voltages. Simulink/MATLAB and/or Pspice based computer simulations, use of Power-World simulator and PSCAD/EMTDC software that is widely accepted in industry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the theory and methods for analysis and control of power systems.
2. Understand the role and function of a power system and its components.
3. Carry out power flow studies of power systems.
4. Understand regulation, stability, and faults.
5. Analyze and design controllers for power systems.
6. Know how to use power analysis and simulation software.
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| ECE 51300 - Diffraction, Fourier Optics, And Imaging |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Modern theories of diffraction and Fourier optics for imaging, optical communications, and networking. Imaging techniques involving diffraction and/or Fourier analysis with application to tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, synthetic aperture radar, and confocal microscopy. Additional topics in optical communications and networking, including wave propagation in free space, fiber, integrated optics, and related design issues. Simulation studies, using Matlab and other software packages for analysis and design. Offered every third semester. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. A knowledge of a number of important technologies based on wave propagation such as digital diffractive imaging techniques and devices involving the principles of diffraction and/or Fourier analysis and synthesis techniques.
2. A knowledge of developments in the areas of device fabrication and computer technology for the fabrication of optical components and implementation of imaging/focusing modalities not possible until recently.
3. An ability to deal with the analysis of imaging and focusing techniques involving diffraction.
4. A knowledge of a number of other topics, such as dense wavelength division multiplexing (DWDM) systems and devices, micro/nano systems in need of rigorous diffraction theory, image and phase recovery involving Fourier analysis and Fourier iterative optimization techniques, focusing of wave energy and daylighting.
5. An ability to utilize the theoretical analysis of such topics based on Fourier analysis and synthesis for system and device fabrications.
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| ECE 51400 - Advanced Engineering Economics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Effective project managers have complete command of their project costs and a thorough understanding of the financial aspects of their business. This course reviews the fundamentals of accounting; examines project cost accounting principles; applications, and impact on profitability; examines the principles of project costing; covers the elements involved in cash management; introduces the framework for how projects are financed and the potential impact financing has on the projects; and a framework for using an effective project cost system. The course is aimed primarily to engineering graduate students interested in project management. Prerequisite: ME 31100 or ECE 31200 and a course in basic Statistics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand how the project cost system works and how it functions in the context of corporate accounting.
2. Learn how to set fees to make a profit; how to read corporate financial statements; and understand what the numbers mean; concepts of budgeting; and does the data tell a story.
3. Understand the basics they need to be effective project managers (and to some extent, firm managers) having full command of the project cost accounting system and its roll in delivery a project on time and in budget.
4. Learn to analyze engineering costs and capital investments, and the ability to compare and select individual projects.
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| ECE 51500 - Software Engineering For Embedded Systems |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course teaches the object-oriented system analysis and design for embedded systems. Unified modeling language and Shlaer/Mellor methodology are studied. Assigned project will lead students through the cycles of information gathering, problem analysis, model design, and model implementation for software development. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| ECE 51600 - Advanced Engineering Project Management |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (ME 51600). The fundamentals of project management including: Overview and concepts of project management (principles, body of knowledge, strategies); planning successful project (defining, specifying, delivery options, scheduling, budgeting); implementing (organizing the team, work assignments, team building, team launch, effective leadership); risk analysis; executing (performance measurement, maintaining the schedule, adjustments/mid-course corrections, record keeping, status reporting, communications, managing conflict, time management); and closeout (performance measurement, maintaining the schedule, adjustments/midcourse corrections, record keeping, status reporting, communications, managing conflict, time management). The course is aimed primarily to engineering graduate students interested in project management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. The student will understand the basics of project management including the importance and interrelationship of all the components.
2. They will be fluent in the Project Management Institute's process group functions (initiating, planning, executing, controlling, and closing) and the project knowledge areas (integration, scope, time, cost, quality, human resources, communications, risk, and procurement) and its roll in delivering a project on time and in budget.
3. The students will learn to analyze engineering costs and capital investments, and the ability to compare and select individual projects.
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| ECE 51801 - Quality Control |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (ME 51500). This course examines the design in order to acquire a better product/process quality. Other aspects of design included are robust design, parameter design, or Taguchi Techniques. This course also gives students a current understanding of the techniques and applications of design of experiments in quality engineering design. The students will learn design of quality control systems in manufacturing, use of advanced statistical process controls, sampling inspection techniques, process capability, and other statistical tools, Also included are vendor sourcing and control tools, methods for establishing specifications and tolerances, quality function deployment, and other quality control techniques. In addition, Six Sigma will be included. The course is aimed primarily to engineering graduate students interested in project management. Prerequisite: Basic Statistics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the design of quality into products and processes using design of experiments including robust/parameter design and tolerance design techniques.
2. Learn that design of experiments is a systematic and efficient method of design optimization for performance, quality, and cost in quality engineering.
3. Be able to use statistical quality control to improve the product and/or process quality for a given design.
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| ECE 52501 - Statistical Concepts In Engineering |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (ME 53200). This course is directed toward the graduate student who has never had a statistics course or whose last statistics course was taken some time ago and a refresher course is required. The primary purpose of this course is to provide a basic understanding of fundamental probability and statistical principles, their underlying assumptions, and their use in data analysis using real-world engineering problems. The course is aimed primarily to engineering graduate students interested in project management. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and proficiency in Calculus. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Have knowledge of basic statistical algorithms and techniques applied to Engineering problems.
2. Possess abilities to use correctly several statistical tools applied to a real problem.
3. Be able to properly select and apply the statistical tools applied to Engineering fields and evaluate the derived consequences of their conclusions.
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| ECE 52600 - Fundamentals Of MEMS And Micro-Integrated Systems |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (BME 58100) Key topics in micro-electro-mechanical systems (MEMS) and biological micro-integrated systems; properties of materials for MEMS; microelectronic process modules for design and fabrication. Students will prepare a project report on the design of a biomedical MEMS-based micro-integrated system. Offered in alternate years.
Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ECE 52701 - System Engineering |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (ME 53400). In today’s environment, there is an ever-increasing need to develop and produce systems that are robust, reliable, high quality, supportable, cost-effective, and responsive to the needs of the customer or user. Reflecting these worldwide trends, System Engineering course introduces students to the full range of system engineering concepts, tools, and techniques, emphasizing the application of principles and concepts of system engineering and the way these principles aid in the development, utilization, and support of systems. The course covers systems engineering from both a technical and management perspective. The course is aimed primarily to engineering graduate students interested in project management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the design of quality into products and processes using design of experiments including robust/parameter design and tolerance design techniques.
2. Learn that design of experiments is a systematic and efficient method of design optimization for performance, quality, and cost in quality engineering.
3. Be able to use statistical quality control to improve the product and/or process quality for a given design.
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| ECE 52800 - Measurement And Stimulation Of The Nervous System |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (BME 52800) Engineering principles addressing questions of clinical significance in the nervous system: neuroanatomy, fundamental properties of excitable tissues, hearing, vision, motor function, electrical and magnetic stimulation, functional neuroimaging, disorders of the nervous system, development and refinement of sensory prostheses. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| ECE 52900 - Introduction To Microwave Engineering |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to the basic aspects of microwave techniques. The topics will include Maxwell’s equations with their physical meaning, and most relevant forms; microwave generation, propagation, boundary conditions, and S parameters. Other topics include transmission lines, Smith Charts, microwave networks, couplers, detectors, mixers, and amplifiers. The course also includes the use of hands-on commercial CAD software. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Know basic properties of microwave propagation and reflection
2. Know how to use a Smith Chart and determine matching circuits
3. Effectively use a commercial CAD package to solve practical microwave problems.
4. Know the definition of noise parameters and its effect on active devices.
5. Know power gain definitions.
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| ECE 53000 - Wireless Communication Systems |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to the basic aspects of wireless communications. The topics will include cellular concept, channel assignment, handoff, trunking efficiency, frequency reuse, capacity planning, mobile radio propagation, multipath fading, modulation, multiple access techniques, and wireless networking. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand basic radio propagation.
2. Understand basics of antennas.
3. Understand cellular concepts including frequency reuse.
4. To know how modulation techniques affects bandwidth efficiency.
5. To know multiple access techniques including TDM, FDM and CDMA.
6. To know the effects of propagation on reception.
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| ECE 53100 - Fiber Optic Communications |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course deals with the fundamental principles for understanding and applying optical fiber technology in the transmission of information. Study topics include the introduction to optical transmission in fibers, fiber structure and modes, signal degradation, light sources, photodetectors, optical receivers, digital transmission systems, and point to point link analysis. Also included is the use of a simulation tool, Ansoft Designer, that can examine the performance of key components such as laser diodes, optical couplers and optical and photodetectors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Relate number of channels to bandwidth.
2. Determine a power budget.
3. Determine numerical aperture for a fiber.
4. Determine quantum efficiency for a detector.
5. Simulate selected optical components.
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| ECE 53200 - Computational Methods For Power System Analysis |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. System modeling and matrix analysis of three-phase power networks. Applications of numerical methods and computers to the solution of a variety of problems related to the planning, design, and operation of electric power systems. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| ECE 53600 - Introduction To Computational Intelligence |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic concepts in theory and paradigms for neural networks, evolutionary computation, and fuzzy logic; algorithms and applications for hybrids of these tools known as computational intelligence are explored. Topics include artificial neural networks, fuzzy systems, and evolutionary computation. Implementations of a number of paradigms are presented, including particle swarm optimization. Applications to various areas, such as biomedical engineering and nonlinear control, are examined. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| ECE 53700 - Multimedia Applications |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Treatment of multimedia algorithms and implementation using high-speed multimedia processors. Detailed discussion of entropy coding, transform coding, speech compression, image compression, video compression, and architecture, addressing modes, and instruction set of multimedia processors. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| ECE 53800 - Digital Signal Processing I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and algorithms for processing of deterministic and stochastic signals. Topics include discrete signals, systems, and transforms, linear filtering, fast Fourier transform, nonlinear filtering, spectrum estimation, linear prediction, adaptive filtering, and array signal processing. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. An understanding of the autocorrelation and covariance methods of estimating the correlation matrix.
2. Knowledge of the Discrete Time Fourier Transform (DTFT) and its relationship to the Discrete Fourier Transform (DFT).
3. Comprehension of parametric methods of spectrum estimation, including autoregressive modeling, minimum variance, linear prediction, and eigendecomposition-based methods.
4. An understanding of nonparametric methods of spectrum estimation, including the periodogram and the correlogram.
5. An understanding of linear filters, including the Wiener filter, as applied stochastic to signals.
6. An introduction to adaptive filters, including the method of steepest descent and the least-mean-square (LMS) algorithms.
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| ECE 54000 - Antenna Design, Analysis And Simulation Methods |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. In this course, theory of electromagnetic radiation, fundamentals of antennas, wire antennas and microstrip antennas, implementation EBG structures for microstrip antennas, antenna matching techniques, antenna arrays, analysis of antenna parameters, simulation of wire and microstrip antennas using 3D and planar electromagnetic simulators will be discussed. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Understanding of antenna parameters.
2. Understanding of electromagnetic radiation.
3. Basic knowledge of wire antennas.
4. Basic knowledge of microstrip antennas.
5. Basic knowledge of EBG structures.
6. Basic knowledge of antenna matching techniques.
7. Ability to use electromagnetic simulators in antenna design.
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| ECE 54300 - Wireless Communication Networks |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides an overview on the protocols and architectures of existing and emerging wireless networks. Specifically, this course involves the study of wireless networks working with existing protocols and new proposed protocols that are more suitable to the particular characteristics of the wireless technology. Protocols for medium access control, routing, and reliable transport, as well as middleware and applications for wireless networks, are covered. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| ECE 54400 - Digital Communications |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to digital communication systems and spread spectrum communications. Topics include analog message digitization, signal space representation of digital signals, binary and M-ary signaling methods, detection of binary and M-ary signals, comparison of digital communication systems in terms of signal energy and signal bandwidth requirements. The principal types of spread spectrum systems are analyzed and compared. Application of spread spectrum to multiple access systems and to secure communication systems is discussed. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| ECE 54700 - Introduction To Computer Communication Networks |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A qualitative and quantitative study of the issues in design, analysis, and operation of computer communication and telecommunication networks as they evolve toward the integrated networks of the future, employing both packet and circuit switching technology. The course covers packet and circuit switching, the OSI standards architecture and protocols, elementary queuing theory for performance evaluation, random access techniques, local area networks, reliability and error recovery, and integrated networks. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| ECE 54900 - Software-Defined Radio |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The course covers all aspects of SDR technology. Specifically it includes an overview of modern wireless systems, transceiver architectures, baseband signal processing algorithms, analog-to-digital converters, radio front-end components, digital hardware architectures, software architectures, middleware and the Software Communications Architecture (SCA), cognitive devices and networks, standardization bodies, software-defined radio products and services. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Knowledge of design considerations for software-defined radio technology and products.
2. Knowledge of software development methods for embedded wireless systems.
3. Knowledge of modern wireless systems and smart antenna algorithms.
4. Knowledge of digital hardware architectures and understanding of development methods.
5. An understanding of middleware in SDR and the SCA.
6. Understanding of analog RF components.
7. Understanding of ADC and DAC technology.
8. An awareness of current industry trends.
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| ECE 55200 - Introduction To Lasers |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to lasers and laser applications which does not require a knowledge of quantum mechanics as a prerequisite. Topics include: the theory of laser operation; some specific laser systems; nonlinear optics; optical detection; and applications to optical communications, holography, laser-driven fusion, and integrated optics. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| ECE 55400 - Electronic Instrumentation And Control Circuits |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis and design of special amplifiers, pulse circuits, operational circuits, DC amplifiers, and transducers used in instrumentation, control, and computation. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
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| ECE 55700 - Integrated Circuit Fabrication Laboratory |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Laboratory exercises in the fabrication and testing of silicon integrated circuits. Both bipolar and MOS integrated circuit test chips are fabricated and tested. Laboratory technique, the technology of integrated circuit fabrication, and electrical characterization are emphasized. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ECE 55900 - MOS VLSI Design |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to most aspects of large-scale MOS integrated circuit design including: device fabrication and modeling; inverter characteristics; designing CMOS combinational and sequential circuits; designing arithmetic building blocks and memory structures; interconnect and timing issues; testing and verification; and system design considerations. Term projects involve the complete design of a functional logic block or system using CAD tools. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
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| ECE 56200 - Introduction To Data Management |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis is on the design of systems that can manipulate and retrieve data from large databases using high level formal languages. Topics covered are: data models and data independence, normalization in relational databases, development of high level query languages for relational and hierarchical models, pictorial query languages, object oriented systems, and object oriented databases. The course includes a project that accounts for about 20 percent of the grade for the course. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ECE 56300 - Programming Parallel Machines |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course presents methods and techniques for programming parallel computers, such as multicore and high-end parallel architectures. Various parallel algorithms will be presented to demonstrate different techniques for identifying parallel tasks and mapping them onto parallel machines. Realistic science/engineering applications and their characteristics will be discussed. Parallel architectures to be considered are shared-memory and distributed-memory multiprocessor systems. Programming paradigms for these machines will be compared, including directive-based (OpenMP), message passing (MPI) and thread-based (Posix threads) methods. Methodologies for analyzing and improving the performance of parallel programs will be discussed. There will be a class project in which each student parallelizes and tunes the performance of a large computation application or developes/improves a tool that helps this process. Each student will prepare one lecture for a selected topic. Offered during odd years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ECE 56500 - Computer Architecture |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the problems involved in designing and analyzing current machine architectures. Major topics include performance and cost analysis, pipeline processing, vector machines and numerical applications, hierarchical memory design, and multiprocessor architectures. A quantitative approach allowing a computer system designer to determine the extent to which a design meets design goals is emphasized. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
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| ECE 56700 - FPGA Design For Signal Processing Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces methodologies of FPGA designs for signal processing applications. It provides system design experience using hardware description language (HDL) and commercial EDA tools. Topics covered include computer arithmetic, fixed-point vs. floating point, FIR/IIR implementations, multirate signal processing, implementation of FFT, modulation/demodulation using FPGA. Literature readings from IEEE Xplore will be assigned to students. Students are required to complete a course project that implements and simulates a signal processing algorithm using FPGAs. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. An understanding of computer arithmetic such as binary multipliers, binary divider, floating-point vs. fixed point, distributed arithmetic, CORDIC, etc.
2. An understanding of the implementations of Finite Impulse Response filters, Infinite Impulse Response filters.
3. An understanding of the implementations of multirate signal processing.
4. An understanding of FFT implementations.
5. An understanding of the implementations of modulation and demodulation.
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| ECE 56800 - Embedded Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to the design of embedded and ubiquitous computing systems including their hardware and software architectures, design methodologies and tools, and communication protocols. The lectures are organized into three parts namely, (a) basic design principles including specification and modeling, hardware components and platforms, software organization, embedded and real-time operating systems, interfacing with external environments using sensors and actuators, and communication in distributed embedded systems, (b) advanced topics such as energy management, safety and reliability, and security, and (c) case-studies of real-world systems from a variety of embedded application domains such as biomedical devices, smart cards and RFID, networked sensors, personal computing devices, home appliances and electronics, mobile robotics, etc. In addition to hands-on programming assignments using off-the-shelf embedded system development kits, the course will feature a comprehensive project where students will design, implement, and evaluate a prototype embedded system. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ECE 56900 - Introduction To Robotic Systems |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (C S 56900) The topics to be covered include: basic components of robotic systems; selection of coordinate frames; homogeneous transformations; solutions to kinematic equations; velocity and force/torque relations; manipulator dynamics in Lagrange's formulation; digital simulation of manipulator motion; motion planning; obstacle avoidance; controller design using the computed torque method; and classical controllers for manipulators. Basic knowledge of vector-matrix manipulations required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| ECE 57000 - Artificial Intelligence |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the basic concepts and various approaches of artificial intelligence. The first part of the course deals with heuristic search and shows how problems involving search can be solved more efficiently by the use of heuristics and how, in some cases, it is possible to discover heuristics automatically. The next part of the course presents ways to represent knowledge about the world and how to reason logically with that knowledge. The third part of the course introduces the student to advanced topics of AI drawn from machine learning, natural language understanding, computer vision, and reasoning under uncertainty. The emphasis of this part is to illustrate that representation and search are fundamental issues in all aspects of artificial intelligence. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
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| ECE 57300 - Compilers And Translator Writing Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course presents the concepts needed to efficiently design and implement translators. Basic compiler/translation theory and technology are briefly reviewed, after which the course focuses on software tools for the automatic construction of translators, as well as more complex concepts involving the construction of compiler symbol tables, etc. Using C on ECN UNIX, each student will construct a simple lexical-recognizer generator, parser generator, and code-generator generator. Basic understanding of compilers and proficiency in C language required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
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| ECE 57400 - Software Engineering Methodology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces students to current software process and life cycle models; software management methods for controlling and managing software projects. Topics include: life cycle models, requirements gathering, software planning, software quality, risk management, software inspections, software metrics, software testing, and software management concepts. Team project work is part of the course requirements. Students are expected to use their programming skills and knowledge of data structures to design and test software generated during their team project activities. A good working knowledge of C programming, UNIX tools and data structures. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| ECE 57700 - Engineering Aspects Of Remote Sensing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the concepts of multispectral image data generation and analysis. Basic principles of optical radiation, reflection, and measurement in natural scenes. Fundamentals of multispectral sensor design and data analysis for complex scenes. Application of signal processing and signal design principles and of statistical pattern recognition to these problems. Spatial image processing methods and algorithms as appropriate to land scene data. Practice with analysis of actual aircraft and spacecraft data in a cross-disciplinary environment. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ECE 58000 - Optimization Methods For Systems And Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to optimization theory and methods, with applications in systems and control. Nonlinear unconstrained optimization, linear programming, nonlinear constrained optimization, various algorithms and search methods for optimization, and their analysis. Examples from various engineering applications are given. Elements of linear algebra and calculus of several variables and some experience with MATLAB helpful. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 58100 - Microwave Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this course, analysis of microwave components and circuits in terms of scattering parameters, determination of electrical characteristics of waveguides and transmission lines through electromagnetic field analysis, design of microwave amplifiers and based on stability, bandwidth, gain, and noise figure criteria, generating layouts and measurement of these devices, fundamentals of antennas, and use of CAD tools in RF/Microwave circuit design will be discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. A basic knowledge of microwave circuits, components.
2. An understanding of waveguides and transmission lines.
3. An understanding of two port networks and S-parameters.
4. An understanding of RF power amplifiers.
5. An understanding of fundamentals of antennas.
6. An ability to use CAD tools in RF circuit design.
|
| ECE 58400 - Linear Control Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Linear spaces and linear operators, mathematical representations of linear systems, canonical forms, state space description, controllability, observability, realization, canonical decomposition, stability, introduction to Lyapunov methods, eigenstructrue assignment, partial and full order observers, disturbance decoupling. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the internal and external system descriptions.
2. Understand the stability, controllability, observability, and realizations concepts with an emphasis on fundamental results.
3. Understand the control systems design methods: state-feedback, state-estimation, and eigenstructure assignment.
|
| ECE 58900 - State Estimation And Parameter Identification Of Stochastic Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to point estimation, least squares, Bayes risk, and maximum likelihood. Optimum mean-square recursive estimation for nondynamic stochastic systems. State estimation for discrete-time and continuous-time dynamic systems. Parameter identification of stochastic systems using maximum likelihood. Stochastic approximation, least squares, and random search algorithms. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
|
| ECE 59500 - Selected Topics In Electrical Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Formal classroom or individualized instruction on topics of current interest. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECE 60000 - Random Variables And Signals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Engineering applications of probability theory. Problems on events, independence, random variables, distribution and density functions, expectations, and characteristic functions. Dependence, correlation, and regression; multivariate Gaussian distribution. Stochastic processes, stationarity, ergodicity, correlation functions, spectral densities, random inputs to linear systems; Gaussian processes. Prerequisite: Master's student standing or higher. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Problems on events, independence, random variables, distribution and density functions, expectations, and characteristic functions.
2. Dependence, correlation, and regression; multi-variate Gaussian distribution.
3. Stochastic processes, stationarity, ergodicity, correlation functions, spectral densities, random inputs to linear systems; Gaussian processes.
|
| ECE 60200 - Lumped System Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An investigation of the basic theory and techniques of modern system theory, emphasizing linear state model formulations of continuous and discrete time systems in the time domain and frequency domain. Coverage includes notions of linearity, time invariance, discrete and continuous time state models, canonical forms, associated transfer functions and impulse response models, the state transition matrix, the Jordan form, controllability, observability, and stability. Prerequisite: Master's student standing or higher and concurrent prerequisite: MA 51100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 60400 - Electromagnetic Field Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of general concepts (Maxwell's equations, materials interaction, boundary conditions, energy flow); statics (Laplace's equation, Poisson's equation); distributed parameter systems (classification of solutions, transmission lines, and wave-guides); radiation and antennas (arrays, reciprocity, Huygen's principle); a selected special topic (e.g., magnetostatics, waves in anisotropic media and optical fibers). Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: Master's student standing or higher. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 60600 - Solid State Devices |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A relatively-broad, moderate-depth coverage of semiconductor devices and related topics. The first portion of the course presents and examines semiconductor fundamentals required in the operational analysis of solid state devices. A detailed examination of the PN junction diode and PN junction devices follows. The final portion of the course treats heterojunction surface devices including the Schottky diode, the MOS capacitor and the MOSFET. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: Master's student standing or higher. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 60800 - Computational Models And Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Computation models and techniques for the analysis of algorithm complexity. The design and complexity analysis of recursive and nonrecursive algorithms for searching, sorting, set operations, graph algorithms, matrix multiplication, polynomial evaluation and FFT calculations. NP-complete problems. Prerequisite: Master's student standing or higher. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Computation models and techniques for the analysis of algorithm complexity.
2. The design and complexity analysis of recursive and non-recursive algorithms for searching, sorting, set operations, graph algorithms, matrix multiplication, polynomial evaluation and FFT calculations.
3. NP-complete problems.
|
| ECE 61000 - Energy Conversion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic principles of static and electromechanical energy conversion. Control of static power converters. Reference frame theory applied to the analysis of rotating devices. Analysis and dynamic characteristics of induction and synchronous machines. State variable analysis of electromechanical devices and converter supplied electromechanical drive systems. Prerequisite: Master's student standing or higher. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 61200 - Advanced VLSI Devices |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Device physics of advanced transistors. Process, device, circuit, and systems considerations affecting development of new integrated circuit technologies. Review of metal oxide semiconductor (MOS) fundamentals along with key process and circuit concepts. Short channel effects in sub-micron channel length metal oxide semiconductor field-effect transistors (MOSFETs) including device scaling considerations. Device physics and technology issues for sub-100 nm (nanoscale) MOSFETs. Limits of silicon device technology and key issues in the continuing miniaturization of devices. Alternative device structures to replace bulk MOSFET. Computer simulation employed throughout the course to examine device issues and prototype new device technologies. Offerd in alternate years. Prerequisite: ECE 60600. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 61500 - Nonlinear Optics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An in-depth study of nonlinear optics. After a review of linear effects, several nonlinear optical processes and applications are discussed. These include electro-optic switches and modulators, harmonic light generators, sum and difference frequency mixing, parametric amplifiers and oscillators, and phase conjugate mirrors. Discussions of nonlinear spectroscopy include topics such as two-photon absorption, saturation spectroscopy, Raman spectroscopy and double-optical resonance measurements. Photonechoes and other transient effects, and surface effects are also discussed. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: ECE 55200, 60400. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 61600 - Ultrafast Optics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the physics, technology, and applications of ultrashort laser pulses. Topics covered include the following: methods for generating and measuring ultrafast laser pulses; basic physical processes affecting ultrashort pulses; devices for manipulating ultrashort pulses; ultrafast nonlinear optics, including nonlinear optics in fibers, nonlinear refractive index effects, pulse compression, solitons, and all-optical switching; time-resolved spectroscopy of ultrafast materials processes; and applications to ultrafast optoelectronics. In addition, each student will select a specific topic for in-depth study. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: ECE 55200. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 61700 - Antennas: Design And Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Electrically small antennas; arrays; wire antennas and feeding arrangements; aperture antennas such as slots, horns, and parabolic reflectors; antennas for multiple frequencies including log-periodic and other frequency independent types; receiving antennas and the concept of antenna temperature; antenna measurements and evaluation. Prerequisite: ECE 44100 and concurrent prerequisite: ECE 60400. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 61800 - Numerical Electromagnetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The numerical solution of Maxwell's equations is studied. Numerical methods such as the Finite Element Method and the Finite Difference Method are presented for the solution of both differential and integral equations. Applications studied include: waveguides (microstrip, VLSI interconnects, optical, discontinuities), scattering (frequency selective surfaces, arbitrary scatterers), antennas, magnetics, semiconductor devices, and inverse scattering. Papers in the current literature are used. Offered every third semester. Prerequisite: ECE 60400. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 62000 - Introduction To Biomedical Imaging Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (BME 630) Overview of biomedical imaging systems and analysis. Examination of various imaging modalities, including X-ray, ultrasound, nuclear, and MRI. Microscopy including how images are formed and what types of information they provide. Image analysis techniques, including analysis of cardiac ultrasound, mammography, and MRI functional imagery. Offered in alternate years. Concurrent prerequisite: ECE 63700. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 62400 - Multimedia Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides a general coverage of three major areas that include multimedia data management (logical and physical modeling), broadband network architectures and protocols for distributed multimedia communication, and user interface environments. Various models and specification methodologies in these areas are introduced. The discussion is augmented with various case studies. Prerequisite: ECE 54700, 56200. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 62500 - Analysis Of Electromechanical Systems II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Extension of ECE 525. Electric propulsion systems including presentation of cycloconverter and rectifier-inverter drive systems. Dynamic and steady-state analysis of machine performance with series controlled rectifiers in the stator or rotor phases. MMF space harmonic analysis. Prerequisite: ECE 62500. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 62700 - Introduction To Cryptography And Secure Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces the basic concepts of cryptography. Various cipher systems are presented, including transposition and substitution systems, Block ciphers, RSA, and Knapsack. Methods used to attack ciphers are discussed with emphasis on complexity. Case studies of the use of cryptographic methods in communication systems are presented with some consideration given to privacy issues. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: ECE 60000. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 62900 - Introduction To Neural Networks |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Information processing with neural networks, biological and engineering implications, learning algorithms, current neural network models and architectures, implementational topics, applications in areas such as signal/image processing, pattern recognition, optimization, simulation, system identification, nonlinear prediction, communications, and control. Concurrent prerequisite: ECE 60000. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 63300 - Modeling And Simulation Of Power System Components |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Recommended for those interested in learning to use computer simulation to investigate the dynamic and controlled behavior of electrical power components. Beginning with an introduction to MATLAB/SIMULINK, the course goes through the key steps of modeling, implementing and verifying the simulation of single and three-phase transformers, single and three-phase induction machines, three-phase wound field synchronous machines and permanent magnet machines useful in power applications, each case amply illustrated in projects around some interesting topics. Students are expected to implement and verify about 10 simulation projects and also discuss observed behaviors on topics such as inrush current in transformers, motoring, generating and braking operation of machines, and pulsating torque from subsynchronous resonance. Prerequisite: ECE 42500 or 43200. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 63400 - Digital Video Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Digital video systems. Characteristics of basic analog video systems, including bandwidth constraints, color encoding, and composite signal formation. Digital video concepts with emphasis on processing of time-varying images. Topics include: filtering, enhancement, restoration, and motion estimation and prediction. Digital video compression techniques, including intraframe coding approaches, with particular emphasis on JPEG. MPEG1 and MPEG2 video compression standards. Low bit rate approaches, including H.261, H.263, and MPEG4. Applications include: video servers, transmission systems, high definition television, multimedia systems, and videoconferencing systems. Offered in alternate years. Concurrent prerequisite: ECE 60000. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 63700 - Digital Image Processing I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to digital image processing techniques for enhancement, compression, restoration, reconstruction, and analysis. Lecture and experiments covering a wide range of topics. 2-D signals and systems, image analysis, and image segmentation. Achromatic vision, color image processing, color imaging systems, image sharpening, interpolation, decimation, linear and nonlinear filtering, printing and display of images. Image compression, image restoration, and tomography. Offered every third semester. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 63800 - Principles Of Digital Color Imaging Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic principles of color science: physiology of the human eye, trichromatic and color opponent models for color, and uniform color spaces. Color reproduction in electronic imaging systems: color models for input and output devices, color imaging system calibration, color quantization and halftoning, and color printing. Color appearance and computational color: color appearance models, models for color constancy, and physics-based models for color. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: MA 51100 and Master's student standing or higher. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 63900 - Error Control Coding |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The theory and practice of error control coding is examined. The study includes the arithmetic of Galois fields as well as linear block, cyclic, and convolutional codes. Some applications of codes in digital communication systems and in computer systems are presented. Offered every third semester. Concurrent prerequisite: ECE 60000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 64100 - Digital Image Processing II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced treatment of selected topics in digital image processing. Image models, color, digital video, synthetic aperture radar, magnetic resonance imaging, stack filters, morphological filters, in-verse problems in computational vision, multiscale techniques. Offered every third semester. Prerequisite: ECE 60000, 63700. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 64200 - Information Theory And Source Coding |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A treatment of the basic concepts of information theory. Determination of channel capacity and its relation to actual communication systems. Rate distortion theory is introduced, and the performance of various source codes is presented. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: ECE 60000. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 64500 - Estimation Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course presents the basics of estimation and detection theory that are commonly applied in communications and signal processing systems. Applications in communications and signal processing will be considered throughout. Prerequisite: ECE 60000. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 64700 - Performance Modeling Of Computer Communication Networks |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The mathematical background needed for the performance and stability analysis of computer communication networks is developed. Point processes, Markov processes, and queuing processes are used in the modeling and analysis of queues, interconnected queues such as ARPANET, and random multiple access networks such as Xerox's ETHERNET. Distributed control of random access networks and centralized control of queuing networks is considered. The techniques developed are useful in the design of computer systems as well as computer networks. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: ECE 60000. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 64800 - Wavelet, Time-Frequency, And Multirate Signal Processing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced topics in signal processing, including time-frequency analysis, multiscale edge detection, wavelet bases and filter banks, and techniques for approximation, estimation, and compression using wavelets. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: ECE 53800. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 65000 - Topics In Solid-State Devices And Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An introductory treatment of selected device and materials related topics. Topics will change from semester to semester and will be announced in advance. The list of possible topics includes solid state microwave devices, optoelectronics, laser-quantum electronics, magnetics, noise in semiconductor devices, acoustic wave devices, energy conversion, device fabrication, electroceramics, MOS devices, thin-film devices, and memory devices. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECE 65400 - Solid State Devices II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to advanced concepts in semiconductor devices as an extension and continuation of ECE 606. Topics include charge storage and transfer in deep depletion MOS devices (CCDs and DRAMs); negative differential mobility and transit time effects in microwave oscillators (Gunn and IMPATT diodes); spontaneous and stimulated emission, quantum efficiency, and charge confinement in photonic devices (LEDs and double heterojunction lasers); and quantum efficiency and spectral response in conventional and avalanche photodiodes. Prerequisite: ECE 60600. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 65600 - Electronic Transport In Semiconductors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A treatment of the microscopic and phenomenological physics of carrier transport in bulk semiconductors and in semiconductor devices. The Boltzmann transport equation is introduced as are techniques for solving it analytically and numerically. The physics of carrier scattering in common semiconductors is explored. Theoretical treatments of low and high field transport are compared with measured results. Balance equations are derived as moments of the Boltzmann Transport Equation and are applied to the analysis of sub-micron semiconductor devices. Students are expected to be able to apply elementary concepts of quantum mechanics and solid state physics. Offered every third semester. Prerequisite: ECE 60600. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 65800 - Semiconductor Material And Device Characterization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comprehensive survey of modern characterization techniques routinely used to determine solid-state material and device parameters. Concepts and theory underlying the techniques are examined, and sample experimental results are presented. The coverage includes electrical, optical, chemical, and physical characterization methods. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: ECE 60600. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 65900 - Quantum Phenomena In Semiconductors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for graduate students familiar with semiconductor fundamentals, with engineering electromagnetics and with linear algebra, but having no significant acquaintance with either quantum mechanics or statistical mechanics. The purpose of the course is to introduce the relevant concepts of quantum mechanics and nonequilibrium statistical mechanics as possible using device-related examples. Topics include: preliminary concepts, equilibrium, restoration of equilibrium, transport, effective mass equation, optical properties, advanced concepts. Offered every third semester. Prerequisite: ECE 60600, MA 51100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 66100 - Computer Vision |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course deals with how an autonomous or a semi-autonomous system can be endowed with visual perception. The issues discussed include: sampling from a topological standpoint; grouping processes; data structures, especially hierarchical types such as pyramids, quadtrees, octrees, etc.; graphic theoretic methods for structural description and consistent labeling; issues in 3-D vision such as object representation by Gaussian spheres, generalized cylinders, etc. Prerequisite: ECE 57000. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 66200 - Pattern Recognition And Decision-Making Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (C S 662) Introduction to the basic concepts and various approaches of pattern recognition and decision-making processes. The topics include various classifier designs, evaluation of classifiability, learning machines, feature extraction and modeling. Prerequisite: ECE 30200. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 66300 - Compiler Code Generation, Optimization, And Parallelization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course presents the concepts needed to design and implement production quality code generators for any of the more popular languages and families of computer architecture (including various pipelined, superscalar, and macro-parallel machines). Flow analysis and concurrency detection, as well as optimizations and loop and irregular code parallelizations, are covered in detail. Using C on ECN UNIX, each student will complete a project implementing a simple optimizer/parallelizer. Prerequisite: ECE 56500, CS 50200 or ECE 46800 or 573000. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 66400 - Formal Languages, Computability, And Complexity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics in computability theory and formal languages include recursive function theory, the equivalence of various generic programming languages for numeric calculations and string manipulations, regular languages and finite state automata, and context-free and context-sensitive languages. In complexity theory, emphasis is on the theory of NP-completeness, including proof methods, the distinctions between strong- and weak-sense NP-completeness, NP-hardness, and performance-guaranteed approximation algorithms. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: ECE 60800. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 66600 - Advanced Computer Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of theoretical aspects of advanced computer systems where multiprocessing is used. Topics include the design, architecture, and performance evaluation of multiprocessor memories, interconnection networks, and computational pipelines. Also included are the topics of scheduling, synchronization, resource allocation, load-balancing, partitioning and deadlock avoidance in multiprocessors. Also covered are the design and analysis of parallel algorithms, programming languages and automatic approaches to parallelism detection/exploitation for concurrent computation. Prerequisite: ECE 56500, 60800. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 67000 - Modeling And Optimization Of High-Performance Interconnects |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. RLC extraction of VLSI interconnects. Modeling of interconnects as RLC trees or networks. Elmore delay model. Reduced-order modeling: moment matching, Pade approximation, and Krylov-subspace methods. Device modeling with consideration of resistive shielding in the interconnection load. Delay calculation with consideration of devices and interconnects. Repeater insertion and planning at floorplanning. Timing-driven placement: zero-slack algorithm for delay budgeting, net-based placement, and path-based placement. High-performance clock synthesis: zero-skew routing, bounded-skew routing, and useful-skew routing. Term projects investigating interconnect-related issues are assigned. Prerequisite: ECE 55900. Typically offered Fall (even years).
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 67300 - Distributed Computing Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discussions of the design issues of distributed computing systems (DCS). The general theory of distributed transaction management, reliability, and resource management is discussed. Various algorithms and specification methodologies for DCS are introduced. A general coverage of the three major areas of DCS, namely: distributed operating systems, distributed databases, and distributed AI is provided. The discussion is augmented with various case studies. Prerequisite: ECE 46900 or introductory course in operating systems. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 67500 - Introduction To Analysis Of Nonlinear Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to modeling of dynamic control systems. State plane and numerical methods for solving modeling equations. Linearization and describing function techniques. Stability concepts. Controller and state estimator design for nonlinear systems. Variable structure sliding mode control. Vector field techniques. Introduction to chaos. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: ECE 60200. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 67600 - Academic Oral Communication For International Research Students |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Discussions of and activities related to such topics as appropriate nonverbal communication; learning styles; strategies for effective speech and listening; and speech acts for the classroom, office, and laboratory. Individual weekly tutoring sessions to improve speech comprehension. Prerequisite: Master's student standing or higher and Electrical & Computer Engineering majors only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 67700 - Communication Aspects Of Academic Research |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Topics relevant to oral and written communication needs of Ph.D. students. Three papers are written: a journal article review, a literature review, and the choice of a thesis proposal, conference paper, or a journal article. Library and Internet research strategies and resources; research/writing ethics; citing sources; citation styles; and academic language. Oral presentations based on the written projects. Extensive peer revision and editing and out-of-class writing conferences with the instructor. Prerequisite: Master's student standing or higher and Electrical & Computer Engineering majors only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 67800 - Radar Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the system aspects of modern radar engineering. The theoretical basis for radar performance analysis is developed and applied to radars designed for a variety of different applications. Consideration is given to system parameters such as receiver noise, antenna characteristics, operating frequency, target characteristics, transmitted signal modulation, and methods of detection. Attention is given to radars for special purposes, such as automatic range and angle tracking, moving target indication, and resolution enhancement through synthetic aperture techniques. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: ECE 60000. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 67900 - Advanced Digital Communications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides a detailed examination of optimum digital communication principles and introduces three advanced topics critical to the design of digital communication systems: system synchronization; techniques for communication in nonideal channels (equalization); and communication over fading/multipath channels. Theoretical principles and practical implementations are considered. Prerequisite: ECE 54400, 60000. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 68000 - Modern Automatic Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theoretical methods in optimal control theory. Topics include the calculus of variations and the Pontryagin minimum principle with applications to minimum energy problems. Geometric methods will be applied to the solution of minimum time problems. Computational methods, singular problems, observer theory, and sufficient conditions for existence of solutions are also discussed. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: ECE 60200. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 68400 - Linear Multivariable Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A state space investigation of multi-input, multi-output control design problems from the geometric perspective. The course will detail the theory and design algorithms needed for a solution to the state feedback eigenvalue assignment problem, the disturbance decoupling problem with and without internal stability, the output stabilization problem, and the tracking (or regulator) problem with internal stability. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECE 68800 - VLSI Testing And Verification |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discusses different aspects of VLSI testing and formal verification of designs. Design and manufacturing defect models are introduced along with test generation and fault simulation algorithms targeting the different fault models. Both combinational and sequential logic testing are covered, and different synthesis for testability schemes such as BIST (Built-In-Self-Test), scan path design, etc., are introduced. Other new and emerging test and verification techniques also are discussed. Offered every third semester. Prerequisite: ECE 55900. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECE 69300 - Advanced Intern Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Graduate-level project course in ECE based on off-campus intern position. Individual research projects are approved by the supervising Purdue ECE faculty member before registering for the course. An approved written report must be filed before credit is accepted. This course cannot be used to satisfy the minimum course requirements for the master's or Ph.D. degrees. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Internship
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECE 69400 - Electrical And Computer Engineering Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Seminar presentations by representatives from industry, members of the faculty of the School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, and other staff and faculty of Purdue University. The presentations introduce the student to a wide variety of current topics relevant to the technical and career aspects of electrical and computer engineering. Technical topics span the entire spectrum of electrical and computer engineering. Career topics include the importance of interpersonal communications, opportunities beyond graduate school, interviewing techniques, and descriptions of non-typical jobs. Required of electrical and computer engineering graduate students at Purdue during one of their first two semesters in residence. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECE 69401 - Electrical And Computer Engineering Graduate Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Seminar presentations by members of the faculty of the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, staff and other faculty of IUPUI, researchers from academia, and representatives from industry. The presentations introduce the student to a wide variety of current topics relevant to the technical, educational and career aspects of electrical and computer engineering. This course cannot be used to satisfy the PhD seminar requirement. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Increased understanding of academic and research topics in electrical and computer engineering.
2. Ability to apply seminar topic/information into graduate studies.
|
| ECE 69500 - Advanced Topics In Electrical And Computer Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Formal classroom or individualized instruction on advanced topics of current interest. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECE 69600 - Advanced Electrical Engineering Projects |
|
Arrange Hours and Credit. Individual research projects to be approved by the supervising faculty member before registering for the course. An approved written report must be filed before credit is accepted. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECE 69700 - Directed Reading In Electrical Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individualized reading course supervised by an appropriate faculty member and pertaining to a topic not intended for a subsequent project or thesis done by that student. Approval for each reading course must be obtained from the department prior to registration. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECE 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECE 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
Department: Electrical & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECE C1990 - Cooperative Education Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's academic program and preparedness for an intended career with a business, industry, or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the co-op practice is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECE C2990 - Cooperative Education Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's academic program and preparedness for an intended career with a business, industry, or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the co-op practice is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECE C3990 - Cooperative Education Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's academic program and preparedness for an intended career with a business, industry, or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the co-op practice is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECE I1990 - Career Enrichment Internship I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's preparedness for entering an initial or second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECE I2990 - Career Enrichment Internship II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's preparedness for entering an initial or second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECE I3990 - Career Enrichment Internship III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's preparedness for entering an initial or second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECE I4940 - Career Enrichment Internship IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's preparedness for entering an initial or second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECET 10000 - Introduction To Electrical And Computer Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An introduction to the different fields of Electrical and Computer Engineering Technology. Hands-on laboratory techniques along with the exposure to lab procedures and safety will be introduced. Students would be engaged in Internet and Library Research and learn about University wide resources and how to best utilize them. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECET 10100 - Electrical Circuits |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of DC electrical circuits and AC electrical circuits. Topics include Circuit Components (R, L, C), voltages, currents, power, Ohm's law, Kirchhoff's laws, series and parallel circuits, circuit theorems, electrical measurements, sinusoidal AC voltages, currents, impedance, RL circuits, RC circuits, and RLC circuits. Not open to EET majors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ECET 10200 - Electrical Circuits I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of DC electrical circuits, Ohm's Law, Kirchoff's Laws, series and parallel circuits, power, magnetism, ammeters, voltmeters, ohmmeters, inductance, capacitance, and an introduction to alternating voltages, currents and reactances. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
|
| ECET 10300 - Topics In Electrical Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. This course includes specialized topics and skills associated with electrical technology. The level of coverage varies according to the audience. Since various electrical/electronics topics may be offered under this title. Does not carry credit toward degree requirements in Electrical Engineering Technology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECET 10500 - Digital Fundamentals I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of logic gates, binary arithmetic codes, Boolean algebra, mapping, adders, comparators, decoders, encoders, multiplexers, and demultiplexers. Small Scale (SSI) and Medium Scale (MSI) integrated circuits and programmable logic devices are used in combinatorial and sequential circuits. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECET 10600 - Success In Electrical And Computer Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Focus on beginning academic career information specific to students in the ECET department. Survey of ECET department programs. Presents essential tools for collegiate success, including campus resources, time-management skills, study skills, fundamental computer usage, and library skills. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECET 10700 - Introduction To Circuit Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Voltage, current, resistance, Ohm's law, Kirchhoff's current and voltage laws, resistance combinations, and The'venin's, Norton's and superposition theorems are studied and applied. DC and AC circuits are studied and utilized, with basic AC terminology described. Ideal RC coupling and filter circuits and RC switching circuits are introduced. Fundamental analog circuits with ideal or near-ideal electronic devices are utilized in the lecture and laboratory to enhance the understanding of basic circuit laws and theorems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 10900 - Digital Fundamentals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces basic gate and flip-flop logic devices and their application in combinational and sequential digital circuits. Topics include decoders, displays, encoders, multiplexers, demultiplexers, registers, and counters. Logic circuit analysis, implementation of circuits using standard IC chips or programmable logic devices, circuit testing, and troubleshooting are emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 11000 - Computer Systems Architecture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to PC based system architecture. Identification, installation and upgrading of microcomputer modules, Windows Operating System. Ability to configure IRQ's, I/O addresses and set switches and jumpers. Distinguish between the popular CPUs. Identify the categories of Memory. Identify the popular types of motherboards, their components and their architecture. Differentiate between the different BUSes and their interfaces. Basic concepts and terminology of Networking. Diagnosing and trouble shooting common module problems and system malfunctions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECET 11100 - Digital Circuits |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of switching circuits, waveshaping, logic gates, arithmetic codes, Boolean algebra, mapping and other simplification techniques. Discrete devices and small-scale (SSI) and medium-scale (MSI) integrated circuits are used in combinational and introductory sequential logic circuits. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ECET 11200 - How Electrical Things Work |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This engineering science course explains how electrical things work to offer an understanding into the complexities of today's technology. The goal of this course is to demystify modern technology, and to explain the theory and scientific principles behind the electrical and physical devices that exist in our everyday lives. May not be used for credit by ECET majors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECET 11400 - Introduction To Visual Basic |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to programming using the Visual Basic language and the NET integrated development environment. Example applications are typical of what may be found in business or technical environment with an emphasis on object orientated programming concepts. Topics to be covered include the syntax and structure of the VB language; controls, dialog boxes, and other interface tools; menu design; multiple forms; error-trapping; and arrays. Other topics that may be covered include object linking and embedding (OLE); VB for applications; database development using record sets and data bound controls; data handling; grids; validation and election; drag and drop,; and graphics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| ECET 11600 - Electrical Circuits |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. This course covers circuit components, R, L, C; voltage; current; power; Ohm;s law, Kirchhoff' laws; series and parallel circuits; electrical measurements; sinusoidal voltages; currents; impedances; transformers; motors; polyphase systems, and the National Electrical Code. This course is a service course for non-ECET majors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and recognize electrical safety practices.
2. Identify the terminology associated with current, voltage, and dc circuits.
3. Convert from one unit of measure to another.
4. Draw schematic circuits of batteries, and calculate the total voltage and current available for different series, parallel, and series-parallel cell and battery connections.
5. Accurately read resistor color code and verily & the results with an ohm meter.
6. Compute total resistance for series, parallel, and series-parallel circuits.
7. Measure total resistance for series, parallel, and series-parallel circuits.
8. Solve problems involving power, current and voltage.
9. Solve unknown values in series, parallel, and series-parallel dc circuits.
10. Identify the terminology associated with magnetism inductance and capacitance.
11. Demonstrate how capacitance reacts in a circuit.
12. Identify the terminology associated with alternating current.
13. Setup an Oscilloscope and accurately measure.
14. Describe and accurately measure RMS, peak, and peak-to-peak voltages.
15. Explain the effects of capacitor and inductors in AC circuits.
16. Solve for capacitive and inductive reactance in AC circuits.
17. Demonstrate the characteristics of a series RC Network.
18. Work with others in laboratory problem solving.
|
| ECET 11700 - Circuits Problem Solution Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course provides students with structured assistance in developing problem-solving skills in circuit fundamentals. Students work together in small groups to complete class assignments. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 11900 - Digital Problem Solution Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course provides students with structured assistance in developing problem-solving skills in digital fundamentals. Students work together in small groups to complete class assignments. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 12000 - Gateway To Electrical Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces students to the academic and professional field of electrical and computer engineering technology. Familiar applications of technology that impact today’s and tomorrow’s society are blended with foundational electrical and electronics principles. Practical systems are examined to illustrate the diverse knowledge required to design, analyze, and solve problems in multifaceted systems. Skills needed to explore electronic systems using standard laboratory instrumentation and methods of measurement are introduced. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply fundamental laws of electrical and electronic circuits to analyze systems and circuits.
2. Assemble and test circuits (virtual and real), measuring electrical quantities using standard instrumentation.
3. Decompose a system into functional blocks; and in some applications, blocks into circuits.
4. Utilize technology to control electronic circuit actions.
5. Utilize structured problem solving techniques to analyze fundamental applications in electronics.
6. Demonstrate knowledge of and apply electrical safety.
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| ECET 14600 - Digital Circuits II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Basic digital system techniques with emphasis on programmable logic and ASIC theory. Computer aided design is strongly emphasized along with system considerations such as criteria for device selection, testability and vendor selection. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify the various types of digital logic devices, and be able to select the correct device for a particular type of project.
2. Use the Quatrus II software to enter designs using standard industry.
techniques such as schematic entry, waveform entry and text entry.
3. Work together as teams to solve complex problems using the techniques taught in the course.
4. Present written and oral reports as teams representing solutions to complex problems.
5. Design systems that meet criteria defined by course.
6. Use the Quatrus II software to simulate designs and compare results against design criteria.
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| ECET 15200 - Electrical Circuits II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of DC and AC electrical circuits, network theorems, j operator, phasors, reactances, impedances, phase relationships, power, resonance, ideal and air-core transformers and an introduction to graphical techniques and and an introduction to graphical techniques and transients. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
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| ECET 15400 - Analog Electronics I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of electronic devices such as the diodes, FET, BJT, Thyristors, MOSFET and operational amplifier. Analysis and design of electronic circuits such as the comparator, amplifier, filter, oscillator and voltage regulator. Other topics include the heat sinks and thermal design. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
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| ECET 15500 - Digital Fundamentals II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of ECET 10900. Sequential logic circuits, flip-flops, counters, finite state machines, programmable logic devices, shift registers, logic families, and introductory computer concepts. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
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| ECET 15700 - Electronics Circuit Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Capacitors, inductors, switching circuits, transformers, rectifiers, linear regulators, dependent sources, operational amplifiers, BJT- & MOSFET-based small-signal amplifiers, waveform generation, and programmable analog devices are studied. Circuit fundamentals such as Kirchhoff's laws are utilized in analysis and design of circuits. Computer simulation is used. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 15900 - Digital Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course continues the study of combinational and sequential digital applications using programmable logic devices and standard logic devices. The input and output characteristics of the various common logic families, the appropriate signal conditioning techniques for on/off power interfacing, digital and analog signal interfacing techniques, and memory devices and systems are discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 16100 - Analog Electronics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of solid state devices and circuits. Topics include diodes, LED, photosensitive devices, zener diodes, bipolar transistors, MOS devices, linear integrated circuits, and related application circuits such as rectifiers, sensing circuits, various transistor amplifiers, transistor switches, linear OP-AMP circuits, and non-linear OP-AMP circuits. Not open to EET majors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ECET 16400 - Applied Object-Oriented Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Problem solving and computing with emphasis on electrical engineering technology applications. Introduction to an object programming language as applied to solving electrical technology problems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
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| ECET 17700 - Data Acquisition And Systems Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental electrical parameters and measurement techniques are introduced. These are then applied to implementing power interfaces, actuators and sensors. Modules that provide signal conditioning, data conversion, filtering and controllers are evaluated. A full, closed loop control system is built and evaluated. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Make laboratory measurements using digital multimeters, oscilloscopes and computer based data acquisition instruments.
2. Trace measurements to NIST standards.
3. Implement and evaluate the performance of electronic components at the module/block level while calculating key circuit parameters.
4. Evaluate the performance of a closed loop system.
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| ECET 17900 - Introduction To Digital Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces computing systems and defines the major classes of computing devices. Sequential and concurrent operations, along with logic and control structures, are covered. Knowledge of fundamental computing principles is discovered. Common software tools are used to create, test, and debug systems. Systems are constructed from standard blocks with a focus on subsystem operation and performance, troubleshooting/debugging and testing. Common applications of embedded systems are introduced. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the major classes of computing devices and the primary applications of each.
2. Describe and distinguish the basic building blocks of conditional and unconditional logic.
3. Convert numbers between number systems (bases) and compute arithmetic operations.
4. Describe and distinguish the relationships between concurrent and sequential events.
5. Describe and distinguish the primary tools used to create, test, and debug computing system hardware and software components.
6. Construct hardware and software components comprised of logical building blocks from given requirements.
7. Troubleshoot hardware and software systems comprised of logical building blocks by using logical deduction.
8. Apply embedded microcomputer systems to solve problems.
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| ECET 19600 - Introduction To EET And Projects |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course introduces ECET projects and the ECET program. Included are topices about ECET projects, options and electives in the ECET curriculum, university services, study techniques and student employment and career opportunities. Also introduced are techniques for proper and safe use of basic hand and machine tools, and the processes of fabricating, assembling and testing printed circuit boards. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 20100 - Mathematical Modeling And Simulation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the computer based on methods of mathematical modeling and simulation of electrical and electronic circuits and systems, instrumentation and measurement procedures. Students will learn to use the up-to-date software tools. Topics will also include probability and statistical methods. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. To use MATLAB in solving problems in Electrical and Electronic circuits.
2. To use system-level analysis.
3. To simulate Electrical and Electronic circuits.
4. To use instruments effectively.
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| ECET 20400 - Analog Electronics II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of the applications of transistors, integrated circuits, and other solid-state devices. Feedback principles as applied to amplifiers, oscillators, and regulated power supplies. Includes large-signal power amplifiers, special-purpose amplifiers, and AM and FM modulation and detection techniques. Introduction to filters as applied to tuned amplifiers and rectifier circuits. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| ECET 20500 - Introduction To Microprocessors |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An introduction to microprocessor and microcontroller hardware and software. Assembly language instructions and programming, troubleshooting, and input/output techniques are studies. Computer-based program editing and assembly techniques are used. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| ECET 20700 - AC Electronics Circuit Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. AC circuits including the j operator, phasors, reactance and impedance are studied. Circuit laws, network theorems, and the fundamental concepts of Fourier analysis are applied and used in the study of topics such as passive filters, IC filters, amplifiers, resonant circuits, single-phase and three-phase circuits. Computer aided analysis of circuits is used. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 20900 - Introduction To Microcontrollers |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course is an introduction to microcontroller hardware and software, focusing on embedded control applications. Interconnections of components, peripheral devices, bus timing relationships, structured C-language programming, debugging, input/output techniques, and use of PC based software development tools are studied. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 21000 - Structured C++ Programming For Electromechanical Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Use of C++ in structured programming and Top Down Design techniques. Problem solving in technology applications is emphasized. The laboratory exercises will emphasize the interfacing of electromechanical systems with software and generation of embedded coding. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
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| ECET 21100 - Electrical Machines & Controls |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course not open to EET students. Lecture, demonstration, and laboratory experiments are combined to acquaint the student with the elements of electrical power circuits and machines. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| ECET 21200 - Electrical Power And Machinery |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of power transformers, single and polyphase circuits. The study of DC machines, AC single and polyphase synchronous and induction machines, and an introduction to power electronics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 21300 - Survey Of Electricity And Electronics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An introduction to fundamentals of electricity and electricity for non-ECET students. Electrical safety and the use of test equipment will be covered. Topics include: basic DC and AC electrical and electronics concepts, reading and drawing schematics, circuit layout and design, electrical troubleshooting, theory and operation of motors and generators, high voltage and PLC wiring. Course not open to ECET students. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| ECET 21400 - Electricity Fundamentals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to elemental electrical components and their characteristics, basic electrical circuit theory, and use of basic laboratory test equipment, electrical motors, and industrial motor controls. Not open to EET students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 21500 - Introduction to Industrial Electronics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Not open to EET majors. A study of power transformers, single and polyphase circuits, and an introduction to the National Electric Code. The study of DC machines (motors and generators), and AC single and polyphase synchronous and induction machines. Programmable controllers and other control devices will be introduced in the course. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| ECET 21700 - Introduction To Process Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces fundamental concepts of process control systems, open-loop and closed-loop controls. Input output characteristics of process elements, dead time, and span. Switching analysis of process hardware. Modeling of static and dynamic processes. Diode, transistor and SCR switching characteristics. Measurements of electronic signals. Solid-state switching devices. Loading effects and power interfaces. Noise and signal conditioning and grounding. Studying cables and their characteristics. Various industrial instrument interface buses, standards, and practices. Typically offered Spring Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| ECET 22000 - Professional Career Development |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course expands the student’s knowledge about the EET program. Included are topics such as: options and electives in the EET curriculum; the EET plan of study; student activities, including professional practice and organizations; international opportunities; employment and career opportunities; plant tours; and guest lectures, featuring EET alumni. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an understanding of the ECET department options and opportunities.
2. Demonstrate an understanding of the University organizations, missions, and resources.
3. Describe career paths of ECET graduates.
4. Develop a plan of study.
5. Develop an appropriate industrial resume.
6. Demonstrate an understanding of internship and co-op opportunities.
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| ECET 22001 - Academic Success Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. This course expands the student’s knowledge about the EET program. Included are topics such as: options and electives in the EET curriculum; the EET plan of study; student activities, including professional practice and organizations; international opportunities; employment and career opportunities; plant tours; and guest lectures, featuring EET alumni. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate awareness of the ECET department options and opportunities.
2. Demonstrate awareness of the University organizations, missions and resources.
3. Define of career paths for ECET graduates.
4. Demonstrate awareness of internship and co-op opportunities.
5. Develop a plan of study.
6. Develop an appropriate industrial resume.
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| ECET 22400 - Electronic Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a survey of key electrical and electronics systems, their basic performance and applications. DC fundamentals include sources, resistance, Ohm’s and
Kirchhoff’s Laws with simple circuits. AC systems include transformers and reactive elements, power production and distribution, filtering, motors and relays. Computer systems are presented with a microprocessor and provide the ability to write and read both digital and analog data. Analog systems include diodes, transistors, IC amplifiers, and analog-digital and digital to analog conversions. The semester closes by combining all of the topics presented in the control of motor speed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply Ohm’s Law and Kirchhoff’s Laws to series and parallel DC circuits.
2. Define, measure, and apply sinusoidal parameters in passive RLC circuits.
3. Explain power generation and distribution.
4. Use a microprocessor to input, output, and manipulate digital and analog signals.
5. Apply diodes, transistors, analog ICs, ADC and DAC to control the performance of a motor.
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| ECET 22700 - DC And Pulse Electronics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Capacitors, inductors, oscillators, rectifiers, bipolar and MOSFET power switches, switching power supplies, half-and full-H bridges, switching audio power amplifiers, op amp differential, composite and single supply operation, and linear regulators are studied. Computer-aided analysis of circuits is utilized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the characteristics of capacitors, inductors, rectifier diodes, Zener diodes, IC regulators, bipolar junction transistors (BJTs), field effect transistors (MOSFETS), and general purpose operational amplifiers.
2. Apply the principles of circuit analysis to the following: switching and linear power supplies, op-amp based amplifiers, BJT and MOSFET switches, Class D amplifier, wave shape generators, RC and RL circuits.
3. Simulate circuits and compare actual data to simulated data.
4. Construct electronic circuit according to a given schematic.
5. Measure electrical parameters, using digital multimeters, signal generators, and oscilloscopes.
6. Interpret laboratory experiment data.
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| ECET 22900 - Concurrent Digital Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course establishes a foundation for concurrent digital systems. Common methods of describing digital circuit operation are studied along with the techniques for translation between any two methods. Basic building blocks of digital systems are defined and applied. Analysis techniques for combinational and sequential logic circuits or subsystems are covered. Computer-based development tools, programmable logic devices, and technical reference sources are used to build, test, and evaluate digital systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe combinational and sequential logic circuits using Boolean expressions, truth tables, timing diagrams, schematics, and hardware description languages (HDLs).
2. Describe the function of common digital building blocks such as logic gates, flip-flops, latches, decoders, encoders, multiplexers, demultiplexers, magnitude comparators, code converter, registers, counters, adders, and multipliers.
3. Analyze the theoretical operation of given combinational and sequential logic circuits or subsystems.
4. Construct, test, and troubleshoot digital circuits and subsystems for given applications using programmable logic devices.
5. Verify digital circuit operation using computer simulation tools.
6. Interpret published voltage, current, and timing parameters of digital devices.
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| ECET 23100 - Electrical Power And Controls |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course introduces magnetic materials and properties followed by analysis of transformers and power conditioning equipment, induction motors, and single-phase and three-phase power systems. Motor control devices, programmable logic controllers, PLC input and output devices, and power systems communications and monitoring are introduced. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 23300 - Electronics And Industrial Controls |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Familiarization with electronics as applied to industry. Basic theory and application of electronics to controls for industrial equipment and data processing. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 23400 - PC Systems I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of PC hardware and software. Components of the computer including CPU, memory, ports, drives, and cards are covered as well as their setup, operation and troubleshooting. Labs include topics within A+ certification and hardware/software interfacing using Visual Basic. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| ECET 25700 - Consumer Power Electronics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course is a study of the application of circuit techniques to amplifiers used in power and RF electronics, including bipolar junction transistors, power MOSFETs, thyristors, RF amplifiers, switching power supplies, and appropriate applications. Computer-aided analysis of circuits is used. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 26200 - Programmable Logic Controllers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to programmable logic controllers (PLCs) to perform process control and motor control functions. Topics include PLC architecture, working principles, programming techniques, ladder logic programming, data manipulation, data highway, various input/output modules and their interface for actuation and signal control. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECET 26400 - C Programming Language Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of fundamental principles and issues in embedded applications: instrumentation, data acquisition, robots, and real time systems. Overview of the C programming environment. Introduction to C language syntax, basic data types, complex data types (pointer, array, structure, bit fields, union enum) storage classes, operators, preprocessor directives, macros, functions, flow control, and file I/O. Programming using a structured approach. Emphasis on the use of mathematical functions (routines) libraries and numerical algorithms needed in embedded applications. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ECET 26500 - Computer Networks |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to Data Communications and Networking hardware. The emphasis is on network hardware and topologies, physical interface standards, construction of transmission media, Local and Wide Area Network protocols as they relate to network hardware, hands-on Local Area Networks installation and troubleshooting. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECET 27000 - Electronics Prototype Development And Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces project planning and basic concepts in electronic design automation (EDA). The student develops a portion of an electronic system using EDA, design for testing (DFT), surface mount technology (SMT), design for manufacturability (DFM), and component characteristic selection techniques. New construction and testing techniques are introduced. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn a concurrent engineering approach to PCB design.
2. Apply basic principles of design for manufacturability (DFM) to a project.
3. Utilize a CAD package for circuit board layout.
4. Design, assemble, and test an SMT-based printed circuit assembly.
5. Demonstrate hand soldering techniques with surface mount devices (SMDs).
6. Utilize standard assisted-placement equipment to assemble a printed circuit assembly.
7. Develop techniques to predict signals that would be present in both a properly operating circuit and anon-operating circuit.
|
| ECET 27300 - Modern Energy Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to modern energy system technologies. Topics include energy conversion fundamentals, efficiency, and renewable energy technologies such as wind, solar, and geothermal. Other topics include central and distributed generation, and power plant fundamentals. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the fundamentals of renewable energy technologies.
2. Differentiate between central and distributed generation.
3. Know the fundamentals of power plant design and operation.
4. Calculate energy savings produced by variable speed drives.
5. Apply energy management and conservation techniques.
6. Describe the operation and benefits of smart grid technology.
|
| ECET 27400 - Wireless Communications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The theory and techniques of wirelessly sending information (voice, music, data) from one location to another is studies from a systems point of view. This includes a signal analysis, modulation techniques, transmitters, receivers, low noise amplifiers, and filters in the RF frequency spectrum. In addition, special topics of current interest are introduced. This course incorporated a student-based communication design and analysis laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Perform power calculations, such as dB, dBm, dBuV.
2. Describe, identify and apply Fourier concepts communication signals and systems, such as wave shapes, signal mixing, carrier waves.
3. Evaluate, describe and calculate the effects of noise on communication circuits and systems.
4. Demonstrate the concepts and applications of amplitude, frequency, and phase modulation techniques.
5. Describe and compare the operation of various receiver and transmitter blocks and systems.
6. Describe and apply the concepts of EMC, EMI and RFI to RF components, circuits and systems.
7. Describe and apply the fundamentals of cellular communication, such as frequency reuse, spread spectrum techniques and network technologies.
8. Describe and apply the fundamentals of digital communications, such as coding, bandwidth and modulation techniques.
9. Demonstrate use of RF laboratory equipment including the spectrum analyzer and RF generator.
|
| ECET 27700 - AC And Power Electronics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. AC Circuits including the j operator, phasors, reactance and impedance are studies. Circuit laws, network theorems, and the application of circuit analysis techniques to amplifiers used in power electronics, including power MOS devices, thyristors, and other appropriate applications. Computer-aided analysis of circuits is used. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Calculate phasor and time domain representation of a sine wave.
2. Analyze series, parallel and series-parallel passive and active AC circuits.
3. Analyze multi-loop, multi-source AC circuits using advanced techniques.
4. Analyze and design given series and parallel resonance circuits.
5. Compute the average voltage, rms voltage and power produced by a wide variety of waveshapes using integral definitions.
6. Describe the linear performance of MOS devices.
7. Analyze and design linear power amplifiers using op amps and MOS devices.
8. Apply thyristors, snubbing, thyristor triggers and proportional interfaces.
9. Evaluate the performance of a variety of AC circuits, using appropriate standard laboratory measurement procedures and simulations.
|
| ECET 27900 - Embedded Digital Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course emphasizing the advanced applications of embedded digital systems. Topics include embedded system architecture, use of advanced programmable counter/timer arrays, analog interfaces, serial communication, and interrupts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Solve problems by the application of C programs emphasizing I/O and peripherals.
2. Demonstrate knowledge and skill in the application of parallel ports, counter-timers, programmable counter arrays, serial ports and interrupts.
3. Demonstrate a conceptual understanding of embedded microcontroller system hardware system design.
4. Demonstrate the use of software development tools such as an editor, an assembler, a C compiler, a linker and locator, an object-to-hex converter, etc.
5. Demonstrate fluency in the language of advanced microprocessors.
|
| ECET 28400 - Computer Communications |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An introductory course in data communication systems. The hardware and software issues in computer communications are studied. Emphasis on hands-on experience in computer communications, such as cabling, use of communication devices and media, choice of networking topologies, protocols, and platforms. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| ECET 29000 - International Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This variable-title, variable-credit course establishes student credit for ECET department approved international activities such as study abroad or industrial internships in foreign countries. Permission of department is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 48 credits
|
| ECET 29100 - Industrial Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 5.00. Practice in industry, with written reports of this practice by the co-op student. Admission to the cooperative education program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 29200 - Industrial Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 5.00. Practice in industry, with written reports of this practice by the co-op student. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 29500 - Industrial Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Enrollment restricted to full-time students who have completed one year's study. Students will work 10-15 hours per week solving technical problems under the supervision of professional employees of local industries. Students will receive some remuneration. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Practicum
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
|
| ECET 29600 - Electronic System Fabrication |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The course includes electronic schematic, printed circuit board design and fabrication using Electronic Design Automation (EDA) tools. Designing electronic circuit schematic, schematic annotation, netlist file generations, electronic packaging selection, printed circuit board (PCB) artwork design using auto router and manual router software tools. Populate the printed circuit board with electronic components; solder using hand tools and testing/debug the electronic hardware into an operational system using bench-top instruments. Course teaches prototyping electronic projects. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| ECET 29700 - Electronic Prototype Development |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course introduces basic concepts in the development of an electronic product prototype. The student develops an electronic device by utilization of: electronic design automation (EDA), design for testing (DFT), surface mount technology (SMT), design for manufacturability (DFM), component characteristic selection techniques, and basic failure predictions. New construction and testing techniques are introduced. The final prototype is presented in a written and/or oral report. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 29900 - Selected Electrical Engineering Technology Subjects |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 6.00. Hours and subject matter to be arranged by staff. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| ECET 30200 - Introduction To Control Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This first course in industrial controls is applications oriented and includes on-off type open- and closed-loop control systems, and analog-based systems. Major topics include relay and programmable controller-based systems. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 30300 - Communications I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Signal representation in time and frequency domains, concepts of noise, impedance matching, mixing, heterodyning, filters, tuned amplifiers, oscillators and voltage controlled oscillators, phase-lock-loop, analog and digital modulation in amplitude, frequency and phase and multiple user communication systems. Others topics include transmission lines, electromagnetic wave propagation in space, and antenna systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
|
| ECET 30400 - Introduction To Communication Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The theory and techniques of sending information (voice, music, data, etc.) from one location to another is studied from a systems point of view. This includes signal analysis, various modulation techniques, transmitters, receivers, video, impedance matching networks and filters through the VHF frequency spectrum. In addition, wireless communication, digital communication and special topics of current interest are introduced. This course also incorporates a student-based communication design and analysis laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 30500 - Advanced Microprocessors |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A course emphasizing applications of microcomputers to dedicated hardware functions. A high-level language is used with an emphasis on programming hand-held computers. Some coverage of microprocessor architecture and troubleshooting is included. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| ECET 30700 - Analog Network Signal Processing |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This is an advanced course in network analysis that stresses network theorems and solutions of time- and frequency-domain problems. Transform circuit and signal analysis using Laplace and Fourier techniques are developed, culmination in active filter design applications. Software techniques, such as MATLAB(r) and LabVIEW(tm), to solve mathematical problems are employed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 30900 - Advanced Embedded Microcontrollers |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A course emphasizing the advanced applications of embedded microcontrollers. Included are microcontroller architecture, use of advanced programmable counter/timer arrays, analog interfaces, serial communication, and other peripherals. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 31000 - Biomedical Instrumentation I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to physiological variants, the concept of measurements and problems encountered in measurements from a living human body. Detail study of transducer principles and circuit techniques in measurement in circulatory, digestive, muscular and nervous systems. System approach to intensive care monitoring and data acquisition. Evaluation of biomedical instruments to meet performance specifications and electrical safety. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECET 31100 - Electrical Systems And Signals In Healthcare |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course offers an overview of electrical systems in the healthcare industry and the human physical parameters which can be electrically measured. Electrical biosignals and their associated issues are introduced. Measurements techniques are studied and implemented in the laboratory. Healthcare electrical systems are investigated including diagnostic, therapeutic, monitoring, and research based equipment. Electrical safety issues are identified. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify bio-generated signals.
2. Demonstrate the ability to make valid physiological measurements.
3. Describe and classify electrical systems in the healthcare industry.
|
| ECET 31200 - Power Electronics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to the characteristics of power semi-conductor devices, diode rectifiers, thyristors, commutation techniques, controlled rectifiers, ac voltage controllers, choppers, inverters, and motor drives. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| ECET 31400 - RF Signals And Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Wave propagation and microwave circuit design are studied. This course provides a solid background for continued study of wireless communications. Topics include signal analysis, Maxwell's equations, planewave propagation, reflection, refraction, diffraction, propagation losses, waveguides, antennas, RF signal measurement, transmission lines, impedance matching, Smith chart applications, RF circuit design, S-parameters, and RF PCB layout. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| ECET 31500 - Digital Design And Implementation Using Programmable Logic Devices (PLDs) |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Review of digital logic (sequential and combinational)design and implementation using conventional techniques. Digital system design and implementation as currently practiced in industry will be covered using state-of-the-art computer software. High level notations using PLD technology will be introduced for the synthesis of digital hardware. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECET 32100 - Introduction To Nanotechnology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the downsizing of electronic devices and introduces the field of nanotechnology. The downscaling to nanoelectronics, properties of nanomaterials and the tools of nanotechnology are studied. Interdisciplinary research and commercial applications are reviewed. The course involves participation in research seminars and hands-on laboratory experiences with nanotechnology instrumentation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify the basic concepts behind nanotechnology.
2. Describe the tools of nanotechnology.
3. Utilize the Scanning Probe Microscope.
|
| ECET 32300 - Introduction To Electric Vehicle Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course is an introduction to electric vehicle (EV) technology analysis and configuration. The course explores the integrated mechanical and electrical power and control systems including the management of integrated power and control systems within an electric vehicle. Students perform detailed analysis of and develop design approaches for electrically powered vehicles. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Learning Objectives:
1. Calculate horsepower requirements for various electric vehicle configurations.
2. Calculate efficiency of an electric vehicle.
3. Compare and contrast the various types of motors/controllers and their associated benefits and limitations.
4. Compare and contrast the various battery technologies related to electric vehicles.
|
| ECET 32400 - Fundamentals Of Electromagnetics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course introduces the fundamentals of electromagnetics in both theory and application. In the course wave propagation, transmission lines, antenna theory, and antenna design are studied. Other topics include Maxwell's equations, planewave propagation, reflection, refraction, diffraction, propagation losses, RF signal measurement, impedance matching, and Smith chart applications. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 32500 - Computer Architecture, Modeling And Performance Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of the architecture, hardware, and system software of computers. Fundamental principles associated with the operation of computers are introduced and studied. Modeling and analysis of computer subsystems, their performance, and interactions are also studied. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 32700 - Instrumentation And Data Acquisition Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course builds upon the prerequisite knowledge and covers implementation of electric systems to measure and record mechanical, electrical, and biological parameters. Signal characteristics, transducer specification and selection, signal conditioning and transmission design, data conversion, software, and an overall system error budget are developed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain how key mechanical, biological, and electrical parameters produce signals that can be sensed by a transducer.
2. Select transducers for each of the parameters above to meet measurement requirements.
3. Design, simulate, build, and verify the performance of amplifiers, filters, and signal conversion circuits appropriate as interfaces to the transducers above.
4. Create software that accesses, reduces, and displays data from these converts.
5. Calculate a full system error budget.
|
| ECET 32900 - Advanced Embedded Digital Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course emphasizing the use of embedded real-time operating systems (RTOS). Students complete systems-level projects using an RTOS. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate fluency in the language of real-time operating systems.
2. Complete systems-level projects by application of real-time operating/multitasking systems.
|
| ECET 33000 - Industrial Programming And Networking |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Networking industrial devices including servers, computers, smart sensors, controllers, and input/output devices. Programming applications for transferring data between industrial applications. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECET 33100 - Generation And Transmission Of Electrical Power |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of the generation and transmission of electrical energy. Includes modeling and analysis of synchronous alternators, transformers, and transmission lines, plus analytical and computer methods of solving load flow and fault conditions on balanced and unbalanced three-phase systems. Introduces techniques used by utilities for protection and economic operation of power systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 33300 - Power Electronics In Energy Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of fundamentals and applications of switch-mode DC-DC and DC-AC power electronic converters. The emphasis is given to hardware development aspects. Students will learn how to safely work with high power and high voltage circuits. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe how power electronics enable energy efficiency in various applications such as energy conservation, renewable energy, and transportation.
2. Design and build switch mode DC-DC and DC-AC converters using commercially available components.
3. Develop closed loop control circuits for DC-DC converters using voltage mode and peak-current mode methods.
4. Simulate power electronic circuits.
|
| ECET 33500 - Computer Architecture And Performance Evaluation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course focuses on the evaluation, implementation and application of computers and embedded systems. The architecture of modern computer CPUs and their peripheral subsystems are presented at the block level, with emphasis on the memory hierarchy, techniques for performance improvement, and the instruction set. Analytic performance evaluation techniques, including probability and stochastic processes, are introduced and developed, as well as common benchmarking tools for quantifying performance and solving problems. Students apply common performance evaluation tools and implement performance evaluation algorithms of their own creation, comparing time and space performance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify, explain, and analyze the performance of a CPU.
2. Identify, explain, and analyze the performance of computer memory subsystems.
3. Identify the primary computer instruction components and explain their function.
4. Distinguish performance trade-offs between pipelined and non-pipelined instruction execution, and identify and explain hazard conditions.
5. Apply probabilistic methods to determine the bit and multiple bit error probabilities on a link (or computer bus trace) given a bit error rate (BER).
6. Calculate buffer (queue) size requirements based on probabilistic arrival processes and service time distributions.
7. Demonstrate the use of common performance evaluation tools and analyze the data produced.
8. Design and implement programs to observe and characterize computer subsystem performance.
|
| ECET 33700 - Analog Signal Processing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This advanced course in analog circuit analysis stresses network theorems and solutions of time and frequency domain problems. Transform circuit and signal analyses, using Laplace and Fourier techniques, are applied in active filter design. Software tools are employed to solve mathematical problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify, calculate and plot standard types of electronic signals.
2. Analyze and recognize the output response of first-order and second-order circuits with regards to resonance, damping and stability.
3. Analyze first and second order circuits in the time domain and the frequency domain.
4. Apply the principles of Fourier series and transforms to filter analysis and harmonic distortion.
5. Design active filters and implement the design using synthesis by equating coefficients.
6. Determine frequency domain functions from time domain functions (Laplace transforms).
7. Determine time domain functions from frequency domain functions (Inverse Laplace transforms).
8. Use Laplace transforms to analyze passive and active circuits in the time domain (transient analysis) and in the frequency (Laplace) domain.
9. Evaluate the performance of circuits using standard laboratory measurements and simulations.
|
| ECET 33900 - Digital Signal Processing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course introduces students to the fundamental principles associated with processing discrete time signals. The architecture, instruction set and hardware and software development tools associated with a fixed point general purpose VLSI digital signal processor are examined. Some common real-time applications are implemented such as digital filters and DFT-based spectral estimation on a typical fixed point digital signal processor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the architectural features of a DSP and relate these to the DSP kernel equation.
2. Manipulate different binary number formats associated with a fixed point DSP.
3. Develop and debug simple programs that involve SOPs, modulo addressing, scaling and extraction of result, and common DSP program structures.
4. Describe the consequences and limitations of sampling baseband signals including the Nyquist rate and bandwidth, quantization noise, aliasing, frequency folding, reconstruction, spectrum of sampled baseband signals.
5. Express a sampled deterministic analog signal in closed mathematical form and expanded form using the unit sample.
6. Express a sampled signal in terms of the Z transform, in expanded and closed form.
7. Describe the relationship between the transfer function and impulse response in an LTI system.
8. Describe the operation of convolution and its implementation using hand calculations, mathematical software packages, and a fixed-point DSP.
9. Design and analyze FIR filters with the aid of a mathematical software package such as MATLAB.
|
| ECET 34101 - Biocompatability And Bio-Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces specific techniques and methodologies of electrical instrumentation applications to healthcare systems. Biocompatibility of materials and mechanisms of material modification are studied. Biosafety and regulations are introduced. Bioethical discussions bring current and global aspects to the course. Career paths for ECET students in Healthcare are identified. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify biosafety issues and cite regulations.
2. Describe bioethics issues.
3. Describe ECET career paths in healthcare.
|
| ECET 34500 - Advanced Digital Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Digital system design with an emphasis on Application Specific Integrated Circuits is studied. System considerations, including design entry, simulation, and testing; selection of ASIC methodology, process technology, and packaging; and IC fabrication are addressed. Hierarchical circuit designs are implemented with CPLDs or FPGAs using a Hardware Description Language. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 34600 - Advanced Digital Circuits |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Basic system techniques with emphasis on digital ASIC theory. Computer aided engineering is strongly emphasized along with system considerations such as criteria for device selection, testability, and vendor selection. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ECET 34900 - Advanced Digital Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course investigates complex digital systems that are implemented with field programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) using concurrent and sequential digital design techniques. Applications will include interfacing with analog signals and memory systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Design FPGA solutions for given digital design problems using a hardware description language (HDL).
2. Design FPGA solutions for given digital problems using a high-level sequential programming language for embedded processors.
3. Design FPGA solutions by decomposing a system into concurrent and sequential functional blocks and using hierarchical system development techniques.
4. Verify digital designs using simulation and hardware prototyping.
5. Analyze and design memory subsystems.
6. Apply ADC and DAC circuits to interface digital systems with analog devices/systems.
|
| ECET 35000 - Computer Circuit Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The theory and practical applications of laying out high frequency circuits using leading-edge technology software. The
course will use schematic capture software, analog and digital simulation software with physical labs to explore emissions, signal integrity, RF/IF signals, thermal properties, and reliability of high-frequency circuits. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 35100 - Instrumentation Applications For Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.0 or 4.00. Introduction to the basic concepts and terminology of instruments. This course covers the procedures and techniques essential to measurement of physical quantities (such as pressure, flow, temperature, and level measurements) and analysis of that data. Students will use data acquisition systems and computer control software to complete laboratory exercises. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Select and implement appropriate sensors to measure the following: temperature, pressure, flow, level measurements, and displacement.
2. Write computer programs, using graphical program language to collect, analyze and display sensor data using data acquisition hardware.
3. Use PID control algorithms to control a physical plant.
4. Use project management skills to complete a project in a timely manner.
5. Function as a member of a team to complete a task.
6. Present results of work coherently in an oral report.
|
| ECET 35500 - Data Communications and Networking |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A survey of data communication and networking techniques, protocols, and standards. Topics include OSI model, TCP/IP protocols and applications, signals, encoding and modulating, transmission of data and interfaces, transmission media, multiplexing, error detection and correction, data link controls and protocols, switching techniques, local area networks, wide area networks and other well known networks services including integrated services digital network (ISDN), X.25 (packet switching), frame relay (virtual-circuit), asynchronous transfer mode (ATM), and synchronous optical network (SONET). Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ECET 35700 - Real-Time Digital Signal Processing |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of the architecture, instruction set and hardware and software development tools associated with a fixed-point general purpose DSP VLSI processor. Fundamental principles associated with the processing of discrete time signals are also introduced along with the implementation of some common applications such as waveform generation, audio affects, FIR and IIR digital filtering and DFT and FFT based spectral estimation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 35900 - PC Interfacing And Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A course emphasizing PC Systems and the techniques to create PC interfacing systems to solve real-world control and data collection problems. Graphical user-interfaces and driver software for custom applications are emphasized. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 36000 - CIM In Electronics Manufacturing |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course covers the manufacture and assembly of electronic printed circuit boards from component selection and board layout to soldering and test. Special emphasis is placed on high volume manufacturing techniques and state-of-the-art processes, such as surface mount technology (SMT). Laboratory projects include CAD circuit board layout, using automatic placement and soldering equipment, investigating thermal characteristics of circuit boards, process design and evaluation using SPC techniques. Effects of manufacturing processes on electrical characteristics are considered. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 36100 - Introduction To PLC & Pneumatic Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of the fundamentals of developing and implementing ladder logic diagrams for machine controls using industrial programmable logic controllers. The applications of hydraulic and pneumatic systems are also studied. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ECET 36200 - Process Control Instrumentation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to process control principles and practices. Study of analog and digital signal conditioning; thermal, mechanical, optical transducers; electromechanical, pneumatic and hydraulic control devices, and the application of computer-aided tools for process control instrumentation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECET 36400 - Fundamentals Of Electromagnetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the fundamentals of electromagnetics in both theory and application. Wave propagation, transmission lines, port parameters, antenna theory, and antenna design are studied. Other topics include Maxwell’s equations, propagation losses, RF signal measurement, impedance matching, and Smith chart applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate knowledge of transmission line theory and application.
2. Apply and analyze transmission line systems using Smith carts.
3. Demonstrate the fundamentals and use of port parameters.
4. Design impedance matching networks using analytical methods and Smith charts.
5. Demonstrate and apply electromagnetic theory.
6. Describe and apply the fundamentals of electromagnetic wave propagation.
7. Design, simulate and analyze antennas.
8. Use RF simulation software for the analysis and design of RF circuits.
9. Demonstrate the use of RF laboratory equipment including the vector network analyzer, spectrum analyzer and RF generator.
|
| ECET 36500 - Electrical Measurements |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of instrumentation and automatic measurements. Individual instruments include DMM, counters, oscilloscopes, spectrum analyzers, and signal generators. The signals and operation of the general purpose interface bus are examined and applied to a measurement system. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 36700 - Internetworking and TCP/IP |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a continuation of EET 26500. The emphasis is on integrating the TCP/IP protocol suite on networking and internetworking devices such as repeaters, bridges, routers, gateways and switches. Other topics from emerging networking technologies will be considered as applied to high speed networks. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECET 36800 - Linear Integrated Circuits |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course is a study of the applications of analog integrated circuits (IC). Topics include linear amplifiers, IC specifications, linear regulators, waveform generation, linear and switched capacitor active filters, and nonlinear circuit applications. Computer aided analysis of many of these circuits is also presented. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 37100 - Automation, Instrumentation, and Process Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. A project-oriented course combining key areas of automation, instrumentation and process control. The course covers automatic testing, computer interfacing, data collection, robotic controls, programmable logic controllers, and graphical process control software. A final project is an integrated system. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Write computer programs, using a graphical program language, to collect, analyze and display sensor data using data acquisition hardware.
2. Write computer programs, using a graphical program language, to control laboratory instrumentation over the GPIB interface.
3. Program a robot to repeatedly move small assemblies and tools.
4. Write programs for a programmable logic controller with system I/O.
5. Use machine vision to identify and locate components.
6. Interface computer, microcontroller, programmable logic controller, robot, and machine vision together into a working system.
7. Use project management skills to complete a project in a timely manner.
8. Function as a member of a team to complete a task.
9. Present results of work coherently in an oral report.
|
| ECET 37200 - Process Control |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of the basic elements of closed-loop analog and digital systems. Topics include characteristics of heat, servo motion, and process tank components and systems. Also covered are closed-loop tuning, troubleshooting, documentation, diagram standards and performance specifications. Several sensor types and interpretation of their static and dynamic specifications are included. Commercial controllers employed include analog, embedded microprocessor and PLC based systems. Software is used to model components and analyze open and closed-loop systems. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 37300 - Applied Electronic Drives |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers operational principles and application development consideration of all subsystems that make up electric drives: electric machines, power-electric based converters, mechanical system requirements, feedback controller design, and the interaction of drives with the utility grid. State of the art drive development tools are introduced through hands-on activities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the structure of electronic drive systems and their role in various applications such as flexible production systems, energy conservation, renewable energy, and transportation, making electric drives an enabling technology.
2. Understand the basic principles of power electronics in drives using switch-mode converters and pulse width modulation to synthesize the voltages in dc and ac motor drives.
3. Understand the operation of DC, AC, and brushless DC motors.
4. Construct and test traditional and electronic drive circuit for above motors.
5. Analyze various signals present in electric drive to evaluate drive performance.
6. Learn speed control of the above machines.
|
| ECET 37400 - Digital Telecommunications |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This is an advanced course in digital communications concepts and applications. Digitalization of analog signals, modulation of digital signals, signaling techniques, multiplexing and protocols are investigated. Applications of transport technologies utilizing underlying digital communication protocols are discussed. Transfer of digital information through diverse communication media is emphasized. Practical application of the technologies and protocols are investigated in the laboratory. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify the major components of the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN) hierarchy and terms associated with the PSTN.
2. Calculate A/D PCM encoding and decoding, recognizing the information loss of the process.
3. Demonstrate an understanding of line coding and zero-suppression techniques used in the PSTN and long haul transport.
4. Apply probabilistic methods to determine single and multiple bit error probabilities on a link given a bit error rate (BER).
5. Demonstrate an understanding of medium characteristics, modulation and multiplexing techniques, physical layer framing structures used in the PSTN, wireless and data networks.
|
| ECET 37401 - Digital Communication Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Digital communication systems form the backbone of modern communication systems, such as cell phone, telecommunication, wireless local area network, Ethernet and optical fiber systems. This course explores the core concepts of modern digital communications systems, covering topics in areas including quantization, encoding, compression, modulation and channel modeling. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe, identify and calculate signal and noise power in a system.
2. Determine the digital representation of an analog value using multiple A/D techniques.
3. Describe, implement and evaluate digital compression and encoding techniques.
4. Create and apply signal constellations of digital modulation techniques.
5. Create and analyze communication channel models.
|
| ECET 37500 - Computer Control System Designs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. A study of computer controlled systems using microcontrollers, computer numerical control (CNC), and programmable logic controller (PLC). Topics include microcontroller based control systems, pneumatic and hydraulic controlled systems, data acquisition, D/A and A/D conversions, ladder diagrams, sampling and reconstruction, Z transform, stability analysis techniques, continuous and discrete time controlled systems, open-loop and closed-loop controlled systems, CNC machines and mechanical hardware. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECET 37700 - Introduction To Fiber Optics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An introductory course in fiber optics for junior or senior level students. Topics include optical characteristics, optical fibers, cables, modulation techniques, optical receivers and transmitters, and measurements on optical systems. A lab is also included in the course resulting in a complete optical transmitter/receiver system modulated with various methods. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ECET 38000 - Professional Issues In EET |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course addresses professional ethics, legal issues, professional development, technology transfer, and corporate culture as they relate to EET graduates. Information relating to personal job and career choices, resumes, and interviews are included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. List professional societies of interest to electrical engineers and technologists, and identify the benefits of professional society membership and activity.
2. Name the Codes of Ethics that apply to electrical engineers and technologists and explain why ethics codes are important.
3. Explain the ethics of safety concept and how it involves engineers and technologists.
4. Describe techniques to manage and resolve conflicts in the workplace.
5. State the legal definition of sexual harassment.
6. List the potential consequences of sexual harassment for the employee and the employer.
7. Prepare an effective resume.
8. Know how to prepare for and conduct a successful employment interview.
9. Explain the benefits of graduate education and lifelong learning.
10. Learn ways for smoothing the transition from the education environment to the workplace environment.
|
| ECET 38001 - Global Professional Issues In Electrical Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course addresses professional ethics, legal issues, professional development, technology transfer, and corporate culture as they relate to EET graduates and our global society. Information relating to personal job and career choices, resumes, and interviews are included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate awareness in areas of intercultural knowledge and effectiveness.
2. Demonstrate awareness in areas of ethical reasoning.
3. Demonstrate awareness in areas of global citizenship and social awareness.
4. Identify applications of professional and ethical responsibilities including respect for diversity.
5. Demonstrate the ability to engage in self-directed continuing professional development.
6. Demonstrate knowledge of the impact of engineering technology solutions in a societal and global context.
|
| ECET 38100 - Electrical Distribution Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of the design and operation of electric distribution systems including estimated demand, demand calculations, energy conservation, faults on power systems, power quality, power factor improvement, electric rates, voltage drops, protective devices, illumination, and the applicable portions of the National Electric Code (NEC). Both new facilities and additions to existing facilities are included. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 38200 - C++ Object Oriented Programming For Industrial Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course provides a comprehensive introduction to C++ for students to apply object-oriented programming in industrial applications. A background in C or another high level language is a must, because all applications in this course involve C and C++. The course introduces the methodology of object identification and behavior, the syntax of C++, and industrial applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ECET 38300 - Advanced Electronic Networks |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced course in network analysis that stresses network theorems and solutions of time and
frequency-domain problems.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECET 38400 - Advanced Mathematical Methods In EET |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An advanced course in mathematical analysis applied to signals and systems in both time and frequency domains; discrete time sequences; z-transform; Fourier Transform; Laplace Transform; use of software tools is emphasized throughout the course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
|
| ECET 38500 - Introduction To Automotive Electronics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course is a study of automotive electronics components and systems. Main topics are sensors, actuators, engine fuel systems and ignition systems. Also covered are braking, emissions, General Motors Class II bus, and OBD (On Board Diagnostic) systems and emerging technologies. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 38600 - Building Electrical Codes And Standard Practices |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course in the design of building wiring, machine wiring and electrical control systems using relevant codes and standards to layout commercial and industrial facilities and manufacturing processes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify codes and standards that pertain to the design and installation of building electrical systems.
2. Choose proper components for a wiring application.
3. Use commercial power system analysis software to assist in the design of an electrical distribution system.
4. Design lighting for office, industrial, and other areas.
5. Apply the appropriate standards to provide proper protection for electoral circuits.
6. Calculate balanced, three-phase short-circuit currents for a distribution system in accordance with applicable standards.
|
| ECET 38800 - Analog IC Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a study of the applications of analog integrated circuits. Topics include linear amplifiers, IC specifications, linear regulators, waveform generation, linear and switched-capacitor active filters, and nonlinear circuit applications. Computer aided analysis of these circuits is also presented. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Analyze and design a wide variety of digitally controlled analog circuits, selecting among several alternative configurations, accounting for the non-ideal IC behavior, and selecting appropriate devices.
2. Evaluate the performance of a variety of analog circuits, using appropriate standard laboratory measurement procedures, and simulations.
|
| ECET 39200 - Digital Signal Processing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the fundamentals of Digital Signal Processing: discrete-time principles, sampling theorem, discrete Fourier transform, fast Fourier transforms, time and frequency domain considerations, Z-transform, solution of difference equations and design of digital filters. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
|
| ECET 39300 - Industrial Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 5.00. Practice in industry, with written reports of this practice by the co-op student. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 39400 - Industrial Practice IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 5.00. Practice in industry, with written reports of this practice by the co-op student. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 39500 - Industrial Practice V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 5.00. Practice in industry, with written reports of this practice by the co-op student. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 39600 - Project Development and Management |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This is a structured course in electronic projects, with an emphasis on planning and design alternatives to meet cost, performance, and user-interface goals. A software tool is utilized for project management. Students work in teams to solve problem assignments using guided design techniques. Creativity is stressed, and the different approaches taken by different teams are compared and discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 39700 - Electronic Project Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to electronic project engineering principles and techniques. Topics include technical feasibility studies, project specification, scheduling, testing, validation and cost estimating. Focus is on teamwork. These principles and techniques are emphasized through the design and execution of an electronic project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECET 40300 - Communications II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of digital communications which includes sideband systems, phase-locked loops, digital communications concepts, pulse and digital modulation, data communications, digital radio, space communications, and fiber optics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 40400 - Wireless Communication And Networking |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An introduction to components, systems and the enabling technology underlying wireless communication and networking. Topics include basics of telegraphic engineering, wireless channel modeling, cellular telephony, signal coding, Inter Symbol Interference, Forward Error Coding techniques, modulation techniques, antenna diversity, spread spectrum communication, frequency hopping, mobile and multi-access communication. Introduction of wireless networking standards, infrared and laser communication, wireless location, and RFID systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. The enabling technology in the wireless networking.
2. Components and subsystems used in wireless networking.
3. To design wireless networking systems.
4. Protocols and principles of operation, administration and maintenance of wireless networks.
5. To interface the wireless networks to LAN, MAN and WAN.
|
| ECET 40600 - Ethics in Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Ethics in engineering technology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECET 41000 - Physics Of Radiologic Imaging |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Diagnostic imaging is among the rapidly advancing fields of non-invasive clinical medicine. This course will cover the physics principles behind imaging techniques. Quality assurance of diagnostic x-ray equipment and radiation safety also will be discussed. This course could be used as a Science/Math elective. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECET 41100 - Microcomputer Interfacing |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A student of microprocessor interfacing techniques and components required to assemble a typical microcomputer system. Emphasis on serial I/O and parallel I/O chips; peripheral interfacing; LED display, keyboard, CRT display, floppy disk, D/As, and stepping motor. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ECET 41200 - Power Electronics Design And Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to the application of power electronics in ac and dc motor drives, dc switching power supplies, solid-state relays, inverters, uninterruptible and standby power supplies and utility interfaces. The course covers the topologies and design of power trains, drivers for the switching devices, protection, and the strategies for control and power factor improvement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECET 41300 - Digital And Data Communications |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of modern digital communication systems. Topics include modulation techniques for digital transmission of data, error detection and correction, data compression techniques, Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA), Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA), etc. Topics in digital communication related to wired and wireless transmission media, along with fiber optics will be discussed. Topics in high speed switched networks will be introduced. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECET 41400 - Wireless Communications |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Practical and theoretical aspects of wireless communication system design are studied; particular emphasis is on mobile communications. Frequency reuse, hand-off, cell splitting, indoor/outdoor propagation, cochannel interference, frequency management, channel assignment techniques, cell-site antennas, handset antenna/human body interaction, switching and traffic, AMPS, GSM, TDMA, and CDMA are studied. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 41700 - Advanced Digital Systems With VHDL |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs) and complex programmable logic using VHDL, finite-state-machine analysis and design, high-speed digital design considerations, memory systems, digital and analog devices, and A/D and D/A conversion. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECET 42300 - Current Trend In Telecom Technology With Variable Title |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. This is a variable title course. A variety of current trends and topics in Telecommunications will be taught. Topics will vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Learning outcomes will vary depending on course content.
|
| ECET 42301 - Electrical Vehicle Integration And Fabrication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course requires students to develop a detailed design, develop a time/action plan, perform research on existing electronic vehicle systems, develop a procurement plan for electronic vehicle components, design and fabricate custom electric vehicle components, and construct an electric vehicle. The completed electric vehicle is extensively tested for safety, performance, and energy efficiency. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Learning Objectives:
1. Design and fabricate custom electrical vehicle components.
2. Execute the construction of an electrical vehicle.
3. Measure energy efficiency of an electrical vehicle.
4. Implement appropriate electric vehicle instrumentation for various electric vehicle configurations.
5. Optimize an electric vehicle configuration for maximum efficiency.
|
| ECET 42400 - Wireless Systems: Design And Measurement |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. In this course wireless RF signals and microwave circuit designs are studied. Topics covered in the course include RF passive systems, power dividers, couplers, RF amplifiers, RF filters, impedance matching, planar antennas, resonators, VCO's, RF simulation and high frequency PCB layout. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET 42800 - Audio Electronics-Selected Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Define, implement, and evaluate the performance of the electronic elements in a professional audio system such as preamplifiers, signal encoding and transmission, data storage, signal reception and decoding, mixers, post processors, and power amplifiers. Both analog and digital signal processing may be implemented in each of the electronic elements. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Define parameters used to specify the performance of the electronic elements of a professional grade audio system.
2. Specify the electronic elements in a professional grade audio system to satisfy a given set of parameters.
3. Design, implement, and evaluate the electronic elements in a professional grade audio system.
|
| ECET 43000 - Electrical And Electronic Product And Program Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course deals with the planning of electrical and electronic products and projects. Research methods are studied to support new product development including customer needs and the development of engineering requirements. Formal techniques such as functional decomposition, top-down and bottom-up design techniques are studied. Planning and design alternatives to meet cost, performance, and user-interface foals are emphasized. Technical topics are revisited with emphasis on new applications. The various types and levels of new product system tests are studied. New product planning, scheduling, and management techniques are studied, along with the usage of software tools for project scheduling and management. Creativity is stressed, and the different approaches taken by the designers are compared and discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply the engineering design lifecycle process.
2. Evaluate customer needs as part of the definition of the solution to a problem.
3. Evaluate alternative designs to solve a problem and then decide on the most appropriate design to pursue.
4. Define a workable plan to create a design to solve a product development problem.
5. Plan and construct a Gantt chart to be followed during senior design.
6. Write a formal technical proposal to be carried through in senior design.
|
| ECET 43300 - Electronic Industrial Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Familiarization with electronics as applied to industry. Basic theory and application of electronics to controls for industrial equipment and data processing. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ECET 43400 - PC Systems II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Real-time PC-based operating systems. Programming Graphical User Interface in C++. Embedded PC hardware, busses, and peripheral programming. Writing and integrating device drivers. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| ECET 43500 - Electronic Industrial Controls |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Not open to EET students. Familiarization with electronics as applied to industry. Basic theory and application of electronics to controls for industrial equipment and data processing. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ECET 43600 - Electrical Power Transmissions, Distribution, And Smart Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course on the simple modeling and simulation of the power grid systems, power flow analysis, and advanced meter infrastructure (AMI). The fundamentals learned in this course will be useful in the study of the effects of distributed energy resources and storage in Smart Grid environment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the role of components of electrical power transmission and distribution network.
2. Identify characteristics of DC and AC transmission lines and cable systems.
3. Identify the characteristics of various power system loads and power quality issues.
4. Calculate and simulate power flow in a power systems network.
5. Explain how to stabilize power systems.
6. Apply Advanced Meter Infrastructure (AMI) as it is used in Smart Grid applications.
|
| ECET 43900 - Advanced Digital Signal Processing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course builds on the basic principles and applications of Digital Signal Processing with a view to implementing advanced DSP techniques. These techniques are chosen to form some of the building blocks that are used in specialization areas such as the biomedical, communications and energy management fields. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Learning Objectives:
1. Write and debug basic DSP applications on a VLSI DSP
2. Write and debug advanced DSP techniques and applications drawn from areas such as communications and biomedical signal processing.
3. Embed software modules from DSP libraries into specific applications.
|
| ECET 44400 - Wireless Systems: Design And Measurement |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this course wireless RF signals and microwave circuit designs are studied. Topics include signal analysis, RF signal measurement, microstrip design and analysis, Smith chart applications, RF circuit design, s-parameters, power dividers and couplers, filter design, and advanced RF PCB layout. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply knowledge of RF component non-idealities.
2. Design, simulate and test RF amplifiers, filters, and power dividers.
3. Apply RF test methods and procedures to RF components, circuits and systems.
4. Demonstrate microstrip and stripline analysis and design.
5. Apply RF simulation software for the analysis and design of RF circuits.
6. Demonstrate printed circuit board layout techniques for high frequency applications.
7. Demonstrate the use of RF laboratory equipment including the vector network analyzer, spectrum analyzer and RF generator.
|
| ECET 44500 - New Tech Computer Systems With Variable Titles |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. The impact of new technologies on computer hardware and software is studied. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Learning outcomes will vary depending on course content. This is a variable title course.
|
| ECET 45300 - Topics In Telecommunications |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An advanced course in telecommunications that introduces and evaluates state-of-the-art systems, services and applications for current and emergencing networking technologies. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| ECET 45400 - Microprocessors |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Use of microprocessors and related components in the design of microprocessor based systems. The architecture, technology, programming, and interfacing of microprocessors are studied. Consideration is given to the trade-offs between hardware and software. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ECET 45500 - Object Oriented System Design |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Course deals with the Designing of Graphic User Interface (GUI) applications using Object Oriented Programming (OOP) methodology utilizing C++ language constructs. The course will cover: the basics of Windows programming, developing Windows applications using Object Windows, Windows Functions and Messages with emphasis on interfacing with the physical objects communicating with the software objects in the realm of Computer Communications and Networking. Typically offered Fall Summer Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Use Software Design IDE, utilize its extensive menu system and customize its Integrated Development Environment for Hardware Interfacing.
2. Use Projects and Forms. Utilize Main Window Forms. Use the Component Palette to place multiple copies of a component. Use Form Methods, Form Events and Object Inspector.
3. Design Form Application to monitor events and display results.
4. Design with Multiple Document Interface Model (MDI).
5. Use visual and non-visual components in the Computer System Design.
6. Utilize the Form Designer and Menu Designer.
7. Monitor and control hardware using the 1024LS DAQ.
8. Design customized GUI projects using Server-Client model to monitor and control remotely.
|
| ECET 45600 - Operating System With Embedded System Design |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The course deals with multi-processor system design. The multiprocessor system’s hardware and software design are integrated in conjunction with the underlying embedded operating system(s). Geographically distributed sub-systems are integrated into the system under discourse and design. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Design software with Borland C++ Integrated Development Environment to utilize its extensive menu system and be able to customize it.
2. Interface PC through various Buses, with outside sub-systems.
3. Integrate the hardware and software portions of the design.
4. Design interface with local as well as remote subsystem through the NET.
5. Integrate assembly language sub-routines within C++language code.
6. Implement multi-level interrupt system.
7. Utilize the multi-tasking capabilities of the Operating System in the System Design.
8. Customize PC based Computer System that is capable to assimilate data from multiple sources, both local as well as remote. Carry on the required computation, make the appropriate decisions, and implement the required control functions.
|
| ECET 45800 - Introduction To VLSI Design |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The use of synthesis tools for designing and building very large-scale integrated (VLSI) circuits. Covers hardware
design language (HDL), simple finite-state machine (FSM) design, and a CAD/VLSI representation system and Boolean truth tables to minimize and implement standard logic cells. Use of logic compiling, design simulation,
hardware floorplanning, different layout strategies, pad placement, and system routing to construct the complete hardware chip. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| ECET 46000 - Project Design And Development |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An extensive individual or small group design project is carried out with guidance from a faculty advisor. This course includes determining customer requirements, considering design alternatives, prototyping, project integration, and testing. The project is completed as a robust prototype. The course concludes with a formal written report and a presentation of the project to faculty and invited industrial guests. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. From a formal project proposal, create a functional prototype to solve the given problem.
2. Utilize a software scheduling package to plan and track the progress of a project.
3. Weigh design alternatives for customer requirements, efficiency, reliability, and cost.
4. Apply formal test procedures to the developed prototype.
5. Analyze the data acquired during testing of the prototype.
6. Present a project orally to a specific audience.
7. Write a technical report including conclusions and recommendations for further work.
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| ECET 46200 - Application Of Computers In Process Control |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of industrial process control systems. Study of continuous- and discrete-state process control. Analyzing process characteristics and controller tuning. Closed loop control system characteristics. System stability, open loop and closed loop transient response. Single, multivariable and cascade control system. Supervisory, direct computer control, and distributed control system. Computer-aided statistical process control (SPC). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand discrete-state process control
2. Understand Control strategies: process characteristics, control modes, composite control modes.
3. Understand Digital and analog controllers, computer in process control and control softwares.
4. Analyze control loop characteristics: control system configuration, multivariable control system.
5. Analyze stability of a control system.
6. Able to model a simple mechanical or an electrical system.
7. Perform process control loop tuning: feedback, feedforward and cascade control.
8. Apply computer based hardware and software tools for process control (NI’s LabVIEW Software Tools).
9. Apply statistical process control techniques for quality assurances (Statit Express QC).
10. Apply statistical process control techniques to determine process capability (Statit Express QC).
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| ECET 46400 - Microprocessors II |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of microprocesor-based systems including programming and interfacing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ECET 46500 - Advanced Topics in Computer Networks |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a continuation of EET 36700. Topics include emerging technologies in computer networks and related hardware, modeling, simulation, and analysis of existing LAN and WAN topologies. The course emphasizes hardware-software integration with respect to computer networks. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| ECET 46600 - Windows Programming For Industrial Applications |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. This course provides an overview of Windows programming using visual software for industrial applications. The graphic user interface (GUI) in Windows programming allows operators in interact with computers by clicking a mouse on a graphical panel without understanding the program itself. The topics of the course include: introduction to the Windows operating system, text input and output, multiple window programs, creating dialog boxes and menus, dynamic data exchange, dynamic link library, and error handling, multimedia programming, designs of graphic control panels for industrial applications such as gages, meters, and setting devices. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| ECET 46700 - IP Telephony |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to converged voice and data networks as well as challenges faced by its various hardware and software technologies. Students will learn the architecture, components, programming, functionality, and features of Voice Over IP (VoIP) such as Voice Manager, Voice-Mail solutions, Call Control, as well as Quality of Service (QoS) technologies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Determine the relevant critical technical needs in order to develop a Cisco IP Telephony design framework in a SOHO environment, including the choice of signaling type and encoding methods.
2. Select the appropriate hardware and software components to support a proposed SOHO IP telephony design.
3. Describe the similarities and differences between PSTN and VoIP including call transport, call signaling and bandwidth requirements.
4. Describe the technologies used in VoIP and how they differ from PSTN technologies; Install an IP Telephony solution in a SOHO environment using CME.
5. Configure Cisco CME to support IP phones.
6. Secure an IP communications network.
7. Design the appropriate dial plaln to support SOHO design requirements; describe effective troubleshooting methods and resolve QoS issues in SOHO IP Telephony networks.
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| ECET 46800 - Microwave Solid State Devices |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A project-oriented course dealing with microwave solid-state devices. Areas to be covered are solid-state materials, solid-state junction (PN and Schottkey), diodes, transistors, and solid-state components. Microwave projects are assigned which involve designing and analyzing microwave solid-state circuits using PSPICE and Microwave Office. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| ECET 47000 - Technology Project Management |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics include project management concepts, project life cycle; project initiation, team building, planning, review, execution, and tracking and control; project related issues, resource, cost, subcontractor control, and risk management; Web-based project management and collaboration, project management and integration tools. A portion of the course is devoted to case studies. Written reports and oral presentations required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| ECET 47200 - Automatic Control Systems |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of network analysis using Laplace Transforms, classical control systems theory, system stability and compensation, and topics on microprocessor-based control systems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
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| ECET 47300 - Microwaves |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of microwave techniques which includes definitions, microwave materials, microwave components, transmission lines, the Smith chart, S-parameter, microwave diodes and transistors, and microwave measurements. Microwave Office is incorporated in the course. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| ECET 47400 - Digital Communications |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. This is an advanced course in digital communications concepts and applications. Topics include analog message digitization, signal space representation of digital signals, binary and M-ary signaling methods, the detection of binary and M-ary signals, modulation of digital signals, signaling techniques, digital multiplexing and protocols. Applications of transport technologies using underlying communication protocols are discussed. Transfer of digital information through diverse communication media is emphasized. There is an introductory treatment of probability theory, including distribution and random variables; with the applications of normal and exponential distributions to traffic analysis. Practical application of the technologies and protocols are investigated in the laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
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| ECET 48200 - Linear Control Systems |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of linear control systems using stability criteria, Bode diagrams, Nichols charts and root-locus plots. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ECET 48300 - Network Fundamentals With Microcontrollers |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. The principles of local-area network communications are studied. Emphasis is on hardware, signals, the hardware/software interface, and protocols commonly associated with embedded systems. Methods, tradeoffs, and performance of various addressing, error detection and correction, and collision detection are studied. Relationships with the 7-layer OSI model are examined. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
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| ECET 48400 - Digital Wireless Systems |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course investigates the theory and implementation of digital wireless systems for current and next generation communication systems. Cognitive radio systems and technologies will be studied and implemented. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the operation and architectures of cognitive systems.
2. Describe the tradeoffs between system performance, computational load and energy requirements.
3. Describe, identify and apply digital communication concepts.
4. Evaluate, describe and calculate the effects of noise in cognitive radio systems.
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| ECET 48404 - Emerging Information, Communication And Technologies |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. An advanced course in the Computer Engineering Technology program that introduces and evaluates emerging systems, services and applications in information, communication, and technologies (ICT) areas. In the laboratory, students use utilities to evaluate and analyze various emerging subjects so that certain level of mastery f the subjects can be demonstrated. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Facilitating students’ critical thinking ability on the emerging subjects of the internet, internet protocols and the delivery of communication services using the internet by focusing on the fundamentals of these systems and applications.
2. Developing competence in analysis and application of technologies in computer networking.
3. Developing competence in analysis and application of technologies in telecommunications and wireless communications.
4. Understanding the operations and development trends of emerging technologies in ICT areas.
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| ECET 48600 - Robotics And Control Electronics With Microcomputers |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of robots, robotic sensors, robotic components, and controlling robots with microcomputers. Topics include sensor-based real-time robot control systems; interfacing the following types of sensors; proximity sensors, force sensors, motion sensors, sound sensors, and vision sensor; low level data acquisition and communication, hgh-level communication, coordinate transformation, coordinated path generation, and robot motion programming. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ECET 48800 - Automatic Test Instrumentation |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An introduction to automated test equipment (ATE). Emphasis is placed on understanding the philosophy of testing in maintaining product conformance and control. The operation of the GPIB, VXI bus, or other integrated automatic test sets with a high level computer language control interface with data logging and analysis is presented. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
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| ECET 49000 - Senior Design Project Phase I |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. An extensive individual design and/or analytical project performed in consultation with one or more faculty advisors. Collaboration with representatives of industry, government agency, or community institutions is encouraged. Evidence of extensive and thorough laboratory performance is required. PHASE I includes, but is not limited to, faculty acceptance of project proposal, defining and limiting project objectives, initial research and source contacts, procurement of materials, and periodic progress reports. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. To prepare the student for Phase II of the Senior Design, which includes further research, project implementation of the finalized design, oral presentation to faculty and other interested parties, and a formal written technical report. The final report must be of a quality that warrants its place in the Purdue University library system.
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| ECET 49100 - Senior Design Project Phase II |
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Credit Hours: 2.00 to 5.00. PHASE II includes, but is not limited to, continued research and finalized design, oral presentation to faculty and other interested parties, and a written technical report. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ECET 49300 - Ethics And Professionalism In Technology |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Factors involved in the ethical decision making in engineering and technology professions on both a local and global scale will be presented. Workplace issues such as socio-economic and cultural differences, professionalism, ethical codes, employee and community safety, whistle blowing, diversity and sexual harassment will be discussed. Case studies will guide student activities. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| ECET 49500 - Inten Project Design/Development |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Credit will not be granted for both ECET 495 and ECET 497. This course is an intensive conclusion to the senior design process begun in ECET 496. The course concludes with a formal demonstration and oral presentation on the finished product and a written report on the final design. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
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| ECET 49600 - Project Design and Development, Phase I |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. An extensive individual or small-group design project is carried out with guidance from a faculty advisor. Phase I includes determining customer requirements, considering design alternatives, and issuing a formal project proposal. Software scheduling tools are used extensively. The course concludes with a report and demonstration of functionality of individual hardware and software design blocks. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
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| ECET 49700 - Project Design And Development, Phase II |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. This conclusion of the design project begun in ECET 49600 emphasizes system integration and testing. The course concludes with a formal demonstration of and oral presentation on the finished product and a written report on the final design. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
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| ECET 49900 - Electrical Engineering Technology |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 9.00. Hours and subject matter to be arranged by staff. Cannot be used to replace EET 48000, 49600, or 49700. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
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| ECET 52100 - Solar Energy Systems |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced course in solar energy topics, including radiation from the sun, technology and design of photovoltaic systems, solar lighting systems, and solar-bio systems. Topics will also include energy storage using hydrogen and new advancements in solar technology. Course may be offered in classroom based, hybrid, or distance formats. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Why and how to harness the energy from sun.
2. Design solar cell based energy systems.
3. How to design solar to thermal conversion systems.
4. How to utilize solar radiance in lighting.
5. How to store sun-derived energy.
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| ECET 52400 - Applied Electromagnetics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an advanced treatment of electromagnetics and applications at the graduate level for engineering technology students. Electric and magnetic field theory is presented, including Maxwell’s equations. Topics include vector analysis, electric and magnetic fields, Maxwell’s equations, electromagnetic wave radiation, and propagation. A semester-long project based on applied electromagnetics is required for each student. Knowledge of RF measurement equipment, such as spectrum analyzers and vector network analyzers is required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Perform electromagnetic analysis, using vectors and differential and integral vector operations.
2. Perform electrostatic analysis and calculation in Cartesian, cylindrical and spherical coordinate systems.
3. Calculate the electric charge and electric and magnetic fields using Coulomb’s Law, Gauss’s Law, and Ampere’s law.
4. Use Maxwell’s equations in integral form and differential form to solve boundary value problems.
5. Derive and calculate the electromagnetic plane waves propagation in two and three dimensional space.
6. Determine and calculate the electromagnetic fields in rectangular and cylindrical waveguides.
7. Evaluate the performance of circuits using standard laboratory measurements and simulations.
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| ECET 52500 - Applications In Forensic Engineering Technology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An interdisciplinary consideration of the applications of forensics in the American jurisprudence system. Topics include: failure analysis of electrical and mechanical systems, accident reconstruction, product liability, codes and standards, ethics, and expert witness testimony. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ECET 53500 - Energy Management |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of energy auditing, energy saving opportunities of commercial and industrial systems, utility rate structures, economic evaluation of investments, potential energy saving retrofits, maintenance considerations, and cogeneration opportunities. Data analysis and report writing are practiced using data from a real world energy audit. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and describe the energy conservation opportunities in industrial and commercial systems.
2. Apply energy auditing techniques.
3. Apply electrical and mechanical engineering principles to improve energy efficiency of systems.
4. Determine energy cost and consumption indexes using energy rate structures.
5. Examine the economic evaluation of energy conservation solutions.
6. Use DOE energy assessment tools.
7. Evaluate existing systems for energy recovery and cogeneration opportunities.
8. Use web-based and published material in energy analysis.
8. Evaluate existing systems for Smart Grid opportunities with smart utility meters.
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| ECET 53600 - Embedded Systems Security |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the implementation and application of cryptographic algorithms and protocols in embedded systems. An overview of the security problem and the science of cryptography and cryptanalysis is presented. The notion of the security perimeter in terms of physical access to assets in embedded hardware subsystems is studied. Students implement and apply various ciphers on 8-bit to 32-bit embedded platforms, comparing and contrasting computational and data throughout performance. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and describe cryptography, cryptanalysis, and security perimeters of embedded systems.
2. Identify and describe key performance issues and tradeoffs in the design and application of cryptographic algorithms and protocols in embedded systems.
3. Identify and describe the main areas of research focus in embedded system security and whey they are important.
4. Identify, describe, and apply tools used in cryptographic analysis and performance characterization of embedded systems.
5. Identify, describe, analyze and apply cryptographic algorithms and protocols including but not limited random number and key generators, private-key and public-key ciphers and protocols, and one-way hash functions.
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| ECET 55100 - Optical Networking |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to components, systems, and the enabling technology underlying the optical networking. The enabling technology includes single-wavelength and Wavelength Division Multiplexing (WDM) systems. Optical layer architecture and design are the primary focus of the course, which includes current infrastructure architecture, the operation, deployment, administration and maintenance of networks, the fault and alarm handling, the protection strategies, the access schemes and interfacing with wireless/copper network systems. The course also introduces latest advances like the free-space optical networking and the optical burst networking. Graduate status in the School of Technology or graduate status in another school, with appropriate objectives and preparation. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Light Propagations in fibers – specify a fiber for an optical link.
2. Optical Components – design a physical optical link on single wavelength.
3. Optical Nonlinearities – learn limitations of optical communication.
4. WDM (Wavelength Division Multiplexing) concepts and components – design a WDM link.
5. Optical layer in the network – design of protection, alarms, fault tolerance and network management of the optical layer.
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| ECET 55200 - Embedded System Design |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The course focuses on microcontroller hardware and software integration for embedded control applications. The architecture, programming, and interfacing of Microchip PIC16F88 microcontroller are studied. Interconnection of components, peripheral devices, C language programming, debugging, input/output techniques, and use of PC-based software development tools are studied. Prerequisite: C or C++ programming background is needed. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate a working knowledge of microcontroller busses and the flow of data within a microcontroller system.
2. Develop and demonstrate a C language program to accomplish a given task using a microcontroller.
3. Demonstrate a working knowledge of the necessary steps and methods used to interface a microcontroller system to devices such as motors, sensors, etc.
4. Demonstrate the use of interrupts and other advanced concepts related to microcontrollers.
5. Complete the design, development, programming, and testing of a PIC microcontroller-based embedded system.
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| ECET 55300 - Robotic System Design |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to mathematical modeling, design, planning, and control of robotic systems. The course dwells from geometry, kinematics, statics, dynamics, and control theory. The content comprises of lectures, readings, and problem solving. It follows roughly the same sequence as the material presented in the text book, so it can be read in anticipation of the lectures. Permission of instructor required. Prerequisites: Mathematics course sequence required in BS in ECET or equivalent. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Gain a conceptual understanding of Robotic system Design and do a mathematical modeling of the system.
2. Undertake a typical application and will have a road map to proceed with the design methodology.
3. Pursue the necessary and underlying design disciplines in order to achieve robotic design criteria.
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| ECET 55400 - Hybrid And Battery Technology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will review different sources of energy and perform the comparison between these sources. Battery and storage technology, charging systems, and battery life cycle will be studied in detail. The storage for solar thermal systems, solar photovoltaic systems, wind biomass and wave energy systems will be discussed and practical examples will be given. Hybrid Systems, the need for hybrid systems, range and type of hybrid systems will be discussed. Case studies of diesel-PV-battery, wind-PV-battery, gas-PV-battery, biomass-diesel-battery systems, gas-electrical and hybrid electric vehicles will be given. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand fossil fuel based systems, impact of fossil fuel based systems, non conventional energy sources, seasonal variations and availability, renewable energy sources and hybrid energy systems.
2. Understand solar thermal systems, solar radiation spectrum, radiation measurement, and power generation.
3. Understand operating principles and the battery technology, components of a battery, types and characteristics different batteries, selection and sizing of battery storage.
4. Design and apply system integration and storage systems.
5. Design hybrid systems, determine the need for hybrid systems, and identify the range and the type of hybrid system.
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| ECET 55500 - System Reliability |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course deals with the statistics and probability methods used in reliability engineering. The primary focus of the course is on the statistical methods used to estimate a product’s reliability from product failure data and covariate information. The course also touches on the probability modeling methods that use knowledge of system architecture and system component reliability to calculate system reliability. Prerequisite: Graduate Standing in Engineering Technology or Engineering. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will apply the knowledge of mathematics and engineering, especially in the areas of probability and statistics.
2. Students will be able to interpret data by the use of statistics.
3. Students will be able to design a system, component or process, and apply simultaneously reliability criteria.
4. Students will develop an ability to recognize, formulate and solve reliability problems.
5. Students will be able to understand professional responsibility through data collections procedures.
6. Students will be able to understand professional and ethical responsibility due to the review of reliability issues, and public relations and contemporary issues associated with them.
7. Students will be able to communicate more efficiently.
8. Students will be able to understand the impact of engineering solutions in a global and societal context, through the review of industry practice.
9. Students will be able to use the techniques, skills, and modern engineering tools necessary for engineering practice, through the use of library, Internet, computer programs, and word processors.
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| ECET 55600 - Alternative Energy Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to various sources of energy and their process of extraction. Nonrenewable versus renewable energy sources and their harvesting technology will be studied. This will include wind, solar, fuel cells, biomass, geothermal, hydropower, and ocean energy. Most emphasis will be on renewable energy sources such as wind and solar, geothermal and oceanic energy technology and their harvesting systems. There will also be modeling simulation and analysis of wind and solar energy harvesting systems. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and analyze the potential of various types' energy resources available on earth.
2. Analyze and model various types of energy harvesting systems and process technologies.
3. Investigate and analyze the cost of harvesting energy from various sources.
4. Identify and describe common technologies currently available for harvesting energy.
5. Computer modeling and analysis of currently available energy harvesting systems.
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| ECET 55700 - Advanced Printed Circuit Board Layout Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this course, Advanced Printed Circuit Board (PCB) design and layout are studied. Topics include PCB substrates material, design methodology, through hole technology (THT), surface mount technology (SMT), mechanical design aspects, EMI, electrical characteristics, power systems, multilayer and stack up. Design for testability and manufacturability. Quality assurance in THT and SMT. The course also encompasses RF, high speed digital and mixed signal PCBs throughout the semester. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Able to select PCB substrate material, proper hardware components based on packaging, size, shape, markings, ratings, and color codes for a chosen electronic project.
2. Able to use computer aided tools to design circuit schematic, PCB layout for the chosen circuits.
3. Shall be proficient about THT and SMT technology and PCB layout design process.
4. Shall be familiar with the IPC and Mil-Spec standards and practices of the industry regarding printed circuit board fabrication and design.
5. Shall be familiar with multilayer PCB layout design.
6. Shall be familiar with PCB quality assurance, manufacturability and testability.
7. Able to use hand tools and electronic hardware components to populate the PCB and put together chosen project.
8. Able to use laboratory equipment to debug and develop the circuit to function properly.
9. Able to use hand tools and hardware components to construct prototype version of a chosen circuit using solderless breadboard technique.
10. Able to write formal report for each project describing the stepwise developments.
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| ECET 56100 - Wireless Networking |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to components, systems, and the enabling technology underlying the wireless networking. Topics include: basics of channel modeling, cellular telephony, coding, modulation techniques, antenna diversity, spread spectrum, ultra wideband, carrier hopping, mobile and multi-user access and location awareness technology. Wireless architectures, access, and design are the primary focus of the course, which includes architectures, fault and alarm handling, protection schemes and network management. Other topics include: paging, Wi-Fi, Wi-Max, CDMA, GSM, Bluetooth, ad hoc networking, and interfacing with wireless/copper network systems. Graduate status in the School of Technology or graduate status in another school, with appropriate objectives and preparation. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. The enabling technology in the wireless networking.
2. Components and subsystems used in wireless networking.
3. To design wireless networking systems.
4. Protocols and principles of operation, administration and maintenance of wireless networks.
5. To interface the wireless networks to LAN, MAN and WAN.
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| ECET 58100 - Workshop In Electrical And Computer Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. Advanced study of technical and professional topics. Emphasis is on new developments relating to technical, operational, and training aspects of industry and technology education. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ECET 59000 - Special Problems In Electrical And Computer Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Independent study of a special problem under the guidance of a member of the staff. Does not substitute for either M.S. thesis or M.S. project credit. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ECET 59800 - Directed MS Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A formal investigation of a particular problem under the guidance of the advisory committee. Not applicable to a thesis option plan of study. Enrollment during at least two consecutive terms for a total of three credits is required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ECET 63800 - Selected Topics In Sensor Networks |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines general sensor network concepts, with a focus on a particular area of research and development. Current applications are studied, culminating with the analysis, characterization and/or examination of a sensor network. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and describe sensor network applications.
2. Identify and describe key performance issues and tradeoffs in the design and application of sensor networks.
3. Identify and describe the main areas of research focus in sensor networks and whey they are important.
4. Identify, describe, and apply tools used in sensor network analysis, simulation, characterization, control, and information retrieval.
5. Analyze, calculate and simulate or measure critical performance metrics of sensor networks and their components (nodes, gateways, etc.).
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| ECET 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ECET C2910 - Cooperative Education Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's academic program and intended career with a business, industry, or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the practice is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ECET C2920 - Cooperative Education Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's academic program and intended career with a business, industry, or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the practice is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECET C3930 - Cooperative Education Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's academic program and intended career with a business, industry, or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the practice is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ECET C3940 - Cooperative Education Practice IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's academic program and intended career with a business, industry, or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the practice is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECET C3950 - Cooperative Education Practice V |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's academic program and intended career with a business, industry, or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the practice is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECET E2910 - Employment Enrichment Experience I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full- or part-time, related employment enrichment experiences designed to enhance the student's academic program and intended career with a business, industry, or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the enrichment experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECET E2920 - Employment Enrichment Experience II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full- or part-time, related employment enrichment experiences designed to enhance the student's academic program and intended career with a business, industry, or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the enrichment experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECET E3930 - Employment Enrichment Experience III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full- or part-time, related employment enrichment experiences designed to enhance the student's academic program and intended career with a business, industry, or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the enrichment experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECET E3940 - Employment Enrichment Experience IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full- or part-time, related employment enrichment experiences designed to enhance the student's academic program and intended career with a business, industry, or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the enrichment experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECET E3950 - Employment Enrichment Experience V |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full- or part-time, related employment enrichment experiences designed to enhance the student's academic program and intended career with a business, industry, or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the enrichment experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ECET I2910 - Career Enrichment Internship I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's readiness for entering an initial or a second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECET I2920 - Career Enrichment Internship II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's readiness for entering an initial or a second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECET I3930 - Career Enrichment Internship III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's readiness for entering an initial or a second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECET I3940 - Career Enrichment Internship IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's readiness for entering an initial or a second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECET I3950 - Career Enrichment Internship V |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's readiness for entering an initial or a second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECET M1050 - Introduction To Electronics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Lecture and laboratory will cover basic circuit elements and circuit analysis, analog and digital components, DC and AC circuits, electrical measuring techniques, and materials and processes in electronics manufacturing, including printed circuit board layout and fabrication, though-hole and surface-mount manufacturing processes, test, inspection, and cleaning. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECET M1500 - Electronics Manufacturing I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the fabrication of electronic products. Topics include components, printed-circuit board layout and fabrication, PCB assembly and inspection, chassis hardware and assembly, and harness and cable fabrication. Students will fabricate and assemble a working prototype in the laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET M2000 - Electronics Manufacturing II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Techniques for high volume manufacturing of printed circuit boards. Both through-hole and surface-mount assemblies are included. Topics include computer-aided circuit design, printed-circuit board layout, board fabrication, assembly, and test. System integration of the entire process and statistical quality control are stressed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECET M2900 - Projects In Electronics Manufacturing |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A capstone course in electronics manufacturing. Students will be given a printed circuit board to lay out and assemble using automated techniques. They will develop test strategies and implement statistical process control. At the end of the course, each student will present written and oral reports on his or her part of the project. Students will evaluate each step of the manufacturing process. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECON 10000 - Economics Lectures |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An orientation to the undergraduate program in economics, to the library and computing facilities used by economics undergraduates, and to the advising and placement services available. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECON 10100 - Survey Of Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. How economic forces such as globalization, technological change, and public policy impact the lives of individuals. Examines the roles, the market-place and the pursuit of self-interest play in the behavior of an economic system. Presents economic systems alternative to the market/capitalist one. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. To apply economic concepts to understand how consumers, producers, and public policy-makers make decisions.
2. Explain the links between technological change, sustainable economic growth, and well-being.
3. Identify global and international economic issues and assess how they impact our well-being.
4. Explain the causes and consequences of globalization.
5. Explain how the interaction of buyers and sellers in the market place determines prices for goods, services, and resources.
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| ECON 21000 - Principles Of Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Economics is the study of decision making under conditions of scarcity. This course looks at the behavior of the individual consumer and firm and their interaction with the government. The second half of the course studies the macroeconomy and focuses on the causes of inflation, unemployment, and interest rate changes. The international economy also will be studied. No credit for management students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:ISH 1040 Introduction To Economics
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECON 21100 - Contemporary Economic Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course assists students in analyzing current economic issues such as inflation, and unemployment, the energy crisis, environmental protection, poverty, and income distribution, urban blight, health care, and education. All students are required to give presentations and prepare papers on one of these topics. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ECON 21700 - Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. National economic problems such as unemployment, recessions, inflation, taxation, bank interest rates, the growth of government, monetary systems, and a rising national debt are discussed along with the principles, policies and institutions for solving these macroeconomic problems. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECON 21900 - Economics For Future Elementary Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A principles of economics course designed for future elementary and social studies teachers. The purpose of this course is to: 1) introduce the future teacher to basic economic concepts required by the Indiana Academic Standards for Social Studies, K-6, 2) learn methods for teaching these concepts in the K-6 curriculum, and 3) develop a catalog of curriculum materials appropriate for teaching economics in grades K-6. No credit for management students. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and understand the basic concepts and principles of economics in order to teach at the primary school level.
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| ECON 21910 - Economics For Future Secondary Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Upon completion of this course students will be able to analyze economic events in order to make more intelligent choices as consumers, workers, and voting citizens; identify and understand the basic concepts and principles of economics in order to meet standards at the secondary school level; identify supplemental materials and programs from variety of sources used in your teaching major, minor or as supplements in your classrooms; and review and organize lessons that teach economic concepts. No credit for management students. The course content is principles-level economics and is designed for social studies education students who are beginning their sequence of required economics courses. The course is designed to be taken before upper-division economic content courses. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Analyze economic events so that you will be able to make more intelligent choices as a consumer, worker, and voting citizen
2. Identify and understand the basic concepts and principles of economics in order to teach at the secondary school level.
3. Identify supplementary materials and programs (CD's, video tapes, simulations, curriculum materials, etc.) from a variety of sources
that can be used in your teaching major, minor or as supplements in your classroom.
4. Review and organize lessons that teach economic concepts in your chosen Social Studies area.
5. Assist course instructor in improving the course to better fit your needs.
|
| ECON 24000 - Personal Financial Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Lectures and case analysis of managing one's personal finances; including budgeting, credit analysis, insurance, taxation, housing, estate planning, private and business investment. Not available for credit in Management concentrations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ECON 25100 - Microeconomics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Microeconomics studies the choices individuals make and the incentives that influence those choices. Emphasis is on the incentives that determine market prices and resource allocation. The role of public policy in influencing incentives and efficiency is also addressed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:ISH 1042 Microeconomics
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
|
| ECON 25200 - Macroeconomics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to macroeconomic theory. The course develops a theoretical framework permitting an analysis of the forces affecting national income, employment, interest rates, and the rate of inflation. Emphasis is placed upon the role of government fiscal and monetary policy in promoting economic growth and stable prices. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:ISH 1041 Macroeconomics
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECON 28000 - Mathematics For Economists |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course is designed to provide familiarity with some of the basic mathematical tools used extensively in economics. Topics to be covered include constrained optimization and comparative statistics along with economic applications. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ECON 29000 - Sophomore Level Problems In Economics |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Arrange with instructor before enrolling. Investigation in a specific economics field. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ECON 30100 - Managerial Economics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of Econ 251. A more rigorous and practical treatment of microeconomic theory. Topics include: consumer behavior and demand, decision under uncertainty, production and cost, factor demand, market structure, general equilibrium and welfare. Emphasis on the tools used to analyze the behavior of individual economic units. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| ECON 30200 - Business Conditions Analysis |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of Econ 252. A more rigorous and practical treatment of macroeconomic theory with emphasis on the conditions in which a business operates. Topics include: determinants of consumption, investment, net exports and foreign exchange rates, the level of unemployment, inflation and the long-run rate of economic growth. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| ECON 31100 - Environmental Economics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an overview of environmental issues and legislation in the United States. Emphasis is placed on understanding and analyzing environmental problems applying basic principles of economics. This course explores the causes of environmental problems and evaluates the various policy instruments that are often used to address them at the international, national, state and local levels. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| ECON 32200 - Public Finance |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The examination and analysis of public finance practices and problems in the federal fiscal system. Government activities that involve spending and taxation are analyzed applying basic principles of economics. Topics include public education, social security, healthcare, environment and tax systems. State and local government issues are also addressed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| ECON 34000 - Intermediate Microeconomic Theory |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics from consumer behavior and demand, decisions under uncertainty, production and cost, factor demand, market structure, general equilibrium and welfare. Emphasis on the tools used to analyze the behavior of individual economic units. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ECON 35100 - Intermediate Microeconomics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Theoretical treatment of consumer and producer behavior. Analysis of demand, production, cost, product and factor markets leading to general equilibrium and welfare implications. Emphasis is upon the development of skills necessary to analyze the behavior of individual economic agents. Not available for credit in Management concentrations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Model decision-making of individuals and businesses.
2. Solve optimization problems related to decision-making.
3. Model the interaction of demand and supply in the market place.
4. Apply microeconomic principles to socioeconomic issues such as education, health care, and insurance.
5. Evaluate public policy initiatives in the context of rational decision-making.
6. Model decision-making under uncertainty and asymmetric information.
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| ECON 35200 - Intermediate Macroeconomics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of ECON 25200. A more rigorous, general equilibrium treatment of macroeconomic theory with emphasis on the components of the model: determinants of consumption, investment, net exports and foreign exchange rates, the level of unemployment, inflation and the long-run rate of economic growth. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| ECON 35300 - Business Cycles |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an analysis of business fluctuation and the impact of government policy instruments. Special emphasis is placed on how macroeconomic factors influence managerial and personal decision making. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| ECON 35500 - Comparative Analysis Of Economic Systems |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course describes the general economic problem and how it is solved by alternative forms of economic organization. Market, centrally planned, social democratic, and mercantilist systems are contrasted in terms of their assignment of property rights, their mechanisms for transmitting information, their incentive structure, and the degree to which they meet efficiency and equity criteria. Worldwide contemporary trends are analyzed. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ECON 36000 - Econometrics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the statistical techniques used to analyze economic data, estimate casual effects, make predictions, and test economic theory. Students learn empirical skills used in analytical consulting, financial modeling, economic research, and by analysts in the private and public sectors. Emphasis is placed on estimating a single equation (e.g., demand function) and the problems associated with such estimation. As part of the course, students will estimate equations using statistical software available in the Krannert computer labs. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| ECON 36100 - Antitrust And Regulation |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The course studies the influence of laws and regulations on the behavior of firms, focusing on two types of government intervention in the market: antitrust law and economic regulation. Antitrust laws define the rules by which firms must compete. Economic regulation more tightly constrains the actions of firms, requiring that they obtain approval to set prices and/or enter new markets. The focus is on current topics in both areas, including comparison of U.S. practice with that of European Union and elsewhere. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate a basic understanding of Economics as applied to antitrust and government regulation of firms, including comparisons of U.S. practice with that of the European Union and elsewhere.
2. Understand the perspective provided by economic analysis regarding the interplay between government regulation and firms’ decisions regarding such factors as pricing, market entry, and the extent/form of competition.
3. Identify insights economic analysis provides concerning the creation and implementation of optimal industrial regulations.
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| ECON 36500 - History Of Economic Thought |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The course traces the development of theories of value and economic growth from the seventeenth century to Karl Marx. Among the authors studied are the mercantilists, Hume, Smith, Ricardo, and Marx. Excerpts from the original works are read and evaluated in light of modern theory. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| ECON 36800 - Economics And Values |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores some specific critiques of stereotypical neoclassical economics; utilizes notions of knowledge, learning, rationality, logic, science, and scholarship that tend to complement those found in many conventional economics courses; raises questions about the roles of values in both individual decision-making and in economic thinking, as well as about the interrelation of economic concepts and issues of ethics, justice, and care at both the individual and the social level; embodies interactive, reflective learning. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Teaches the values of both individual decision making and economic thinking as well as the interrelation of economics concepts and issues.
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| ECON 37000 - International Trade |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Develops an understanding of the economics of globalization, including the movement of goods, people, capital, and ideas across countries. Using the tools of intermediate economic theory, we discuss the benefits and costs of globalization, the implications of globalization for wages, earnings, and national welfare, and their intersection with government policies. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate a basic understanding of Economics as applied to international trade, including the movement of goods, people, capital, and ideas across countries.
2. Understand the perspective provided by economic analysis regarding globalization of economies, including the implications for wages, earnings and national welfare.
3. Identify insights economics analysis provides concerning the benefits and costs of globalization and the implications for government policies.
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| ECON 37100 - International Monetary Problems |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A mixture of lectures and case discussions covering historical changes in the world's monetary system, problems with balance of payments adjustments, exchange rates and foreign exchange markets, international capital markets and financial flows, the international transmission of business fluctuations, monetary and fiscal policy in an interdependent world, and crises in developing countries. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ECON 37500 - United States Economic History |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of economic analysis to illuminate such historical questions as the economic effects of British colonial administration, the rise of banking institutions, the financing of the railroads, the economics of slavery, the rise of big business, and the sources of government regulation of business. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| ECON 38000 - Money And Banking |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The course analyzes the economics of money, monetary systems, investments, and financial intermediaries in modern industrial economies. Topics considered include the origin of money and the banking industry, financial asset markets, the role of central banks, and the effects of various monetary policies. The theory will be presented side by side with current economic and financial news, and the students will learn how to track financial and economic data via The Wall Street Journal. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| ECON 38500 - Labor Economics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The purpose of this course is to introduce important topics, theories, institutions, and policy issues relating to the functioning of labor markets. Topics to be considered include labor supply decisions, investments in human capital, compensating wage differentials, labor contract theory, unions, compensation programs, signaling in labor markets, the economics of unemployment, and government employment, retirement, and workplace safety. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| ECON 39000 - Junior Level Problems In Economics |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Investigation into a specific topic area of economics. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ECON 40600 - Natural Resource And Environmental Economics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to economic models of renewable and nonrenewable natural resources and the use of these models in the analysis of current resouce use and environmental issues. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| ECON 41500 - Contemporary Economic Problems And Policies |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An application of the principles of economics developed in ECON 25100 and 25200 to contemporary controversies in public policy. Half of the semester is devoted to microeconomics issues and half to controversies in macroeconomics policy. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| ECON 41900 - Managerial Economics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The application of economic analysis and common nonmathematical models to managerial decisions. Topics include decisions involving time and uncertainty in both competitive and noncompetitive markets. Pricing decisions are emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn how to apply the concepts of economic analysis and common non-mathematical models to managerial decisions in both competitive and non-competitive markets.
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| ECON 42200 - Public Finance And Taxation |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the role of government in market economies. The aim of the course is to provide an understanding of the reasons for government intervention in the economy and how individuals and firms respond to taxation and other government actions and how to evaluate the benefits of public programs. For example, what effects do taxes have on incentives to work, save, and invest? Emphasis is placed on current U.S. policy issues including Social Security, health care, education, environmental regulation, welfare programs, and tax reform. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate a basic understanding of public economics, including public finance and welfare issues and the role of government in market economics.
2. Understand the perspective provided by economic analysis in public policy issues including environmental policy , Social Security, education policy, welfare programs, and taxation.
3. Identify insights public economics provides concerning the economic efficiency and equity effects of various government policies.
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| ECON 43400 - International Trade |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The course is a study of the reasons, as well as the benefits and costs of international trade. The effects of trade policy (e.g., tariffs, trade agreements) are examined. Balance of payments, foreign exchange, and international macroeconomics linkages are also examined. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify the gains and losses from specialization and exchange.
2. Assess the impact of free-trade upon wages and other factor payments.
3. Appraise the benefits and costs of trade barriers
4. Describe U.S. commercial policy, as it relates to trade.
5. Translate foreign-currency denominated prices and interest rates.
6. Construct a country’s balance of payments.
7. Deduce the impact of changes in the economic environment upon the value of a country’s currency.
8. Evaluate the effectiveness of monetary and fiscal policy in the context of an open-economy macroeconomic model.
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| ECON 45100 - Game Theory |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. In the course, economic, political, and social interactions are represented as games, in which strategies and resulting outcomes can be analyzed. The analysis of these interactions is then used to demonstrate how one can make optimal decisions under uncertainty. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ECON 45600 - Urban Economics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the market forces that lead to the development, growth, and size of cities. In addition, this course covers the theory of location and land use, principles of local public finance, policy problems in the areas of urban housing, transportation, crime, and pollution. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| ECON 46000 - Econometrics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the statistical techniques used in testing economic theory. Emphasis is placed on estimating a single equation (e.g., a demand function) and the problems associated with such estimation. As part of the course, students will estimate equations on the University's computational facility. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ECON 46100 - Industrial Organization |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the determinants of firm and market structure and the resulting market performance in imperfectly-competitive markets. Advanced topics include advertising, research and development, imperfectly competitive international markets, and market integration. Emphasis is placed on using theoretical models of firm and industry behavior to explain and analyze real-world examples of firm behavior. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| ECON 46200 - The Economics Of Health Care |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The course analyzes economic forces that shape the health care industry. Course content includes the market structure of the health care industry, public and private health care delivery systems, reimbursement methods for services, and the labor market for health care workers. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| ECON 46500 - Economic Forecasting Techniques |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a basic course in economic forecasting where statistical techniques are used to evaluate data and develop a forecast. Emphasis is placed on the evaluation of time series data, estimating, testing and the application of computer based methods of forecasting. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| ECON 46600 - International Economics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Analyzes topics in international economics, using more advantage techniques and more detailed treatment than in ECON 37000 or 37100. While coverage varies somewhat with instructor, some topics could include: economic growth, innovation and technology transfer, and the role of multinational corporations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate a basic understanding of Economics as applied to international trade and finances.
2. Understand the perspective provided by economic analysis regarding the interaction between economic growth and international trade.
3. Identify insights economics analysis provides concerning the benefits and costs of technology transfer and the role of multinational corporations.
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| ECON 46700 - Economics And The Law |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a study of the economic consequences of law. The focus is on the impact of laws on the efficient use of resources in a society. The relevant microeconomic theory underlying social decision making will be examined. The economic foundations of property rights and contract law will be examined, including issues of risk allocation and liability associated with tort law. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| ECON 47000 - Transportation Economics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Building upon basic economic principles, this course introduces the student to mainstream areas in transportation economics including market demand and supply, market structure, transportation investment, marginal cost pricing, cost-benefit analysis, land use and transportation, transportation safety, and government intervention. Blending theory with application, the course takes a case study approach in drawing upon a wealth of empirical work on highways, railroads, motor carriers, airlines, and water carriage. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ECON 47100 - Behavioral Economics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students learn about human behavior in economic environments, with a strong emphasis on classroom laboratory exercises. Topics considered include behavior in a variety of markets - for example, markets with price controls, markets for financial assets and auction markets -- and behavior in social dilemmas that arise when people try to provide public goods voluntarily or when sellers try to conspire to fix prices. Students will also learn how people bargain with, trust each other, and show social preferences towards others. Decision-making and anomalies for risky and uncertain choices will also be covered. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate a basic understanding of Economics as applied to human behavior in various economic environments based on classroom laboratory exercises.
2. Understand the perspective provided by economic analysis in social exchanges that involve bargaining, trust, and uncertainty.
3. Identify insights experimental economics provides concerning individuals’ behavior in markets.
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| ECON 49000 - Problems In Economics |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Arrange with instructor before enrolling. Supervised reading and reports in various subjects. Open only to a limited number of seniors with superior records in previous courses. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ECON 49900 - Senior Honors Thesis |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Execution by economics honors students of a senior honors thesis under the direction and supervision of the faculty. In addition to a paper, completion of the research project may involve the presentation of the findings in a seminar or workshop setting. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Research
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Honors, S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Complete a high quality research paper that applies Economic analysis to a topic of particular interest to the student.
2. Develop a deep understanding of the roles that Economic theory and/or empirical analysis (Econometrics) play in creating high-quality economic analysis.
3. Identify the economics literature (journals, books, monographs, etc.) that relates to the research topic considered.
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| ECON 51000 - Game Theory |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Game theory is a powerful tool that facilitates a decision making process of individuals. Games are characterized usually by two or more players where any player’s action has an impact on other players’ payoff. Players are decision making units, e.g. individuals, firms, workers, managers, countries etc. Game theory analyzes situations in which people (or other animals) interact by breaking these situations down into basic descriptions of the set of players, the strategies available to these players, and the payoffs that the players receive for different combinations of strategy choices. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understanding of the logical mechanics, provide good intuition and to apply tools to explain events.
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| ECON 51100 - Intermediate Economics I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Consumer behavior and demand, production and cost, factor demand, market structure, general equilibrium and welfare. Emphasis on the tools used to analyze the behavior of individual economic units. Not open to students with credit in ECON 34000. Typically offered Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| ECON 51110 - Foundations Of Economics And Finance |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course provides an introductory examination of the elements of economics and finance routinely utilized for managerial decision making. An overview of the micro/macro economy is presented, focusing on supply and demand, production costs and market structures, role of the government, Federal Reserve, and fiscal and monetary policy in the economy. The course also covers general financial decision making as relates to time value, capital budgeting, cost of capital and capital structure, and working capital management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Have a basic understanding of the elements of microeconomics and macroeconomics that impact managerial decision making such as supply demand, industry structure, fiscal and monetary policy and the role of the government and Federal Reserve.
2. Have an understanding of the time value of money, capital budgeting, the implications of capital structure and the cost of capital as well as elements of risk management.
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| ECON 51200 - Intermediate Economics II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Course content includes money and banking, national income and aggregative economics; the analysis of the determination of national income, employment, the price level, and the balance of payments. Consideration of both theory and economic policy. Not open to students with credit in ECON 35200. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| ECON 51300 - Economic Theory |
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Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00 (West Lafayette, Calumet) 3.00 (North Central) Theoretical analysis of a market economy with an emphasis on decision processes of managers. Consideration is given to micro aspects of price determination, utilization of resources and market organization, and to aggregative concepts of national income and employment. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| ECON 51400 - Microeconomics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An introduction to microeconomic theory. Analysis of consumer demand, output and input decisions of firms, price determination, economic efficiency, market structures, and market failure. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| ECON 51500 - Macroeconomics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Investigation of the causes of macroeconomic fluctuations in the economy. Looks at changes in inflation, unemployment, real output, interest rates, and exchange rates, and explores why they occur, what their effects are, and what, if any, role government should play in dealing with these problems. A mixture of theory and case studies with reference to historical case studies. Current macroeconomic problems will be discussed with a focus on the international aspects of macroeconomic problems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Predict the macroeconomic impact of fiscal and monetary policies using the mathematical IS/LM models.
2. Demonstrate an understanding of the interdependencies and complexities with respect to international trade of goods and services as well as capital flows.
3. Analyze the possible economic/social impacts of various policy proposals from a historic perspective.
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| ECON 51900 - Economics For Pre-College Educators |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Economics and economic education materials and instructional strategies for pre-college teachers in all grade levels and subject areas. Most sections, or workshops, survey both microeconomics and macroeconomics concepts and current public policy issues. Some workshops, however, deal with special themes or contemporary economics problems, and vary each time they are offered, e.g., international economics, economics in literature and children's literature or energy and environmental economics. Participants are usually expected to develop a package of classroom activities and supplements. Typically offered in the Summer, but occasionally in the Fall and Spring semesters.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
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| ECON 52000 - Industrial Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course will explore the division of economic activity among industries in developed and less-developed countries. It will examine patterns of private and public ownership in different countries. It will discuss the determinants of market and firm structure, firm conduct, and market performance in imperfectly competitive markets, and different approaches to regulating such markets. Emphasis is placed on using basic economic models of firm and industry behavior to explain and analyze real-world markets. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to apply economic analysis and model to explain real-world firm and industry behavior.
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| ECON 53400 - International Trade Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Problems of the international economy addressed in the light of economic theory. Emphasis is on real, as opposed to monetary, topics. Topics may include trade barriers, multinational corporations, technology transfer, the European economic community, economic constraints on the sovereignty of nation-states. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate a basic understanding of international trade theory.
2. Understand the perspective provided by economic analysis regarding the interaction between international trade and growth.
3. Idetify insights international trade theory models provide to real world policy issues such as free trade area formation and administered protection policies.
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| ECON 55000 - Personnel Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Personnel Economics applies micro- and macroeconomic theory to the workings of the labor market while maintaining a focus on incentives in the workplace. The course will investigate the determination of wages and compensation (based on a study of labor demand and supply) and the differences in these forms of payment for labor services across workers within an occupation, across occupations, and across cultures. Other topics to be considered include the connection between investments in education and training and labor market outcomes and estimates of the costs and benefits of immigration and employee turnover and discuss the impact of unions, as well as discrimination in the labor market issues. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will have the tools of economic logic that allow them to evaluate proposals for labor policies on a firm-specific level and on a national level.
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| ECON 55100 - Competitive Advantage Of A Region |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course applies the theory of competitive advantage, advanced by Michael Porter (The Competitive Advantage of Nations) to a region. Examines factors associated with superior economic growth relative to peer regions. One focus of the course is Northern Indiana and factors of potential competitive advantage, including multiple carriers for intercontinental rail service, proximity to major manufacturing, and strength in support services important to new product development. Students will analyze economic growth of an Indiana county and compare this to peer counties, and use principles of comparative advantage to understand resultant outcome difference in growth performance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| ECON 55200 - Introduction To Economic Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to the economic development process carried out by local governments, chambers of commerce, not-for-profit organizations and utility companies. It examines economic development organization structure, community-based economic development programs, relationships between chambers of commerce and government and others in delivering programs that expand jobs and investment in existing businesses and attract new business. There is an emphasis on the roles of professional staff, community volunteer representatives and team work in the conduct of community economic development programs. Interpretation of economic and statistical data and in working within community-based economic development teams is covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| ECON 55300 - Economic And Social Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers: (1) regional growth, development, and change; (2) input-output analysis; (3) benefit/cost analysis; (4) social issues and change; and (5) creating a regional strategy. Topic (1) provides an overview of the recent literature of regional growth and development. Topic (2) provides students with hands-on experience in using the IMPLAN economic model for a county or region of their choice. The model is particularly useful in evaluating the economic impacts (direct, indirect, and induced) of new developments on a region. Topic (3) provides students with techniques to evaluate the economic benefits and costs of proposed initiatives. Topic (4) introduces students to an analysis of social issues that have implications for and interactions with the practice of economic development. Topic (5) is directed at developing an integrated economic development strategy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| ECON 56200 - Econometrics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This masters-level course in econometrics covers the tools that will enable students to conduct empirical analysis using economics data. The course examines the statistical techniques used in testing economic theories, estimating casual effects, and making predictions. Emphasis is placed on estimating a single equation (e.g., a demand function) and the problems associated with such estimation. As part of the course, students will estimate equations using STATA, a statistical software package. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will have the tools to perform simple econometric analysis of Economic problems.
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| ECON 56500 - Law And Economics |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is designed to give the student an understanding of both legal and economic principles and the relationship between them. It will also show the student how to access various data bases, Lexis/Nexis, to get a formal statement of the law and how the laws have actually been interpreted and enforced. Finally, through the use of economic analysis, the student will acquire the tools to predict the likely outcomes of particular laws and how they will affect their family and business decisions. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The student is expected to understand the interplay between Economics and Law.
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| ECON 57200 - Econometrics II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is primarily related to the specification of, and estimation, prediction, testing and inference in, the linear regression model under ideal and generalized conditions. Other topics covered include: a discussion of typical mean-independence violations and instrumental variables estimation. This course builds on 57100 in its extensive use of linear algebra and mathematical statistics to illustrate these concepts. Throughout the course, we will apply techniques discussed in the classroom using MATLAB. The programming side of the course should not be excessively demanding, and instructional tutorials for basic MATLAB operations will be posted online. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. A student will be able to apply Econometric analysis to specific economic questions using MATLAB.
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| ECON 57300 - Financial Econometrics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course offers an introduction of basic principles of econometric analysis that will help students understand finance theories and their empirical applications. It will also equip students with appropriate statistical techniques for doing applied financial research. The statistical techniques are particularly well suited for analyzing financial time-series data. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The student will be able to apply Econometric time series methods to analysis financial data.
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| ECON 57400 - Microeconometrics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This is a graduate-level course in microeconometrics. This course is primarily related to the specification and estimation of various models commonly encountered in microeconomic applications. The course will first briefly cover the theory of maximum likelihood estimation (MLE), and apply MLE in some introductory settings. These methods will then be applied to various latent-variable economic models including binary choice models (the logit, probit, and other alternatives), censored regression models (e.g., the tobit) and models for count data. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to apply microeconometric tools to analyze various economic questions.
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| ECON 59000 - Problems In Economics |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Open only to a limited number of seniors and graduate students. Arrange with instructor before enrolling. Supervised reading and reports in various subjects. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ECON 60000 - Teaching Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course traces the development of economic theory from the Mercantilist writers through the contributions of J. S. Mill and Karl Marx. Topics covered include the development of value theory (especially labor theories of value), theories of economic growth and business cycles, the classical debate over the meaning and validity of Say's Law, and changing views regarding the appropriate role of government in the marketplace. In each case, the contributions of the authors considered are evaluated in light of our modern understanding of economic theory. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ECON 60600 - Microeconomics I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An introduction to basic consumer and producer theory, competitive markets (including using the continuum to model competition), basic general equilibrium theory, and basic risk/uncertainty. Co-requisite: ECON 61500. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECON 60700 - Microeconomics II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Building on Microeconomics I, more advanced consumer and producer theory using support functions, risk/uncertainty and information, and basic game theory and oligopoly. Prerequisite: ECON 60600. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECON 60800 - Macroeconomic Theory I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. An introduction to general equilibrium macroeconomic models in both deterministic and stochastic settings. Topics studied include: static neoclassical models, social planner problems, dynamic programming, growth and capital accumulation, stochastic economies, asset pricing, and overlapping generations models. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECON 60900 - Microeconomics III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An advanced course in game theory and general equilibrium theory. Among the topics covered are: games in strategic form, games in extensive form, games of incomplete information, cooperative games with side payments, mechanism design, consumer choice theory, Pareto optimality, the Arrow-Debreu-McKenzie model, and the existence and stability of competitive equilibria. Prerequisite: ECON 60600. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECON 61000 - Advanced Game Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An advanced course in game theory and its applications. Among the topics covered are: extensive form games, normal form games, Nash equilibrium, mixed strategies equilibrium, subgame perfect equilibrium, learning and equilibrium, games with incomplete information, repeated games, cooperative games, noncooperative bargaining, and auctions. Prerequisite: ECON 60600. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an advanced understanding of game theory and strategic thinking, including concepts such as dominance, backward induction, equilibrium, commitment, extensive form games, and asymmetric information.
2. Understand the perspective provided by game theory for a variety of games played in economic and political settings.
3. Identify insights game theory provides in translating an informal description of a multi-person decision situation into a formal game-theoretic problem.
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| ECON 61100 - Macroeconomic Theory II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. An introduction to selected topics in macroeconomics, including theories of business cycles, economic growth, microfoundations of labor markets and some miscellaneous issues. Topics covered include: theories of business cycles (real business cycles, information imperfections, coordination failures), economics of growth (neoclassical model, human capital model, endogenous growth), microfoundations of labor markets (recursive competitive equilibrium models, search and matching models, efficiency wages, implicit contracts, insider-outsider model), miscellaneous issues including monetary economics (cash-in-advance constraint models), the Lucas critique, time inconsistency, and endogenous cycles. Prerequisite: ECON 60800. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ECON 61200 - Advanced Macroeconomics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Selected topics in contemporary research in macroeconomic theory. Emphasis on the implications of uncertainty in macroeconomic theory, including such topics as search theory, asset selection under uncertainty, stochastic optimal control, and asymmetric information. Typically offered Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ECON 61300 - Topics In Microeconomics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Economic theory workshop, with presentations given by departmental and external speakers. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECON 61400 - Economics Of Information |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An introduction to the economics of information. Key topics considered are nonexpected utility theory and the various implications of asymmetric information-either hidden
action(s) and/or hidden types, including extensions of the basic principal-agent model as well adverse selection issues, mechanism design, and screening/signaling models. Other topics that may be considered include the value of information/real option theory, herd behavior, capital asset pricing models, stochastic calculus and options pricing models, organizational decision making, search theory and price dispersion models, and herd behavior. Prerequisite: ECON 60600. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECON 61500 - Mathematical Analysis For Economists |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Topics include constrained optimization, comparative statics, and elementary topics in mathematical analysis. Students should be familiar with calculus, linear algebra, basic probability, and have a grasp of microeconomic theory (such as the material covered in ECON 51100). Typically offered Fall.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Master key mathematical concepts used in advanced (PhD level) Economics courses.
2. Gain the ability to analyze Economics problems using higher level mathematical tools.
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| ECON 61800 - Advanced Topics In Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Macro/international theory workshop. Topics on macroeconomics and international economics are presented by departmental and external speakers. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Gain awareness of the latest research in Economics across a variety of fields in Economics.
2. Identify ways to effectively communicate new research in Economics to others.
3. Understand how the development of new formal theoretic models and/or the execution of rigorous novel empirical research using the latest Econometric methods provide insights for current policy discussion.
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| ECON 62000 - Industrial Organization |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A survey of some of the major theoretical issues in the field of industrial organization. Topics include: the welfare economics of competition and monopoly, static and dynamic oligopoly theory, differentiated products models, and entry deterrence. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECON 62100 - Applied Industrial Organization |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A continuation of ECON 62000, with emphasis on empirical analysis and the application of theory to real-world situations. Topics covered include: empirical estimation of market structure, empirical tests of market conduct, the effect of anti-competitive behavior on economic performance, antitrust practice, regulation theory and practice, and experimental industrial economics. The material is selected from current journal articles. Prerequisite: ECON 62000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECON 63000 - Advanced Monetary Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Covers current literature on decentralized monetary economies. Topics are selected from recent research publications that include: studies related to endogenous determination of pattern of exchange, valuation of assets and currencies, price determination and dispersion, and international finance. The material is selected from current journal articles. Prerequisite: ECON 53000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECON 63100 - Industrial Organization |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A study of asset selection within the expected utility approach, with some attention given to the nonexpected utility decision models. Topics covered include axioms for measurable utility, monetary models under uncertainty, models of capital budgets, and security-selection models. Prerequisite: Master's student standing or higher. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| ECON 63200 - Labor Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An area seminar. Theoretical and empirical research on the financial markets. Prerequisite: ECON 63000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECON 63400 - International Trade |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Application of microeconomic techniques to international trade. Topics include: classical, neoclassical, and modern theories of international trade; the theory of tariffs and commercial policy, (including aspects of political economy), welfare aspects of trade and tariff theory, and related topics. The material is selected from current journal articles. Prerequisite: ECON 60700. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECON 63500 - Monetary International Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A research seminar on international monetary issues. Topics include: theories of balance of payments and exchange-rate determination, international asset markets and capital flows, breakdowns of pegged exchange-rate regimes, currency substitution, monetary integration, international impacts of alternative monetary, and fiscal and intervention policies. Assignments are based on selected articles. Prerequisite: ECON 60800. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECON 63600 - Topics And Research In International Trade |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A course in international trade theory and empirics, with emphasis on surveying the recent developments in the field-including empirical applications of material covered in ECON 634. While specific subject matter may vary from year to year, likely topics include: theory and empirics on trade and wages, trade and the environment, trade in the presence of multinational firms and vertical specialization, empirical evaluation of the positive theories of trade (especially factor endowment and variety models), and the identification and measurement of trade barriers and their effects. Material is selected from current journal articles. Prerequisite: ECON 60700. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECON 64000 - Economic And Social Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. The role of government in the American economy. Policies relating to the environment, energy, transportation, labor markets, the distribution of income, macrostability, and international trade are analyzed. Prerequisite: ECON 51300, Master's student standing or higher and Management majors only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| ECON 65000 - Labor Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics in labor economics. While the specific subject matter varies from year to year, recent seminars have examined such topics as dynamic labor demand and supply analysis, human capital theory, screening and signaling theories, contract theory, efficiency wages, job matching, search, unions, and internal labor markets. Material is selected from current journal articles. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECON 65200 - Economics Of Labor Markets |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Study of labor force concepts and measurements, the macroeconomic behavior of employment and earnings, and the functioning of labor markets. Emphasis is placed on empirical findings and research methods. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate a basic understanding of Economics as applied to labor markets.
2. Understand of the perspective provided by economic analysis with respect to human resource management.
3. Develop knowledge of the various applications of economic analysis to the creation and implementation of optimal personnel practices and policies.
|
| ECON 66800 - Topics In Applied Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Applied micro workshop. Topics on applied macroeconomics are presented by departmental and external speakers. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECON 67000 - Probability And Statistics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. An introduction to probability theory and the basic statistical estimation methods. Topics include: axiomatic development of probability theory, counting methods, conditional probability and Bayes' theorem, random variables and distributions, expectation, variance, covariance and correlation, special distributions, statistical inference, maximum likelihood estimators, unbiased estimation, and testing hypotheses. Prerequisite: ECON 61500. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECON 67100 - Econometrics I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An introduction to the modern techniques of econometrics and their applications. Topics include: the classical linear regression model (specification, estimation, inference, and prediction), specification analysis, functional form, heteroscedasticity, and autocorrelation. Prerequisite: ECON 67000. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| ECON 67200 - Econometrics II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics include generalized method of moments, estimation and inference with weak instruments, panel data models and bootstrap methods. Prerequisite: ECON 67100. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECON 67300 - Time Series Econometrics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This advanced course gives an up-to-date and comprehensive treatment of modern time series analysis and empirical macroeconomics. Topics include: ARIMA processes, spectral analysis, forecasting, covariance-stationary vector processes, vector autoregressions, state space representations in the Kalman filter, non-stationary time series and fractional integrated processes, and time series models of heteroscedasticity. Prerequisite: ECON 67200. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| ECON 67400 - Microeconometrics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This advanced course covers the econometrics and statistical methods needed to study data on individual agents in general qualitative response models and models of limited dependent variables. Special emphasis is placed on applying the alternate estimation and inference techniques to actual or simulated datasets. Topics include: univariate binary models, multinomial and multivariate qualitative response models, choice based sampling, distribution-free estimation methods, and Tobit models. Prerequisite: ECON 67200. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECON 67600 - Economics Of Uncertainty And Information I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Covers topics in decision theory and the economics of information. Topics include: insurance, nonexpected utility theory, capital asset pricing models, stochastic calculus and options pricing models, organizational decision making, herd behavior, search theory and price dispersion models, principal-agent models, multiple agents, multiple tasks, multiple periods, incomplete contracts, and adverse selection topics. Applications of these models arise in industrial organization, labor economics, and public economics, as well as various areas in management. Course readings are primarily from journal articles. Prerequisite: ECON 60700. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECON 67700 - Economics Of Uncertainty And Information II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Continuation of ECON 67600. Prerequisite: ECON 67600. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECON 68500 - Experimental Economics I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An overview of seminal and recent developments in experimental economic research. Provides practical training in designing and conducting experiments and the analysis of experimental data. Content varies from year to year. Applications include: industrial organization, game theory, finance, international trade, information economics, and monetary economics. Course readings are primarily from journal articles. Prerequisite: ECON 60700. 61000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECON 68600 - Experimental Economics II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Covers topics different from ECON 685, and they vary from year to year. May be taken prior to ECON 685. Course readings are primarily from journal articles. Prerequisite: ECON 60700. 61000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ECON 69000 - Advanced Problems In Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Advanced individual reading and investigation in a specific economic field at the graduate level. Open to individual students with superior records. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECON 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ECON B1160 - Survey of Economic Ideas |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The important conclusions of economics are surveyed and applied to topics chosen by the instructor. Especially valuable to students with no high school background in economics. Not applicable to a major or minor in economics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECON B2010 - Elementary Microeconomics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of why people specialize as producers and exchange what they produce with others. Includes analysis of how market structure affects prices. Discusses the issue of whether self-interested economic behavior promotes or hinders society.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECON B2020 - Elementary Macroeconomics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of the major explanations for fluctuations in general business conditions. Focuses on how the private sector's economic behavior is affected by various governmental policies and institutions.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECON B2210 - Business Statistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to various statistical and probabilistic concepts and techniques with application to business problems including random variables and probability distributions, measures of central tendency and dispersion, testing of hypotheses, simple linear regression, and correlation. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECON E1000 - Current Economic Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Discussion of socioeconomic issues from applied point of view through investigation and analysis of current topics of interest such as bank regulations, foreign policy, economics of defense, international trade and finance, ethics and economics, economics of crime, and economics of discrimination. Not open to those with previous college-level economics courses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECON E1010 - Survey Of Current Economic Issues And Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic economic principles applied to current social issues and problems. Topics covered will typically include inflation, unemployment, wage and price controls, welfare, social security, national debt, health programs, food prices, pollution, crime, mass transit, revenue sharing, multinationals, population, and energy. Not open to those with previous college-level economics courses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECON E1020 - Economics Of Personal Finance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Shows how the state of the economy, prices, and interest rates should guide personal decisions about spending and saving, credit, investments, and insurance. Intended for non-Business students. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECON E1030 - Introduction to Microeconomics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Scarcity, opportunity cost, competitive and noncompetitive market pricing, and interdependence as an analytical core. Individual sections apply this core to a variety of current economic policy problems, such as poverty, pollution, excise taxes, rent controls, and farm subsidies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECON E1040 - The Macroeconomic Facts of Life |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The primary focus of the course will be the long-run behavior of the economy, with emphasis on the experience of the U.S. Data from both the 19th century and the post World War II period will be analyzed, with emphasis on the secular determinants of output and prices. Policy questions such as the impact of government budget deficits and the implications and prospects for Social Security will be examined. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECON E1070 - Introduction to Macroeconomics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Measuring and explaining aggregate economic performance-- inflation, unemployment, economic growth, international issues. Studying the benefits and costs of government activism-- through monetary policy and fiscal policy-in trying to regulate the business cycle. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECON E1080 - Prin Of Economics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explaining behavior in economic and political markets. Topics include scarcity, opportunity cost, demand and supply, competitive and noncompetitive market structures. Individual sections also study a variety of current economic policy topics, including poverty, labor markets, the environment, education, and health care. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECON E1500 - Introduction To Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| ECON E1750 - Economics For Educators |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed for students preparing to be teachers. This course covers basic concepts and analytical techniques in both microeconomics and macroeconomics. Emphasis is placed on active learning exercises, discussion and analysis of current events, group problem solving and other instructional techniques useful in primary and secondary education.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECON E2000 - Fundamentals Of Economics: An Overview |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the basic institutions of market economy and the role they play in defining and pursuing economic goals in the U.S. economy. Emphasis is placed upon the effects of existing economic institutions; current economic policy alternatives as they affect both the individual and the society. No credit toward B.S. in business; no credit for both E200 and E201. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECON E2010 - Introduction To Microeconomics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of evolution of market structure using the analytical concepts of supply and demand, opportunity cost, and marginal analysis. Applications include a variety of concurrent microeconomic issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECON E2020 - Introduction To Macroeconomics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Measurement and explanation of total economic performance; money and monetary and fiscal policy as an analytical core. Individual sections apply this core to a variety of current economic problems such as inflation, recession, and unemployment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECON E2700 - Introduction To Statistical Theory In Economics And Business |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Describing populations and samples; introduction to inference, including confidence intervals and hypothesis testing; correlation and simple and multiple regression; Chi-square, non- parametric, test of independence. Uses a popular statistical package for demonstrating and solving statistical problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECON E2800 - Applied Statistics for Business and Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Summary measures of central tendency and variability. Basic concepts in probability and important probability distributions. Sampling, sampling distributions, and basic estimation concepts. Statistical software required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECON E2810 - Applied Statistics For Business And Economics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. B.S. in Business students must complete E 2810 before completing 80 credit hours. Balanced coverage of statistical concepts and methods, along with practical advice on their effective application to real-world problems. Topics include simple linear regression, multiple linear regression, and analysis of variance. Use of statistical software required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECON E3000 - Survey Of Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides the macroeconomic and microeconomic understanding that managers will use throughout their careers. Microeconomic topics include supply and demand, pricing, production and costs, and applications of microeconomic theory. Macroeconomic topics include international economics, monetary and fiscal policies, aggregate demand and aggregate supply, and models of the macroeconomy. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECON E3030 - Survey Of International Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of international economics. Basis for and effects of international trade, commercial policy and effects of trade restrictions, balance of payments and exchange rate adjustment, international monetary systems, and fixed vs. flexible exchange rates. Students who have taken E4300 many not enroll in ECON E3030 for credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECON E3040 - Survey Of Labor Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Economics problems of the wage earner in modern society; structure, policies, and problems of labor organizations; employer and governmental labor relationships. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECON E3050 - Money And Banking |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Money and banking system of the United States, including problems of money and the price level, proper organization and functioning of commercial banking and the Federal Reserve System, monetary standards, and credit control. Recent monetary and banking trends. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECON E3060 - Undergraduate Seminar In Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discussion and analysis of contemporary economic problems and policies. Diffrent topics may be offered each semester. Papers and other written and oral asignments required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| ECON E3070 - Current Economic Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Current economic issues, problems, and research methods. Designed to explore in depth an economic issue currently before the public or to examine a particular aspect of the methodology of economics. Examples would be a study of the economic aspects of discrimination, a study of urban economic policy, or a study of simplified models in economics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| ECON E3080 - Survey Of Public Finance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of government expenditures and revenue sources, taxation and capital formation, public debt and inflation, growth in government spending, and intergovernmental fiscal relations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECON E3210 - Intermediate Microeconomic Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intermediate-level microeconomics; theoretical basis of demand; production; pricing under conditions of competition and monopoly; allocation and pricing of resources; partial and general equilibrium analysis; welfare economics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECON E3220 - Intermediate Macroeconomics Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intermediate-level macroeconomics. National income accounting; theories of income, employment, and price level. Counter-cyclical and other public-policy measures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| ECON E3230 - Urban Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to basic concepts and techniques of urban economic analysis to facilitate understanding of current urban problems; urban growth and structure, public provision of urban services, housing, employment, transportation, relationship between public and private sectors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
|
| ECON E3250 - Comparative Economic Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Essential economic theories and features of economic systems, including private enterprise, authoritarian socialism, and liberal socialism.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| ECON E3280 - Game Theory Goes To The Movies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Game theory is the science of strategic thinking. The objective of this course is to introduce students to the basic tools of game theoretic analysis by synthesizing illustrations from popular films. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ECON E3370 - Economic Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Characteristics of economically underdeveloped countries. Obstacles to sustained growth; planning and other policies for stimulating growth; examination of development problems and experience in particular countries. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| ECON E3400 - Introduction To Labor Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines theories of wage and employment determination. Analysis of the impact of unions and other institutional factors on these theories; labor market imperfections; labor mobility; impact of government policies on labor behavior. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECON E3460 - Economics Of Gender |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the pattern of employment, unemployment, earnings, occupations, income hours of work, poverty, and other measures of economic well-being. The socially constructed categories of gender, race-ethnicity, and class are used as a conceptual framework to understand the emerging patterns of economic well-being. The theoretical explanations offered by neoclassical economics as well as political economy will be explored to understand work, wages, and discrimination. The course emphasis is on contemporary American society. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ECON E3500 - Money And Banking |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. sbas of the United States. The supply and control of money and its impact on the U.S. economy. Topics in the application of Federal Reserve System monetary policy. Analytical treatment of the Federal Reserve System and the commercial banking industry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ECON E3600 - Public Finance Survey |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the role and scope of government expenditures and taxation. Topics include public goods, externalities, income redistribution programs, and major elements of taxation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ECON E3630 - Environmental And Natural Resource Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic theory and policy of such topics as pollution, resource depletion, environmental risk, and resource conservation. Issues covered include limits to growth, quality of life, and the appropriate roles for the private market and federal control. Credit not given for both E3630 and E4630. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECON E3750 - Intro To Mathematical Econ |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to mathematical economics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECON E3850 - Economics Of Industry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of market structure and behavior. Location, technology, economics of scale, vertical integration, conglomerates; barriers to entry, and competitive practices. Economic assessment of production performance and environmental impact. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| ECON E3910 - Independent Research In Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Independent readings and research by special arrangement with an economics faculty mentor and the director of undergraduate studies. A research paper or other substantial writing assignments are usually required. A maximum of 3 credit hours in E3910 may count toward the major in economics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| ECON E4060 - Senior Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Assessment of the current state of economic knowledge and discussion of how economics is applied to study the problems facing modern society. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| ECON E4080 - undergraduate Readings in Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Description unavailable online at this time. Please contact appropriate department. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
|
| ECON E4140 - Economics Of The Nonprofit Sector |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The role of nonprofit organizations (universities, churches, hospitals, orchestras, charities, day care, research, nursing homes) in mixed economics. Public policy controversies such as regulation of fundraising, antitrust against universities, "unfair" competition with for-profit firms, and the tax treatment of donations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECON E4200 - History Of Economic Thought |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of main theoretical developments since the beginning of the systematic study of economics. Theoretical propositions and structures of the earlier writers will be interpreted and evaluated in terms of modern economic analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ECON E4300 - Introduction To International Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Gains from trade; relation between factor rentals and goods prices, distributional effects of trade, tariff policy and quantitative inferences; trade problems of developing countries, discrimination and customs unions; balance of payments adjustments via prices and incomes, exchange rate policy; role of international reserves. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| ECON E4450 - Collective Bargaining: Practice And Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Collective bargaining in contemporary economy: economic, social, and legal problems involved in negotiating; administration of collective bargaining agreement through grievance procedure and arbitration. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ECON E4460 - Public Policy In Labor Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Current labor relations law as contained in Taft-Hartley and Landrum-Griffin Acts. NLRB and court decisions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ECON E4700 - Introduction To Econometrics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of regression analysis to economic and business data. Estimation and hypothesis testing of classical regression model. Heteroscedasticity, collinearity, errors in observation, functional forms, and autoregressive models. Estimation of simultaneous equation models. Credit will not be given for both ECON E4700 and ECON E4720. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECON E4710 - Econometric Theory And Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Economic Theory And Practice I. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ECON E4720 - Econometric Theory And Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis is on the various extensions of the classical linear regression model such as multiple equations, limited dependent variables, time-series and panel data models using economic and business data. Special topics include instrumental variables, stationary and nonstationary data, fixed and random effects models, probit/logit, censored regression and sample selection. Several software packages are used in computer lab applications. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ECON E4770 - Korean Economy And Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces business students to the Korean economy, language, and culture. The purpose is to increase student's knowledge of Korean economy and culture so that they can engage in more effective economic activities with Korea and Asian countries. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ECON E5040 - Mathematics For Economists |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics in mathematics that are particularly useful in the application of microeconomic theory, macroeconomic theory, and econometrics. Topics covered include: matrix algebra, comparative-static analysis, constrained optimization, difference equations in discrete time, game theory, and set theory as applied to general equilibrium analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECON E5140 - The Nonprofit Economy And Public Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The role of nonprofit organizations universities, churches, hospitals, orchestras, charities, day care, research, nursing homes in mixed economies. Public policy controversies such as regulation of fundraising, antitrust against universities, ''unfair'' competition with for-profit firms, and the tax treatment of donations. This course may not be taken for credit by anyone who has received credit for E414. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECON E5150 - Institutional Setting For Nonprofit/Philanthropic Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. This course provides a broad overview of nonprofit institutions and philanthropic practices, along with a discussion of available data sources on each. We discuss the size and scope of nonprofit organizations, revenues, governance, regulation and taxation, intersectoral relations, patterns of philanthropy, and public policies that affect giving behaviors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECON E5190 - Regional Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Regional economics is the study of economic behavior in space. The course examines the internal and interregional determinants of growth and decline of a region from supply and demand perspectives. Public policies to influence these determinants are considered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECON E5200 - Optimization Theory In Economic Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to concepts and techniques of optimization theory applied in modern micro and macroeconomics. Theory and application of Lagrange multipliers, comparative statics analysis, valve functions and envelope theorems. Elements of dynamic programming and other methods of economics dynamics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECON E5210 - Theory Of Prices And Markets |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Pure theory of consumer behavior, competitive exchange, theory of production; resource allocation, Pareto optimum, monopoly and monopsony, imperfect competition, moral hazard, adverse selection, and market signaling. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECON E5220 - Theory Of Income And Employment I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive study of intermediate income theory; emphasis on construction and empirical significance of aggregative economic models of the determination of income, employment, and price level. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECON E5700 - Fundamentals Of Statistics And Econometrics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Mathematical overview of statistics and econometrics at graduate level. Topics covered include probability and probability distributions, sampling distributions, tests of hypotheses, estimation, simple regression, multiple regression, generalized linear model and its applications, simultaneous equation system. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECON E5710 - Econometrics I-Statistical Foundations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to concepts and techniques of optimization theory applied in modern micro and macroeconomics. Theory and application of Lagrange multipliers, comparative statics analysis, valve functions and envelope theorems. Elements of dynamic programming and other methods of economics dynamics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECON E5730 - Econometrics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Estimation and inference in linear regression model, basic asymoptotic theory, heteroskedasticity, measurement error, generalized least squares, instrumental variable model, maximum likelihood estimation, generalized method of moments, qualitative response models. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECON E5740 - Applied Econometrics And Forecasting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of techniques employed in economic model building, estimation, and usage. Topics covered include single and multi-equation system estimation, limited dependent variable regression techniques, hypothesis testing, policy analysis, and forecasting. Various forecasting techniques are discussed, including smoothing and decomposition methods and time series analysis. A number of projects are assigned throughout the semester in order to give the student hands-on experience with the different techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECON E6110 - Information Economics and Theories of Incentives and Contracts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course covers topics in the theories of incentives and contracts that study situations in which there are explicit or implicit contractual obligations. It explores the role and influence of asymmetric information in determining outcomes with special emphases on moral hazard and adverse selection. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECON E6210 - Theories of Prices and Market II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of equilibrium, first- and second-orderconditions; statistical derivation of demand and cost curves; activity analysis; general equilibrium; welfare economics; microeconomics of capital theory; pure oligopoly and gave theory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECON S1030 - Introduction To Microeconomics:Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory microeconomics course for students admitted to Honors program. No credit for both S103 and E201. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECON S2010 - Introduction To Microeconomics: Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed for students of superior ability. Covers the same core materials as ECON E2010. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ECON S2020 - Introduction To Macroeconomics: Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed for students of superior ability. Covers the same core materials as ECON E202. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECON S2700 - Introduction To Statistical Theory In Economics And Business: Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Covers the same core materials as E270 but with more involved applications in economics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ECON V1000 - Elements Of Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course intended primarily for students who need only one semester of economics. A survey of microeconomics, macroeconomics, international economics, comparative economic systems, historical development of economic thought. This course is a transferrin course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| ECON V2010 - Microeconomics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A descriptive and analytical study of the market economy, including market structures, pricing, and distribution and determination of wealth and income. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| ECON V2020 - Macroeconomics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A descriptive and analytical study of fundamental concepts of our national economy. It includes an analysis of the determination and fluctuations in national income and employment, monetary and fiscal policy, and international trade and finance. Economic analysis of monetary and fiscal policies is stressed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| EDCI 10500 - Introduction To Teaching |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course serves as an introduction for Education majors to the field of education. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Teacher candidates will be able to describe the political, practical, and ethical aspects of the field of Education.
2. Teacher candidates will be able to explain the PNC Education program, including but not limited to the Conceptual Framework, the technology use of Taskstream and WebCT, the portfolio assessment process, and the professional development and organizations available to them.
|
| EDCI 12000 - Technology In Society: Online Communication And Publishing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students will learn the importance of writing professionally and academically in an online setting through the exploration of blog tools, including WordPress, one of the world’s most popular blogging tools today. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn how to write for professional and academic audiences online, use current online publishing tools, construct and present online communication that demonstrate high levels of creativity and critical thinking, and develop rational and reasoned arguments in order to share ideas more constructively in the online professional space.
|
| EDCI 13000 - Technology In Society: Digital Media And Learning |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students will learn the importance of audio and video sharing mechanisms that exist on the Web, and how to use them appropriately. They will explore issues related to presenting themselves professionally and adhering to copyright and other legal considerations. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Define basic concepts related to technology and society, including the internet, blogs, RSS feeds, media sharing, and copyright.
2. Compare and contrast between professional and personal uses of the internet and blog publishing.
3. Describe the impact that technology and the internet have had on working and communication habits, intellectual property, and society’s understanding of copyright law.
|
| EDCI 14000 - Technology In Society: Web Tools And Social Networking |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students will learn importance of presenting themselves professionally in online social spaces, which are popular and commonly used today. Such spaces include Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, YouTube and Google Plus. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Create publications that are effective and efficient in conveying academic research and messages through a mixture of text, video, and audio.
2. List the resources available for furthering academic knowledge and productivity available on the internet, including multimedia and social networking resources.
3. Describe issues related to the responsible and ethical uses of technology for communication and sharing of information.
|
| EDCI 20500 - Exploring Teaching As A Career |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will become familiar with the work of teachers and begin to develop their educational philosophies through examining what it means to teach and to learn and the nature and purpose of schools. Students will critically evaluate teaching as their chosen profession. Includes a weekly field-based experience in an elementary, middle, or high school classroom. It is highly recommended that EDCI 27000 be taken with or before taking this course. Field experience required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation 1, Travel Time, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division, GTC-Written Communication, UC-Written Communication
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Concurrent Credit
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 20600 - Introduction To Teaching |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will analyze the work of professional educators and begin to develop their own educational philosophies through examining the nature of teaching and learning in American schools. Students will critically evaluate the profession and practice of teaching with focus on current trends in K-12 education. Students will become familiar with teacher preparation requirements at the national, state, and college levels. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| EDCI 21000 - Education Scholars Program I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. To explore the field of education by having professionals share their thoughts and experiences about the profession, and watching videos of teachers in the classroom. Students will learn about a relevant topic in education and what is involved in conducting research by assisting a professor in their area of interest/specialization. Students must be freshman DeVito scholarship recipients. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 21100 - Education Scholar Program II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. To explore the field of education by visiting local schools, having professionals share their thoughts and experiences about the profession, and watching videos of teachers in the classroom. Students will learn about a relevant topic in education and what is involved in conducting research by assisting a professor in their area of interest/specialization. (Note: travel time is needed to visit local educational sites.) Awarded the DeVito Scholarship. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture, Travel Time
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 21200 - Introduction To Early Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reviews history and philosophy of kindergartens and other programs for young children. Classroom organization and management alternatives are analyzed. Emphasis is placed on meeting individual needs of young children through group and individual activities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| EDCI 24200 - Principles And Philosophy Of Vocational And Technical Education |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. An introduction to the origin, scope, evolution, and objectives of vocational and technical education. Emphasis will be placed on the need for vocational-technical education and its relation to other types of education. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 24400 - Seminar In Leadership For Vocational Youth Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Particular emphasis on practice relative to effective functioning as advisors to vocational youth organizations. Fundamentals of small-group work and individual responsibilities in working with vocational youth organizations will be stressed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDCI 25000 - Professional Development In Family And Consumer Sciences Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Exploration of the roles and responsibilities of family and consumer sciences educators in schools, communities, and businesses. The organization and coordination of family and consumer sciences education programs and their relationships to academic and vocational-technical education will be emphasized. Historical background, youth organizations, professional resources and organizations, career development, and other trends and issues will be addressed. Includes participation in youth organization and professional activities. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
0.000 TO 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 4 credits
|
| EDCI 26000 - Introduction To Computers In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course covering instructional uses of microcomputers; the selection, evaluation, and management of hardware and software; and curricular applications for microcomputers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| EDCI 27000 - Introduction To Educational Technology And Computing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Addresses fundamentals of educational technology, including the integration of instructional design, media, computers and related technologies within the classroom setting. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Information Literacy, UC-Information Literacy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 27100 - Classroom Applications Of Educational Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Explores classroom applications of educational technology in K-12 settings. The students will achieve a greater understanding of issues and techniques related to technology integration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| EDCI 27200 - Integrating Technology In The Classroom |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. EDCI 27200 explores class room applications of educational technology. Teacher candidates will examine the integration of educational technology in classroom settings through field experiences, web-based resources, video case studies, and in-class discussions. The goal of the course is to help teacher candidates achieve a greater understanding of issues and techniques related to the integration of education technology in K-12 educational settings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. The candidate will have knowledge of how to evaluate and select educational software, and understand the social, ethical, legal and human issues surrounding the use of technology.
2. The candidate will be able to implement curriculum plans that include methods and strategies for applying technology to maximize student learning, particularly with high level thinking skills.
3. Teacher candidates will be able to understand the social, ethical, legal, and human issues surrounding the use of technology in PK-12 schools and apply that understanding in practice.
|
| EDCI 27600 - Child, Family, School And Community Partnerships |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the life of the young child within the context of family, community, and cultural systems. Explores the issues and characteristics of diversity within families and communities. Students develop strategies for fostering positive family/teacher/provider-child relationships. Students will gain exposure to community early childhood resources through a service learning component. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| EDCI 28500 - Multiculturalism And Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course integrates an understanding of multiculturalism with principles of democratic education. Historical, sociological, cultural, political, philosophical, and pedagogical foundations of multiculturalism are explored and related to issues of pedagogy in a pluralistic society. This course is taken concurrently with EDCI 20500, which includes a school-based Theory into Practice field experience. Some discussion topics and assignments will be based on that field experience. It is highly recommended that EDCI 27000 be taken with or before taking this course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 28600 - Multiculturalism In Secondary Schools |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an introductory course of multiculturalism with principles of democratic education and social justice at the secondary level. A variety of theorists and perspectives on issues pertaining to multicultural education are discussed. Class activities and assigned readings focus on the examination of sociopolitical, cultural, and economic conditions that influence teaching and learning in secondary schools. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an understanding of the range of developmental characteristics of adolescence including interpersonal, cultural, and societal contexts and uses this knowledge to facilitate student learning.
2. Develop a sequence of learning activities that meet diverse students’ needs and interest.
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| EDCI 30001 - Lifelong Health And Wellness For Teachers And Children |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course includes topics important to personal health, wellness, and disease prevention for adults and children. Students will learn about health and wellness, and how to incorporate healthy habits into their daily lives. In addition, the health and safety of children will be covered. This course concludes by considering ways in which elementary schools can provide opportunities to promote student health. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to explain factors that influence physical and mental wellness.
2. Students will be able to explore strategies that enhance wellness for themselves and others.
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| EDCI 30400 - Literacy And Middle Childhood |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. Explores aspects of child development and its relevance to literacy, including early and middle childhood developmental influences. This course examines methods and materials appropriate for grades 3-6. Topics will include the instruction and assessment of students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Student will be able to understand principles of early and middle childhood literacy and apply that knowledge through planning instruction through a variety of teaching methods.
2. Students will also learn how to appropriately adapt and adjust instruction for all students based on formal and informal assessment data.
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| EDCI 30500 - The Teaching Of Modern Foreign Languages In The Elementary Schools |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Lectures and discussions on the place of modern foreign languages in the elementary school curriculum and on current methods and materials for teaching modern foreign languages at this level; workshop activities for the development of teaching skills. No undergraduate students may be enrolled in any of these undergraduate courses until they have been admitted to teacher education. Should precede the professional semester. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 30700 - Corrective Reading For The Classroom Teacher |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Classroom procedures for the identification of reading difficulties; selection and application of appropriate methods and materials to provide corrective treatment. Emphasizes approaches to discovering and diagnosing reading; techniques for selecting materials in planning a remedial program, methods for teaching specific skills and techniques for evaluating progress. Appropriate laboratory and field experiences are provided. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| EDCI 30800 - Practicum In Reading For The Classroom Teacher |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. For prospective teachers in elementary or secondary schools who desire advanced supervised practice in teaching reading to pupils experiencing reading difficulty. It is required for a minor in reading. The seminar will evaluate diagnostic and tutoring strategies, methods, materials, and achievement. No undergraduate students may be enrolled in any of these undergraduate courses until they have been admitted to teacher education. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 30900 - Reading In Middle And Secondary Schools: Methods And Problems |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. For prospective teachers at junior and senior high schools. An overview of reading processes, fundamentals of reading instruction, factors that influence the ability to read text materials, strategies and materials for identifying and reducing reading problems, school resources, and programs for normal and deficient readers. Concurrent enrollment with program-specified methods course. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 31000 - Literacy And The Young Child |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A content course designed to provide the background knowledge needed to guide the literacy development of children aged 3-8. The course examines young children's emergent use and understanding of literacy in the home and in early schooling. The course traces the connections between the developmental history of children's literacy and classroom practice. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 31100 - Media For Children |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Books and other resources designed for children and adolescents are studied and evaluated in terms of literary theory and aesthetic appreciation. Emphasis is placed on literature and its place in the child's world. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 31200 - The Early Education Program: Cognitive Areas |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Presentation of various techniques for beginning academic learning through language arts, social studies, math, science, and the arts for preschool and kindergarten. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| EDCI 31300 - The Early Education Program: Social And Emotional Areas |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Reviews the building of socialization skills. Emphasis is on dealing with feelings, expressing emotions, developing attitudes and self-concept. Explores parent-teacher cooperation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| EDCI 31500 - Teaching Mathematics In The Elementary School |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Materials and methods used in teaching mathematics at various grade levels in the elementary school. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| EDCI 31600 - Teaching Social Studies In The Elementary School |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. Provides experiences in developing skills for teaching social studies as well as understanding of appropriate subject matter, including evaluation techniques and procedures. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to demonstrate through the planning and teaching of lessons, that they possess the knowledge of social studies necessary to provide quality educational experiences for children in grades K-6.
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| EDCI 31700 - Teaching Of Science In The Elementary School Curriculum |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides experiences in developing skills for teaching science as well as the understanding of appropriate subject matter: includes evaluation techniques and procedures. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| EDCI 32000 - Principles Of Practice In Elementary And Secondary Schools |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides the pre-service teacher with classroom management principles and strategies for the elementary or secondary school classroom. This course will also highlight the teacher's role in the community and the community's role in the educational process. Because the nature of the classroom management differs substantially across developmental levels, separate course sections will be offered for elementary and middle/secondary students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| EDCI 32100 - Literacy And The Young Child |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. Explores aspects of child development and its relevance to literacy, including early and middle childhood developmental influences. This course examines methods and materials appropriate for grades 3-6. Topics will include the instruction and assessment of students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to understand principles of middle childhood literacy and apply that knowledge through planning instruction and teaching using a variety of methods.
2. Students will also learn how to appropriately adapt instruction for all students on formal and informal assessment data.
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| EDCI 32200 - English For New Language Learners |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a teacher education course that focuses on English as a New Language (ENL) key terms, issues, curriculum development, and instruction for students (PreK-12) in a variety of language and program settings. The course will emphasize language acquisition and the practice of integrating language and content instruction for students with English as a New Language. Typically offered Fall and Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| EDCI 32300 - Educational Technology For Teaching And Learning |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores classroom applications of educational technology in K-12 settings and addresses methods for effectively integrating technology into the teaching and learning process. Knowledge in this area can be gained through an understanding of the social stimulants to technological developments and their effects on society. Students will learn about technology-based instructional resources and the pedagogical processes they can facilitate. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Use technology to locate, evaluate, manage and communicate information from a variety of sources.
2. Use a variety of media to communicate, collaborate, and interact with peers, experts, students, parents, and other audiences.
3. Examine and demonstrate legal and ethical practices related to technology use.
4. Select and use appropriate technology resources to increase productivity.
5. Identify technology resources available in schools and analyze how accessibility to those resources affects planning for and implementation of instruction.
6. Evaluate and select new information resources and technological innovations based on appropriateness to specific tasks.
7. Use technology to facilitate higher order thinking skills and real world problem solving, thereby enhancing student learning.
8. Apply technology resources to enable and empower learners with diverse backgrounds, characteristics, and abilities.
9. Plan ways to continue growth in technology knowledge and skills to stay abreast of current technologies and trends.
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| EDCI 32500 - Literacy In The Primary Classroom |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will study how children’s oral language develops, how children learn to read and write in primary grade settings, and the teacher’s role in this process. Students will learn how phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary and comprehension influence children’s literacy development. Students will learn how to select appropriate instructional materials; employ teaching strategies to meet the cognitive and affective literacy needs of all children; and collect, interpret, and use data from various types of assessments to inform literacy teaching and learning processes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop a sound background in theory and research about children’s language and literacy development and learning.
2. Learn how literacy learning, teaching, and assessment in phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary, comprehension and writing can be effectively and systematically integrated and diversified to meet individual or group needs.
3. Design and implement developmentally appropriate instruction for primary grade students.
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| EDCI 32600 - LIteracy In The Intermediate Classroom |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course includes a field based component. Students will build on material learned in EDCI 32500. They will concentrate on increasing student’s literacy skills with a focus on fluency, phonics, strategic reading, vocabulary, literary analysis, content area reading, the writing process, and building comprehension skills. They will learn to select appropriate materials, employ strategies to meet the cognitive and affective literacy needs of all children; and create integrate, and use data from various forms of assessment to inform the teaching and learning process. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture, Travel Time
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop a sound understanding of student literacy needs in the intermediate grades with a focus on comprehension strategies, strategic reading, vocabulary development, literary analysis, content area reading, and the writing process.
2. Assess student’s learning and use this information to design and implement developmentally and culturally appropriate instruction in literacy and social studies.
3. Learn how literacy learning, teaching, and assessment can be effectively and systematically integrated and diversified to meet individual or group needs.
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| EDCI 32700 - Social Studies Junior High/Middle School |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Acquaints students with developmentally appropriate content, materials, methods and literature relating to the social studies field generally and the intense teaching areas particularly. Includes an overview of the role of the middle school social studies teacher today, junior high/ middle school philosophy, use of technology, and planning of instructional units. Field experiences are integrated with classroom instruction. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| EDCI 33100 - English Teach Junior High/Middle School |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Acquaints students with developmentally appropriate content methods and materials for teaching English in Junior High/ Middle schools, includes an overview of the role of the Middle School teacher today, Junior High/Middle School philosophy, use of technology, and planning of instructional units. Field experiences are integrated with classroom instruction. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| EDCI 33200 - Foreign Language Junior/Middle School |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Acquaints students with developmentally appropriate content methods and materials for teaching foreign language both as a language experience and as a cultural experience. Comparative studies of various language teaching methods, analysis of current foreign language textbooks and accompanying materials, use of technology, and planning of instructional units are included. Field experiences are integrated with classroom instruction. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| EDCI 33400 - Mathematics Instruction Junior/Middle School |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Acquaints students with developmentally appropriate content materials and methods in teaching mathematics in the junior high/middle school. Includes an overview of the role of the middle school Mathematics teacher today, junior high/middle school philosophy, use of technology, and planning of instructional units. Field experiences are integrated with classroom instruction.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| EDCI 33600 - Science Instruction Junior/Middle School |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Acquaints students with developmentally appropriate content materials and methods in teaching science in the junior high/middle school (include Life and Physical Science). Includes an overview of the role of the middle school science teacher today, junior high middle school philosophy, and planning of instructional units. Field experiences are integrated with classroom instruction.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| EDCI 34100 - English Teaching In Senior High, Junior High And Middle Schools |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Acquaints students with developmentally appropriate content, methods, and materials for teaching high school, junior high and middle school English. Includes an overview of the role of the high school, junior high, and middle school English teacher today, the high school, junior high, and middle school philosophy, the use of technology, and planning of instructional units. Field experiences are integrated with classroom instruction. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| EDCI 34200 - Strategies Of Foreign Language Instruction In Senior High, Junior High And Middle Schools |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Acquaints students with developmentally appropriate content, methods, and materials for teaching high school, junior high, and middle school foreign language and culture. Comparative studies of various teaching methods, analysis of current foreign language textbooks and accompanying materials, use of technology, and planning of instructional units are included. Field experiences are integrated with classroom instruction. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| EDCI 34400 - Strategies Of Mathematics Instruction In Senior High, Junior High And Middle Schools |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Acquaints students with developmentally appropriate content, materials, and methods for teaching mathematics in the high school, junior high and middle school. Includes an overview of the role of the high school, junior high and middle school math teacher today, the high school, junior high and middle school philosophy, use of technology, and planning of instructional units are included. Field experiences are integrated with classroom instruction. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| EDCI 34600 - Strategies Of Science Instruction In Senior High, Junior High And Middle Schools |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Acquaints students with developmentally appropriate content, materials, and methods in teaching science in the high school, junior high and middle school (includes life and physical sciences). Includes an overview of the role of the high school, junior high and middle school science teacher today, the high school, junior high and middle school philosophy, use of technology, and planning of instructional units. Field experiences are integrated with classroom instruction. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
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| EDCI 34700 - Strategies Of Social Studies Instruction In Senior High, Junior High And Middle Schools |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Acquaints students with developmentally appropriate content, materials, methods and literature relating to the social studies field generally and the intense teaching areas particularly. Includes an overview of the role of the high school, junior high and middle school social teacher today, the high school, junior high and middle school philosophy, use of technology, and planning of instructional units. Field experiences are integrated with classroom instruction. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| EDCI 35000 - Community Issues & Applications For Educators |
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Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Examination of diverse family and community characteristics and issues, and potential impacts on teaching and learning processes. Includes interactions with human service agencies and personnel in the school and community. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 35500 - Teaching And Learning K-12 Classroom |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Acquaints students with general methods of promoting the learning process in the K-12 secondary school. Topics studied will include long-term and short-term instructional planning and evaluation; classroom organization including management, motivation of students, the use of media to promote instructional objectives; and individual and group learning procedures. Students will also study how curriculum goals are adapted and implemented in the secondary classroom. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn and understand how to implement a wide variety of student and teacher-centered teaching methods.
2. Understand the fundamentals of planning for instruction of diverse student populations, i.e., short term and long (unit and daily lesson plans).
3. Understand various class room management approaches and create their own classroom management plans.
4. Understand the connection between the theory of teaching and learning via their observations and participation in K-12 classrooms.
5. Demonstrate their knowledge of teaching methods via teaching presentation and unit plans.
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| EDCI 35600 - Career Education In Family And Consumer Sciences |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of the role of family and consumer sciences in logical sequences of courses that lead to various careers. Emphasis on organization and instruction of occupational laboratory and cooperative education programs in Family and Consumer Sciences. Includes interactions with students and teachers in occupational programs. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 35700 - Occupational Internship In Career And Technical Education |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Supervised experiences in the area(s) of job training teacher certification. One hour of credit earned in increments of 250 clock hours of in-service training. Approval of University vocational education advisor. Typically offered Spring Fall.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
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| EDCI 35800 - Introduction To The Organization And Coordination Of Vocational And Technical Education |
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Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. An introduction to the organization and coordination of vocational and technical education. Areas of emphasis include delivery systems, funding, state plan, credentialing systems, public relations, recruitment/placement/ follow-up, youth organizations, trends, and issues. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 36000 - Curriculum And Instruction In Family And Consumer Sciences: Middle School |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Instructional program development for family and consumer sciences. Developmental needs and issues of early adolescents and integration of language arts, math, and other content areas are emphasized, with corresponding impacts on standards-based curriculum and instruction for family and consumer sciences. Includes observations and interactions with family and consumer sciences teachers and students. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 36100 - Social Studies In The Elementary School |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides students with an overview of the field of social studies, of selected issues in the field, and of best practice strategies for teaching social studies to elementary school children. Encourages participants to reflect on social studies knowledge, skills and dispositions, how students learn these most effectively, and how best to teach social studies. Includes a field-based experiential component. No undergraduate students may be enrolled in any of these undergraduate courses until they have been admitted to teacher education. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture, Travel Time, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will work to identify the most important social studies knowledge, skills and dispositions.
2. Investigate how students learn most effectively.
3. Utilize their new understandings to draw conclusions about what constitutes powerful teaching in the social studies.
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| EDCI 36200 - Literacy In The Elementary School I |
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Credit Hours: 6.00. Examines how children's oral language develops, how they learn to read and write, and the teacher's role in these processes. Using a balanced approach to literacy instruction, students learn to select materials; employ strategies to meet the cognitive and affective literacy needs of all children; and collect, integrate, and use data from various forms of assessment to inform teaching and learning processes. Includes a field-based experiential component. Taken concurrently with EDCI 36100. No undergraduate students may be enrolled in any of these undergraduate courses until they have been admitted to teacher education. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture, Travel Time, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 36201 - Literacy Instruction In K-3 Classrooms |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Candidates will learn about theories of language and literacy development as related to the research and practice of a balanced approach to literacy instruction in the primary grades, K-3. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Create environments that foster language development.
2. Select, analyze and adapt materials for developmentally appropriate literacy instruction.
3. Select, use and interpret appropriate assessment, documentation and observation tools to inform instruction.
4. Use assessments to identify teaching strategies to support emergent and beginning readers.
5. Understand the role of the family in children’s literacy development and involve families in reciprocal respectful relationships to support this development.
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| EDCI 36202 - Literacy Instruction In 4-6 Classrooms |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Elementary Teacher Education Candidates will learn about theories of literacy as they relate to the content areas they will teach, emphasizing a “reading to learn” approach through inquiry-based instruction in the intermediate grades, 4-6. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and use developmentally appropriate strategies to promote comprehension and analysis in the content areas.
2. Use developmentally appropriate strategies to support children’s verbal and written communication, including research skill, work study, literary analysis and study skills.
3. Develop and implement instructional strategies that are aligned to state and national standards.
4. Select materials to support the learning of all students across the curriculum.
5. Select, use and interpret appropriate assessment tools to inform instruction.
6. Use assessments to identify teaching strategies to support reading in grades 4-6.
7. Communicate with families to support children’s literacy development.
|
| EDCI 36300 - Literacy In The Elementary School II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on teaching children who experience difficulty acquiring literacy. Assessments of children's strengths and needs are used to plan and evaluate instruction. Strategies for helping children develop more mature literacy understandings are applied in weekly small-group instructional sessions. Includes a field-based experiential component. Taken concurrently with EDPS 43000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Laboratory, Lecture, Travel Time, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. This course extends students’ knowledge of literacy processes so that they are able to make decisions about the use of appropriate assessment measures and instructional strategies for children who are experiencing difficulty learning to read and write.
|
| EDCI 36400 - Mathematics In The Elementary School |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on teaching mathematics in the elementary school. Students learn what it means to teach mathematics when reasoning, problem solving, communication, and connections are the foci. Includes a field-based experiential component. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture, Travel Time, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn, practice, and reflect on strategies of teaching mathematics and their relationships to your beliefs and knowledge about how children learn mathematics.
2. Gain skill in assessing, evaluating, and responding to the needs of diverse learners in mathematics.
3. Understand ways to assess students’ mathematical understanding and learning.
4. Plan and carry out problem-solving mathematics instruction with a focus on students’ conceptual and procedural understanding.
|
| EDCI 36500 - Science In The Elementary School |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigates ways children learn science as a basis for planning, enacting, and assessing science curriculum and instruction. State and national standards, teaching cases, and science lab experiences are used as tools for reflecting on practice. Includes a field-based experiential component. Taken concurrently with EDCI 36400 and EDCI 37000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Laboratory, Lecture 1, Lecture, Travel Time, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 36600 - Use Of Assessment In The K-12 Classroom |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will acquaint students with standardized tests currently in use in K-12 settings such as ISTEP and interpretation of test data to inform planning and instruction. In addition this course will address use of standardized tests to identify and develop education programming for students with special needs. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| EDCI 37000 - Teaching English As A New Language |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course focuses on the design of materials and instructional strategies for English Language Learners Pre-K - Grade 6. This course must be taken concurrently with EDCI 36400 and EDCI 36500. It includes a field-based experiential component. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture, Travel Time
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Gain skill in designing materials and implementing instructional strategies for English Language Learners in the elementary school content areas.
2. Gain skill in assessing children’s strengths in English and applying this knowledge to classroom experiences on the basis of these strengths as well as current practices in ELD (English Language Development).
3. Gain knowledge of current issues and techniques in instruction students who are at the beginning or intermediate stages of English language acquisition.
|
| EDCI 37100 - Integrated Curriculum In Early Childhood: Creative And Affective Domains |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will present methods focusing on teaching and learning, curriculum, and assessment in the areas of art, play, physical education/movement, music, drama, and social-emotional development. Focus will be on the integrative nature of the early childhood classroom addressing social-emotional development, creativity, and the learning environment. Students are required to complete a field study in a diverse early childhood setting. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| EDCI 37200 - Integrated Curriculum In Early Childhood: Cognitive Domains |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores methods focused on teaching and learning, curriculum, and assessment in the areas of mathematics, science, social studies, health, and nutrition. Examines developmentally appropriate practices, strategies for meeting the needs of diverse learners' cognitive development, including the role of the "more competent other" in facilitating experiential learning. A field experience in an early childhood setting is required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| EDCI 37300 - Expressive Arts/Social Studies In Kindergarten And Primary Grades |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores the concepts and modes of inquiry from the social studies including history, geography, social sciences and related areas to foster kindergarten and primary children's understanding. Focus on the integration of curriculum including the arts as a means of communication and inquiry. Examines methods and materials for presenting the content. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| EDCI 37400 - Science And Math In Kindergarten And Primary Grades |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores methods and materials for inquiry in the content areas of science including physical, life, earth and space. Explores methods and materials for fostering conceptual development in the areas of mathematics including number, geometry, measurement, statistics and probability, and algebraic reasoning. Focus on the process of inquiry and problem-solving to construct knowledge. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| EDCI 37500 - Music And Movement For The Young Child |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores the use of the fine arts in primary classroom settings, including physical movement and activity, dramatics, dance as well as rhythms, instruments, singing and listening to music. Emphasis on the integration of music and movement within the early childhood and elementary/primary curriculum.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| EDCI 40100 - Reading Comprehension In The Content Area |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fulfills requirement for reading endorsement. Reading comprehension related to organizing and remembering expository text for primary, intermediate, and middle school students. Teaching strategies for general and specific content area comprehension. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 40200 - Teaching Kindergarten: Issues And Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of developmentally appropriate kindergarten curricula, current issues, and practices. The course addresses not only the activities and procedures of a kindergarten classroom, but also the connections between children's development and the design of developmentally appropriate, integrated curricula. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 40800 - Advanced Literacy Instruction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will be offered for elementary education candidates pursuing the addition of Reading to the teaching license. Students will further their understanding of the role of assessment and the implementation of appropriate instructional strategies in student (K-6) literacy learning. Issues related to diversity will be highlighted. A field experience in a diverse setting will be required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| EDCI 40900 - Student Teaching Seminar In Literacy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. During student teaching, education candidates will provide evidence of their impact on K-6 student learning, and demonstrate that they are able to create a learning environment that fosters an interest and growth in all aspects of literacy. They will engage in reflective practice and will communicate and interact with families, professional colleagues, and the community to support the K-6 students' learning and well being.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| EDCI 42100 - The Teaching Of Biology In Secondary Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The rationale, objectives, methods, and materials of teaching biology and life science in junior and senior high schools. Extensive use of multimedia resources in planning specifically for the student teaching experience. No undergraduate students may be enrolled in any of these undergraduate courses until they have been admitted to teacher education. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Have a conceptual understanding of science, how to develop a learning community within a classroom, and an understanding of and strategies to implement educational equity in a classroom.
2. Learn how to carry out the practical activities of science teaching, develop worksheets, hold class discussions, develop and grade tests, and use textbooks.
3. Learn about the nature of scientific understanding and classroom communities, and how to use theoretical knowledge of learners & communities to guide their teaching.
|
| EDCI 42200 - The Teaching Of English In Secondary Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores a wide variety of instructional practices suitable for teaching middle and high school English including language, literature, and writing - addressing specific pedagogical issues such as teaching diverse learners and developing cohesive units of instruction. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 42300 - The Teaching Of Social Studies In Secondary Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The purpose of this course is the development of a theoretical framework and pedagogical skills necessary to teach social studies to middle and high school students. Students are introduced to the general issues involved in planning and organizing a social studies curriculum. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 42400 - The Teaching Of Earth And Physical Science In The Secondary Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The methods and materials needed for the teaching of chemistry, earth-space, physics, and general science in the secondary schools, including field experience. No undergraduate students may be enrolled in any of these undergraduate courses until they have been admitted to teacher education. May be taken for two credits (no field experience) by students who are enrolled in another methods course with field experience. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. State your goals for secondary science teaching based on an informal position.
2. Use questions, demonstrations, and activities to probe students’ concepts.
3. Describe teaching strategies which motivate students and which foster learning.
4. Describe teaching strategies to encourage meaningful problem solving.
5. Plan a science unit using a model of science teaching which takes student conceptual change into account.
6. Teach a lesson, lab, or demonstration employing appropriate strategies.
7. Choose appropriate assessment techniques to evaluate various learning outcomes.
8. Compare and evaluate secondary science curriculum materials, including audio-visual and computer materials.
9. Be able to store and/or dispose of materials properly and select experiments based on appropriate safety guidelines.
10. Describe strategies to provide appropriate learning for a diverse student population.
|
| EDCI 42500 - Teaching Of Mathematics In Secondary Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. This course is designed for students who are planning to be secondary mathematics teachers in the twenty-first century. The course content is organized around tools and tasks for teaching secondary mathematics content, theories of teaching and learning mathematics, and organizing for classroom instruction. Must have completed at least 18 credit hours of Mathematics previous to this course. No undergraduate students may be enrolled in any of these undergraduate courses until they have been admitted to teacher education. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 42600 - Teaching Mathematics In The Middle And Junior High School |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Designed to prepare the prospective teacher to plan, present, and evaluate mathematics lessons, determine goals, manage instruction, and use a variety of instructional strategies. Must have completed at least 18 credit hours in Mathematics previous to this course. No undergraduate students may be enrolled in any of these undergraduate courses until they have been admitted to teacher education. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 42700 - The Teaching Of Modern Foreign Languages In Secondary Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course is a combination of lecture, computer-facilitated interaction, and guided on-site secondary school experience provided through the Professional Development School program. No undergraduate students may be enrolled in any of these undergraduate courses until they have been admitted to teacher education. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture, Travel Time
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 42800 - Teaching Science In The Middle And Junior High School |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Designed to prepare preservice teachers to teach science in the middle and junior high school (grades 5-9). No undergraduate students may be enrolled in any of these undergraduate courses until they have been admitted to teacher education. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 42900 - Methods Of Teaching Physical Education In Secondary Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of instructional concepts and strategies in physical education field experience setting. No undergraduate students may be enrolled in any of these undergraduate courses until they have been admitted to teacher education. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Travel Time
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 43000 - The Teaching Of Foreign Languages In Junior High And Middle School |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An examination of second language listening, reading, speaking, and writing skills, along with information on cultural problems. No undergraduate students may be enrolled in any of these undergraduate courses until they have been admitted to teacher education. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 43200 - The Teaching Of Health And Safety In Secondary Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The selection and application of teaching methods, materials, content, and resources appropriate for health instruction at the various educational levels. No undergraduate students may be enrolled in any of these undergraduate courses until they have been admitted to teacher education. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Travel Time
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 43300 - The Teaching Of Social Studies In Junior High/Middle School |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Foundations of social studies; methods, techniques, strategies of teaching, and activities - with special attention to skills of planning, questioning, and testing. Includes observation, participation, and microteaching in social studies classrooms. No undergraduate students may be enrolled in any of these undergraduate courses until they have been admitted to teacher education. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDCI 43400 - Literacy Teaching And Learning In Secondary Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Exploration and development of various instructional methods and materials appropriate for supporting adolescent literacy in secondary English (i.e., middle and high school English Language Arts), including the teaching of reading. Content-area literacy methods and materials are also addressed. Includes a field experience of up to 20 hours in a secondary English school setting. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To explore multiple, diverse, research-based instructional strategies and materials to support the teaching of secondary English literacy.
2. To explore multiple, diverse, research-based instructional strategies and materials to support the teaching of content-area literacy.
3. To support the development of pedagogical competency through continued work with issues of teaching and learning in secondary English.
|
| EDCI 43500 - The Teaching Of Speech And Theatre In Secondary Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. No undergraduate students may be enrolled in any of these undergraduate courses until they have been admitted to teacher education. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 44400 - Methods for Teaching Family and Consumer Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Strategies and techniques for teaching family and consumer sciences. Emphasis placed on instructional planning and materials, teaching methods, and classroom management. Includes field experience. Content requirements should be completed previous to or concurrent with this course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 44600 - Directed Observation For Family And Consumer Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Designed to acquaint future teachers with responsibilities for organizing family and consumer sciences yearly programs and extension personnel with the array of extension responsibilities. Thirty-five hours of directed experience in approved school or extension setting needed for one credit. No undergraduate students may be enrolled in any of these undergraduate courses until they have been admitted to teacher education. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 45000 - Techniques Of Coordination In Cooperative Vocational Education |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. For prospective and present coordinators and supervisors of cooperative vocational programs in public schools. Emphasis on problems of organization, administration, supervision, and operation of cooperative education programs. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 46500 - Assessment In The Elementary School |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course will acquaint teacher candidates with both formative and summative assessments, focusing on standardized tests currently used in K-6 settings. Candidates will learn how to interpret test data to inform their planning and instruction, and help them determine the effectiveness of their instruction. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply multiple formative and summative assessment strategies to assess student learning and inform instruction.
2. Use assessment results to determine effectiveness of instruction.
3. Modify teaching practices based on assessment results.
|
| EDCI 46600 - Integrated Curriculum In The Elementary School |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course introduces various approaches to integrated curriculum, including historical foundations and current conceptual frameworks. Students develop integrated curriculum units (with relevant goals, materials, activities and plans) suitable for particular teaching contexts. The course includes a field-based component and is taken concurrently with EDPS 43000. No undergraduate students may be enrolled in any of these undergraduate courses until they have been admitted to teacher education. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 47000 - Practicum And Seminar In Early Childhood Programs |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. This course is the equivalent of a student teaching experience - the capstone early childhood course. Structured so that candidates have experiences in a setting birth to age eight, with a focus on infants/toddlers and preschoolers. The practical experience is complemented with a seminar that focuses on the issues of guidance and discipline, cultural diversity, and the early childhood profession. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Student Teaching, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| EDCI 48900 - Supervised Student Teaching |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 9.00. Eight weeks of full time student teaching in an academic subject or grade under the supervision of the public school teachers in charge of the classes and supervisors from university. Typically offered Fall Spring.
6.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Student Teaching, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDCI 49000 - Individual Research And Teaching Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Primarily for teacher candidates requiring special, individualized experience in research or teaching. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDCI 49100 - Topics And Issues In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Provides the student with the opportunity to strengthen the preparation program though the study of selected educational topics and issues based on individual needs and interests. One topic is dealt with in each enrollment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDCI 49500 - Student Teaching In The Secondary Classroom |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. For the B.S. in Secondary Education, students would be receiving the license in Adolescence and Young Adulthood as well as their Content Area. Therefore, students would complete their student teaching experience in a secondary classroom in their major content area. In the case of dual content areas, the student teaching would take place for eight weeks in one content area and eight weeks in the other. This would partially fulfill the requirements for the secondary teaching license. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in all of the Purdue University North Central Education Program Outcomes as well as in the aligned standards to these outcomes: The Interstate New Teacher Assessment and Support Consortium Standards, the Professional Standards for the Teachers of Adolescence and Young Adulthood, and the state and national content area standards for their particular content area emphasis(es).
|
| EDCI 49600 - Student Teaching In The Elementary School |
|
Credit Hours: 8.00 to 16.00. Full time elementary classroom teaching experiences and a student teaching seminar under the mentorship of the classroom teacher and a University supervisor. Typically offered Fall Spring.
8.000 TO 16.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDCI 49700 - Supervised Teaching |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 12.00. Teaching full-time in a school classroom under the supervision of the teacher in charge of the class and a university supervisor. Typically offered Fall Spring.
6.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDCI 49800 - Supervised Teaching |
|
Credit Hours: 8.00 to 16.00. Teaching full time in a school classroom under the supervision of the teacher in charge of the class and a University supervisor. Completion of education methods courses and other Gate requirements for the major area and admittance to teacher education required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 16.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Student Teaching, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDCI 49900 - Supervised Teaching Or Practicum In An Endorsement Area |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 9.00. Teaching full time in an endorsement area in a school classroom under the supervision of the teacher in charge of the class and a University supervisor. Completion of education courses required for the endorsement area and admittance to teacher education. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Student Teaching, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDCI 50000 - Foundations Of Literacy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey course in the acquisition of and instruction in reading, writing, and other aspects of language. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 50100 - Problems In Literacy Acquisition: Evaluation And Instruction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines informal and standardized instruments useful for evaluating students who experience difficulties acquiring reading, writing, and other aspects of language. Discusses corrective/remedial instructional strategies appropriate for the classroom and clinic. Supervised practicum. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 50200 - Reading In Middle And Secondary Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course designed for teachers and prospective teachers in subject matter areas of the junior and senior high school. Surveys of techniques and objectives of reading instruction in the schools with special attention to the opportunities and obligations to teach reading within content areas. Teaching experience helpful but not required. May be taken as part of the sequence leading to reading specialist or for the junior high school endorsement program. Typically offered Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 50600 - Environmental Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Synthesis of philosophies, scientific principles and methods for environmental education programs in forests, camps, and schools. Students conduct and summarize literature research on scientific and educational principles. In interdisciplinary teams, they develop, implement, and evaluate curricula for schools, nature centers, interpretive and outdoor education programs. Typically offered Fall Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 50900 - Writing In Middle And Secondary Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on understanding philosophical and theoretical approaches, such as the writing process model, current reading/writing research, and how various approaches fit into existing school curriculum. Typically offered Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 51000 - Colloquium In Science And Mathematics Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Weekly colloquia on individual research topics of interest to science and mathematics education faculty and graduate students. Colloquia will describe research programs in education. Course will be required of first-year graduate students. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| EDCI 51100 - Teaching Mathematics In The Elementary School |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Historical and current curriculum developments in mathematics education with implications for classroom practice; analysis of instructional strategies; cognitive development; use of research results. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 51200 - Mathematics In The Secondary School |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Models of mathematics learning, current curriculum trends and practices with emphasis on laboratory and individualized systems; designing instructional materials. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 51300 - Foundations Of Learning Design And Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides an historical overview of the field and delineates the foundational knowledge, skills, and attitudes needed by professionals in the field of educational technology and instructional design. Students explore the field by engaging in collaborative projects, along with thinking and writing about various aspects of educational technology and the underlying instructional design theories. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 51400 - Language Arts In The Elementary School |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Research, recent trends, and current developments in the field of language arts and implications for classroom practice in the elementary school. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 51500 - Reading In The Elementary School |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Research, recent trends and current developments in the field of reading instruction. Emphasis will be on improving developmental reading in the elementary school programs rather than on surveying remedial programs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 51600 - Seminar In Environmental Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The seminar covers current research and literature in environmental education, focusing on teaching children and adults about the environment. Topics vary by semester and student interest. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| EDCI 51700 - Survey Of Science Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to current issues and research in science education, broadly organized under themes of learning, teaching, and science curriculum. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 51800 - The Nature Of Science In Science Teaching |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores philosophical issues related to the scientific enterprise, such as the production and validation of scientific knowledge; the role of the scientific community; and the influence of gender and culture on doing science. Also examines the implications of these issues for science teaching and learning, as well as for research in science education. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 51900 - Teaching Learners Of English As A New Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ENGL 51900) This course focuses on current issues and techniques in ESL instruction and assessment for students at the beginning or intermediate stages of English language acquisition Pre-K-12. Emphasis is on the design of materials and instruction that foster English language development in the content areas of the curriculum (i.e., Specially Designed Academic Instruction in English or SDAIE). Some familiarity with elementary and/or secondary teaching methods is assumed. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Student will be able to design materials and instruction that foster English language development in the ENL classroom environment as well as in content areas of the curriculum.
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| EDCI 52600 - Language Study For Educators |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ENGL 52900). Covers foundational knowledge in language and linguistics for teachers and educational researchers. Topics include structure and functions of language, language acquisition and development, language diversity, classroom discourse, language and media, and literacy-language arts curriculum. A foundation for work in Literacy and Language Education. Typically offered Summer Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Student will have a better understanding of the concepts and theories of how second (and more) languages are acquired and processed through an examination of current research into second language acquisition. They will critically examine this research to develop a greater understanding of the issues and challenges faced by students as they learn English as a New Language, and how teachers can develop practice which address these needs.
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| EDCI 52700 - Science Methods In The Elementary School |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The examination of learning theories, instructional methods, and curricular materials appropriate for teaching science concepts and skills in the elementary school setting. Students will apply, evaluate, and reflect upon elementary science teaching methods through class activities and field experience assignments. Acceptance into the Elementary Transition into Teaching (TTT) program. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Student Teaching
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 52800 - Human Performance Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to the field of human performance technology (HPT). It examines basic concepts and principles of human performance, the theoretical underpinnings of the field, research and application literature, and various approaches to solving human performance problems. A systematic approach to the analysis, design, development, implementation and evaluation of performance improvement interventions within organizations is emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify the major theoretical underpinnings of the field of HPT.
2. Describe the relationship between the systematic development of instruction, learning theories and HPT.
3. Discuss the relationship between theory and practice relative to performance improvement solutions.
4. Compare and contrast analysis frameworks.
5. Identify the major phases of a framework for performance analysis.
6. Develop tools and techniques related to each of the major performance analysis phases.
7. Synthesize elements of the performance analysis process through application to case studies and real projects.
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| EDCI 53000 - English Language Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ENGL 53000). Focuses on theoretical and practical knowledge for teachers about how second languages are learned, and on the educational and philosophical basis for second language teaching and learning. Links English language development to teaching and learning strategies and is designed for undergraduate and graduate students in education and practicing teachers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop increased understanding of the English language development process by English language learners (ELLSs).
2. Describe the importance of the changing demographics in the U.S. and Indiana as they relate to ELLs.
3. Explore the literacy development of ELLs in broader sociocultural contexts.
4. Describe the importance of explicit teaching and the oral and written language development for ELLs.
5. Develop understanding of the nature and role of culture in language development and academic achievement, considering the development of literacy and biliteracy by ELLS.
6. Explore how individual differences affect English language development.
7. Gain experience in identifying the learning challenges of ELLs and assessing ELLs’ learning in P-12 classrooms.
8. Collaborate with colleagues in activities and assignments and in planning to build partnerships with ELLs’ families.
9. Develop understanding of their roles as ELL teachers and professionals in advocating on behalf of ELLs.
10. Discuss the role of the teacher in the English language development of ELLs.
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| EDCI 53100 - Learning Theories And Instructional Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course has been designed to help you learn how theories of human learning and motivation can be applied to the instructional process in order to make the process more effective, efficient, and/or appealing. The focus of the course is on two areas: 1) the theoretical principles that have contributed to the field of Instructional Design (ID), and 2) how those principles can be applied within practical settings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify, describe, and explain the basic tenets of behavioral, cognitive, and constructivist learning theories.
2. Compare and contrast the contributions of various learning theories to the field of instructional design.
3. Identify and describe the basic components within various motivational theories and their impact upon the learning process.
4. Select appropriate principles derived from given theories and apply those within practical learning situations.
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| EDCI 53200 - STEM Goes Rural Seminar I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of current problems, issues, research, and practice related to the teaching of STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) subjects in rural school settings. Permission of Department required. Typyicall offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The teacher of adolescents and young adults understands the range of developmental characteristics of adolescence including interpersonal, cultural, and societal contexts and uses this knowledge to facilitate student learning.
2. The teacher of adolescents and young adults understands the challenges young adults face and provides them with the skills and opportunities to be reflective in making responsible decisions.
3. The teacher of adolescents and young adults has an understanding of the characteristics of high schools and incorporates this knowledge into the design of educational programs which reflect sound principles of teaching and learning.
4. The teacher of adolescents and young adults understands the interdisciplinary nature of high school curriculum and relates his/her subject matter to foster well-rounded student learning.
5. The teacher of adolescents and young adults understands the teaching/learning research base and employs a variety of instructional strategies, resources, and technologies which advance the learner into high level thinking skills.
6. The teacher of adolescents and young adults understands the impact of family structure and home life on educational development and uses this knowledge to facilitate and support the education of the young adult.
7. The teacher of adolescents and young adults understands the importance of the community in the education of young adult and works with resource persons and community groups to promote student learning and citizenship.
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| EDCI 53201 - School Curriculum: Leadership, School Culture And Change |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the needs of children and society, explores modern programs and procedures for developing a school community learning plan, and investigates ways to improve present school learning environments and curricula. Master’s student standing (or graduate student standing, or as required). Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. The candidate will exhibit an understanding of curriculum theory and best practices in instruction.
2. The candidate will exhibit the ability to develop a learning plan for a community of learners.
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| EDCI 53300 - Teaching And Learning Number And Operations. |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide opportunities for mathematics educators to develop understanding of teaching and learning in the domain of number and operation. Central to this work is the construction of models of learners’ understanding of number and operation and the use of those models to build and select curriculum. While curricular efforts have historically taken as central a formal view of mathematics and its construction, more recently curriculum has been written to engage learners and to build from knowledge of learners’ understanding. In this course we will develop models of learner’s understandings of different facets of number and operation and then use those models and our emerging understanding of curriculum to explore challenges in teaching and learning. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop models of learner's understandings of number and operation.
2. Use models of learner's understandings of number and operation to design and select appropriate and productive learning opportunities.
3. Develop knowledge of key curricular development in mathematics education in the United States.
4. Associate teaching and curriculum with understandings of number and operation they might generate.
5. Use technology to support the development of ideas in number and operation.
6. Synthesize existing research to support inquiry in the teaching and learning of number operation.
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| EDCI 53400 - Teaching And Learning Geometry And Measurement |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide opportunities for mathematics educators to develop understanding of teaching and learning in the related domains of geometry and measurement. Central to this work is the construction of models of learners’ understandings of geometry and measurement and the use of models to design instruction. Geometry, as a discipline in school mathematics, has historically and more currently been debated. In this course we will explore research in the teaching and learning of geometry and measurement. A synthesis of select literature will inform our efforts to develop models of learners’ geometric reasoning and understanding of measurement. We will move past the development of models to the design of instruction meant to support understandings of concepts that utilizes technology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop models of learner's understanding of measurement and concepts in geometry.
2. Use models of learner's understanding to design and select appropriate and productive learning opportunities.
3. Develop knowledge of the history of geometry as a school mathematics subject in the United States.
4. Develop and articulate a perspective on teaching and learning geometry and measurement with technology.
5. Synthesize existing research to support inquiry in the teaching and learning of geometry and measurement.
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| EDCI 53500 - Teaching And Learning Algebra And Functions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a course for current or prospective mathematics teachers wishing to explore ways of teaching algebra with a focus on addressing concerns related to student performance in algebra and increasing algebraic reasoning skills in the classroom. The course includes experiences with inquiry-based learning by engaging participants in algebra activities from two secondary National Council of Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM) standards-based curricula. The course will provide opportunities for participants to collaborate on the development of algebraic thinking in mathematics classrooms and will address pedagogical approaches to students’ learning of algebra. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Content and pedagogical knowledge for teaching algebra.
2. Familiarity with NCTM standards-based mathematics curricular.
3. Disposition that values students' contributions and desires to motivate students to learn algebra using a variety of strategies, including engaging them in making sense of algebraic concepts and making use of their life experiences to find relevant contexts for algebra.
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| EDCI 53600 - Teaching And Learning Data Analysis And Probabilty |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will provide opportunities for the growth of middle school mathematics teachers understanding of data analysis and probability as a means to help analyze and interpret experienced events. The course will address the following: selecting and using appropriate statistical methods to analyze data, developing and evaluating inferences and predictions that are based on data, and understanding and applying the basic concepts of probability. This course will also address pedagogical approaches to students’ learning of data analysis and probability. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Employ research-based instructional strategies to develop statistical understanding in middle, secondary and tertiary settings, and for teacher professional development.
2. Develop tasks, questions, and lessons that can be used to assess as well as further develop students' understanding of statistics and probability.
3. Read and interpret research results and classroom-based articles that describe students' statistical and probabilistic reasoning.
4. Reflect on course readings and their practical teaching experience to consider how to best teach statistical and probability concepts.
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| EDCI 53700 - Professional Learning Communities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this class students will examine and explore the strategies to implement Professional Learning Communities in their respective districts and/or schools. Students will study and apply the elements of a professional learning community (PLC) as they relate to and effect student learning and increased student achievement. Participants will be engaged in research, evaluation and the design of: 1) framework to meet the diverse needs of students, 2) a positive climate of culture and learning for all students and staff, 3) integration of instructional technology to increase student engagement for students, and 4) current best practices in curriculum, instruction, and assessment. As they progress through course activities, students will create an action plan for the development of a professional community in a school of their choice. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe and evaluate the strengths and weakness of core PLC concepts and their practical applications.
2. Develop and describe strategies for leading a group of teachers through the process of “foundational work” in implementing a PLC.
3. Develop and describe strategies to sustain the change process after training ends, through use of embedded PLC practices.
4. Decribe and apply the critical elements of PLCs as presented by DuFour and Eaker.
5. Develop and implement an action research project designed to gather and analyze data related to student learning, student engagement, and student achievement in a particular subject/grade level in a school of their choosing.
6. The research project results will be used to create a PLC plan for a school that has as its goal to foster improvement of student learning at a subject/level in that school.
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| EDCI 54100 - Contemporary Issues In Career And Technical Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Identification, analysis, synthesis, and implications of current issues and problems in career and technical education at the elementary, secondary, postsecondary, and adult levels; policy and literature review; formulation of alternatives and solutions. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 54300 - Instruction In Career And Technical Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Contemporary trends and methods in teaching career and technical programs, learning styles and teaching styles, and a variety of creative instructional strategies for different educational contexts will be identified and analyzed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 54400 - Career And Technical Education For Special Needs Learners |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Legislative initiatives; identification of special needs learners at the elementary, secondary, postsecondary, and adult levels; learning characteristics; assessment; individualized planning; instructional adaptations; school and community resources; exemplary program models; research, trends, and issues; and evaluation. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 54800 - Teaching Mathematics To Diverse Learners |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide opportunities for in-service teachers to engage around issues of equity in mathematics education. Equity here is used as a broad construct intended to help us think about how to provide meaningful opportunities to learn for all the students in our mathematics classrooms. The notion of “diverse” here is also taken broadly. All students have special needs, but it is sometimes helpful to think about the needs of particular groups of students while at the same time avoiding reducing differences among students to stereotypes. Issues of diversity here include, but are not limited to race, culture, gender, disabilities, language, SES, and sexual orientation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Increased awareness of diverse learners' challenges in mathematics education.
2. Developed discourse for equity issues in mathematics education.
3. Knowledge of strategies to facilitate diverse learners' mathematical learning.
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| EDCI 54900 - Assessment In Mathematics Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to help teachers of mathematics recognize the link between productive assessment and productive instruction, using the mathematics education standards for teacher competence in educational assessment. This course is designed to help teachers meet those professional standards and understand the public pressure as well as instructional need for effective formative and summative assessment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Choose appropriate assessment methods.
2. Develop appropriate assessment methods.
3. Administer scoring and interpreting assessment results.
4. Use assessment results to make decisions about individual students, plan teaching and develop curriculum.
5. Communicate assessment results to students, parents, and other educators.
6. Recognize inappropriate assessment methods and uses of assessment information.
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| EDCI 55000 - Career Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of contemporary legislation, educational reform, trends, and issues; career education program models; vocational and technical education, technology prep, and school-to-work systems; partnerships; foundations of career education; career development; curriculum; career guidance and counseling; career assessment; career planning practices; learning styles and instructional strategies; career information sources and resources; exemplary programs; and special needs populations and practices. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 55100 - Young Adult Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a survey of classic and contemporary young adult texts. Students are introduced to the genre through reading notable young adult texts, applying relevant literary criticism, and investigating effective pedagogical strategies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 55200 - Generalizable Skills Instruction In Career And Technical Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Curriculum, assessment, planning, implementation, and evaluation relating to generalizable skills (also known as generic, transferable, or workplace skills) in career and technical education, other content areas, and special education programs; philosophical, historical, social, economic, political, and educational influencing factors; analysis and synthesis of current research and conceptual models; practical applications for programs; instructional strategies; resources and support services, interdisciplinary collaboration approaches; applications for special needs learners; learning styles and characteristics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 55300 - Leadership Development In Career And Technical Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design, development, implementation, and evaluation of systems and strategies for enhancing the skills and knowledge of personnel seeking to become leaders in the field of Career and Technical Education (CTE); research related to critical and emerging leadership issues, strategies, policies, and resources are examined and applied to program improvement initiatives in schools, the workplace, agencies, and other organizations that serve a wide variety of youth, adolescents, young adults, and adults. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
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| EDCI 55400 - Production Of Instructional Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Involves the design, development, and editing of digitally-based materials for use in computer-based learning environments. Includes planning and implementing text, graphics, audio, and video materials for use as communication and learning tools. Typically offered Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| EDCI 55600 - Educational Video Game Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to provide an introduction to the design of educational video games. The focus of the course is on two areas: 1) the learning, instructional design, and game design theories which can inform the design of effective and engage in educational video games, and 2) how to apply those theories within practical settings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Become comfortable with the history, concepts, terminology, culture, and classification of educational video and computer games.
2. Explore current research on educational computer and video games.
3. Examine learning, instructional design, and game design theories for relevance to the design of educational computer and video games.
4. Apply theory be designing, developing, and implementing a prototype of an educational computer or video game as teams.
|
| EDCI 55900 - Academic Language And Content Area Learning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ENGL 59900) Course focuses on theoretical and practical knowledge for teachers about how second languages are learned, and on the educational and philosophical basis for second language teaching and learning. The course links English language development to teaching and learning strategies and is designed for undergraduate and graduate students in education and practicing teachers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop an understanding of the linguistic challenges of academic language in the content areas of science, language arts, mathematics, and the social studies for ELLs.
2. Gain experience in determining academic tasks that require advanced levels of reading and writing.
3. Learn about the development of academic literacy as ELLs move from elementary into secondary and postsecondary education.
|
| EDCI 56000 - Educational Technology For Teaching And Learning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Educational/training application of instructional technology, including computers, media, and instructional design. Stresses knowledge, skills, and attitudes needed to implement and manage technology in instructional environments. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 56100 - Computer-Assisted Instruction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines aspects of computer-assisted instruction. Primary focus upon application of effective learning design strategies for computer-mediated instruction within popular CAI languages, such as BASIC and PILOT, basic computer-managed instruction system, including practical classroom considerations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
|
| EDCI 56400 - Integration And Management Of Computers In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is intended for pre-service teachers, in-service teachers, administrators, trainers, and others who use or intend to use computers in educational settings. This course focuses on techniques for and issues related to integrating computers in educational environments. Topics covered include: popular computer applications, management issues, information and security issues, and designing educational applications for use in educational settings. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 56500 - Principles Of Adult Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (YDAE 56500) Principles of adult education applied to helping adults learn, evaluating their performance, and determining their needs. Examines history, philosophy, and research of adult education. Explores techniques required in design and delivery of instruction for adults. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 56600 - Educational Applications Of Hypermedia |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of educational applications of hypermedia tools and related research. Creation of hypermedia instructional materials. Incorporation of digitized media (sound, photographs, and motion clips) in hypermedia is explored. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 56700 - Action Research In Science Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to various models and conceptions of teacher action research in science education. Students review literature on action research, participate in small research cohorts, and plan and conduct action research within their respective educational situations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 56800 - Partnering With Web-Based Tools For Learner Centered Environments |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides an in-depth look at Web-based digital tools for teaching and learning, with a focus on learner-centered activities and environments. Emphasis is given to applying the knowledge and skills necessary to create a Web-based, student-centered lesson/unit that provides diverse learners with opportunities for formal and informal learning. Course content is applicable to both independent and collaborative learning, as well as use of the Web as the sole educational delivery system or in combination with other approaches, including traditional classroom instruction. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Create a personal vision of 21st century schools or workplace and a personal definition of a 21st century learner.
2. Examine, in depth, a specific student-centered approach (e.g. project-based learning, problem-based learning, inquiry learning, authentic instruction, etc.) and discuss the similarities and differences among different approaches.
3. Create a video tutorial that teaches others how to use a specific Web 2.0 tool.
4. Design a learner-centered lesson that incorporates relevant Web 2.0 tools for the purpose of broadening and/or deepening students’ understanding of specific curricular content.
5. Develop an implementation plan and create appropriate assessment measures to determine student learning in your own learner-centered lesson.
|
| EDCI 56900 - Introduction To E-Learning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines how design and development of instruction are impacted by the use of the computer as delivery system. A primary focus is on effective learning design strategies for computer mediated instruction. Learners will identify and apply effective design with emphasis on project management, planning, and implementation issues. Education or training materials will be developed using appropriate authoring tools as determined by the instructional context. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand and demonstrate sound design processes for e-learning.
2. Understand and implement instructional and learning theory relevant to creating effective e-learning.
3. Design, develop, and evaluate an effective e-learning product.
|
| EDCI 57200 - Introduction To Learning Systems Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the principles of designing instructional materials and to instructional communication theory and techniques. Topics include objectives, student characteristics, media selection, communication variables, message design, and systematic evaluation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 57300 - Instructional Development Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Provides supervised field experience in programs involving instructional design development activities. Students participate in ongoing projects in the design, development, and evaluation of instructional materials and training programs in business and industry, medical facilities, or other settings deemed appropriate. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDCI 57500 - Foundations Of Distance Learning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the field of distance learning/education. Examination of basic concepts and principles of distance learning, the theoretical underpinnings of the field, research and application literature, and distance education delivery technologies. Focus is on integration of distance education technologies for learning and teaching. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 57700 - Strategic Assessment And Evaluation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores principles and techniques that can be used to carry out evaluations within an organization. In particular, the course examines several aspects of conducting evaluations: planning and designing an evaluation, developing appropriate instruments, using various methods to collect information, analyzing information obtained from those methods, and communicating results and recommendation. This course is designed to help learners understand the multiple ways that evaluation is used in instructional systems, and provide opportunities to design various types of evaluation instruments. Approximately one half of the course is dedicated to the study of learner assessment, and the remaining half of the course is dedicated to the study of program evaluation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Define evaluation within the context of human performance and learning.
2. Develop prototype evaluation tools and frameworks useful in training/education, workplace performance improvement, and E-learning.
3. Evaluate the quality of an E-Learning or EPSS program.
4. Synthesize knowledge by developing an evaluation plan and tools for an actual setting.
|
| EDCI 58000 - Foundations Of Curriculum |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the major historical and philosophical sources of curriculum ideas. Significant forces influencing curriculum decision making. Different theoretical approaches to the construction and analysis of curriculum. Typically offered Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 58500 - Multicultural Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Concepts and theories of ethnicity and cultural pluralism: implications for educational change. Examination of value systems and cultural characteristics of various ethnic groups, different ethnic learning styles, ethnically pluralistic curriculum content and instructional materials, and conceptual curriculum design strategies for implementing multicultural education. Typically offered Summer Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 58700 - Leadership And Management In Educational Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course addresses the fundamentals of leadership and management of educational technology in a K-12 setting. Students will explore and evaluate computer hardware, software, networks, and lab management, including how they fit into education. This course is designed to provide prospectives on organizational leadership of educational technology, as well as providing future teachers with the ability to troubleshoot basic problems often associated with computers and software in the classroom. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Actively plan your development needs/goals within your professional context.
2. Develop and understanding of networking at the local, building, and regional context.
3. Acquire comprehensive understanding about the issues of managing people, equipment, and technological environment.
4. Develop operational processes to facilitate the organizational technological change/innovation.
5. Create concise and persuasive documents explaining technical topics to non-technical people.
6. Develop a comprehensive, persuasive and research-based technology planning proposal including software and hardware evaluation, staff development, facilities planning, and financial planning.
|
| EDCI 58800 - Motivation And Instructional Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course has been designed to provide an in-depth study of motivation as one of the fundamental variables underlying human learning, behavior, and instructional design. The focus of the course is on two areas: 1) theories of motivation and the general principles that have contributed to the field of instructional design, and 2) how those principles are applied within practical design settings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and describe the basic tenets of various theories of motivation.
2. Compare and contrast the contributions that the various motivational theories offer to the field of instructional design.
3. Select appropriate principles derived from given theories and apply those principles within practical design situations.
4. Analyze motivational problems in learning and performance and design effective solutions.
5. Consider motivational theories and their relation to current research in Education and Instructional Design.
|
| EDCI 58900 - Special Topics For Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Consideration of appropriate professional problems of experienced educational personnel in workshops or in-service programs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDCI 59000 - Individual Research Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Opportunities for students to study particular problems under the guidance of a member of the This plan of individualized instruction may be used in any field of education or vocational education. Does not include thesis work. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDCI 59100 - Special Topics In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Group study of a current problem or special topic of interest to professional educational personnel. Intensive study of research, theory, or practical aspects of a particular issue within the usual graduate class format. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDCI 59200 - Elementary Transition To Teaching Seminar And Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. This is a two-semester course with an additional two-four week summer component. The course is comprised of a seminar portion, taught by the TTT coordinator, with concurrent practicum experiences where students spend approximately 14 hours per week in elementary classrooms (20 during the summer component). During all three practicum experiences, students are supervised by the resident master teacher, the TTT coordinator, and additional University supervisors, if necessary. The focus of the seminar is on reinforcing and extending pedagogical concepts and methodology and teaching basic instructional practices essential for success in the classroom. (Prerequisite: acceptance into the Transition to Teaching program.). Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 4 credits
|
| EDCI 59300 - Introductory Secondary Transition To Teaching Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This seminar course offers an introduction to the TTT program, as well as an overview of general educational concerns and issues applicable to all content area instruction at the middle and high school levels. It is often the first course taken in the TTT program by program participants. The course centers on discussions of educational issues, theories, and approaches that the students who are seeking licensure in any of the secondary areas available at Purdue will find helpful. Additionally, the course provides general information about TTT program course sequences, the fee structure, application processes for student teaching placements, and the overriding philosophy of the TTT program at Purdue. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 59400 - Concluding Secondary Transition To Teaching Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This seminar course offers a conclusion to the program, as well as a review of general educational concerns and issues applicable to all content area instruction at the middle and high school levels. It is often the last course taken in the TTT program by program participants. The course centers on discussions of educational issues, theories, and approaches that the students who are seeking licensure in any of the secondary areas available at Purdue will find helpful. Additionally, the course helps students prepare to obtain their teaching license and enter the teaching community as a secondary teacher. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 59500 - Advanced Studies In English Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 - 3.00. Advanced study of an English education topic, issue, problem and/or trend within the instructor's fields of specialization. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. To understand the historical, ideological and cultural forces shaping our perception of the teacher.
2. To examine the construct of the teacher, both real and perceived.
3. To explore the image of the teacher presented in literature and film.
|
| EDCI 60000 - Seminar And Practicum In The Supervision Of Reading Instruction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Seminar and practicum in supervision of reading instruction. Seminar includes theory and practice of reading supervision with emphasis on the role of the reading specialist. Includes field supervision of students in reading courses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 60100 - Problems In Literacy Acquisition: Advanced Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines strategies for teaching elementary and secondary students who experience moderate to severe difficulties acquiring reading, writing, and other aspects of language. Supervised practicum. Prerequisite: EDCI 50000, 50100. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| EDCI 60400 - Social Studies In The Elementary School |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Social Studies-content and place in the modern elementary education curriculum. Materials, instruction techniques, evaluation procedures, and understanding the syntax of the structure of social studies. Prerequisite: EDCI 36100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 60500 - Teaching Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of historical developments and present trends in science education; the designing, implementation, and evaluation of science programs; the role of research in present and future developments. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 60800 - Individualizing Instruction In The Elementary And Secondary Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the foundations underlying individualized instruction, the preparation of individualized instruction materials for the class-room, the role of research in individualized instruction, and the future trends and issues in individualized instruction. Completion of a teacher certification program. Typically offered Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 61200 - Seminar In Literacy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Recent trends and research in literacy. Topics provide in-depth study of literacy acquisition in educational settings. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Student will demonstrate their understanding of the role language plays by identifying issues and challenges of ESL students in literacy, and by proposing how they as educators can integrate a variety of appropriate resources, strategies, and materials into their teaching.
|
| EDCI 61300 - Seminar In The English Language Arts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ENGL 69100) Problems in the teaching of English: literature, language, rhetoric. Attention to recent scholarship and to its application in the public schools. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDCI 61400 - Literacy And Development Of Young Children |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on literacy development (reading, writing, other aspects of language) in pre-school and elementary age children. An emergent literacy model is contrasted with traditional models and school instruction. Particular experiences and materials that aid literacy acquisition are considered. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. An understanding of the complex developmental history of literacy, including the role of visual literacy.
2. Familiarity with relevant research, and the ability to critically evaluate and discuss this literature.
3. Development of the professional skills of analytic and integrative thinking, discussion, and questioning.
4. A critical understanding of the role of classroom experience-both in terms of its social and political value and in terms of available resources and materials -- in the development of young children's literacy.
|
| EDCI 61500 - Qualitative Research Methods In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on expanding graduate students' research skills to include knowledge of the theories and methods associated with qualitative and qualitative-quantitative combined research. Prerequisite: EDPS 53300. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 61600 - Advanced Qualitative Research Methods In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on expanding students' foundation level knowledge of qualitative research in the areas of theories, methods, analysis and interpretation, and presentation. Prerequisite: EDCI 61500. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 61800 - Gender And Culture In Science Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the different perspectives on issues of gender, culture, and science. Major topics include feminist critiques of scientific theories and methods, the work of women and minorities in science, the role science has played in the construction of race and gender, and topics in science education, such as girls' learning in science and the potential of inclusive practices in the science classroom. Prerequisite: EDCI 51800 or 58500. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 62000 - Seminar In Mathematics Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Selected topics in mathematics education. Typical topics considered are: (1) problem solving; (2) instructional strategies; (3) cognitive structure; (4) current curriculum; (5) current research. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDCI 62200 - Seminar In Science Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Current issues in science education. Typical topics considered are: (1) science curriculum; (2) concept learning; (3) teacher education; (4) intellectual developments; (5) current research. Prerequisite: EDCI 51700, 51800. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDCI 62300 - Seminar In Genre Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores theoretical and practical implications of genre theory for literacy studies, literary studies, psychology, communication, and education. Course topics include theoretical models of genre in spoken and written language and human activities; genres as tools for perceiving the world, maintaining and challenging social hierarchies, and developing a sense of self; the development of genre knowledge across the life span; and educational applications of genre theory. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 62400 - Seminar In Social Studies Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An investigation of various aspects of the teaching of the social studies. One topic is dealt with in each enrollment. Master's candidates are expected to complete the first three topics. Areas include: (1) philosophic concepts used in the social studies; (2) curricular analysis and examination of new social studies materials; (3) methods of inquiry in the social studies; (4) research methodology in the social studies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDCI 62700 - Current Topics In Educational Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A critical analysis of problems, trends, issues, and programs related to the area of educational technology. Prerequisite: EDCI 51300. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
|
| EDCI 63500 - Content And Goals In Mathematics Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines conceptions of what mathematics is and how those conceptions have influenced the mathematics curriculum over the course of American history. Prerequisite: Master's student standing or higher and enrolled in Mathematics Education. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 63600 - The Learning Of Mathematics: Insights And Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines research related to the learning of mathematics and to the relationships of social and cultural factors to the learning of mathematics. Prerequisite: Master's student standing or higher and enrolled in Mathematics Education. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 63700 - The Teaching Of Mathematics: Insights And Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines research related to mathematics teaching, including research on characteristics of mathematics teachers, the features of effective mathematics teaching, and the professional preparation and development of mathematics teachers. Prerequisite: Master's student standing or higher and enrolled in Mathematics Education. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 64500 - Organization And Administration Of Career And Technical Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Organizational structure and delivery systems at the national, regional, state, and local levels; program areas and services; legislative initiatives; federal, state, and local planning; administrative functions and practices; leadership development; trends; and issues. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 64700 - Research In Career And Technical Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Rationale for and history of research in career and technical education; analysis of the research process and research methods; examination of the environment and support required for research; proposal development, and strategies for dissemination and utilization of research. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 64800 - Curriculum In Career And Technical Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of curriculum in career and technical education programs; business and industry training programs; curriculum planning, development, implementation, and evaluation; review and analysis of curriculum models. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 64900 - Assessment In Career And Technical Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Goals and rationale for evaluation in education and work training contexts; assessment and measurement methods, techniques, and procedures; reliability, validity, and accuracy; construction and selection of instruments; data and information collection, analysis, and interpretation; meta evaluation; adaptations and modifications for special needs populations; and using assessment data and information. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 65000 - Program Evaluation In Career And Technical Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Goals and objectives of, and criteria for, program evaluation in career and technical education; evaluation models and methods; design and planning; issues; development and selection of instruments and procedures; data and information collection and analysis; preparing program evaluation reports; and using program evaluation results for program improvement. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 65200 - Seminar In Family And Consumer Sciences Education |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 6.00. A critical analysis of current problems, trends, issues, and programs in family and consumer sciences education. Prerequisite: 12 credit hours in Education or equivalent professional training. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDCI 65300 - Seminar In Career And Technical Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 9.00. Current trends, theory, and practices related to educational contexts and careers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDCI 66000 - Learning Design And Technology Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Investigation of trends, developments, and issues in educational technology. Focus is on current practices, problems, and research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDCI 66300 - Interactive Multimedia |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines computer-based interactive multimedia theory, research, design, development, and evaluation. Includes a digital audio-video production and design of interactive multimedia for stand-alone or online delivery. Prerequisite: EDCI 56100, 57200. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 67000 - Learning Design And Technology Integrated Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Current issues and problems in educational technology. Projects in current practice and research selected and pursued. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDCI 67200 - Advanced Practices In Learning Systems Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Applications of learning systems design to educational situations. In-depth treatment of learner analysis, task analysis, learning activities design, learner verification and summative evaluation. Focuses on the application of instructional design concepts and principles within authentic ID situations. Prerequisite: EDCI 57200. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 67300 - Issues And Methods In Learning Systems Design Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides preparation to conduct independent research in the field of educational technology through direct participation in the research process: critically reviewing research, designing and conducting a research study, synthesizing and presenting results in written and oral formats. Prerequisite: EDPS 53300. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 67400 - Advanced Instructional Design Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the impact of both psychological learning theories and instructional applications upon the development of various instructional design theories. Emphasis is on theory construction, influence of learning and educational principles, and the current and future possibilities of instructional design theory. Prerequisite: EDCI 53100 and 57200. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 67500 - Instructional Strategies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines and applies the cognitive strategies and tactics that can be used by an instructional designer to improve human learning. Applications of chunking, frames, concept mapping, advance organizers, analogies, rehearsal, and imagery tactics to learning will be covered. Implementation and evaluation procedures for those strategies within intellectual skills, verbal information, psychomotor, and attitude domains of learning will be studied and applied. Prerequisite: EDCI 57200. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 68200 - Contemporary Curriculum Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Critical examination of contemporary concepts of curriculum theory. Rational/technical curriculum, social needs/child centered curriculum. Socio-political curriculum theory; curriculum as existential, aesthetic, and phenomenological. Implications for current practice, school reform, and educational research. Prerequisite: EDCI 68100. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 68400 - Seminar In Curriculum Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course designed to allow for the in-depth exploration of specialized and timely topics in curriculum theory, practice, and reform. Though all specialized topics address both theory and practice, some topics focus more heavily on practice, and others focus more heavily on theory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDCI 68500 - Global Issues In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Critical examination of contemporary global issues in education. Historical, social economic, political, and cultural theories of globalization in international context. Analysis and synthesis of current research. Implications and application to current practice, school reform, policy, curriculum, and educational research. Resources for instruction; curriculum design strategies for implementing global education. Prerequisite: 12 credit hours in Education. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDCI 69400 - Elementary Transition To Teaching Student Teaching/Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 6.00. A full-time elementary classroom teaching experience and internship seminars. Students teach for a period of 14 weeks under the mentorship of a master teacher and a University supervisor. In order to provide support for student teachers and ongoing interactions among students and their supervisors, students will attend scheduled student-teaching seminars. After the classroom experience has ended, students will spend two additional weeks completing a variety of assignments. The purpose of the internship semester is to provide a structured experience for learning and refining the theories and practices necessary to become an effective teacher of all children in the inclusive classroom. Prerequisite: EDCI 50100, 51100, 58500, 60300, 60400, 60500. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Internship
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDCI 69500 - Internship In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 10.00. Amount of credit to be determined by nature and extent of the assignment. A special course in selected areas of education, designed to provide practical field experience under professional supervision in selected situations related to the candidate's area of specialization. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 10.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDCI 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDCI 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDCI 90100 - New Student Orientatn |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Curriculum and Instruction
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDFA 20000 - History And Philosophy Of Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDST 20000) How history and philosophy have informed school organization, curriculum, and teaching practice. Students develop their own philosophies of teaching. Topics include continuities and discontinuities of schooling, colonial period to present. Conflicting demands placed upon schools. Issues of race, class, and gender inform debates over school purposes and practices. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to identify and correctly use terms and concepts that explain human/social behavior in historical, political, economic and cultural frames of reference; recognize and explain foundations, structures, and processes of contemporary societies; recognize, analyze, and interpret human exp. in terms of intellectual, historical, political, economic, and cultural contexts.
|
| EDFA 49000 - Individual Research And Teaching Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Opportunity for undergraduate students to investigate particular problems in the field of education under supervision. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDFA 49100 - Topics And Issues In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Provides the student with the opportunity to strengthen the preparation program though the study of selected educational topics and issues based on individual needs and interests. One topic is dealt with in each enrollment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDFA 50700 - Introduction To Teacher Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This is the first in the Masters of Teacher leadership concentration. In this course, students will become familiar with the role of the teacher leader, characteristics of teacher leaders, and the role of a teacher leader in establishing a shared vision for the school or district. In addition, this course will introduce participants to the major assets, constraints and barriers that confront school curriculum leadership as they move schools and teachers toward more effective, research-based practice. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Discuss and defend the critical attributes of teacher leaders.
2. Identify and defend the attributes of school culture and leadership that would support the work of a teacher leader.
3. Identify and analyze the attributes and characteristics of a teacher leader that would contribute in a major way to the success of that teacher leader.
4. The student will be able to create a comprehensive professional development plan for a school that is based on professional practice and current research on K-12 student learning.
|
| EDFA 51200 - Foundations Of Educational Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDST 51200) Administration of education; roles of local, state, and federal government. Focus on purpose, organization, task areas, and processes of educational administration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| EDFA 51300 - Educational Facilities Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDST 51300) Systems approach as a basis for school facilities planning. Study directed toward procedures for solving facilities problems. Emphasis on techniques for developing and securing technical information. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| EDFA 51600 - School-Community Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDST 51600) This course will stress concepts and principles relevant to school-community interaction. It will focus on the new roles of the public in education and will deal with problems encountered by educators in communicating with the public. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| EDFA 59000 - Individual Research Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. (EDST 59000) Opportunities for students to study particular problems under the guidance of a member of the staff. This plan of individualized instruction may be used in any field of education or vocational education. Does not include thesis work. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDFA 59100 - Special Topics In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. (EDST 59100) Group study of a current problem or special topic of interest to professional educational personnel. Intensive study of research, theory, or practical aspects of a particular issue within the usual graduate class format. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDFA 60800 - Business Management In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDST 60800) Examination of internal and external determinants of school fiscal policy. Experiences with fiscal procedures for school budgeting and accounting, including preparation of a school budget. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| EDFA 60900 - Legal Aspects Of American Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDST 60900) Legal foundations of education as established by constitutional provisions, court decisions, opinions of attorney generals, administrative rulings, and executive directives. Emphasis on legal theory and principles currently in state of change. Stress of case study method of investigation into educational law. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| EDFA 61000 - Supervision Of Instruction And Instructional Personnel |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDST 61000) Examination of the functions of school administration which focus on achievement of instructional expectations of educational service. Emphasis on developing an individualized supervisory program for instructional personnel. Typically offered Summer Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| EDFA 61300 - Clinic For Educational Leaders |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. (EDST 61300) Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDFA 69500 - Internship In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 10.00. (EDST 69500) Amount of credit to be determined by nature and extent of the assignment. A special course in selected areas of education, designed to provide practical field experience under professional supervision in selected situations related to the candidate's area of specialization. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 10.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDHI B2000 - Introduction To Personnel Services In Residence Halls |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Principles involved in self-awareness, developing inter- and intrapersonal skills, and examining the development of community within the residence hall. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| EDPS 10000 - Personal Growth And Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An experiential learning approach to interpersonal communications and such developmental issues as autonomy, identity, values clarification, intimacy, and career-life goals. Emphasis is upon active participation in small-group discussion and cognitive mastery of personal and interpersonal dynamics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 10100 - Facil Personal Growth And Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Facil Personal Growth And Development. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 10300 - Introduction To Higher Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to assist and guide students in maximizing their potential for success at the university by promoting academic growth. Through collaborative learning, this course will promote the concept of life-long learning through the use of the following strategies: utilization of campus resources; goal setting; time management; diversity training; values exploration; career exploration; and critical thinking skills. This course is highly recommended for all freshman. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| EDPS 10500 - Academic And Career Plan |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Builds understanding of career interests and personality characteristics related to academic and career decisions. Expands knowledge of Purdue academic programs and of the world of work. Introduces decision-making strategies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Information Literacy, UC-Information Literacy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 20000 - Life Career Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course designed to help students clarify and develop educational and vocational plans related to career development. Emphasis upon assessment, exploration of vocational opportunities, the decision-making process, and identification of appropriate educational channels leading to selected career objectives. Section 1 for juniors and seniors only to focus their career direction and to develop job search, career management, and life-planning skills. Section 2 is for freshmen and sophomores only, in the process of changing or selecting a college major. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 21000 - Academic Self-Esteem Enhancement |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Academic Self-Esteem Enhancement. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 22000 - Psychology Of Learning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the learner and learning. Study of the cognitive, social, physical, moral and personality development from early childhood through adolescence; implications of developmental stages for educational planning and intervention. Principles of basic learning theories, facilitative conditions and strategies for enhancing learning; classroom management as a means to foster the learner's development and learning. Survey techniques for assessing the learner, learning and identification of learning dysfunctions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| EDPS 23500 - Learning And Motivation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to concepts of learning and motivation for classroom teachers. Influence of development, culture, and individual differences on learning and motivation. Uses of assessment and technology in promoting learning and motivation. A field-based experiential component is included. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 23600 - Developmental Theory And Practice In Early Childhood Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will explore the theories of child development as they relate to early childhood education. An overview of theoretical perspectives on the developing child will serve as a foundation for examining current practices in early childhood education settings from birth through age eight. There will be a focus on child study (observation and assessments in diverse settings). Child development in all domains and its connections to practical applications in group settings will be studied. Implications of multicultural perspectives for infants/toddler, preprimary and primary age children will be addressed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| EDPS 26000 - Introduction To Special Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the field of special education: foundations, areas of exceptionality, teaching strategies, and current issues and trends. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Each student will correctly respond to written exam questions designed to measure awareness, knowledge, understand and application of a variety of issues relating to exceptionality and the teacher’s role; abstract a professional journal article about integrating differentiating instruction for, and accommodating students with, special needs; write a brief report of an individually selected field experience involving direct, “real world” contact with course topics.
|
| EDPS 26500 - The Inclusive Classroom |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Characteristics of students with special needs/talents; strategies for helping students learn and develop in general educational settings. Emphasis placed upon research evidence, case studies, problem-based learning, and development of a plan for an inclusive classroom. A field-based component is included. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture, Travel Time
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 27000 - Characteristics of Individuals with Mild Disabilities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Characteristics of students with mild disabilities and their related academic and social outcomes, issues, and implications for assessment and intervention. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 27500 - Observation, Assessment And Documentation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The focus of this course is on the methods and tools used for child study to create positive learning environments that foster children's development. Students explore the purpose and value of assessment, examine and apply the use of systematic observations, documentation, and other effective assessment strategies. Includes an in-depth case study. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| EDPS 27600 - Young Children With Exceptional Needs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The identification of young children's exceptional needs. Study of various developmental challenges and characteristics with a focus on early intervention with resources and referrals. Strategies for adapting early care and education settings for all children and families to ensure education in inclusive settings. Use of the Division for Early Childhood of the Council of Exceptional Children guidelines. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| EDPS 27700 - Nurturing And Guiding The Young Child |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores the connection between the developmental needs of young children and practices for guidance. Methods for management in early care and education settings to promote pro-social behaviors. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| EDPS 28500 - Diversity And Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course integrates an understanding of diversity with principles of democratic education. Historical, Sociological, Cultural, Political philosophical, and Pedagogical Foundations of diversity are explored and related to issues of pedagogy in a pluralistic society. This course includes an experiential component. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| EDPS 30000 - Student Leadership Development |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Leadership in students is developed through lectures and experiential activities. Topic areas include leadership styles; campus organizational structures; program planning; social and intellectual activities; human relations and cultural differences; motivation; team building; public relations. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| EDPS 30100 - Peer Counseling Training |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Students are trained to help peers deal with their problems and concerns. Training modules are used to build knowledge and skills in the duties of peer helpers; student development, communication, goal setting, and use of community resources are stressed. (EDPS 30100 and 30100 are for Horizon students only.). Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| EDPS 30200 - Adolescents Classroom Teacher |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will develop understanding of physical, intellectual, emotional and social development of learners. Emphasis on individual differences and behavior patterns that influence the establishment of an orderly, healthy learning environment, and upon the teacher as an influence of the learning environment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 30300 - Career And Life Planning Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will complete a personal assessment of their values, skills personality traits, interests, life goals and life roles. Students will also become familiar with tools integral to a successful job search, including networking, resume writing, job search correspondence, and interviewing. Finally students will identify possible paths as they are guided through the process of integrating their knowledge of themselves with information they have gathered about the larger world of work. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to identify work values, skills, personality traits, interests, and life goals through formal and informal self, assessments.
2. Students will understand the connection among several variables including: connecting college to career, understanding the relationship between jobs and career path, explore the similarities and differences between life in college and life after college, become familiar with tools that are integral to a successful job search, and understanding the usefulness of researching potential places of employment and networking.
3. Students will be able to learn how to write a professional resume and cover letter.
|
| EDPS 30600 - Adolescent And Young Adult Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Candidates learn research-based theories of adolescent and young adult development and how this relates to the teacher's role in the secondary classroom. The influences of development, culture, and classroom contexts on secondary students' learning are examined. The purpose of the field component is to integrate course topics with professional field experiences, and encourage reflective observations of adolescent and young adult development in secondary classrooms. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an understanding of how adolescents and young adults learn and develop.
2. Demonstrate an understanding of the range of developmental characteristics of adolescents and young adults, including interpersonal, cultural and social contexts.
3. Provide learning opportunities that support the intellectual, social and personal development of adolescents and young adults.
|
| EDPS 30700 - Classroom Climate In Secondary Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Teacher candidates learn how to develop a supportive, challenging, and growth enhancing classroom community for students. Teachers must develop advanced classroom management skills to create a classroom community that welcomes diversity, makes effective use of technology and provides appropriate educational experiences for students with diverse needs, backgrounds, and developmental levels. This course is designed to help teacher candidates improve their classroom management skills through a variety of educational experiences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Use an understanding of individual and group motivation and behavior to create a learning environment that encourages positive social interaction, active engagement in learning and self-motivation.
2. Express an understanding of characteristics of high schools by designing an educational program that reflects sound teaching and learning.
3. Articulate the relationship between a school and its community.
4. Create a positive, productive environment where all students have an equal opportunity to learn.
|
| EDPS 30800 - Exceptional Learners-Secondary |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course addresses characteristics of students with diverse backgrounds of cognitive ability, as well as the strategies for helping theses students learn and develop in educational settings. Emphasis is placed on research evidence, case studies, problem-based learning, and development of a plan for a differentiated classroom. It provides candidates with the foundation to be effective teachers of students with exceptional needs and talents in secondary educational settings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstarte an understanding of how learners differ in their approaches to learning and create instructional opportunities that are adapted to learners with exceptionalities.
2. Demonstrate an understanding of the interdisciplinary nature of the high school curriculum and relates his/her subject matter to foster well-rounded student learning.
3. Demonstrate an understanding of the teaching/learning research base and employ a variety of instructional strategies, resources and technologies which advance the learner into high thinking skills.
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| EDPS 31500 - Collaborative Leadership: Listening |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The purpose of this course is to provide integrated study of listening as a collaborative leadership skill necessary for interpersonal and intrapersonal development. Focus is on the development of professional listening skills, and the understand of the role listening plays in collaborative leadership conflict resolution, interviewing, team building, and ethics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: GTC-Speaking & Listening, UC-Oral Communications, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify the essential elements of collaborative leadership.
2. Understand how listening skills interact with thoughts, feelings, and behaviors.
3. Explain the importance of listening to understand basic human motivation.
4. Explain the importance of listening as a collaborative leadership skill.
5. Demonstrate listening skills related to initiating and sustaining positive relationships.
6. Demonstrate interpersonal communication skills appropriate for negotiating difficult conversations.
|
| EDPS 31600 - Collaborative Leadership: Cross-Cultural Settings |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this course, students will explore the cultural nuances of leadership in the United States as well as around the world. This course will include impact of globalism as a context for leadership, conflict resolution in a global environment, and other important factors that impact culturally diverse or global teams. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Better understand what a culture is, broadly defined, and how it functions.
2. Better understand the importance of culturally aware, knowledgeable, and skillful leaders.
3. Increase professional and personal self-awareness in relation to leadership in diverse settings.
4. Better understand the importance of making cultural issues central for constructive conflict management.
5. Understand the complexity of leader-other interaction and impact of psycho-social variables on this interaction.
|
| EDPS 31700 - Collaborative Leadership: Mentoring |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The purpose of this course is to provide a theoretical and experiential overview of the basic elements of mentoring as a key aspect of effective collaborative leadership. The learning experience is designed to promote development of the knowledge, skills, and dispositions required for competent mentorship. Emphasis on workplace and youth mentoring. Typically Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Differenitate among various types, purposes, roles of mentoring/mentors.
2. Identify the essential elements of effective mentoring relationships.
3. Examine and discuss the ethical considerations involved in mentoring.
4. Acquire knowledge regarding how issues of diversity interact with the process of mentoring.
5. Evaluate empirical findings associated with mentoring.
6. Consider various approaches to evaluating mentoring and the outcomes of mentoring programs.
|
| EDPS 33000 - Child Behavior Elementary School |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Presents methods of collecting and using information about the behavior and development of children in the elementary school. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 36100 - Use Of Assessment Techniques In Special Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Assessment techniques for the exceptional child, with applications to curriculum. Includes norm-referenced and curriculum-based measurement, error analyses, and observational ratings. Admission to Teacher Education Program, passage of Gate A. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 36200 - Organization And Management Of Instructional Behaviors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Organization and management techniques, including structure, principles, scheduling, evaluation, and strategies for effective integration into regular, resource, and special education classrooms to motivate and increase appropriate learning behaviors and to manage problem behaviors. Admission to Teacher Education Program, passage of Gate A. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 36400 - Practicum In Special Education Assessment |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Practical experiences in test administration, scoring, and interpretation will be provided in practicum. Admission to Teacher Education Program, passage of Gate A. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 37000 - Teaching Students With Diverse Learning Needs In K-12 Class |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. EDPS 37000 builds on basic concepts presented in EDPS 26000. The course develops a knowledge base and practical strategies that will enable teachers to help every student succeed-including students with disabilities, those with diverse cultural backgrounds, students with limited English proficiency, students who are considered at risk" for academic failure and those who are gifted and talented. Topics include planning and grouping strategies classroom management collaboration skills curriculum adaptations teaching strategies and supported inclusive education. Field experiences are integrated with classroom instruction. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| EDPS 41000 - Collaboration And Transition Practices For Individuals With Disabilities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course addresses the professional collaborative practices for special educators, who work with school age students with disabilities. The topics of this course include collaboration with professionals, ancillary personnel, agencies, and families, problem-solving and dealing with conflict, co-teaching, and transition planning from early intervention to post-secondary settings. The possible products from this course include community resources, transition plans, co-teaching plans, and family interviews. No undergraduate student may be enrolled in this undergraduate course until they have been admitted to the teacher education program and passed Gates A and B. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will become familiar with the legal requirements of IDEA and other related laws, both federal and state as they relate to collaboration and transition.
2. Students will demonstrate proficiency in writing and interpreting transition plans.
3. Students will demonstrate knowledge in the use of both formal and informal assessments in determining student transition needs and supports.
4. Based upon assessment information, students will be able to develop comprehensive plans for community-based instruction (including ecological inventories, site analyses, site development, instructional strategies, behavior management plans, data collection).
5. Students will demonstrate knowledge of interagency collaboration, professional development, and community resource development for the purpose of providing effective transition services.
6. Students will demonstrate a basic understanding of the government benefits (e.g., SSI, AFDC) for which persons with disabilities may be eligible. They will be familiar with the impact of work or other financial resources on maintaining these benefits.
7. Students will be knowledgeable about accessing and implementing information related to school and post-school private resources for persons with disabilities in the areas of government benefits, vocational services, estate planning, independent living, social and recreational services, transportation services, community integration and related services.
8. Students will demonstrate an understanding of the issues and barriers encountered by students, parents, and service providers as students with disabilities transition between grade and school levels. Through this understanding, students will be able to identify solutions to issues and barriers for all parties as individuals with disabilities transition through grade and school levels.
|
| EDPS 43000 - Creating And Managing Learning Environments |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course develops skills in classroom organization and management at the elementary level. It includes classroom discipline, interpersonal skills, administrative aspects of teaching, working with families, building support networks, and a classroom design project. No undergraduate students may be enrolled in any of these undergraduate courses until they have been admitted to teacher education. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop skills for building classroom communities.
2. Analyze different approaches to classroom discipline and the effects of those approaches on the cognitive, social, and emotional development of diverse students.
3. Develop a personal philosophy of classroom discipline.
4. Understand how student diversity, developmental levels, technology, instructional design, room arrangement, and assessment techniques influence the classroom community and climate.
5. Develop strategies for effective management of professional time and tasks.
6. Learn how to collaborate with colleagues and parents to enhance student learning and development.
7. Development a comprehensive plan for creating and managing the learning environment in a real or simulated teaching situation.
|
| EDPS 45900 - Assistive Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Use of technological applications in special education, including microcomputers, interactive video, auditory and visual enhancement, and other adaptive devices with individuals experiencing disabilities including learning disabilities, intellectual impairments, sensory and physical impairments. No undergraduate students may be enrolled in any of these undergraduate courses until they have been admitted to teacher education. Admission to Teacher Education Program, passage of Gates A and B. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 46000 - Strategies For Teaching Individuals With Disabilities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to education of individuals with mild disabilities, learning disabilities, mild mental handicaps, and severe emotional handicaps. Topics include: technological applications, teacher effectiveness, instructional design, development of individualized education programs, and evaluation of instruction. No undergraduate students may be enrolled in any of these undergraduate courses until they have been admitted to teacher education. Admission to Teacher Education Program, passage of Gate A. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDPS 46100 - Practicum In Strategies For Teaching Individuals With Disabilities |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Practicum experience in assessment and teaching of individuals with disabilities. Experience in design, delivery, implementation, and evaluation of instruction. No undergraduate students may be enrolled in any of these undergraduate courses until they have been admitted to teacher education. Admission to Teacher Education Program, passage of Gates A and B. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Student Teaching, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDPS 46200 - Advanced Strategies For Teaching Individuals With Disabilities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced strategies for teaching individuals with disabilities. Topics include technological applications, reading, problem-solving, written language, self-monitoring, memory, peer tutoring, generalization, and computer-assisted instruction. No undergraduate students may be enrolled in any of these undergraduate courses until they have been admitted to teacher education. Admission to Teacher Education Program, passage of Gates A and B. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDPS 49000 - Individual Research And Teaching Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Primarily for teacher candidates requiring special, individualized experience in research or teaching. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDPS 49100 - Topics And Issues In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Provides student with opportunity to strengthen preparation through study of selected educational topics and issues based upon individual needs and interests. One topic is considered in each enrollment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDPS 49800 - Supervised Teaching- Special Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 16.00. A student planning to enroll in EDCI 49600, 49800, 49900; EDPS 49800, 49900, 56100, or 56600 in the spring or fall semester of any academic year must secure, complete, and submit a student teaching application form between the middle of September and November 1 preceding the academic year during which he or she will be enrolled in the course. Failure to file the application during or prior to this time will make it virtually impossible for the student to receive a student teaching assignment for that year. Application forms may be obtained in and submitted to Room 3241, Liberal Arts and Education Building. Teaching full time in a school classroom under the supervision of the teacher in charge of the class and a University supervisor. No undergraduate students may be enrolled in any of these undergraduate courses until they have been admitted to teacher education. Admission to Teacher Education Program, passage of Gates A, B, and C. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 16.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Student Teaching, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDPS 49900 - Supervised Teaching Or Practicum In Endorsement Area |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 9.00. A student planning to enroll in EDCI 49600, 49800, 49900; EDPS 49800, 49900, 56100, or 56600 in the spring or fall semester of any academic year must secure, complete, and submit a student teaching application form between the middle of September and November 1 preceding the academic year during which he or she will be enrolled in the course. Failure to file the application during or prior to this time will make it virtually impossible for the student to receive a student teaching assignment for that year. Application forms may be obtained in and submitted to Room 3241, Liberal Arts and Education Building. Teaching full time in an endorsement area in a school classroom under the supervision of the teacher in charge of the class and a University supervisor. No undergraduate students may be enrolled in any of these undergraduate courses until they have been admitted to teacher education. completion of education courses required for the endorsement area and admittance to teacher education program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Student Teaching, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDPS 50000 - Group Counseling Theories And Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theoretical and experiential overview of fundamental elements of group work and group counseling processes. Broad topics include purposes and types of groups, therapeutic factors and stages of leadership skills, and multicultural, ethical, and legal aspects of group counseling. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 50100 - Introduction To School Counseling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Presents an overview of counseling in elementary, middle, and secondary schools. Treats the history of school counseling, developmental characteristics and problems of students, and counseling program elements and issues. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 50300 - Introduction To Mental Health Counseling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides an overview of mental health counseling as it relates to community issues and needs. Roles and settings for the mental health counselor and specific intervention skills will be stressed. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| EDPS 50500 - Foundations Of Career Development And Assessment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Treats career development theories which emphasize aspects of the self in decision making, occupational classification systems, and educational and vocational information with applications to individual and group counseling. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop a comprehensive understanding of core and emerging theories and areas of research in career development.
2. Demonstrate the ability to conceptualize career counseling cases from various theoretical and multicultural perspectives.
3. Demonstrate the ability to integrate theory and research and utilize this information in such a way that it informs applications of career counseling and assessment.
4. Demonstrate understanding of the role that cultural, individual difference (e.g., biological, personality), and developmental factors play in shaping career development processes.
|
| EDPS 50700 - Counseling Multicultural And Diverse Populations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Counseling strategies for multicultural and diverse populations encountered by helping professionals. Among the populations considered are ethnic and cultural minorities, older persons, the gifted, and the disabled. Typically offered Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 50900 - Expressive Arts: Music, Movement, And Spiritual Expression |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to the creative process and the use of that process in development of music, movement, and spiritual expression in traditions and cultures of healing. It presents evidence that the expansion of the creative potential with all of us is valuable for professional counselors to recognize and use in treatment. Further, the course will include definitions, historical roots, theoretical underpinnings, and basic elements of music, movement, and spiritual expression in art therapy. Course topics will include an examination of the major contributors in the field, and how music, movement, and spiritual expression can be used to affect behavioral, emotional, and psychological changes, and how art therapy can be used in the context of various psychological approaches. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Analyzing the physical structure of music, including order and time.
2. Analyzing physical and emotional responses to music.
3. Analyzing intrapersonal interactions affected by music.
4. Designing musical therapeutic interventions and reinforcements.
5. Evaluating the use of silence as a therapeutic tool.
6. Synthesizing movement into a mirroring of intrapersonal interactions and responses.
7. Analyzing movement as a cognitive and emotional response to a stimulus.
8. Analyzing movement as a unique form of communication within the therapeutic process.
9. Analyzing the meaning derived from spirituality as a psychological survival tool.
10. Evaluating the meditative experience in terms of cognitive and emotional response.
11. Synthesizing methods and techniques of meditation for enhancement of inner peace.
12. Analyzing spiritual symbols in cultural or spiritual affiliations in terms of cognition and emotion.
13. Synthesize music and movement to enhance spirituality.
14. Assessing client spirituality within philosophy of life, hope, trust, and self-actualization.
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| EDPS 51000 - Culture And Cognition |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Explores how culture shapes thinking and learning form childhood through adulthood. Students develop a critical understanding of the cross disciplinary research on culture and cognition and its implications for teaching and learning. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 51500 - Applied Behavior Analysis For Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of learning theory, measurement procedures, verification of functional relationships, and developing knowledge of current significant research in applied behavior analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Introduced to specific methods and teaching strategies for working with children with emotional and behavioral disabilities.
2. Prepared to systematically monitor student performance.
3. Prepare teachers to devise and implement usable functional behavior analysis and behavior management plans for students with emotional and behavioral disabilities.
|
| EDPS 51600 - Addictions Seminar I: HIV/AIDS And Dual Diagnosis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is intended to provide awareness and knowledge about concomitant disorders and substance use disorders and the assessment and recommended treatment for dually diagnosed clients. The course will also provide an overview of HIV/AIDS and its relation to substance use disorders. These topics will be addresses within a culturally aware and competent framework. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand assessment and diagnosis of substance use disorders.
2. Understand assessment and diagnosis of psychiatric disorders most commonly associated with substance use disorders.
3. Review of HIV/AIDS basic information and how this is associated with drug use and the risk factors arising from drug use.
4. Awareness of how diversity is part of all of these issues to produce dynamic counseling issues.
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| EDPS 51700 - Addictions Seminar II: Ethics, Criminal Justice, And Social Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is intended to provide awareness and knowledge about the ethics of working within the substance abuse setting. Students will receive a better understanding of how this population is represented within the criminal justice system, and how other social systems can be used in both prevention and treatment of substance abuse. The ICAADA core functions covered are Orientation, Client Education, and Consultation. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the ethics of the Addiction field.
2. Understand the impact of substance abuse and crime.
3. Learn how social systems within the area can be used in preventative efforts.
4. Realize how social systems can assist in treatment.
|
| EDPS 52000 - Characteristics Of Individuals With Severe Disabilities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Characteristics and issues encountered by individuals who experience severe and profound levels of mental retardation and/or autistic spectrum disorders. Characteristics include: learning, behavioral, social, emotional, and communicative abilities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Definitions and classification systems of mental retardation and autism (INTASC Principles 1, 2, 3)
2. The legal requirements for services for students with moderate/severe disabilities, including legislative, judicial, and administrative rules (INTASC Principles 1, 9, 10)
3. Cognitive development, social-emotional development, communication development, behavior characteristics, and related research concerning populations of individuals with moderate and severe disabilities (INTASC Principles 2, 3)
4. Learning theories and the ability to analyze learning deficits of populations with severe disabilities within the framework of various learning theories (INTASC Principles 2, 3)
5. Cultural similarities and differences among moderately/severely disabled populations (INTASC Principles 1, 2, 3, 7)
6. Knowledge of significant social and service delivery issues (INTASC Principles 1, 8, 10)
7. Locating and use of relevant professional literature and organizations concerned with the education and welfare of individuals with moderate and severe disabilities (INTASC Principles 9, 10)
8. Professional and ethical practices of a professional special educator (INTASC Principles 9, 10)
|
| EDPS 52100 - Counseling And Psychopathology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of an understanding of the DSM-V-TR, diagnosis, and treatment planning. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate knowledge and understanding of the diagnostic categories described in the DSM-V-TR.
2. Demonstrate knowledge and understanding of cultural, gender, socioeconomic, ethnic, ethical and legal issues that relate to the process of diagnosis.
3. Demonstrate the ability to use the multi-axial evaluation diagnostic system.
4. Demonstrate knowledge of factors that contribute to, or interfere with, accurate assessment and diagnosis.
5. Demonstrate knowledge of best treatment practices for the DSM-V-TR disorders.
|
| EDPS 52200 - Crisis Intervention And Emergency Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides in-depth study of the nature of crises and crisis intervention. Students will learn crisis theory, crisis intervention models, and practical skills for effective crisis intervention. Over the course of the semester, we will attend to a variety of crises including crises related to suicide, violence, victimization, psychiatric illness, chemical dependency, individual or family-level trauma, and community-wide disasters. Emphasis will be placed on the counselor's development of crisis assessment, management, and short-term intervention skills. Special attention will be given to cultural, ethical, and legal considerations. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the impact of crises, disasters, and other trauma-causing events on people.
2. Understand the operation of an emergency management system within clinical mental health agencies and in the community.
3. Understand the principles of crisis intervention for people during crises, disasters, and other trauma-causing events.
4. Demonstrate the ability to use procedures for assessing and managing suicide risk.
5. Screen for addiction, aggression, and danger to self and/or others, as well as co-occurring mental disorders.
6. Understand appropriate use of diagnosis during a crisis, disaster, or other trauma-causing event.
7. Differentiate between diagnosis and developmentally appropriate reactions during crises, disasters, and other trauma-causing events.
|
| EDPS 52500 - Language And Communication In Autism Spectrum Disorders |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (SLHS 52500) This course will address development and impairment of language and communication in individuals with autism spectrum disorders (ASD). In addition to language and communication characteristics, this course will review the behavioral, cognitive, sensory, and social–emotional abilities of individuals with ASD. Differential diagnosis, assessment, and intervention strategies will be emphasized with a focus on empirically supported treatments and evidence-based practices. Current developments and research findings will be highlighted related to etiology and diagnosis of ASD, advances in biomedical research, augmentative and alternative communication strategies, assistive technology solutions, behavioral, cognitive, and physiological interventions, and comprehensive treatment approaches. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will demonstrate knowledge of the definitions and classification systems of autism spectrum disorders.
2. Students will understand and appreciate the legal requirements for services for students with autism spectrum disorders including legislative, judicial, and administrative rules.
3. Students will demonstrate knowledge of the cognitive, social-emotional, and communication development, behavioral characteristics, and related research concerning the population of individuals experiencing autism spectrum disorders.
4. Students will demonstrate an understanding of learning, cognitive and emotional theories related to individuals with autism spectrum disorders.
5. Within the framework of the various theories, students will demonstrate an ability to analyze learning, cognitive, and emotional deficits and identify how these impact educational services.
6. Students will demonstrate an understanding of and appreciation for the cultural similarities and differences among different autism spectrum disorders.
7. Students will gain an understanding of significant social and delivery issues related to individuals with autism spectrum disorders.
8. Students will become skillful in locating and using relevant professional organizations and literature concerned with the education and welfare of individuals with autism spectrum disorders.
9. Students will become knowledgeable of and demonstrate the professional and ethical practices of a professional special educator.
|
| EDPS 52900 - Techniques Of Addictions Counseling: Counseling Skills, Groups, And Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to help students develop and apply basic counseling skills and helping attitudes for addictions counseling. Self-evaluation, giving and receiving feedback and reflection upon the development of clinical skills and ethical tendencies is an essential part of this course. The ICAADA core functions of Assessment Intake, Treatment Planning, Counseling, and Report/Record Keeping will be included. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Analyze the advanced skills needed to conduct a counseling interview for addictions.
2. Evaluate the advanced skills and synthesize them into their repertoire of responses for use in addictions counseling.
3. Evaluate the self-awareness necessary for becoming a competent addictions counselor, especially in relation to our multicultural world.
4. Analyze addictions counseling skills for competence in leading groups and individual sessions.
5. Analyze and evaluate feedback on their progress related to addictions counseling skills.
6. Maintain a self-reflective environment that analyze and synthesizes evaluation as a tool for enhancing beginning addictions counseling skills.
7. Analyze assessment tools for advanced practice.
8. Analyze and evaluate treatment plans.
9. Analyze relapse prevention programs, particularly AA and NA.
10. Analyze the family’s role in seeking and persisting in addictions counseling.
|
| EDPS 53000 - Advanced Educational Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theories of learning and development, research on instruction and learning, and principles of measurement applied to educational problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 53100 - Introduction To Measurement And Evaluation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the basic concepts and principles of measurement and evaluation with special emphasis on descriptive statistics, and teacher-made and standardized tests. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 53200 - Measuring Educational Achievement |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course in developing, analyzing, and interpreting measures of educational achievement. Emphasis is placed upon cognitive tests. Nontest techniques for assessing behavior are also explored. Prior experience with statistics or measurement, although helpful, is not required for this course. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 53300 - Introduction To Educational Research I: Methodology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course in educational research and evaluation methodology which considers the various methods of educational research, the formulation of research hypotheses, and the preparation of research reports. Typically offered Summer Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 53400 - Introduction To Educational Research II: Measurement Consideration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course in measurement concepts and statistical reasoning, with emphasis on the selection, evaluation, and/or development of independent and dependent variables as they are employed in educational research settings. Unlike EDPS 53100 and 53200, this course is explicitly designed for the educational researcher and not for the teacher. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 53500 - Personal And Social Development During The School Years |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Stresses understanding of personal and socio-emotional growth of students and teachers in the school environment. Attention is given to means of promoting personal and socio-emotional growth. Typically offered Summer Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 53600 - Achievement Motivation And Performance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of current theory and research on the nature and development of achievement motivation. Motivation for intellectual and academic performance will be emphasized. Applications of theory in educational settings will be considered. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 54000 - Gifted, Creative And Talented Children |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to intellectual, social, and emotional characteristics of gifted youth. Philosophy of gifted education. Multi-talent concept of giftedness: intellectual, academic, creative, artistic, and leadership. Criteria for selecting instructional materials and methods. Designing learning experiences for the gifted. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 54100 - Identification And Evaluation In Gifted Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to instruments and procedures for identifying gifted, creative, and talented students. Procedures for evaluation of gifted programs and individual student progress. Also covers selection strategies and guidance of the gifted. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 54200 - Curriculum And Program Development In Gifted Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to curricular materials, curriculum development, and programs for gifted, creative, and talented students. Serves needs of teachers and administrators who are developing programs. Also covers administration and evaluation of programs and methods of orientation and in-service training of teachers. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 54500 - Social And Affective Development Of Gifted Students |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the affective and psychosocial development of gifted students. Emphasis on developmental influences on academic performance. Introduction to appropriate educational and counseling interventions for gifted students. Typically offered Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 56200 - Augmentative And Alternative Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (SLHS 54000) Introduction to augmentative and alternative communication. Cognitive, educational, physical, psycho-social, and linguistic aspects are considered together with symbol characteristics, teaching strategies, and research issues. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 56300 - Identification, Evaluation, And Assessment Of Exceptional Individuals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced procedures for educational assessment of exceptional individuals: norm-referenced and curriculum-based measurement, error analyses, and observational ratings. Adaptations and selections of tests for sensory impairments, behavioral styles, different intelligence levels and ages. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an awareness of legal, social, and cultural issues as they relate to the assessment of individuals with special needs.
2. Demonstrate an understanding of the statistical properties and statistical uses of tests
3. Demonstrate knowledge of the reasons for assessment and the steps in the educational assessment process.
4. Distinguish between norm-referenced, criterion-referenced, and individual referenced assessment procedures.
5. Demonstrate skill in the administration, and scoring of classroom assessment systems for academic skills (e.g., reading, math, spelling, and writing), including norm-referenced, criterion referenced, and individual-referenced tests.
6. Demonstrate knowledge of various decision-making systems and reporting formats.
7. Demonstrate skills the interpretation of the data and in reporting the results of a comprehensive educational and process assessment
8. Demonstrate skills in using the interpretation for planning an IEP or accommodations for student with special needs.
|
| EDPS 56400 - Mild Mental Handicaps: Historical Perspectives, Etiology, And Characteristics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study of persons with varying disabilities. Topics include: historical development; theoretical models; etiological factors; characteristics; assessment and intervention. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDPS 56500 - Intervention Strategies And Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of intervention strategies and research with individuals with varying disabilities. Reading comprehension; written composition; mathematics; mnemonic strategies; metacognitive strategies; self-monitoring; social problem solving; and transitional instruction. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDPS 56600 - Graduate Supervised Teaching Special Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 16.00. Demonstration of ability to function independently in special education setting by appropriately planning for student needs, implementing and evaluating plans, establishing appropriate classroom discipline, and interacting professionally with staff and parents. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 16.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDPS 56800 - Social, Legal, And Ethical Issues In Special Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of difference and similarities of children with exceptionality, including their nature and characteristics related to their developmental and educational needs. Analysis and practical application of social, legal, and ethical issues in the field of special education. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 57100 - Advanced Assistive Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction and overview of assistive technology for communication, education, employment, recreation, and daily living activities. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To learn about assistive technology for students with disabilities.
2. To learn about the integration of technology into teaching and learning within the field of special education.
|
| EDPS 57300 - Medical And Physical Management Of Individuals With Multiple Disabilities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Medical and physical aspects of severe disabilities and implications for educational models of intervention and service delivery. Topics include nature of disorders/conditions, recent research findings, advanced methods for individual adaptations, and procedures for structural modification. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The roles and responsibilities of the educational team.
2. Instructional strategies needed to promote independence.
3. Motor tone and motor patterns.
4. Proper positioning, lifting, and handling techniques.
5. Feeding and toileting techniques.
6. Infection control.
7. Assessment and monitoring techniques of major health conditions.
|
| EDPS 57500 - Advanced Methods For Teaching Students With Social, Behavioral & Attentional Disorders. |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of different approaches to intervention as they relate to the social/emotional, behavioral, and attentional characteristics of students with mild disabilities. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Use functional assessment as a basis for intervention.
2. Use technology to collect, analyze, summarize, and report student performance data to aid instructional decision-making.
3. Use antecedent strategies in planning and implementing interventions.
4. Use consequences in planning and implementing interventions.
5. Use cognitive behavioral strategies in planning and implementing interventions.
6. Demonstrate an understanding of technological applications in planning and implementing interventions.
7. Demonstrate knowledge of how to monitor medication – its effects and side effects.
8. Use recent journal articles to select empirically-based intervention strategies.
|
| EDPS 57600 - Methods Of Teaching Students With Severe Disabilities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of knowledge and skills to effectively plan for and teach students with severe disabilities across various educational settings. Topics include: instructional strategies, community-based instruction methods, and vocational training. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Gain knowledge of the various instructional strategies;
2. Acquire the ability to apply the principles of learning and strategies of instruction;
3. Gain knowledge of the components of community referenced curriculum and community-based instruction; and
4. Gain knowledge of antecedent cue regulation strategies for students with severe disabilities
|
| EDPS 57701 - Characteristics Of Children With Mild Exceptionalities: Advanced Level |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course addresses the academic, behavioral, social-emotional, cognitive, communication, and motor/physical/somatic characteristics of students with mild exceptionalities and their outcomes and implications for accommodation and intervention. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will demonstrate knowledge of the definitions and classification systems of mild disabilities.
2. Students will understand and appreciate the legal requirements for services for children with mild disabilities, including legislative, judicial, and administrative rules (state and federal).
3. Students will demonstrate knowledge of related research and the cognitive, social-emotional, and communication, developmental, and behavioral characteristics of individuals with mild disabilities.
4. Students will demonstrate an understanding of the etiologies of individuals with mild disabilities.
5. Within the framework of the various theories, students will demonstrate an ability to analyze the characteristics and identify how these could impact academic and social outcomes and interventions.
6. Students will demonstrate an understanding of and appreciation for the cultural similarities and differences of mildly disabled individuals.
7. Students will recognize relevant assessments of the characteristics of individuals with mild disabilities and analyze these characteristics for their functional importance.
|
| EDPS 58900 - Special Topics For Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Consideration of appropriate professional problems of experienced educational personnel in workshops or in-service programs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDPS 59000 - Individual Research Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Opportunities for students to study particular problems under the guidance of a member of the This plan of individualized instruction may be used in any field of education or vocational education. Does not include thesis work. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDPS 59100 - Special Topics In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Group study of a current problem or special topic of interest to professional educational personnel. Intensive study of research, theory, or practical aspects of a particular issue within the usual graduate class format. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDPS 60000 - Counseling Theories And Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of major counseling theories and counseling techniques, professional and ethical issues. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 60100 - Counseling Theories And Techniques Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Use of counseling techniques in a supervised laboratory; application of theories and techniques within varying employment settings. Concurrent Prerequisite: EDPS 60000. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 60400 - Advanced Counseling Theories And Interventions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Integration of counseling theory, practice, and research. Emphasis on integrating counseling knowledge and skills with major counseling theories and interventions. Prerequisite: EDPS 60000. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 60500 - Advanced Career Development Theory And Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Presents the dominant theories in contemporary career psychology. Emphasizes use of recent empirical findings to evaluate and analyze the validity of major constructs, assessment procedures, and counseling techniques derived from each theory. Prerequisite: EDPS 50500. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 60900 - Program Development And Organization In Human Services |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Issues and procedures in program development, management, organization, and administration for school guidance, college student affairs, and mental health services. Also treats administrative theory, intervention strategies, staff development, and evaluation. Prerequisite: EDPS 50100 or 50300 or 50400. Typically offered Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 61000 - Counseling Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. EDPS 61000 is a field experience for first year master’s students in school counseling, consisting of a minimum of 100 hours in a school, under the supervision of both a site supervisor and a campus supervisor. Permission of instructor required. Prerequisites: EDPS 60000 and EDPS 60100. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDPS 61100 - School Counseling Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Attention given to current topics, such as special education, gifted education, data management, grant writing, crisis intervention, service learning, K-12 career development, and systemic change. Prerequisite: EDPS 50100, 50500, 60100, 61000. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 61200 - Advanced Applied Behavior Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced application of basic principles of learning and applied behavior analysis to make informed decisions to create effective contexts for learning. Prerequisite: EDPS 36200 or 51500 and EDPS 58800. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 61400 - Advanced Counseling Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Supervised use of personal and career counseling techniques applied to complex and difficult client situations. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Practicum
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDPS 61500 - Theories Of Counseling Supervision |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Critical analysis of the theories and counseling supervision. Experiential exercises may be included. Prerequisite: EDPS 61400. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDPS 61700 - Professional Issues, Ethics, And History Of Counseling Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Three primary areas in counseling psychology: 1) historical development within psychology; 2) American Psychological Association ethics, professional, and legal issues; and 3) the scientist-practitioner training model in counseling psychology identity. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 61800 - Counseling Psychology Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Content and process learning related to recent investigations of counseling process and treatment efficacy research in counseling psychology. Concurrent prerequisite: EDPS 61700 and Doctoral student standing in the Counseling Psychology Program. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 61900 - Counseling Psychology Research Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of qualitative and quantitative research designs in counseling psychology. Concurrent prerequisite: EDPS 61800 and (PSY 60100 or STAT 50200) and Doctoral student standing enrolled in the Counseling Psychology Program. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 62000 - Counseling Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Recent investigation and research in (1) counselor supervision; (2) professional issues; (3) counseling theories; (4) education of counselors and student personnel workers; (5) counseling methodology; (6) vocational development; (7) elementary school counseling; (8) counselor consultation; and (9) other relevant topics. One topic is dealt with in each enrollment. Prerequisite: Open to graduate students who have successfully completed 12 credit hours of previous counseling personnel services courses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDPS 62100 - Advanced Multicultural Counseling Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study and clinical application of racial and cultural theories in counseling. Knowledge and practicum components are integrated to facilitate development of awareness and skill competencies central to "Guidelines on Multicultural Education, Training, Research, Practice and Organizational Change for Psychologists" of the American Psychological Association. Prerequisite: EDPS 50700. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 62200 - Systems Concepts In Counseling And Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the use of systems concepts in the counseling professions. Individuals' development within relationships and family matrix, contemporary person-environment issues, and constructs for research and preventive, developmental, and remedial practice. Prerequisite: EDPS 61700. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 62300 - Personality Assessment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Applied introduction to methods of administration, scoring, and interpretation of primarily objective personality assessments. Emphasis is placed on assessment of normative population with attention given to personal strengths, developmental factors, and issues of diversity.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 62400 - Advanced Off-Site Counseling Practicum And Supervision Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Supervised use of personal and/or career counseling and assessment applied to complex and difficult client situations. Critical analysis of counseling supervision theories. Prerequisite: EDPS 61400. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 4 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop knowledge of counseling supervision theories, methods and problems.
2. Learn to think like a supervisor, using the scientist-practitioner integration of theory, research and practice.
3. Understand individual and cultural differences and diversity (ICD) in supervision.
4. Achieve a counseling supervision foundation that is consistent with the scientist-practitioner model, your counseling theoretical approach and your identity as a counseling psychologist.
5. Gain knowledge, awareness and understanding of ethical issues related to counseling supervision.
6. Develop increased skill in understanding clients' issues within and across sessions, identifying patterns, and conceptualizing with professional theories; for instance, better recognize and understand the therapy process (e.g., the pace of working through, phases of therapy).
7. Achieve greater self-awareness in professional relationships. Recognize, understand and respond constructively to personal reactions in counseling and supervision (i.e., individual, group, peer).
8. Attain increased ability to translate theory into the practice of psychology, use the self-in-relationship as an intervention, monitor counseling relationship and process, and effectively develop and apply interventions from a theoretical conceptualization.
9. Gain competence and confidence in self as a counseling psychologist and scientist-practitioner (i.e., a critical thinker who applies a scientific attitude to integrating theory, research, and practice).
10. Accomplish greater understanding and responsiveness to cultural and individual differences and diversity in clients' personality functioning and in professional relationships.
11. Become more skillful in using appropriate self-reflection and providing feedback to other (e.g., clients, peers) in a non-critical and useful manner.
12. Demonstrate the ability to implement and behave in accordance with professional guidelines, standards, ethics, and law applicable to the practice of psychology.
13. Demonstrate effective use of both individual and group supervision, using group leadership skills.
14. Achieve a collegial, collaborative and consultative attitude toward learning, supervision, practice, conceptualization, and diagnosis.
15. Enhance thoughtful and useful self-reflection and self-evaluation.
16. Gain a reasonable sense of your own strengths and growing edges as a therapist and supervisee. Be prepared to convey these strengths and growing edges to new supervisors.
17. Demonstrate the ability to be responsible for your own learning, including focusing on and participating in the class' learning.
|
| EDPS 62500 - Human Growth And Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of lifespan development. Study of major development theories of childhood, adolescence, and adulthood. Prerequisite: EDPS 60000. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Provide students with a brief overview of the origins of the study of development.
2. Familiarize students with selected physical, cognitive, and psychosocial theories of development.
3. Encourage critical thinking regarding the strengths and limitations of theories discussed during this course.
4. Provide opportunity for detailed and comprehensive investigation of current research/theory focused upon selected developmental topics.
5. Provide information on factors that affect normal and abnormal behavior and strategies for facilitating optimal development over the lifespan.
6. Encourage application of relevant aspects of developmental theory.
|
| EDPS 63000 - Research Procedures In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of a philosophy of educational research and consideration of the methods for the selection and evaluation of techniques used in educational research. Techniques discussed are methods to control variables, sampling procedures, data collection procedures, statistical procedures, and research proposal development and writing. Prerequisite: EDPS 53300, (PSY 60100 or EDPS 53300), STAT 50200. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 63100 - Applied Educational Research Design Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Presentation of a theoretical system for designing research on educational problems in the schools and provision of actual experiences in designing research in cooperation with public school personnel. Sessions with the school personnel involve students in the process of clarifying problems, identifying major parameter and variables, reviewing and interpreting prior research, and formulating a valid design. Prerequisite: EDPS 63000 and one graduate course in Statistics. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDPS 63200 - Seminar In Research Procedures In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Experimental, field study, scientific survey, and prediction study methods in education. Internal and external validity, identification and development of research problems, criteria development, common methodological errors, strategies of analysis, and sources of acceptable educational research literature will be reviewed. Critical analyses of the research methodology of educational research reports in the student's field. Prerequisite: EDPS 63000 or 53300 and course work in Statistics. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDPS 63300 - Seminar In Educational Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Recent investigations and research in educational psychology. One topic is dealt with in each enrollment. The topics provide an in-depth study of those areas of psychological investigation in educational settings and problems. These areas include: (1) instructional technology and design; (2) individual differences and educational growth; (3) school learning: theory and research; (4) classroom behavior and social processes; (5) educational assessment; and (6) other relevant topics. Prerequisite: EDPS 53000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDPS 63400 - The Psychology Of Learning And Teaching At The College Level |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (PSY 69500) Current methods of formulating objectives of instruction; examination of student characteristics which affect learning; discussion of basic learning processes; analysis of instructional variables which affect learning; selection of instruction methods and materials; evaluation of learning outcomes; and evaluation of the instructional system. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 63600 - Item Response Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Models and model-data fit, estimation of ability and item parameters, item and test information, test construction, obtaining evidence of test reliability and validity, differential item functioning, norming, and equating. Prerequisite: EDPS 53100, (PSY 60100 or STAT 50200 or 51200). Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 63700 - Data Analytic Procedures For Applied Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Strategies for analyzing data with general statistical packages, including data management and application of various data analysis procedures, and interpretation of statistical results in applied research. Prerequisite: PSY 60100 or STAT 50200 or 51200. Typically offered Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 63800 - Factor Analytic Procedures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis techniques and examination of the use of factor analysis in social sciences. Emphasis on application of methods. Students will develop skills to conduct factor analytic research and critically review use of factor analysis in research. Prerequisite: STAT 51200, 52400. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 65000 - Critical Issues In Special Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for advanced graduate students in special education and related disciplines. The goals of this course are: (a) to familiarize students with current topics and critical controversies in special education, (b) to help students gain skills in critical analyses of issues, and (c) to provide students with opportunities to develop skills that are linked to the professorate (e.g., researching, writing, and speaking about contemporary issues). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 65300 - Collaborative Learning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 Techniques for fostering productive collaboration in classrooms will be discussed along with the evidence for their educational effectiveness. The course will be research focused. Truth-wins, most –competent-member, and average-member models for comparing group performance to individual performance will be described. The goal will be to have students learn how to implement successful collaborative activities in classrooms while also developing the ability to further research in the field. In addition to course readings and class participation, students will be expected to propose a research study related to collaborative learning with emphasis on the literature review. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn how to implement successful collaborative activities in their classrooms while also developing the ability to further our understanding of the field.
2. Students will be expected to propose a research study related to collaborative learning with emphasis on the literature review.
|
| EDPS 65500 - Computers And Cognition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the interaction between memory and human cognition with technology in general and computers in specific. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Interaction between memory and human cognition with technology in general and computers in specific.
2. How people learn in a technology rich environmment ( e.g., the web, hypermedia environments, video vs. text).
|
| EDPS 66000 - Practicum In Special Education Assessment And Teaching |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Assessment and teaching of individuals with varying disabilities. Prerequisite: EDPS 56300, 56400, 56500 or approved teaching experience. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Student Teaching, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDPS 66100 - Review And Implications Of Research In Special Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigation and research in (1) special issues; (2) mental retardation; (3) learning disabilities; (4) emotional disturbance; (5) early education for exceptional children; (6) curriculum development; (7) career education; (8) parent education; and (9) other relevant topics. One or more topics are dealt with in each enrollment period. Prerequisite: Must have post-master's status. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 66400 - Seminar In Special Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. A critical analysis of or special assignments related to research, practice, and selected problems in special education or in specific disability areas. One topic is considered in each enrollment. For advanced graduate students. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDPS 66500 - Collaboration And Transition Practices In Special Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Three modules related to collaboration and transition practices in special education are addressed. Included are theoretical frameworks and assessment for consultation and collaboration involving paraeducators and families. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand consultation theory and its application for decision-making in special and general education contexts.
2. Recognize conditions that strengthen or inhibit effective use of collaborative consultation.
3. Exhibit self-understanding and constructive use of individual differences for school-based collaboration in culturally diverse settings.
4. Demonstrate skills in facilitating family partnerships with schools to serve student needs.
5. Apply communication skills of effective verbal and non-verbal communication, listening, avoiding communication roadblocks, dealing with resistance, being appropriately assertive, and resolving conflicts.
6. Use problem-solving techniques in collaborating with professional colleagues, parents and related and ancillary personnel to provide for students’ learning needs.
7. Develop self-assessment techniques and tools for evaluating and improving consultation, collaboration, and co-teaching skills.
8. Formulate strategies for co-planning and co-teaching to serve students’ special needs.
9. Explain responsibilities and strategies for supervising and planning with paraeducators, and for initiating involvement of school administrators in collaborative efforts.
10. Demonstrate awareness of need for organizing interrelated agencies in their roles as providers of the array of services required for students’ special needs.
11. Cite key legislation that has impacted career and transition programs and services for youth and adults with disabilities. (Standard 2)
12. Explain theories and stages of life-long career development and how they impact the career decision-making process for individuals with disabilities. (Standard 2)
13. Identify methods, strategies, and materials used for instruction to facilitate career education, including participation in the IEP process. (Standard 2)
14. Explain theoretical models on which family intervention is predicated. (Standard 2)
15. Demonstrate an understanding of the impact a child with a disability has on the family, family dynamics, coping strategies, finances, and family communication and interaction patterns (Standards 1, 2)
16. Identify and define issues and strategies related to empowerment, and self-advocacy that are crucial to the successful career development of individuals with disabilities. (Standards 2, 3)
17. Develop an awareness of community resources available in career transition planning for students with disabilities at the elementary, middle, and secondary levels. (Standard 2)
18. Discuss issues related to parental involvement in career development and the educational process for youth and adults with disabilities. (Standards 1, 3)
19. Identify and describe services, supports, and resources available in post-secondary and employment settings for youth and adults with disabilities. (Standard 2)
20. Identify and define the issues related to interagency collaboration in the career and transition planning process for youth and adults with disabilities. (Standard 2)
|
| EDPS 68800 - Single Subject Research Design |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Designed to introduce advanced level students to single subject research methodology in context of a science of human behavior, including design theory and application, measurement, experimental validity, applied behavior analysis, and data analysis procedures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will demonstrate the ability to design, conduct, and analyze a single subject experimental study.
2. Students will demonstrate knowledge about the various single subject research designs, their simple and embedded use, and variations of the designs.
3. Students will demonstrate knowledge for the analysis of data within a single subject experimental design.
4. Students will demonstrate knowledge of the application of single subject research methodology in clinical and educational settings with individuals with disabilities and/or communication disorders.
5. Students will demonstrate the ability to synthesize single subject research for conducting a systematic review or meta-analysis.
|
| EDPS 69500 - Internship In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 10.00. Amount of credit to be determined by nature and extent of the assignment. A special course in selected areas of education, designed to provide practical field experience under professional supervision in selected situations related to the candidate's area of specialization. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 10.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDPS 69600 - Internship In Counseling Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 10.00. A special course in the practice activities of counseling psychology. Provides field experience under the supervision of a licensed psychologist. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 10.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDPS 69700 - Education Specialist Project-Research |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 18.00. Educational Specialist project research. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDPS 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDPS 90100 - New Student Orientatn |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDPS B2510 - Human Growth And Development For Secondary Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to human development from birth through adolescence, emphasizing the preadolescent and adolescent periods. Covers biological, cognitive, and social development as they apply to the middle school and high school settings.
Open only to students in secondary education programs
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| EDST 20000 - History And Philosophy Of Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDFA 20000) How history and philosophy have informed school organization, curriculum, and teaching practice. Students develop their own philosophies of teaching. Topics include continuities and discontinuities of schooling, colonial period to present. Conflicting demands placed upon schools. Issues of race, class, and gender inform debates over school purposes and practices. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| EDST 24800 - Contemporary Issues In American Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will read about and discuss critical issues facing schools today. Issues will include: funding, testing/assessment, charter schools, vouchers, bilingualism, dropout programs, violence in schools, accountability movement, teacher unions, parent involvement, inclusion, tracking, technology, and others. Requirements include weekly readings and online responses; one five-page paper; and one group project. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will have a better understanding of the complex issues facing schools today.
2. Students will be able to critically evaluate differing points of vois and perspectives about school issues.
3. Students will be able to design a school and justify their ideas.
|
| EDST 27000 - Early Childhood Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the field of early childhood care and education including career options and variety of early childhood settings. The history, philosophy, current trends and issues of early childhood will be explored. Students will observe and interact with children and early childhood professionals. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| EDST 49000 - Individual Research And Teaching Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Primarily for teacher candidates requiring special, individualized experience in research or teaching. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDST 49100 - Topics And Issues In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Provides student with opportunity to strengthen preparation through study of selected educational topics and issues based upon individual needs and interests. One topic is considered in each enrollment. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDST 50000 - Philosophy Of Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDFA 50000) Study of fundamental philosophical issues and concepts in education. Treatment of historical and contemporary positions in educational philosophy and connection of philosophical understandings to American schools. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| EDST 50100 - History Of American Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey course with analysis of key terms: history, education, and American. Examination of European background of American education; cultural, philosophical, psychological, historical, and sociological factors that have shaped the educational system. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDST 50600 - History Of Women's Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of types of school systems, programs, and curricula for females at elementary, secondary, and postsecondary levels, as well as nonformal education programs, throughout American history. Intersection of gender, race, ethnicity, social class, and regionalism is emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDST 51100 - Information Systems In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDFA 51100) An overview of automated data processing applications to education. Primary emphasis on administrative applications for pupil, staff, facility, program, and financial accounting. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Dept Credit
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDST 51200 - Foundations Of Educational Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDFA 51200) Administration of education; roles of local, state, and federal government. Focus on purpose, organization, task areas, and processes of educational administration. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDST 51300 - Educational Facilities Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDFA 51300) Systems approach as a basis for school facilities planning. Study directed toward procedures for solving facilities problems. Emphasis on techniques for developing and securing technical information. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| EDST 51400 - Economics Of Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDFA 51400) A general course in financing education, including current economic theories, sources of revenues, and trends in fiscal structure and operations in education. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| EDST 51600 - School-Community Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDFA 51600) This course will stress concepts and principles relevant to school-community interaction. It will focus on the new roles of the public in education and will deal with problems encountered by educators in communicating with the public. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Dept Credit
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| EDST 58900 - Special Topics For Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. (EDFA 58900) Consideration of appropriate professional problems of experienced educational personnel in workshops or in-service programs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDST 59000 - Individual Research Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. (EDFA 59000) Opportunities for students to study particular problems under the guidance of a member of the This plan of individualized instruction may be used in any field of education or vocational education. Does not include thesis work. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDST 59100 - Special Topics In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. (EDFA 59100) Group study of a current problem or special topic of interest to professional educational personnel. Intensive study of research, theory, or practical aspects of a particular issue within the usual graduate class format. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDST 60000 - Seminar In The Foundations Of Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Recommended for those who have had a prior foundations course. Specialized studies in such areas as educational history, educational philosophy, educational sociology, religion and public education, current educational issues, and classical literature of education. Typically offered Fall, Spring, Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDST 60200 - Seminar: The School Principalship |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Individual exploration in depth of selected aspects of the school principalship and critical analysis of related issues. Prerequisite: EDST 51200. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Acquired proficiency in the Indiana Standards for School Leaders - Building Level content and skills. The Indiana Department of Education believes these content standards define those skills and abilities that school leaders must possess to produce greater levels of success for all students. The learning outcomes in this course are based on the Indiana standards focused on the students acquiring proficiency in: Leadership, Supervision, Vision and Mission, Change, Staff Recruitment & Selection, Staff Evaluation, Staff/Administrative Relations, Curriculum Leadership and Management, Student Discipline, Pupil Personnel Services, Professional Development, Ethics, Decision Making, Planning, Time Management and Teaching and Learning.
|
| EDST 60300 - The American College And University |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Recommended for those who plan to teach on the higher level. History of the development of American higher education, current trends and/or problems, and individual in-depth study of matters related to the individual student's area of specialization. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDST 60500 - Elementary School Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. (EDFA 605) Study of role and responsibilities of the elementary school principalship; focus upon leadership functions in staff and pupil personnel, school and class organization, plant management, instructional and educational program, and school and community relations. Prerequisite: EDST 51200. Typically offered Summer Fall.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EDST 60700 - Administration Of Educational Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDFA 607) An examination of administrative function, process, structure, and practice. Special emphasis given to theory development in administration. Exploration of system analysis applications to educational administration. Prerequisite: EDST 51200. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Dept Credit
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Acquired proficiency in the Indiana Standards for School Leaders - Building Level content and skills. The Indiana Department of Education believes these content standards define those skills and abilities that school leaders must possess to produce greater levels of success for all students. The learning outcomes in this course are based on the Indiana Standards focused on students acquiring proficiency in organizational and resource management, including using data to identify needs and priorities within the organization; identifying and addressing organizational barriers to student achievement; using technological tools to manage information and support effective management of the organization; and using practices for the safe, efficient and effective operation of school's physical plant, equipment and auxiliary services.
|
| EDST 60800 - Business Management In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDFA 608) Examination of internal and external determinants of school fiscal policy. Experiences with fiscal procedures for school budgeting and accounting, including preparation of a school budget. Prerequisite: EDST 51400. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| EDST 60900 - Legal Aspects Of American Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDFA 60900) Legal foundations of education as established by constitutional provisions, court decisions, opinions of attorney generals, administrative rulings, and executive directives. Emphasis on legal theory and principles currently in state of change. Stress of case study method of investigation into educational law. Prerequisite: 9 credit hours in Education. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Acquired proficiency in the Indiana Standards for School Leaders - Building Level content and skills. The Indiana Department of Education believes these content standards define those skills and abilities that school leaders must possess to produce greater levels of success for all students. The learning outcomes in this course are based on the Indiana standards focused on the student acquiring proficiency in human resource management; equity and access to educational programs, curricula and available supports; behavior management systems; school safety and emergency preparedness; student safety and welfare; and the rights and responsibilities of students, families, and school staff.
|
| EDST 61000 - Supervision Of Instruction And Instructional Personnel |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDFA 610) Examination of the functions of school administration which focus on achievement of instructional expectations of educational service. Emphasis on developing an individualized supervisory program for instructional personnel. Prerequisite: EDST 51200. Typically offered Summer Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Dept Credit
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| EDST 61200 - Seminar In Educational Administration And Curriculum |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of current research and theory related to selected topics in educational administration and curriculum. One topic is studied in each enrollment. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDST 61300 - Clinic For Educational Leaders |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. (EDFA 61300) Clinic for educational leaders. Typically offered Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDST 61500 - Educational Policy And Decision Making |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDFA 615) Examination of educational policy and decision making on the federal, state, and local levels. Analysis of the conversion of demands made upon the school as a political system to policies responsible for allocating resources to its various constituencies. Various methodological approaches to the study of educational policy. Prerequisite: EDST 51200. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| EDST 61600 - Analytical Techniques In Educational Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDFA 61600) Analytical techniques requisite to planning and conducting efficient and cost-effective needs assessment, goal definition, planning, decision making, and evaluation of educational efforts. Emphasis placed on applied educational problem solving and cost-effective solutions. Prerequisite: EDST 51400 or 60800. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| EDST 66300 - Organization And Administration Of Special Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDPS 66300) A comprehensive course in the organization and administration of special education including the organizational arrangements, identification, placement and service delivery, tests and assessments, program evaluation, personnel, and school/community relations. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDST 69400 - Intern In Educational Administration: Building Administrator |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. (EDFA 69400) Field experience in educational administration under university supervision in selected situations related to school building administration. Amount of credit to be determined by nature and extent of assignment. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Internship
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDST 69500 - Internship In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 10.00. (EDFA 69500) Amount of credit to be determined by nature and extent of the assignment. A special course in selected areas of education, designed to provide practical field experience under professional supervision in selected situations related to the candidate's area of specialization. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 10.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDST 69700 - EdS Project-Research |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 18.00. Educational Specialist project in research. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| EDST 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Education
Department: Educational Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUA F3000 - Topical Explorations In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A one-semester course on a particular topic, established at the request of a faculty member and with the approval of the Academic Affairs Committee. Applies only as elective credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUA F4000 - Topical Explorations In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. One-semester course on a particular topic, established at the request of a faculty member and with the approval of the Academic Affairs Committee. Applies only as elective credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUA F5000 - Topical Exploration In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 15.00. This course number identifies a one-semester course on a particular topic, established at the request of a faculty member and by the approval of the Academic Affairs Committee. Applies only as elective credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 15.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUA G2500 - Life Skills For Personal And Interpersonal Development |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Students address typical developmental tasks of college, identifying their own choices and goals. Skill building encourages increased competence and confidence, and includes decision-making, goal-setting, communication skills, time-management, career-life planning, assertiveness, and support strategies. Each student will identify a plan to accomplish a specific personal goal. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUA G5980 - Comprehensive Examination in Counseling |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. The comprehensive examination is a program-wide test of knowledge of eight areas in counseling: human development, social and cultural foundations, the helping relationship, group counseling, research and evaluation, apparisal, career and lifestyle development, and professional orientation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUA G5990 - Specialization Project In Counseling |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Students confer on an individual basis with counselor education faculty to gain assistance in constructing a paper or project that contributes to knowledge on a speficic topic of the student's choice. Completed projects would meet the standards either for publication in professional journals of for presentation at professional conferences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUA M5400 - Methods Of Teaching In the Middle School |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. General methods, including techniques related to individualized and interdisciplinary learning within the middle school. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUA M5500 - Practicum:Junior High/Middle School |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Teaching or experience in an accredited school, normally within Indiana. Credit will be commensurate with time spent in the instructional setting. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUA T5550 - Problems In Human Relations And Cultural Awareness |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Current problems in human relations and cultrual awareness will be examined with emphasis on behaviors and practices that enable teachers and administrators to understand and obtain knowledge about themselves and others. Discriminatory practices involving race, sex, disability, religion, and social class will be studied. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC A5000 - Introduction To Education Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course entails an introduction to the history, philosophy, and social aspects of educational leadership. It reviews relevant theories of administration; the historical role of administration in schools; and the political, social, economic, and philosophical frameworks that have informed administration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC A5080 - School Law And The Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Legal problems affecting teachers, including state and federal relations to education, church-state issues, teacher liability, employment, contracts, assignment , dismissal, tenure, retirement, teacher rights and welfare, and pupil control. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC A5100 - School-Community Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. For teachers and school administrators. Characteristics of the community-school, including the multicultural quality of the resources, adapting the educational program to community needs; use of community resources in instruction; planning school-community relations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC A5150 - Educational Leadership: Teacher Development And Evaluation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The primary goal is to develop the knowledge, interpersonal and leadership skills that can be applied in the leadership for the improvement of instruction. Models of supervision and evaluation will be examined, but the major focus will be to examine the context for change in today¿s schools and apply leadership knowledge to the task of direct assistance, group development, professions development, curriculum development, and action research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC A5540 - Data Process For Administrators |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of computer programs for education. Primary emphasis on administrative applications for pupil, staff, facility, program, and financial accounting. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC A5600 - Political Perspectives Of Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on theoretical and conceptual approaches useful in describing, explaining, and predicting political behavior related to schools. Forces for continuity and change of local, state, and federal levels are explored. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| EDUC A5900 - Research In School Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individual research or study with a school administration faculty member, arranged in advance of registration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC A6000 - Problems In School Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to identify practical school problems, determine issues, develop skills, and formulate concepts. A workshop in which case-concept method is used in determining behavioral patterns. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC A6080 - Legal Perspectives On Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of the legal framework affecting the organization and administration of public schools, including church-state issues, pupil rights, staff-student relationships, conditions of employment, teacher organizations, tort liability, school finance, and desegregation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC A6240 - Educational Leadership: The Principalship K-12 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course engages students in a dialogue around building a professional learning community leading to instructional program coherence committed to the success of all students. Students complete their leadership platform as a part of this course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC A6250 - Administration of Elementary Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. For persons preparing for administrative or supervisory positions. Role of the principal as a professional leader in development and operation of school property.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC A6270 - Secondary School Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. For secondary administrators. Teacher selection and promotion, program-making, load, adjustment, pupil personnel, library, cafeteria, study organization, athletics, reports, and records.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC A6300 - Economic Dimensions of Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Includes current problems in school support, costs of education, sources of school revenue, state and federal support, state and local control in school finance, and legal basis of school finance.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC A6350 - Public School Budgeting And Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the normative and positive aspects of financing K-12 public education. After a rigorous introduction to the foundation of school finance theory, the course investigates the concepts and practices of effective budget management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC A6380 - Public School Personnel Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The background, present conditions, and future directions of school personnel management; development and implementation of a school personnel management program; and examination of problems and issues.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC A6400 - Planning Educational Facilities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the basic concepts in planning educational facilities as they relate to educational needs, educational specifications, forms and shapes, flexibility, learning environment, and renovation and modernization.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC A6530 - The Organizational Context of Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Organizational factors examined in terms of impact on human behavior and student learning.The critical role of administrative policies and practices in shaping the organizational context. Alternative organizational designs and administrative strategies studied in terms of their effectiveness under specified conditions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC A6950 - Practicum in Educational Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides for a closely supervised field experience in various areas of school administration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC A7200 - Workshop on Selected Problems in School Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Individual and group study. One credit hour is offered for each week of full-time work.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC C7500 - Topical Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Current issues, developments, and concerns bearing on higher education. Specific topics vary each semester. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC D5120 - Seminar in Forms and Forces of Adult Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The history and current status of adult education in the United States; the nature, scope, purpose, and historical development of adult education institutions and program areas.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC E2010 - Multicultural Education/Global Awareness |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC E3000 - Elementary Education For A Pluralistic Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of the principles of multicultural education. An introduction to major ethnic and minority groups in the United States. A historical view of the status of culturally different learners in elementary schools. A focus upon teaching strategies and curricular innovations for culturally diverse classrooms. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC E3100 - Seminar On Legal Issues In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00: Students in this course will (1) examine issues related to legal and ethical rights and responsibilities of teachers and students; (2) discuss legal cases that have had an impact on our educational system; (3) discuss ethical perspectives on educational dilemmas.
Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC E3170 - Practicum In Early Childhood Education |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Methods and materials used in the education of children from three to six years of age. Observation and participation. Final course in endorsement/degree. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC E3250 - Social Studies In Elementary School |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores the sociological backgrounds of education and surveys subject matter, materials, and methods in the content areas. Public school participation required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC E3270 - Social Studies Methods And Family Focus On Young Children |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course has a dual focus: One goal of the course is to explore issues related to children, families, and communities including legal and ethical issues, and public policies affecting young children from a deeper understanding of families and communities; the course will then focus on goals of a social studies curriculum for young children, including appropriate methods and strategies of instruction. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC E3280 - Science In Elementary School |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Objectives, philosophy, selection, and organization of science materials and methods. Concept development and use of multidimensional materials in science experiments. Analysis of assessment techniques and bibliographical materials. Public school participation required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC E3300 - Infant Learning Environment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will broaden their knowledge base of appropriate instructional strategies to enhance infant-toddler development, caregiving skills, and knowledge of appropriate learning environments, and will apply strategies and knowledge in providing care and educational experiences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC E3330 - Inquiry In Mathematics and Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on planning and managing appropriate science and math experiences with children of three to eight years of age. Opportunity for exploring, developing, experimenting, and evaluating instructional materials and their inherent possibilities for children's learning. Planning appropriate inquiry-oriented experiences will be stressed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC E3350 - Introduction To Early Childhood Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course has a dual focus. First, it is an overview of the field including an historic perspective, program models, goal of early childhood education, and professional organizations. The second focus emphasizes learning observation skills, understanding the characteristics of young children, teacher-child interaction, and classroom management skills. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC E3360 - Play As Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Includes theories and development of play and how it can be guided. Shows how children use play to develop individually, understand the physical, social, and cognitive environment, and develop physical and motor skill and creative ability. Includes a section on the selection and construction of play materials. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC E3370 - Classroom Learning Environment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the curriculum aspects of early childhood programs designed to meet ethnic and cultural differences and on planning, utilizing, and evaluating learning environments. Selection of materials and activities and the acquisition of skills for using these to stimulate children's development are major focuses. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC E3380 - Early Childhood Educator |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Includes the role of the teacher as a professional educator, including professional responsibilities, school and community relations, and involvement in professional organizations. A major emphasis is on parent involvement and parent education. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC E3390 - Methods Of Teaching Language Arts |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. This course describes and appraises the materials, methods, and techniques employed in an elementary school developmental language arts program. Public school participation required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC E3400 - Methods Of Teaching Reading I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. This course describes and appraises the methods, materials, and techniques employed in a reading program. Public school participation required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC E3410 - Methods Of Teaching Reading II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. This course describes and appraises the materials, methods, and techniques employed in diagnostic and corrective instruction in reading programs. Public school participation required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC E3430 - Mathematics In The Elementary Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasizes the developmental nature of the arithmetic process and its place as an effective tool in the experiences of the elementary school child. An accumulation of at least three hours credit is required for certification. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC E3450 - Language Arts and Mathematics for Young Children |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Methods of developing language, cognition, reading and mathematical readiness, mathematical thinking through play, the arts, and directed experiences; design of curriculum and appropriate teaching strategies for young children.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC E3460 - Discipline/Parenting For Young Children |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of discipline of children in early childhood settings for interaction in teaching and learning environments with an emphasis on working with parents and teachers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC E3470 - Language Arts For Early Childhood |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course describes the development of language and literacy in the early years. Curriculum and instructional strategies in varied early childhood settings are included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC E3490 - Teaching And Learning For All Young Children I: Focus On Birth To Age Three |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will connect theorywith typically and atypically pedagogical skills in real-life settings with typically and atypically developing young children, birth to age three. They will learn how to become keen observers of children, and will acquire proficiency in designing, implementing, and assessing environments that are developmentally appropriate and literacy-rich. Typcially offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
PU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC E3520 - Teaching And Learning Children Ages 3-5 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course engages students in the development, implementation, and assessment of curricula for all children ages 3-5 years. Content area of mathematics, social studies, science, literacy, and art will be emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC E3700 - Language Arts And Reading I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The student will broaden their knowledge of the theoretical base as well as instructional strategies to enhance literacy practices throughout the preprimary and primary childhood years. This course will cover emergent literacy by emphasizing literacy practices which engage children in integrated, meaningful, and functional activities. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
PU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC E3710 - Language Arts And Reading II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the theory, instructional methods, materials, technology, and assessment strategies related to listening, speaking, reading, and writing for students in grades 3-6. Comprehension, critical analysis, writing, and integration of ideas presented in various print forms across subject matter are emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
PU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC E4000 - Education In The Inner City |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Education In The Inner City. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC E4030 - Education In The Inner City Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. May be taken for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC E4490 - Trade Books And The Classroom Teacher |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasizes the use of trade books in language and reading in elementary classrooms. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC E4900 - Research In Elementary Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individual research in a given subject area. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC E5050 - Organization and Administration of Early Childhood Programs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of different organizational plans for early childhood programs from infancy through age 8. Includes discussion of school philosophy, goals, curriculum, housing, staffing, budget, policies for admission, grouping, health, licensing requirements, and school-community relations.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC E5070 - Evaluation Of Classroom Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The child as a learner; goals for early childhood programs; organizing the instructional setting including teacher roles and methods of assessing behaviors. Use of this knowledge in organizing and evaluating self and a child in a program. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC E5080 - Seminar In Early Childhood Education |
|
Credit Hours:1.00 to 3.00. Seminar will be based on current interests of students and will serve as a means of synthesizing their experiences. An interdisciplinary approach will be taken to exploring current issues and problems in early childhood education, current happenings as they relate to the issues, and major research efforts to support programs. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 4 times
|
| EDUC E5130 - Workshop in Elementary Social Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Means for improving the teaching of social studies in the elementary school.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC E5160 - Workshop in Elementary School Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. For experienced teachers. Ideas on analysis of problems; curriculum trends and teaching techniques; development of new educational materials; and recent resource materials.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC E5240 - Workshop in Early Childhood Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Individual and group study of problems in nursery-school and kindergarten education. Emphasis on broadening understanding of curriculum problems and their application to teaching in nursery schools and kindergartens.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC E5250 - Advanced Curriculum Study in Early Childhood Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Curriculum planning, guiding, and evaluating learning experiences, and interpreting values of early childhood education. New approaches to teaching.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC E5350 - Elementary School Curriculum |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Social, economic, and educational forces influencing changes in the curriculum of the elementary school; observation and study of the curriculum and methods of evaluating it.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC E5360 - Supervision of Elementary School Instruction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Modern concepts of supervision and the evolutionary process through which they have emerged. Supervisory work of the principal, general supervisor, and supervisor of consultant. Study of group processes in a democratic school system.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC E5470 - Elem Social Studies Curriculum |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores the purposes, substantive issues, essential pedagogies, and content of elementary social studies curriculum. Also examines innovative approaches to designing and implementing social studies curriculum for elementary classrooms. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC E5480 - Advanced Teaching of Science in the Elementary School |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed for experienced teachers to gain proficiency in the teaching of science in the elementary school. Individualized learning experiences will be provided for persons interested in middle-school teaching.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC E5740 - Elem Social Studies Curriculum |
|
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC E5900 - Research in Elementary Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Individual research in a given subject area.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC E5950 - Problem Analysis in Elementary Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. For experienced elementary teachers. Individual and group study of organizational and teaching problems. Techniques of problem analysis, identification, and use of resources contributing to the alleviation of teaching problems.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC F1100 - Windows On Education |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. First year seminar to support incoming freshmen interested in teaching as a career. The course will facilitate students¿ efforts to navigate university life while making aninformed decision regarding career choices
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC F2000 - Examining Self As A Teacher |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to help a student make a career decision, better conceptualize the kind of teacher the student wishes to become, and reconcile any preliminary concerns that may be hampering a personal examination of self as teacher. Students will design a major portion of their work. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| EDUC F2030 - Topical Exploration In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Identification and assessment of goals for a university degree. Development of a written academic and strategic plan to complete the degree. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| EDUC F2050 - Study Of Education And The Practice Of Teaching |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A review of the literature on approaches to education as a discipline and a field of inquiry, and an explanation of several approaches to teacher education. Integrates scholarship and inquiry with the development of educational possibilities. Students will begin the process of constructing a set of personal and social commitments that will guide their future teaching activities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| EDUC F4000 - Honors Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Content varies but always involves the investigation in depth of significant topics in education. An interdisciplinary approach is taken. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC F4010 - Topical Exploration In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Explores various topics of relevance to education, both in the United States and abroad. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC F5160 - Advanced Study in the Teaching of Secondary School English Language Arts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Current methods and materials for secondary-school English courses; guiding reading to meet literary, historical, vocational, or scientific interests.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC F5490 - Advanced Study in the Teaching of Language Arts in the Elementary Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Helps experienced teachers gain further insight into the development of the English language and how best to teach language arts. Emphasizes basic communication skills and significant trends and materials.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC G2030 - Communication In The Classroom |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students study counseling theories and techniques for application to teaching. They learn methods of building community in the classroom, and ways to encourage student participation and respect for others. Students learn techniques and attitudes of group dynamics and leadership. Other topics of communication covered: conflict resolution, active listening, and parent-teacher communication. Typically offered Fall, Spring, Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC G5020 - Profession Orient And Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Studies that provide an understanding of all aspects of professional functioning including history, roles, organizational structures, ethics, standards, and credentialing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| EDUC G5030 - Counseling Theories and Techniques I: Humanistic and Existential |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Restricted to counseling majors. Analysis of major humanistic and existential counseling theories emphasizing didactic and experiential activities designed to model application of processes, procedures, and techniques of theories being studied.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC G5040 - Counseling Theories and Techniques II: Behavior and Family Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Restricted to counseling majors. Analysis of major behavior and family counseling theories emphasizing didactic and experiential activities designed to model application of processes, procedures, and techniques of behavior, and family approaches to professional practice.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC G5050 - Individual Appraisal: Principles and Procedures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of statistical, psychometric, sociometric, and clinical principles crucial to professional interpretation of standardized and informal data regarding individual clients. Current issues/controversies about ethnic, sex, cultural, and individual differences will be examined.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC G5240 - Practicum in Counseling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Restricted to counseling majors. Closely supervised counseling practice with clients in the department?s counseling laboratories or approved field sites in schools or agencies. Intensive supervision.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC G5250 - Advanced Counseling Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Restricted to counseling majors. Supervised use of individual, couples, and/or group counseling techniques with emphasis on more complex and difficult client situations. May be repeated for credit with the advice of counselor education program faculty.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| EDUC G5320 - Introduction To Group Counseling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Restricted to counseling majors. Psychological and theoretical foundations of group counseling. Analysis of the dynamics of groups.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| EDUC G5420 - Organization and Development of Counseling Programs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Environmental and population needs-assessment for program planning. Procedures for counseling-program development and accountability/evaluation. Case studies.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC G5500 - Internship in Counseling and Guidance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Counseling experience in actual school or agency situations. Under direction and supervision of the counselor, students get practice in counseling, interviewing, in-service training, orientation procedures, and data collection.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC G5510 - Advanced Internship In Counseling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced internship experience. Provide counseling services in a field placement with supervision. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC G5520 - Career Counseling: Theory And Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to career-development theory, psychological assessment for career planning, and sources and uses of career information in counseling.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| EDUC G5620 - Sc Coun:Int,Cons&Prg Dev |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Foundations and contextual dimensions of school counseling. Knowledge and skills for the practice of school counseling. Developmental counseling. Program development, implementation and evaluation. Consultation. Principles, practices and applications of needs assessment. Provides an overall understanding of the organization of schools and the function of counselor and counseling program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC G5630 - Foundations of Mental Health Counseling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Foundations and contextual dimensions of mental health counseling. Program development, implementation, and evaluation. Principles, practice, and applications of community needs assessment. Ethics. Examination of professional issues. Administration, finance, and management of mental health counseling services.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC G5670 - Introduction to Marriage and Family Counseling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of historical context, theoretical formulations, counseling techniques/strategies, research findings, treatment issues, and ethical/social concerns in marriage and family counseling.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC G5700 - Human Sexuality |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an introductory graduate-level course dealing with all areas of human sexuality that a person might encounter in day-to-day living. Topics will include sexual terminology, the human body, expressing one?s sexuality, heterosexuality, homosexuality, pornography, sex education, sex offenses, sexual dysfunction, and sex therapy.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC G5730 - Communication Skills and Interpersonal Relations in Counseling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of basic skills of interviewing: attending, encouragement to talk, paraphrasing, summarization of content, responding to feeling and summarization of feeling, when to use skills, situations in which different communications skills may be used.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC G5750 - Multicultural Counseling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide both a cognitive and guided training opportunity. It examines the influence of cultural and ethnic differences of counselor and client in counseling. Attention is given to theory, research, and practice. General cross-cultural dynamics as well as specific target populations are studied.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| EDUC G5800 - Topical Seminar in Counseling and Guidance |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An intensive study of theory and research of selected topics in counseling.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC G5900 - Research in Counseling and Guidance |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individual research.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC G5920 - Seminar in Drug/Alcohol Abuse Prevention |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to etiology and symptomology of drug/alcohol abuse and methods of prevention or remediation. Includes dynamics of adult children of alcoholics/abusers and families of abusers.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC G5960 - Counseling Supervision |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to counseling supervision theory, methods, and techniques. Special attention to ethical and legal obligations. Closely directed experience in supervising beginning graduate students.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC H3400 - Education And American Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. The present educational system, its social impact and future implications viewed in historical, philosophical, and sociological perspective. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| EDUC H3410 - American Culture And Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. An opportunity to participate in a cooperative learning venture, as students investigate the sociological, psychological, historical, and philosophical foundations of American education, relating findings, observations, and experiences at Professional Development School sites with current practices and the future of education.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC H4400 - Education And American Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Education And American Culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC H5030 - History of Education in Western Civilization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected developments and problem areas in the history of education in the Western world studied in light of their relation to other social institutions, forces, and basic movements in Western civilization.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC H5040 - History of American Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of education, both informal and institutional, in American history, leading to an understanding of present educational theory and practice. Designed for graduate students who seek to develop an historical perspective of education in America.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC H5200 - Education and Social Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Identification and analysis of major problems set for education by the pluralistic culture of American society.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC H5220 - The Schooling of Women and Girls |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course will aid students in chronicling gender bias in schools and in providing theoretical, practical, and creative solutions to past and current injustices. The class will also help participants understand historical, sociological, and comparative issues facing the schooling of women and girls. Past solutions, current dialogues, and future possibilities for women and girls will be the central thematic approach in discussing school-related issues. In addition, class members will acquaint themselves with feminist methodological approaches to research.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC H5300 - Philosophy of Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of representative topics in the philosophy of education.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC H5380 - Critical Thinking and Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory of instruction and critical assessment of reflective thinking as in (1) problem-solving and (2) the process of discovery.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC H5400 - Sociology of Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of representative topics in the sociology of education.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC H5510 - Comparative Education I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to comparative method in the study of educational systems in different societies. Provides students with conceptual and methodological tools from the field of education and related disciplines, such as sociology, political science, anthropology, and economics, for studying societal school systems in depth and making international and comparisons.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC J5000 - Instruction In The Context Of Curriculum |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. First course for the master's degree in curriculum and instruction. Extends concepts introduced in undergraduate teacher preparation. Topics include conceptions and definitions of curriculum and instruction and their impact on social contexts, learning theories, and schooling practices. Elementary and secondary contexts are studied. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| EDUC J5110 - Methods of Individualizing Instruction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will critically examine several approaches to individualizing instruction. Emphasis is on developing strategies for determining characteristics of the learner and on creating a variety of classroom strategies designed to individualize learning (K?12).
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC J5150 - Methods of Small Group Instruction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will examine the purpose and several approaches to using small-group instruction in the classroom. Emphasis is on learning how to improve the quality of interaction and integrate small-group instruction into the basic curriculum.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC J5200 - Learning Materials Development and Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Diagnosis and definition of learning styles and design of tasks appropriate to the varied styles of learning of children.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC K2010 - Schools, Society And Exceptionality |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course is designed to provide an overview of the many complex issues related to special education policy and practice in the United States. Content will include an introduction to the definitions and characteristics of various exceptionalities; an exploration of the options available for instructing exceptional children in public school settings; and discussions of the many important topics and issues related to planning and implementing special education in American public schools. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| EDUC K2050 - Introduction To Exceptional Child |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of the characteristics and the identification of exceptional children. The course presents the issues in serving exceptional children as they participate in the educational, recreational, and social aspects of their lives. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| EDUC K2060 - Teaching Methods for Students with Special Needs |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course will focus on curriculum and instructional methods for teaching students with diverse abilities and disabilities. Specifically, students will learn about the historical and legal precedents in special education, student-centered assessment and planning strategies, learning styles, curricular adaptions, individualized instruction, teaming strategies, building classroom communities, and planning for transitions, career exploration, and adult outcomes. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC K3000 - Developmental Characteristics Of Exceptional Individuals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theoretical concepts and models of intellectual, emotional-social, and sensory-motor characteristics of the exceptional individual. Effect of these characteristics on cognitive, affective, and psychomotor development. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC K3050 - Teaching The Exceptional Learner In The Elementary School |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Knowledge, attitudes, and skills basic to the education of exceptional learners (students who are handicapped as well as gifted and talented) in the regular elementary classroom. Topics include historical and international perspectives, the law and public policy, profiling the exceptional learner, a responsive curriculum, teaching and management strategies, teachers as persons and professionals. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC K3060 - Teaching Students With Special Needs In Secondary Classrooms |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course includes an overview of the skills and knowledge necessary for effective instruction of students with disabilities in inclusive secondary programs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| EDUC K3070 - Methods For Teaching Students With Special Needs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course prepares future teachers to work with students with diverse abilities in inclusive settings. Participants learn to use learning modalities, varied rates, and complexity of instruction, and to make use of individual interests and preferences. Additionally, differentiating and/or individualizing instruction for all learners and developing classroom management skills are emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC K3500 - Introduction To Mental Retardation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A basic survey of the field of mental retardation. Definitions, classifications, diagnostic and treatment procedures are discussed from medical, psychological, sociological, and educational points of view. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC K3510 - Vocational Assessment And Instruction For Special Needs Secondary Students |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasizes an awareness of issues and available options related to programming for the special needs adolescent adult. The concept of career education including preparation in daily-living, personal, social, and occupational skills is used as the basic framework for the course. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC K3520 - Education Of Children With Learning Disabilities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Educational programs for optimum growth and development of educable mentally retarded and learning disabled children. Study and observation of curriculum content, organization of special schools and classes, and teaching methods and materials. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC K3600 - Behavioral Characteristics Of Mentally Retarded |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Definitions, classifications and diagnosis and treatment procedures from medical, psychological, sociological and educational points of view. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC K3700 - Introduction To Learning Disabilities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of historical development and current status of definitions, classifications, assessment, and treatment procedures for learning disabled students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC K3710 - Assessment And Individualized Instruction In Reading And Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasizes assessment and remediation procedures addressing reading and math problems of mildly handicapped students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC K4000 - Computers For Students With Disabilities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides knowledge and experience for the student to integrate special-education computer technology into the educational process of the self-contained classroom and mainstream environments: Computer Assisted Instruction (CAI), data management, and telecommunications software; adaptive devices for communication, learning, and environmental control; and other related experiences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC K4100 - Trends and Issues In Special Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides students with an overview of current movement in the field of special education. Major emphasis is on application and implication of principles mandated by P.L. 94-142 and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC K4410 - Transition Across The Lifespan |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to give prospective teachers information and skills necessary to effectively teach students with disabilities at the high school level. An overview of characteristics of secondary students with mild disabilities, school programs, transition from school life to adult life, curriculum issues, and strategies of effective instruction for students with disabilities will be covered. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
|
| EDUC K4480 - Families, School And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The purpose of this seminar is to learn the perspectives of individuals with disabilities and their families regarding the impact of disabilities in their daily lives. A life-span approach will be used to discuss issues related to birth and early childhood, school-age years, and adulthood. Additional topics include labeling, legal issues, person-centered planning, and academic, social/emotional, behavioral, and environmental issues. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
|
| EDUC K4530 - Management Of Academic And Social Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Surveys principles of behavior management as they pertain to educational environments. Students will learn how to define, observe, measure, record and change academic and social behavior. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC K4650 - Service Delivery Systems And Consultation Strategies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reviews methods of implementing service delivery systems; consulting with professionals and parents; designing in-service training programs; and developing referral systems, curricular and personnel resources, and evaluation techniques used in special education programs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC K5000 - Topical Workshop In Special Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Intensive study of such selected topics as language development for exceptional children, the disadvantaged child, and behavior modification for exceptional children. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC K5050 - Introduction to Special Education for Graduate Students |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic special-education principles for graduate students with no previous course work in special education. Students cannot receive credit for both EDUC K2050 and K5050. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC K5100 - Assistive Tech In Special Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides beginning graduate students with an overview of current trends and issues in the field. Major emphasis is on application and implication of principles mandated by PL 94-142 and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC K5250 - Survey Of Mild Handicaps |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced survey of the literature relating to mild handicaps, including historical foundations, definitions, and current issues facing workers in the field. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC K5350 - Assessment And Remediation Of The Mildly Handicapped |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasizes the collection and use of formal and informal assessment information for designing the content of individual educational plans for handicapped children in various academic areas such as reading and mathematics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC K5360 - Assessment And Remediation Of The Mildly Handicapped II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on the analysis and selection of instructional materials, the use of assessment information, and the development and implementation of individual educational plans for mildly handicapped children. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC K5410 - Transition Across The Life Span |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this course, issues and strategies related to the array of transitions students with disabilities need to make as they progress from pre-school to public school and on to adult life are discussed. The course covers laws, policies, and guidelines governing service provision across age groups and levels of instruction, and it addresses strategies for program planning, interagency cooperation and collaboration, and resource utilization. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC K5480 - Families, School, And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course focuses on the family as a system and discusses the impact of disabilities on the daily lives of family members. Historical, legal and ethical perspectives on family involvement and empowerment are explored. Approaches for providing services to families with members who are developmentally disabled, chronically ill, at risk or who have other types of impairments also are presented. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC K5530 - Classroom Management and Behavior Support |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Surveys principles of behavior management as they pertain to educational environments. Students will learn how to define, observe, measure, record, and change academic and social behavior. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC K5650 - Collaboration And Service Delivery |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reviews methods of implementing service delivery systems; consulting with professionals and parents; designing in-service training programs; and developing referral systems, curricular and personnel resources, and evaluation techniques and used in special education programs. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC K5950 - Practicum In Special Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Provides for closely supervised field experience in various areas of special education. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC K5990 - Master's Thesis In Special Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Master's Thesis in Special Education. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC L4000 - Instructional Issues In Language Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will explore the historical context and the current instructional issues, policies, and trends related to literacy learning. Issues such as developmentally appropriate literacy instructional strategies and methodologies will be addressed. The course will also explore issues related to decoding, vocabulary, comprehension, fluency, socioeconomic and cultural influences, oral language, and second language acquisition. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Richmond
|
| EDUC L4420 - ESL Methods I - Introduction To Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. ESL Methods I - Introduction To Issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC L5110 - Adv Stdy/Tch Writ Elem |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of trends, issues, theories, research, and practice in the teaching and evaluation of written composition in elementary schools. The emphasis is on alternative methods for the teaching of writing and for the evaluation of progress (growth) in writing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC L5200 - Advanced Study in Foreign Language Teaching |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles, practices, problems, and current research pertaining to the teaching of a particular modern language in the secondary school. Emphasis on teaching the advanced levels. Separate sections as needed for teachers of French, German, Russian, and Spanish.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC L5240 - Lang Iss Bi/Multi/Educ |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of language education issues related to the linguistic abilities and educational needs of students requiring bilingual or bidialectal instruction. Topics discussed include language acquistion, language pedagogy, program models, cultural influences, teacher training, and research directions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC L5300 - Tpc Wkshp In Lang Edu |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Individual and group study of special topics in the field of language education. Updating and improving the teaching of English, English as a second or foreign language, foreign languages, and reading. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| EDUC L5590 - Trade Books In The Elementary Classroom |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasizes the use of trade books in language and reading in elementary classrooms. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| EDUC M1010 - Laboratory or Field Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Laboratory or field experience for freshman. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC M1300 - Introduction To Art Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Historical, sociological, and philosophical foundations of art education, and the general processes and techniques of teaching as they apply to teaching visual art. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| EDUC M2010 - Laboratory or Field Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Laboratory or field experience for sophomores. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC M3000 - Teaching In A Pluralistic Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to introduce students to teaching as a profession. Students focus upon the "self as teacher," learning styles, cultural pluralism, and classroom teaching strategies that respond positively to the personal and ethnic diversity of the learner. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| EDUC M3010 - Laboratory or Field Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Laboratory or field experience for juniors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC M3030 - Laboratory/Field Experiences: Junior High/Middle School |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Laboratory or field expericnecs at the junior high or middle school level. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC M3040 - Laboratory/Field Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory or field experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC M3050 - Laboratory/Field Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Laboratory or field experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC M3060 - Laboratory/Field Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Laboratory or field experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC M3070 - Laboratory/Field Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Laboratory or field experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC M3100 - General Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. General Methods. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC M3140 - General Methods For Senior High/Junior High/Middle School Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. General methodology and organization; knowledge about the teaching process, including general methods, instructional media, measurement, curriculum development and organization of the senior high/junior high/middle school; and techniques to promote individualized and interdisciplinary learning. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC M3200 - Diversity and Learning: Teaching Every Child |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. This course integrates information from education psychology and multicultural and special education to prepare students to teach children in their early childhood and middle childhood years. The content includes adolescent development, learning theory, motivation, and assessment. Students reflect critically on personal assumptions and
develop attitudes and beliefs supportive of multicultural education and inclusion.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC M3220 - Diversity/Learning: Reaching Every Adolescent |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. This course integrates information from education psychology and multicultural and special education to prepare students to teach adolescents and young adults. The content includes adolescent development, learning theory, motivation, and assessment. Students reflect critically on personal assumptions and develop attitudes and beliefs supportive of multicultural education and inclusion. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC M3230 - Teaching Of Music In Elementary Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Fundamental procedures of teaching elementary school music, stressing music materials suitable for the first six grades. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC M3300 - Foundations Of Art Education And Methods I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to art education theory and related social issues. Supervised art teaching in public schools is an important part of this course. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC M3330 - Art Experiences For The Elementary Teacher |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The selection, organization, guidance, and evaluation of art activities, individual and group. Laboratory experiences with materials and methods of presenting projects. Public school participation required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC M3390 - General Music Methods K-8 |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Principles of musical development and curriculum planning applied to the teaching of general music in schools, including special populations. The application of computer technologies to the teaching of general music and music appreciation are examined.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC M4010 - Laboratory or Field Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Laboratory or field experience for seniors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC M4020 - Laboratory Or Field Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Laboratory or Field Experience. Typicall offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC M4030 - Laboratory/Field Experiences |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Laboratory or field experiences at the high school level. Corequisite with the required special methods course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC M4040 - Laboratory/Field Experience For Seniors |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Laboratory or field experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC M4050 - Laboratory / Field Experience For Seniors |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Laboratory or field experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC M4080 - Field Experience: Senior/Junior/Middle School |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Laboratory or field experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC M4090 - Field Experience: Teaching Reading |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Laboratory or field experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC M4200 - The Student Teaching Seminar: Understanding Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Seminar taught as a corequisite with early childhood (M4230), kindergarten /primary (M4240), elementary (M4250), kindergarten (M4700), and/or middle/junior high school (M4700) student teaching experiences. This seminar will address several issues related to the process of becoming a teacher. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC M4240 - Student Teaching: Kindergarten-Primary |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 15.00. Student Teaching: Kindergarten-Primary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 15.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Student Teaching, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC M4250 - Student Teaching: Elementary |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 16.00. Classroom teaching and other activities associated with the work of the full-time elementary classroom teacher. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 16.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC M4260 - Student Teaching: Early Childhood |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 16.00. Classroom teaching and other activities associated with the work of the full-time early childhood classroom teacher. Students may be placed in preschool, kindergarten, or primary classroom within public school systems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 16.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC M4300 - Foundation Of Art Education Methods II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The unique role of artist/educator is phenomenologically examined both on a theoretical and practical level. Attention to curriculum development. Public school settings utilized for extension of class experiences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC M4420 - Teaching Secondary School Social Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Develops concepts and theories from social science, humanities, and education into practices of successful social studies instruction. Integrates social issues and reflective thinking skills into the social studies curriculum. Emphasis on curriculum development skills and on building a repertoire of teaching strategies appropriate for middle/secondary school learners. Includes micro-teaching laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC M4430 - Methods Of Teaching High School Social Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Public school participation required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC M4450 - Methods Of Teaching Foreign Languages |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development and practice of skills and techniques for teaching foreign languages, selecting content and materials, and evaluating student and teacher performance. Micro-teaching laboratory included. This course should be taken during the semester immediately preceding student teaching. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC M4460 - Methods Of Teaching Senior High/Junior High/Middle School Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Designed for students who plan to teach biology, chemistry, earth science, general science, or physics in the junior high/middle school or secondary school. Assignments and credit will be differentiated for graduate students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC M4470 - Methods Of Teaching High School English |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Public school participation required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC M4480 - Methods Of Teaching High School Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Includes methods of teaching mathematics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC M4490 - Methods Of Teaching High School Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Designed for students who plan to teach biology, chemistry, earth science, general science, or physics in junior high, middle, or secondary schools. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC M4510 - Student Teaching: Junior High/Middle School |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 16.00. Full-time supervised student teaching for a minimum of 10 weeks in a junior high or middle school accredited by the state of Indiana, or in an equivalent approved school out of state. The experience is directed by a qualified supervising teacher and has university-provided supervision. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 16.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC M4570 - Methods Of Teaching Senior High/Junior High/Middle School Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Study of methodology, heuristics of problem solving, curriculum design, instructional computing, professional affiliations, and teaching of daily lessons in the domain of secondary and/or junior high/middle school mathematics. (Sem. I only). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC M4690 - Content Area Literacy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Focuses on middle, junior, and senior high school. Curriculum, methods, and materials for teaching students to read and learn more effectively in all content areas. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC M4700 - Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 8.00. Teaching or experience under the direction of an identified supervising teacher with university-provided supervision in the endorsement or minor area, and at the level appropriate to the area, and in an accredited school within the state of Indiana unless the integral program includes experience in an approved and accredited out-of-state site. The practicum may be full or part-time. The amount of credit granted will be commensurate with the amount of time spent in the instructional meeting. Grade: S or F. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| EDUC M4740 - Undergraduate Seminar In Music Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Taken concurrently with student teaching. Current literature in music education; individual projects. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| EDUC M4780 - Methods Of Teaching High School Speech |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Includes methods of teaching speech and theatre. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| EDUC M4790 - Methods In Dental Health Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Includes methods pertaininig to dental health education. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| EDUC M4800 - Student Teaching In The Secondary Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 16.00. Students assume, under the direction of the supervising teacher, responsibility for teaching in their subject-matter area in a public school in the state. Additional fee. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 16.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC M4810 - Student Teaching Dental Health |
|
Credit Hours: 8.00. The student teacher participates in the preparation and conducting of teaching sessions under supervision in approved settings. Seminar sessions are held to discuss pertinent topics related to student teaching. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| EDUC M4820 - Student Teaching: All Grades |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 16.00. Full-time supervised student teaching in music at the elementary, junior high/middle school, and/or high school level in an accredited school within Indiana. Additional fee. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 16.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC M5000 - Integrated Professional Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 6.00. This seminar is linked to courses and field experiences included in the Transition to Teaching (T2T) program. It will allow for collaboration among school-based mentors, university-based instructors and T2T candidates in offering academic content appropriate to the program. The seminar will provide a technology-rich and performance-based professional experience. This course has a fee attached. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| EDUC M5010 - Laboratory/Field Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. A laboratory or field experience in education for graduate students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC M5140 - Workshop In Social Studies Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Special topics in methods and materials for improving the teaching of social studies in middle, junior high, and high school. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC N1020 - Teaching And Learning Elementary School Mathematics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Helps preservice teachers develop an understanding of the mathematics content and pedagogy relevant for a successful elementary school teacher. Focus is on content and methods that are consistent with recent recommendations about mathematics learning and teaching, and the state of Indiana academic standards. Pedagogical methods address number theory, data and chance, and algebraic thinking. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC N1030 - Teaching And Learning Elementary School Mathematics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Helps preservice teachers develop an understanding of mathematics content and pedagogy relevant for a successful elementary school teacher. Focus is on content and methods that are consistent with recent recommendations about mathematics learning and teaching, and the state of Indiana academic standards. Pedagogical methods address geometry, measurement, and algebra. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC N3430 - Mathematics In Elementary School |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Emphasizes the developmental nature of mathematical ideas and processes and the role of mathematics in the elementary school curriculum. Public school participation required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| EDUC N4430 - Teaching Elementary School Mathematics Problem Solving |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The teaching and learning of problem solving. Topics include types of problems, appropriate instructional sequences, strategies for solving problems, factors related to problem difficulty, evaluating problem-solving learning. Work with elementary school children is included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| EDUC N5170 - Ad Stdy Tch Sec Sch Ma |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course EDUC N5170 description unavailable online at this time. Please contact appropriate department. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| EDUC N5230 - Workshop in Elementary Modern Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Means for improving the teaching of mathematics in the elementary school. One credit is offered for each week of full-time work. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC N5430 - Advanced Study in the Teaching of Mathematics in the Elementary Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to help the experienced teacher improve the teaching of mathematics. Opportunities will be provided for individual and group study of content, methodology, and instructional materials for modern mathematics programs.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| EDUC N5900 - Independent Study In Mathematics Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individual research or study with a Mathematics Education faculty member, arranged in advance of registration. A one- or two-page written proposal should be submitted to the instructor during the first week of the term specifying the scope of the project, project activities, meeting times, completion date, and student products. Ordinarily, N590 should not be used for the study of material taught in a regularly scheduled course. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC P2490 - Growth and Development In Early Childhood |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on the cognitive, social, affective, and physical development of the child during the early years of life. The goal of understanding the growing child from multiple perspectives guides the study of theory and research on child development. Theoretical study is integrated with observations of, and experiences with, children in a way that increases the insights and competence of the teacher of young children. The unique developmental problems of special groups of children - handicapped, economically deprived, and minority groups - are addressed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| EDUC P2500 - Educational Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. The study and application of psychological concepts and principles as related to the teaching-learning process, introduction to classroom management, measurement/evaluation, and disability awareness. Public school participation required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| EDUC P2510 - Educational Psychology: Elementary Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. The application of psychological concepts to school learning and teaching in the perspective of development from childhood through pre-adolescence. Special attention is devoted to the needs of the handicapped. Public school participation required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC P2520 - Educational Psychology: Junior High and Middle Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. The application of psychological concepts to school learning and teaching in the perspective of development during the pre-adolescent period. Public school participation required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC P2530 - Educational Psychology: Secondary Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. The application of psychological concepts to school learning and teaching in the perspective of development from pre-adolescence through adolescence. Special attention is devoted to the needs of the handicapped. Public school participation required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC P2540 - Educational Psychology: Teachers All Grade |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. The application of psychological concepts to school learning and teaching in the perspective of development from childhood through adolescence. Special attention is devoted to the needs of the handicapped. Public school participation required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC P2550 - Educational Psychology For Middle And Secondary School Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. The application of psychological concepts to school learning and teaching, using the perspective of development from the beginning of preadolescence through adolescence. Special attention is devoted to the needs of the handicapped. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC P3150 - Child Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the physical, cognitive, social, affective, and moral development of children from birth through adolescence, as well as contexts that impact development. Understanding the growing child from multiple perspectives based on research and theory while integrating observations of and experiences with children is a key component. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| EDUC P3750 - Classroom And Community Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will analyze theoretical and practical applications of various models of classroom leadership and management. Students will understand how to involve families as partners in supporting the school both inside and outside the classroom. The role of teachers in building relationships with community members and agencies to enhance the development and learning of children through grade 6 will be explored. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| EDUC P4500 - Child Development Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will revisit child development theories, issues, and trends. Will discuss the direct application of this information in preschool, kindergarten, or primary grade classrooms, which they are student teaching. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| EDUC P4900 - Research In Educational Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individual Research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC P5010 - Statistical Method Applied to Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Problems in statistical analysis, taken from education and psychology, including computation and interpretation of averages, variance, coefficients of correlation; introduction to hypothesis testing.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| EDUC P5030 - Introduction to Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Methods and procedures in educational research.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| EDUC P5070 - Testing in the Classroom |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of measurement principles in classroom testing; construction and evaluation of classroom tests; evaluation of student performance; interpretation and use of measurement data; assessment of aptitudes, achievements, and interests via standardized tests; school testing programs.
. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| EDUC P5100 - Psychology In Teaching |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic study of psychological concepts and phenomena in teaching. An analysis of representative problems and of the teacher?s assumptions about human behavior and its development. This course is intended for those working toward the master?s degree who currently are or are planning to be classroom teachers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| EDUC P5140 - Life Span Development: Birth To Death |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey course of human development from infancy through old age, emphasizing the life span perspective of development. Classical stage theorists, current popular conceptions, major research findings, and educational implications for all life stages from birth to death. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| EDUC P5150 - Child Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Major theories and findings concerning human development from birth through the elementary years as they relate to education. Topics include physical development, intelligence, perception, language, socioemotional development, sex-role development, moral development, early experience, research methods, and socio-developmental issues relating to education.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| EDUC P5160 - Adolescent Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Characteristics of growth and development in adolescents, including physical, psychological, social, cognitive, and emotional, are studied. Emphasis is given to relevance for the educational practitioner and potential for future research. Contemporary issues such as drug and alcohol abuse, sexuality, vandalism are examined. Minority and handicapped youths? problems are studied.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| EDUC P5170 - Adult Development And Aging |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development in early, middle, and late adulthood. Topics include development research methods; racial and ethnic diversity in adult development; social relationships in adulthood; work, leisure and retirement; changes in health, sensory, cognitive and personality functioning; coping; mental health interventions; and communicating with the elderly.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| EDUC P5400 - Learning and Cognition in Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of theoretical positions in learning and cognition, with emphasis on their relevance for the design of classroom learning situations.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| EDUC P5550 - Emotional Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Current approaches to the study and measurement of emotions as they relate to developmental theory, particularly stage theory. Relationship of affect and cognition. The relevance of the affective domain for teaching, parenting, and counseling/therapy.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| EDUC P5700 - Managing Classroom Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of pupil and teacher behaviors as they relate to discipline. Attention is given to the development of such skills as dealing with pupils? problems and feelings, behavior modification, reality therapy, assertiveness in establishing and maintaining rules, and group processes. Designed for teachers, administrators, and pupil-personnel workers.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| EDUC P5750 - Developing Human Potential |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and techniques of humanistic psychology as they relate to the helping professions. A variety of readings and experiences emphasize applications in human-relations skills, self-image, values, and stress management. Course assignments include applications to both personal and professional life.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| EDUC Q2000 - Introduction To Scientific Inquiry |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Course provides the elementary education major with background in the process skills of science, with emphasis on the integration of these skills and science concepts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| EDUC Q4000 - Man and Environment: Instructional Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. For preservice and experienced teachers. Ideas on curriculum trends and instructional techniques coupled with current national and international topics in environmental education; new resource materials and related bibliographies. An examination of a holistic scheme for teaching/learning about the environment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| EDUC R3010 - Audiovisual Production Of Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 2.00. A study of simple hand and machine-assisted materials production techniques. Basic graphics techniques and layout are included for a variety of mediated formats. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| EDUC R3030 - Audiovisual Operation Of Equipment |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 2.00. Training to basic skill levels in the operation of 16 mm projectors, opaque, overhead, tape recorders, television video taping/playback, phonographs, and other common classroom equipment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| EDUC R5030 - Instructional Media Application |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Surveys the characteristics of widely used types of audiovisual media (e.g., slides, film, video) and technologies of instruction (e.g., programmed instruction, simulation/gaming, computer-assisted instruction). Provides guidelines for selection of media and techniques. Develops media presentation skills. For IST majors, does not count toward the minimum credit-hour requirement.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC R5050 - Workshop in Instructional Systems Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Topical workshops on selected media/technology. Emphasis on demonstrations and hands-on experience. Content will vary: e.g., multi-image, microcomputers, simulations/games.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC R5060 - Practicum in Instructional Systems Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. The practical development of competencies in such components of instructional technology as administration, evaluation of materials, production, and instructional development. The practicum can be taken for 1?6 credit hours. One credit hour requires about 48 periods of. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC R5230 - Utilization of Audio- Visual Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selection and use of major types of audio-visual materials; use of projection and audio equipment; and preparation and use of bulletin and flannel boards.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC R5330 - Organization and Curricula Integration of Audio- Visual Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discusses principles and practices in organizing, facilitating, and integrating the use of audiovisual materials in various school curricula and educational programs of youth and adult groups.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| EDUC R5430 - Preparation of Inexpensive Instruction Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Laboratory practice in applying such techniques as lettering, coloring, and mounting to illustrations and other materials in the preparation of pictures, maps, charts, posters, and graphs for projected and nonprojected use.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC R5440 - Basic Instructional Photography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic principles, materials, and processes of photography and their application to problems of communication and the development of instructional materials.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC R5460 - Survey of Instruction System Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reviews motivation, perception, and learning theory in terms of the communication and learning process, and examines the role and contributions of audio-visual communications and materials in teaching situations.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| EDUC R5580 - Designing Instructional Video |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design and production of videotaped instruction for education and training. Includes taping of original sequences, assembling, editing, field testing, and revision of resulting programs.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| EDUC R5660 - Instructional Development Basics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the development of instructional systems. Topics surveyed include needs assessment, learner analysis, instructional analysis, specification of instructional objectives, selection of instructional strategies and media, and formative evaluation. Each student will develop and pilot-test a prototype instructional product.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC R5900 - Research in Instructional System Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Individual research.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC S4050 - The Middle and Junior High School |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course provides future middle and junior high teachers with an understanding of how early adolescent students and school structures impact curriculum, instruction and classroom management decisions. The course meets the middle/junior high school endorsement requirement for elementary school majors. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC S4200 - Teaching/Learning In Middle School |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Middle schools operate on unique philosophical and organizational foundations. This course will explore the design of middle schools and the ways teachers work to meet the needs of a diverse range of learners including those with specific needs. Preservice teachers will develop the skills needed to provide challenging learning opportunities to young adolescent learners.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC S4300 - Teaching And Learning In The High School |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course for secondary teachers explores curriculum planning for conceptual learning that is developmentally appropriate for adolescents and young adults. It includes the topics of high school organization and reform, assessment, critical thinking, urban school settings, risk behaviors, identity development, and importance of the larger community context.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC S4900 - Research In Secondary Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individual research in a given subject area. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC S5020 - Nature Of STEM Discipline |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Nature of STEM Discipline. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC S5030 - Secondary School Curriculum |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to provide an overview for the teacher of the basic theories underlying the secondary-school curriculum and an examination of the subject areas, problems, trends, challenges for the future, and significant research in the field.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC S5040 - Introduction To STEM Teaching |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction To STEM Teaching. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC S5050 - The Junior High and Middle School |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Role of the junior high school and middle school in American education. Total program: philosophy, functions, curriculum, guidance, activities, personnel, and administration. Not open to students who have taken EDUC S486.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC S5090 - Middle School STEM Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course will provide students with the knowledge and skills needed to understand middle level students and effective teaching strategies; to learn an appropriate model for developing assessments and curriculum design and be proficient in planning and carrying out instruction. Scholars will create unites for middle level students based on current learning theories, best practices and local standards. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC S5180 - Advanced Study in the Teaching of Secondary School Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Improved techniques, current literature, textbooks, free and low-cost materials, and solutions of specific practical problems confronting science teachers in the classroom and laboratory.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC S5190 - Advanced Study in the Teaching of Secondary School Social Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Re-studying the purposes of high school social studies, evaluating recent developments in content and instructional procedures, and developing social-studies programs for specific school situations.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC S5300 - Junior High and Middle School Curriculum |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The educational program especially designed for pre- and early adolescents, with emphasis on analysis, planning, organization, and evaluation of junior-high/ middle school curriculum and special attention to specific subject areas.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC S5550 - Diversity And The Communities Of All Learners |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This class explores issues related to teaching all learners in increasingly complex secondary schools. It draws on anthropology to understand diversity across culture, sociology to examine the social complexities of pluralistic societies, special education to address the individualize student needs. The course emphasizes educational practice and communities of learners. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC S5900 - Research in Secondary Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individual research in a given subject area.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC S5910 - Research Project In Secondary Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to permit students to demonstrate their ability to identify, analyze, and propose solutions to problems in their educational area. Solutions may include research or comprehensive review of the literature, together with recommendations. An oral explanation and defense of the project is required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC S6550 - Supervision of Secondary School Instruction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The role and function of supervisors; the modern concept of supervision; techniques of supervision; improvement of teaching procedures; and new trends in organization of instruction.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC T4310 - Human Development And Poverty I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Human Development And Poverty I. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC T5150 - Interprofessional Collaboration-Urban Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Interprofessional Collaboration-Urban Schools. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC T5310 - Organizational Change In Culturally And Linguistically Diverse Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Organizational development in linguistically and culturally diverse school sites: legal basis; administrative strategies; staff development models; use of community resources; and formative evaluation techniques for organizational development in school contexts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC T7500 - Topical Seminar In Urban Education |
|
Credit Hours; 3.00. This variable topics course focuses on an organized, disciplinary approach to problems in or dimensions of urban education. The course provides an overview of the discipline-based theory and research related to the topic as well as critiques the theory, identifies gaps in the research, and explores potential research projects. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 5 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Recognize the basic philosophy and approaches to informal/nonformal learning as it applies to a wide range of community-based learning contexts.
2. Recognize the many ways in which "community" manifests itself in for learning in contemporary, historic and social perspectives.
3. Identify the ways in which community learning contributes to democratic process, social justice, and human development.
4. Position learning and education within the community context.
5. Be able to identify and explain a range of community-based educational resources and how these sites can support the learning needs of diverse populations.
6. Discuss critically, in written and verbal form, current issues in community-based learning including education theory and assessment.
7. Evaluate critically an informal or nonformal learning experience in the community.
8. Be familiar with the core nonformal learning literature, local organizations, and reference sources including on-line resources.
9. Design and complete an original applied research-based project that articulates the value of community-based learning opportunities.
|
| EDUC U1000 - Threshold Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Opportunities for students to better understand their personal development, to learn and utilize human relations skills, to assess humanistic issues in both personal and societal terms, and to establish goals for the future. Class emphasis will vary, depending upon student needs and specific topics to be addressed.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| EDUC U2050 - Human Development Opportunity For College Students |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Opportunities are given for students to better understand their personal development, to learn and use human relation skills, to assess humanistic issues in both personal and societal terms, and to establish goals for the future. Class emphasis will vary, depending upon student needs and the specific topics to be addressed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC W2000 - Using Computers In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Introduction to instructional computing, educational computing literature, and BASIC programming. Review and hands-on experience with educational software packages and commonly used microcomputer hardware. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| EDUC W2010 - Beginning Technology Skills |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Develops proficiency in computer applications and classroom software; teaches principles and specific ideas for appropriate, responsible, and ethical computer use to make teaching and learning more effective; promotes critical abilities, skills, and self-confidence for on-going professional development.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| EDUC W2100 - Survey Of Computer-Based Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students achieve facility in BASIC at the intermediate level; are introduced to social, moral, and technical issues relating to educational computing; and examine a variety of educational software. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC W3010 - Integrating Technology Into Teaching Part I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Provides students with skills and experiences that allow for effective and appropriate integration of technology into teaching and learning activities. Focus will be on reviewing current models of effective technology integration, surveying available technology in schools, and developing classroom lessons and activities. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC W3100 - Integrating Technology K-12 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will study the methods for teaching programming, application of pedagogical and technical principles of software design, software evaluation, and staff development techniques in the area of computer-based education. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| EDUC W4010 - Integrating Technology Into Teaching Part II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Provides students with skills and experiences that allow for effective and appropriate integration of technology into teaching and learning activities. Students will have the opportunity to implement and evaluate a technology-integrated classroom activity in an advanced field experience. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC W4100 - Practicum In Computer-Based Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 8.00. The culminating experience for candidates seeking to be licensed in computer instruction. Either eight weeks of full-time or 16 weeks of half-time field work in an educational setting that incorporates instructional computing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC W4270 - Education Through Travel |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Education Through Travel. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC W5050 - Workshop In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Workshop to meet specific professional needs.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC W5200 - Instructional Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will explore computer-related technology, computer peripherals and their applications across the curriculum. Technical issues and applications will be studied through research and projects using a variety of software and hardware. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC W5310 - Computers In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Computers in Education - The course will be totally online for the semester. Students will need regular access to a computer with internet connections. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC W5400 - Computers In The Curriculum |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Computers In The Curriculum. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC W5510 - Educational Foundations For High Ability Students |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Participants develop an understanding of the nature and needs of high ability individuals. Focus is on historical foundations, theories and philosophies and laws and policies related to high ability education. Identification and selection strategies, characteristics, and educational program opportunities are also emphasized. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC W5530 - Methods and Materials for the Gifted and Talented |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Concentrates on the teaching techniques that benefit the gifted learner. Teacher and learner styles are discussed as well as those skills necessary to deal adequately with these students. The course also examines selection, development, and evaluation of materials for use with the gifted student.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC W5540 - Creative Problem- Solving and Metacognition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Use of a variety of problem-solving processes designed to develop creative thinking and leadership in teachers and their students. Participants learn about their own abilities and the development of student abilities through associated instruction.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC W5600 - Topical Seminar in Gifted Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive study of selected topics pertaining to gifted and talented education. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC W5950 - Practicum: Gifted and Talented |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this course, emphasis is on learning through field activities with in-class feedback related to the education of students who have high abilities in academic and/or arts areas. Focus is on developing leadership abilities through actively pursuing grants, creating workshops and websites, and other educational supports for high ability students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC X1010 - Techniques In Textbook Reading |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Instruction and guided practice in techniques for learning from printed materials. Emphasis is on gaining information from text and practical retrieval and discussion of concepts. Much of the work is done on an individual basis. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| EDUC X1500 - Reading-Learning Techniques I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Emphasis on mechanics of reading, flexibility in reading, styles of learning, listening comprehension, vocabulary development, word attack, reading comprehension, and reading rate.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC X1510 - Reading/Learning Tech II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Designed to develop higher levels of learning skills with instruction and practice in critical reading and listening, understanding and applying principles, methods of learning.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Remedial, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| EDUC X1520 - Reading/Learning Techniques III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Offered in two options: reading/ rate course with major topics covering reading rate development, comprehension power, skimming, and scanning; or as individualized study for students who wish to work in a special area in
conjunction with an instructor on an individually designed program.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC X1530 - Reading And Reasoning For The New College Student |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Emphasis on transition to college level analytical and critical reading, including argument analysis; convergent, divergent, and constructive reading of texts; and concept/theme building through reading. Experiences in the main library and career services center are provided. Students address issues of commitment and personal responsibility as college learners. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC X1550 - Critical Reading And Research Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focus is on academic literacy for high achieving or honors students, including critical reading of challenging materials, inquiry, acclimation to the environment of high expectations and both social and intellectual diversity of a university campus. Readings and inquiry center on a theme selected for particular groups. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC X1570 - Key Strategies For Academic Success |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Three one-hour modules cover personal aspects of learning, college-level intellectual skills and strategies, and performance on examinations. These may be taken singularly or in any combination and/or order for a maximum of 3 credit hours. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| EDUC X1580 - Culture Of College |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course presents a comprehensive view of college as a culture to be learned and understood while developing academic and personal skills that support success. It is intended for students on academic probation or entering students who would benefit from sustained support for a full semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC X1590 - Connecting With Campus Resources |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Students construct a plan for academic success in consultation with instructors and peer mentors and seek out resources and experiences to fulfill that plan, and complete collaborative and writing activities to enrich their insights. Focus is on learning to function as active members of the campus learning community. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC X2100 - Career Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Designed to teach the career-planning process which includes an assessment of the student's individual interests, values, and abilities; an exploration into several career possibilities; choosing a major; development of decision- making skills; and job searches, including resume writing and interviewing techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC X3100 - Professional And Career Preparation |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is designed to instruct students on transitioning to the word of work. Specific topics include, resume writing, gaining experience, professional networking, etiquette, interviewing skills and job search strategies. Throughout the course, students will complete various experiential activities, such as, completing a mock interview, attending a career fair and interviewing an employer in their perspective career field. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC X4010 - Critical Reading In The Content Area |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Aids elementary and secondary teachers in the development of instructional strategies which assist students in the comprehension, critical analysis, and integration of ideas presented in literature of various subject-matter areas. Public school participation required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC X4600 - Books for Reading Instruction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the use of trade books and non-text materials for teaching language arts and reading K-8. Special sections may focus on specific student populations. Section emphasis announced each semester. (At IUPUI, the focus of this course is adolescent literature, grades 5-12.). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC X4700 - Psycholinguistics For Teachers Of Reading |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Explores the linguistic and cognitive dimensions of language. Discusses relationships among the systems of language and also among the various expressions of language. Always includes topics on semantics, grammar, and dialect.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC X4900 - Research In Reading |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Individual research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC X5040 - Diagnosis of Reading Difficulties in the Classroom |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of causes of reading disabilities among students, diagnostic procedures, types of treatment, and case histories.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC X5150 - Workshop in Elementary Reading |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Means for improving the teaching of reading in the elementary school.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC X5160 - Advanced Study in the Teaching of Reading in the Junior High and Secondary School |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. For secondary teachers. The developmental reading program in secondary schools; use of reading in various curriculum areas, appraisal of reading abilities, and techniques and materials for helping reluctant and retarded readers.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC X5250 - Practicum In Reading |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Observation and participation in the reading clinic. Diagnostic testing, remedial teaching, compiling clinical records, and reporting to parents and schools.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC X5300 - Tpcl Wrkshp In Reading |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Course EDUC X5300 description unavailable online at this time. Please contact appropriate department. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC X5450 - Advanced Study in the Teaching of Reading in the Elementary Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of developmental reading program in the elementary school, use of reading in various curriculum areas, appraisal of reading abilities, and techniques and materials for individualized instruction.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| EDUC X5900 - Research In Reading |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Topics vary.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EDUC Y5000 - Computer Laboratory For Educational Statistics |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 or 1.00. This laboratory course is designed to accompany courses in educational statistics. Use of statistical software, interpretation of analysis results, and conceptual discussion of statistical concepts and principles are included in this laboratory. The management and use of large data sets may be included in some laboratory offerings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC Y5020 - Intermediate Statistics Applied To Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An extension of correlation techniques, including partial and multiple correlation and exploration of various complex analyses of variance procedures, with emphasis on application to problems commonly faced in research in education. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC Y5200 - Strategies For Educational Inquiry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory course intended to orient beginning graduate students to the conduct of social science inquiry in general and educational inquiry in particular and to acquaint them with key terms and generally accepted procedures in qualitative and quantitative inquiry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC Y5350 - Evaluation Models And Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of evaluation as an inquiry process, including a discussion of the history of evaluation and the state of the art. Frameworks and models for planning evaluation studies are discussed and applications are demonstrated. Criteria for evaluating studies, steps for writing evaluation proposals and reports, and techniques for the collection of information are discussed. This course is similar to J6600. Credit may not be earned in both courses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EDUC Y6110 - Qualitative Inquiry In Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of qualitative approaches to educational inquiry (e.g., case study, naturalistic inquiry, educational anthropology, educational connoisseurship and criticism). Exploration of methods for collecting and analyzing qualitative data, criteria for field studies, and approaches to writing up field studies.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EEE 25000 - Environmental, Ecological, and Engineering Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of systems thinking and examples, and applications to environmental, ecological, and engineering systems. Students will develop an understanding of complex and global systems, along with the tools and analysis methods required to deal with them. Basic environmental and ecological science concepts are also included. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Environ & Ecol Engr
Department: Environ & Ecological Engr
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. An understanding of the types of relationships and dynamics common in complex systems, including environmental systems, ecological systems, and engineering systems.
2. The ability to apply fundamental systems tools and modeling approaches to a wide variety of engineering, environmental, and ecological problems.
3. An understanding of the foundational concepts and vocabulary of global environment and ecological systems.
4. An appreciation of the complexity of contemporary issues related to society and EEE, including and understanding of the roles and responsibilities of stakeholders.
|
| EEE 29199 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in environmental and ecological engineering. Program coordinated by EEE with cooperation of participating employers and the Office of Professional Practice. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Environ & Ecol Engr
Department: Environ & Ecological Engr
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply knowledge to identifying and solving problems in the professional engineering context.
2. Advance skills related to professional preparation, critical thinking, problem solving, communication, and teamwork.
3. Increase understanding of the engineering profession and practice, basic engineering principles, and principles and practice of ethical responsibility in professional work.
|
| EEE 29299 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Environmental and Ecological Engineering. Program coordinated by EEE with cooperation of participating employers and the Office of Professional Practice. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Environ & Ecol Engr
Department: Environ & Ecological Engr
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply knowledge to identifying and solving problems in the professional engineering context.
2. Advance skills related to professional preparation, critical thinking, problem solving, communication, and teamwork.
3. Increase understanding of the engineering profession and practice, basic engineering principles, and principles and practice of ethical responsibility in professional work.
|
| EEE 30000 - Environmental And Ecological Systems Modeling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to computational methods for describing physical, chemical, and microbiological processes that occur in natural and engineered aqueous systems, including rivers and lakes, and within water and wastewater treatment systems. Emphases on understanding and conceptualizing important processes, data analysis, algorithm development, and competency in the use of programming tools. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Environ & Ecol Engr
Department: Environ & Ecological Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply simple models to natural and engineered systems.
2. Identify processes critical to proper formulation of ecological and environmental models.
3. Formulate models to analyze specific issues concerning natural waters and wastewaters.
4. Encode model algorithms into common software packages.
5. List limitations and assumptions of classic and self-formulated models.
|
| EEE 35000 - Introduction To Environmental And Ecological Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to water pollution, air pollution, noise, hazardous and solid wastes, and their control. Environmental impact statements and global pollution issues. Field trips required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Environ & Ecol Engr
Department: Environ & Ecological Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to apply material balance tools to environmental systems.
2. An ability to describe the different types of air, soil, and water pollutants and how they affect environmental quality on a local or global scale.
3. An ability to explain the principles of water, wastewater, air, soil, and hazardous waste treatment processes.
4. An ability to describe the professional and ethical responsibility of engineers in the context of environmental management.
5. An ability to describe the key roles and responsibilities of public institutions and private organizations in managing environmental resources.
|
| EEE 35500 - Engineering Environmental Sustainability |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (CE 35500) An introduction to the examination of global-scale resource utilization, food, energy and commodity production, population dynamics, and their ecosystem impacts. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Environ & Ecol Engr
Department: Environ & Ecological Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be creative thinkers that can collect and analyze appropriate data and information, and perform necessary quantitative analysis to develop original and innovative management strategies for real-world sustainability problems.
2. Students will be able to individually and in teams skillfully communicate in writing, orally, and with multimedia their ideas and conclusions about managing sustainability issues in a manner that increases knowledge and understanding of the audience.
3. Students will be critical thinkers that can identify the environmental, social, political, and economic dimensions of technical challenges and evaluate their own and others’ perspectives in forming logical opinions and conclusions.
4. Students will be able to effectively identify information needs, efficiently acquire appropriate information, and critically evaluate and use it in an ethical and scholarly fashion to gain understanding of and communicate about sustainability issues, challenges, and strategies.
5. Students will become global citizens and socially aware by gaining knowledge of diverse international and cultural perspectives and display social responsibility and leadership in managing sustainability issues, ultimately increasing their global literacy.
6. Students will learn how to be a productive team member, constructively evaluate their own and others’ performances, resolve conflicts effectively and encourage the willing contributions of everyone.
|
| EEE 38199 - Professional Practice Co-Op I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Environmental and Ecological Engineering. Program coordinated by EEE with cooperation of participating employers and the Office of Professional Practice. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Environ & Ecol Engr
Department: Environ & Ecological Engr
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply knowledge to identifying and solving problems in the professional engineering context.
2. Advance skills related to professional preparation, critical thinking, problem solving, communication, and teamwork.
3. Increase understanding of the engineering profession and practice, basic engineering principles, and principles and practice of ethical responsibility in professional work.
|
| EEE 38299 - Professional Practice Co-Op II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Environmental and Ecological Engineering. Program coordinated by EEE with cooperation of participating employers and the Office of Professional Practice. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Environ & Ecol Engr
Department: Environ & Ecological Engr
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply knowledge to identifying and solving problems in the professional engineering context.
2. Advance skills related to professional preparation, critical thinking, problem solving, communication, and teamwork.
3. Increase understanding of the engineering profession and practice, basic engineering principles, and principles and practice of ethical responsibility in professional work.
|
| EEE 38399 - Professional Practice Co-Op III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Environmental and Ecological Engineering. Program coordinated by EEE with cooperation of participating employers and the Office of Professional Practice. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Environ & Ecol Engr
Department: Environ & Ecological Engr
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply knowledge to identifying and solving problems in the professional engineering context.
2. Advance skills related to professional preparation, critical thinking, problem solving, communication, and teamwork.
3. Increase understanding of the engineering profession and practice, basic engineering principles, and principles and practice of ethical responsibility in professional work.
|
| EEE 39000 - Environmental And Ecological Engineering Professional Practice Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Seminar lectures and discussions to introduce students to aspects of professional practice within Environmental and Ecological Engineering. Topics include career planning and placement skills, professional responsibility and ethics, functioning as a professional, and other current important topics in the profession. Students will interact with several practicing Environmental and Ecological Engineers. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Environ & Ecol Engr
Department: Environ & Ecological Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop professional skills that will allow them to enter into the professional Environmental and Ecological Engineering field.
2. Gain an understanding of major professional issues.
3. Begin development of a personal approach to ethical professionalism.
4. Gain experience in professional communication.
5. Gain knowledge of the range of opportunities available in the profession.
|
| EEE 39399 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Environmental and Ecological Engineering. Program coordinated by EEE with cooperation of participating employers and the Office of Professional Practice. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Environ & Ecol Engr
Department: Environ & Ecological Engr
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply knowledge to identifying and solving problems in the professional engineering context.
2. Advance skills related to professional preparation, critical thinking, problem solving, communication, and teamwork.
3. Increase understanding of the engineering profession and practice, basic engineering principles, and principles and practice of ethical responsibility in professional work.
|
| EEE 39499 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Environmental and Ecological Engineering. Program coordinated by EEE with cooperation of participating employers and the Office of Professional Practice. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Environ & Ecol Engr
Department: Environ & Ecological Engr
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply knowledge to identifying and solving problems in the professional engineering context.
2. Advance skills related to professional preparation, critical thinking, problem solving, communication, and teamwork.
3. Increase understanding of the engineering profession and practice, basic engineering principles, and principles and practice of ethical responsibility in professional work.
|
| EEE 39599 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Environmental and Ecological Engineering. Program coordinated by EEE with cooperation of participating employers and the Office of Professional Practice. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Environ & Ecol Engr
Department: Environ & Ecological Engr
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply knowledge to identifying and solving problems in the professional engineering context.
2. Advance skills related to professional preparation, critical thinking, problem solving, communication, and teamwork.
3. Increase understanding of the engineering profession and practice, basic engineering principles, and principles and practice of ethical responsibility in professional work.
|
| EEE 39699 - Professional Practice Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. One-session professional experience in environmental and ecological engineering. Program coordinated by EEE with cooperation of participating employers and the Office of Professional Practice. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Permission of department required.Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Environ & Ecol Engr
Department: Environ & Ecological Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply knowledge to identifying and solving problems in the professional engineering context.
2. Advance skills related to professional preparation, critical thinking, problem solving, communication, and teamwork.
3. Increase understanding of the engineering profession and practice, basic engineering principles, and principles and practice of ethical responsibility in professional work.
|
| EEE 43000 - Industrial Ecology And Life Cycle Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The outputs and processes associated with industrial systems are examined, with special emphasis placed on interactions of these systems with environmental and ecological systems. A full product life cycle perspective is stresses, including energy and material flows, processes used to produce materials and realize products, and the management of end-of-life products. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Environ & Ecol Engr
Department: Environ & Ecological Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. An understanding of the principles of industrial ecology and an ability to apply these principles to specific engineering and manufacturing systems in order to create designs with reduced environmental and ecological impact.
2. Knowledge of life cycle analysis (LCA), its different forms, its limitations, its endpoints, and the common tools, techniques, and databases available to assist in LCA.
3. The ability to perform a limited life cycle analysis on an industrial product or process, with a defined analysis goal.
4. An understanding of the complex interactions between industrial and environmental systems.
|
| EEE 48000 - Environmental And Ecological Engineering Senior Design |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Senior-level environmental and ecological engineering design projects. Projects will integrate knowledge and skills earlier in the degree program and stress the application of the design process to interdisciplinary environmental and/or ecological engineering systems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Environ & Ecol Engr
Department: Environ & Ecological Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to apply material and concepts from previous EEE coursework to an innovative design project.
2. An understanding of the complete design process and an ability to perform the process.
3. An ability to identify and acquire new knowledge as a part of the problem-solving/design process.
4. An ability to function on multidisciplinary teams.
5. An ability to communicate professional design and design decisions effectively.
6. An awareness of professional ethics and responsibility of engineers.
7. An appreciation of the role of engineering and of EEE in social contexts.
|
| EEE 49500 - Environmental And Ecological Engineering Projects |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 6.00. Topics Vary. Arrange hours and credit. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Environ & Ecol Engr
Department: Environ & Ecological Engr
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EEN 22000 - Fundamentals Of Electrochemical Materials And Energy Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course examines the chemistry and structure of materials and their correlation with various electrochemical properties including their suitability for use in conversion and storage of electrochemical energy, energy related materials, and chemical and renewable energy sources. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| EEN 24000 - Basic Engineering Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course is an introductory mechanics course in energy engineering, covers force systems and couples, equilibrium, centroids, friction, Kinematics, kinetics of particles & rigid body, Newton’s second law, energy, and momentum methods; equations of motions, and application to machine elements. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Analyze vectors and forces, equilibrium of a particle in two and three dimensions.
2. Equivalent systems of forces, concept of moment of a force.
3. Equilibrium of rigid bodies, free body diagram, and determination of reactions.
4. Distributed forces, concept of centroids and centers of gravity.
5. Distributed forces, moment of inertia of areas.
6. Kinematics of a particle: rectilinear and curvilinear motion, use of various coordinate systems.
7. Kinetics of a single particle: equations of motion, linear impulse and momentum, angular impulse and momentum.
8. Kinematics and kinetics of rigid bodies: tarnslation and rotation, relative and absolute references.
|
| EEN 26000 - Sustainable Energy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The objective of this course is to familiarize the students with various forms of available energy. The concept of these energies in terms of effciency, raw material, safety, economy and environmental impact will be introduced. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the basic concept of various energy, how they work.
2. Be able to identify the components for each energy system.
3. Apply energy and efficiency equation for simple models.
4. To understand the feasibility, economic and environmental impact of each energy system.
5. Explain the advantage and disadvantage of each energy system for current and future use.
6. Be able to discuss the selection of particular energy system for specific application and location.
|
| EEN 26200 - Engineering Design, Ethics, And Entrepreneurship |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic concepts of the design process. Innovative engineering design of real life applications. Engineering ethics topics. Fundamentals of Entrepreneurship. Design projects focus on open-ended problems. Design modeling, simulation, documentation and communication. Implementation and use of modern computer tools in solving design problems and completing team design projects in the area of Energy Engineering. Typically offered Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Implement the design process in engineering design projects.
2. Conduct the planning phase of the design process and plan in terms of deliverables.
3. Understand the design problem and generate engineering specifications.
4. Generate and evaluate design concepts following a functional decomposition.
5. Select materials and manufacturing processes for selected design concepts.
6. Conduct product generation and evaluation.
7. Validate the final design through simulation and/or prototyping.
8. Document the design activities and outcomes through product development file, drawings, and personal design notebook.
9. Work as team player and demonstrate participation through a personal design notebook.
10. Give technical presentations in form of project proposal, final design report, and oral presentation.
11. Utilize computer-aided design tools in engineering design problems.
12. Conduct Library/Internet search of patents and literature.
13. Demonstrate a basic understanding of ethical principles such as moral autonomy, definitions of ethics and morality, ethical dilemmas, and truthfulness.
14. Demonstrate an understanding of models of right and wrong (utilitarianism, duty ethics, right ethics, and virtue ethics) and their use in determining right actions.
15. Demonstrate a working knowledge of a process for resolving ethical dilemmas.
16. Demonstrate a working knowledge of workplace ethics, including issues such as whistle blowing, confidentiality, conflict of interest, and intellectual property.
17. Demonstrate an understanding of the impact of engineering decisions on the global environment, including such issues as cultural differences, safety, environmental protection, technology transfer, and infrastructure.
18. Demonstrate knowledge of contemporary issues, particularly issues that present conflicting points of view with an ethical component.
19. Demonstrate an understanding of engineering as a profession and engineers as professionals.
20. Demonstrate an understanding of how a code of ethics can help an engineer work ethically and to determine right actions.
21. Understand and critique business plans, draft their own, and understand the basics of starting up a business.
22. Write organized project reports to communicate accurately and effectively with equations, drawing and narratives.
|
| EEN 29700 - Selected Topics In Energy Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00-6.00. Topics of contemporary importance or of special interest Energy Engineering. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EEN 34500 - Renewable Energy Systems And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to introduce the system and design of energy conversion and storage devices for renewable energy sources. Students will first learn about energy sources available on earth including kinetic, solar, and chemical. Next, the course will provide students with a review of the thermodynamic concepts behind energy constant and energy transfer via an energy conversion device. Finally, this course will tie together concepts of renewable energy sources and thermodynamics teaching students about design elements for energy conversion and storage devices, in which renewable energy sources are converted and stored. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall, Spring, Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Discuss theoretical considerations of renewable energy sources that include solar energy, kinetic energy (wind and tidal), and chemical energy (nuclear, biomass, and other chemicals).
2. Discuss the thermodynamic aspects of energy transfer through the energy conversion device by using the first and second laws of thermodynamics.
3. Understand the basic principles of the energy conversion device for renewable energy sources that mainly cover solar, kinetic, and chemical energies.
4. Identify the basic design components and their functions for the selected energy conversion device.
5. Use energy conversion principles and basic design components to understand the current energy conversion devices and evaluate their conversion efficiency.
6. Identify ways to store renewable energy sources and understand the basic principles of the energy storage system.
7. Use energy storage principles to perform basic system design and component selection for the selected energy storage device.
8. Discuss practical considerations for energy conversion and storage devices and their respective current challenges and future directions.
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| EEN 39700 - Selected Topics In Energy Engineering |
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Credit Hours: 0.00-6.00. Topics of contemporary importance or of special interest in Energy Engineering. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| EEN 46200 - Capstone Design |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Concurrent engineering design concept is introduces and practiced. Application of the design is emphasized. Design problems from all areas of energy engineering are considered. Contemporary issues pertaining to energy engineering career will be discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply the design process to fulfill customer’s needs.
2. Identify and formulate design tasks and their objectives.
3. Establish a project schedule and work plan, and be aware of project management techniques.
4. Develop design specifications by completion of a house of quality.
5. Generate design ideas based on functional decomposition.
6. Evaluate the ideas based on customer requirements.
7. Creatively generate product designs.
8. Complete the design including considerations for cost, safety, environmental, and societal impacts.
9. Validate the final design through simulation and/or working prototype.
10. Utilize computer-aided design tools for engineering design, analysis and manufacturing.
11. Develop a physical prototype of the final design using appropriate manufacturing tools.
12. Give technical presentations and communicate accurately and effectively through weekly progress report, project proposal, organized final design report, and oral presentation.
13. Document the design activities and outcomes through product development file, drawings, meeting minutes, and personal design notebook.
14. Conduct Library/Internet search of patents and literature.
15. Work effectively as (multidisciplinary) team player and demonstrate his/her participation through a personal design notebook.
16. Show awareness of lifelong learning and ethical aspects.
17. Understand the impact of engineering solutions in a global and societal context through broad education.
18. Understand issues related to entrepreneurship and intellectual property.
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| EEN 49700 - Selected Topics In Energy Engineering |
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Credit Hours: 0.00-6.00. Topics of contemporary importance or of special interest in Energy Engineering. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| EMER E2010 - Emergency Medical Technician-Basic |
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Credit Hours: 6.00. This course focuses on well-being of the EMT, basic patient assessment and airway management, special considerations for the pediatric and geriatric patient, specific medical emergencies, trauma, and basic pharmacology. Completion of course requirements allows student to sit for state or national EMT-Basic certification. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| EMER E2100 - The Paramedic and Pulmonology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an in-depth study of the anatomical and physiological foundation of respiration and the management of respiratory diseases and disorders. Students will have the opportunity to perform adult and pediatric advanced airway management and ventilation techniques and practice pharmacologic intervention during simulation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| EMER E2130 - Paramedic As Team Member |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. Students will have the opportunity to use interview and physical exam techniques in assessing patients across the lifespan in prehospital and hospital environments. Scheduled and supervised clinical rotations include the advanced life support ambulance, the 911 communications center, the emergency department, anesthesia, and the pediatric clinic. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| EMER E2140 - Essentials/Pharmacology & EKG |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the roles and responsibilities, health and safety, and medical, legal and ethical issues that affect the paramedic. Other content includes illness and injury prevention. The course also helps students acquire the skills to perform a patient assessment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| EMER E2150 - Pharmacology For The Paramedic |
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Credit Hours: 6.00. Course introduces the principles and procedures necessary for the paramedic to properly administer medication in the prehospital environment. Topics include pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, identification of medication, and drug dosage calculations. Students will have the opportunity to practice medication administration and vascular access techniques. General principles of pathophysiology will also be presented. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| EMER E2200 - The Paramedic And Medical Matters |
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Credit Hours: 5.00. This course provides study of the pathophysiology and prehosiptal management of various medical emergencies. Topics include neurology, endocrinology, allergies and anaphylaxis, gastroenterology, urology, hematology, toxicology, environmental agents, infectious and communicable diseases, psychiatry, genealogy, and obstetrics. Students will have the opportunity to practice pharmacologic intervention during simulation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| EMER E2210 - Trauma |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the assessment and management of the trauma victim. Also included are rescue techniques, mass casualty and triage principles, and stress management techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| EMER E2230 - Paramedic As Team Player |
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Credit Hours: 5.00. Students will engage patients across the lifespan in prehospital and hospital environments to assess and manage a variety of pulmonary, cardiovascular and other medical emergencies. Scheduled and supervised clinical rotation include ALS ambulance, emergency department, anesthesia, intensive care unit, cardiac catherization lab, pediatric clinic, labor and delivery, and special care nursery. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| EMER E2260 - The Paramedic And Cardiology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces electrophysiology and electrocardiology and various cardiovascular emergencies. Topics include ECG interpretation, recognition of cardiac dysrhythmias, management of cardiovascular emergencies. Students will have the opportunity to practice ACLS and PALS skills, including pharmacologic intervention and electric therapy during simulations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| EMER E2330 - Paramedic As Team Leader |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Students will have the opportunity to be in charge of various prehospital and emergencies while under the supervision of a certified paramedic preceptor on an ALS ambulance. Other clinical rotations include emergency department, intensive care, and burn units. This course emphasized assessment-based management.Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| EMER E2430 - Paramedic Professional Progress |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. Students will continue to have the opportunity to be in charge of various prehospital emergencies while under the supervision of a certified paramedic preceptor on an ALS ambulance. The student will have the opportunity to practice PEPP and PALS skills and prepare for the NREMT-Paramedic examination. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| EMER E2460 - Contemporary EMS Issues |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will introduce local response and resources for abuse and assault, mass casualty incidents, triage, weapons of mass destruction, and crime scence awareness. Other topics reviewed include ambulance operations, rescue, and hazardous materials. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| EMER E2990 - Independent Study In Paramedic Science |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Special topics, projects, or readings for students enrolled in paramedic science.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| EMER W2100 - The Paramedic And Pulmonology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an indepth study of anatomical and physiological foundation of respiration and the management of respiratory diseases and disorders. Students will have the opportunity to perform adult and pediatric advanced airway management and ventilation techniques and practice pharmacologic intervention during simulation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| EN 11100 - English Composition-ICN |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. English Composition-ICN. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| ENE 49800 - Undergraduate Research In Engineering Education |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individual research projects for students with the approval of their academic advisors. Requires prior approval of, and arrangement with, a faculty research advisor in the Department of Engineering Education. Written and oral final reports are required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: School of Engineering Educ
Department: Engineering Education
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ENE 50100 - Professional Development In Engineering Education |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This course provides beginning engineering education graduate students opportunities to define themselves with the engineering education department and within the field of engineering education. Students, faculty, and outside speakers present research topics, academic opportunities, and other information that will enhance students' graduate experiences. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Engineering Educ
Department: Engineering Education
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop a plan for completing a professional engineering education portfolio. (Students will demonstrate an ability to reflect critically upon their learning goals and articulate learning plan.)
2. Identify and interact with members of the engineering education community at local and national levels. (Students will develop and enhance their communication skills and other professional development skills.)
3. Identify and utilize resources that will help students to complete their doctoral program and to transition into the professional engineering education community. (Students will obtain knowledge of academic and professional resources in engineering education.)
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| ENE 50200 - History And Philosophy Of Engineering Education |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the history and philosophy of engineering education by: (1) exploring the history of engineering education through archival research and historical documents (critical moments, tensions, issues); (2) investigating philosophies of education and the philosophies that have guided engineering as a profession; and (3) critiquing the evolution of engineering education, identifying alternative scenarios, and imagining a future role in engineering education. This course introduces students to the field of engineering education while broadening their views of the roles of interrelationships between teaching and research. Open to students in Engineering Education. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Engineering Educ
Department: Engineering Education
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1) develop a culture of critical reflection, engagement, and collaborative learning,
2) provide opportunities for students to identify and understand tools to inquire into the history and philosophy of engineering education and develop the skills for using these tools, and
3) provide opportunities for students to use these inquiry tools to form persuasive arguments about the nature of engineering education.
These course objectives map to the following ENE PhD competencies: think critically and reflectively, communicate knowledge, synthesize knowledge, and participate actively in professional community.
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| ENE 50300 - Engineering Education Inquiry |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is conceived as a bridge between beginning graduate students’ knowledge of technical research and modes of inquiry appropriate to the new field of engineering education. It is designed as the entryway to required research method courses taken as part of the students’ plan of study. By the end of this survey course, students will be able to critique research in terms of the quality of the authors’ argument based on their chain of reasoning, and will recognize that the articulation of a research question, the significance of the question, the choice of methods in regards to the research goals, and the transparency of the explanation of the methodology are all the parts of the chain of reasoning. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Engineering Educ
Department: Engineering Education
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Provides a pathway into the discipline that characterizes the diversity of approaches to engineering education research and research topics.
2. Create opportunities to discuss the need for rigorous engineering education research.
3. Develop critical understanding of relationships between research problem, method, and design.
4. Foster community development and collaborative efforts among students and engineering education researchers.
5. Help students identify conceptual hurdles and individual pathways into research activities.
6. Support students’ identity development as an engineering education researcher.
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| ENE 50600 - Content, Assessment And Pedagogy: An Integrated Engineering Design Approach |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The course is explicitly identified in the ENE -PhD requirements as a "foundation course" required for all students. This course is intended to be taken early in a graduate student's curriculum and therefore is designed to be a bridge between the student's previous experience with engineering (education, work, and teaching) and new engineering education research-based approaches. It is intended as an entryway to help students apply an engineering design approach to the design of instruction. To meet this aim, the course involves an iterative project-based approach in a context (design site) that is chosen by the student for its relevance, interest and potential application. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Engineering Educ
Department: Engineering Education
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop and articulate an engineering design approach for content, assessment, and pedagogy (CAP).
2. Critically describe the research-based features of each of the elements - content, assessment and pedagogy.
3. Apply the principles and theories to the design of a course, module, lesson plan, or other instructional setting.
4. Use reflection and dialogue as a tool of self-discovery for shaping and refining personal philosophies for the design of instruction.
5. Participate in a "community of practice" culture through formation of our own community and participation in the broader community of engineering education.
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| ENE 55300 - Introduction To Globalization And Engineering |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. History and dynamics of globalization, and its impact on engineering practice and the lives and education of engineers. Topics include: global migration of highly-skilled people, free flow of capital and the globalization of R&D investment, world trade of commodities and high-tech products, global value chains and the process of innovation, role of multinational and metanational corporations, role of intellectual property and the global spread of technology, global outsourcing and off-shoring of engineering jobs and services, global convergence of engineering education and life-long learning. The course includes lectures by the instructor or by guest speakers representing industry and academia from all over the world. This course is designed assuming a maturity level congruent with students having work experience or planning to enter fulltime employment within a year. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Engineering Educ
Department: Engineering Education
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Increased global awareness.
2. Knowledge of the dynamics of globalization as an economic and social process.
3. Recognition of engineering and engineers as important social and economic actors.
4. Understanding the global as the horizon of interest to the engineering profession in the 21st century.
5. Increased understanding of the nature and roles of engineering education and life-long learning within the globalization dynamic.
6. Knowledge of how globalization impacts the process of innovation.
7. Knowledge of the engineering tools, processes, and attributes required to lead and innovate within a rapidly globalizing profession.
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| ENE 55400 - Globalization And Engineering |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The focus is on the multifaceted dynamics of globalization, and its impact on engineering practice and the lives and education of engineers. The course emphasizes engineering and globalization from the perspectives of the emerging Asian economies and Europe, as well as the United States. This course is designed for practicing engineers and engineering educators. It is taught within a learner-centric, highly interactive, collaborative learning environment in which students are expected to learn from the experiences and thinking of each other, as well as from the instructor, and other course resources. The course places emphasis on reading, writing, web-based research, and discussion. Students are recommended (but not required) to have a minimum of two years work experience as a practicing engineer and strong communication skills (self-assessed). Permission of instructor is required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Engineering Educ
Department: Engineering Education
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Increased global awareness.
2. Knowledge of the dynamics of globalization as an economic and social process including contrasting theories and interpretations of events.
3. Knowledge of how globalization is studied and characterized by economists, political scientists, and sociologists.
4. Ability to interpret studies and research on globalization.
5. Increased understanding of the nature and roles of engineering education and life-long learning within the globalization dynamic.
6. Advanced understanding of the innovation process within a global enterprise including contrasting theories and the ability to analyze specific cases.
7. Increased ability to lead and innovate within a rapidly globalizing profession.
8. Knowledge of the engineering profession, engineering education, and globalization from the perspectives of countries beyond the United States, particularly perspectives from Europe and the emerging economies of Asia.
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| ENE 59000 - Special Problems In Engineering Education |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Project or special topics of contemporary importance or of special interest that are outside the scope of the standard graduate curriculum. Interested students should seek a faculty advisor by meeting individual faculty members who work in their area of special interest and prepare a brief description of the work to be undertaken and expected outcomes and deliverables. An individual project must be approved by the faculty member supervising the project and the student's advisor before registering for the course. An approved written report is required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: School of Engineering Educ
Department: Engineering Education
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
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| ENE 59500 - Special Topics In Engineering Education |
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Credit Hours: 0.00 to 6.00. Primarily designed for specialized topic areas for which there is no specific course, workshop, or individual study plan, but having enough student interest to justify the formalized teaching of a course
. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Engineering Educ
Department: Engineering Education
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times or for a maximum of 12 credits
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| ENE 62000 - Design, Cognition And Learning |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Design is central to engineering: it is an integral part of the engineering profession and how we educate future professionals. Design cognition and learning is an area of engineering education research that seeks to understand what designers know and how they learn, and what tools best support design activity (e.g., collaboration, innovation, etc.). This research draws from many perspectives including cognitive psychology and the learning sciences, organizational learning, engineering and product design, architecture, human-centered interaction, and creativity and innovation. Themes in the course include (1) design knowledge, (2) what theories help understand design knowing and learning, (3) what are ways to study designers and design activity, and (4) how may design research inform design education and practice? Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Engineering Educ
Department: Engineering Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Explore and critique multiple perspectives on design cognition and learning – some of which are synergistic and some of which conflict – to develop a more sophisticated understanding that acknowledges and builds on different perspectives.
2. Stretch, broaden, and challenge perspectives.
3. Share and clarify ideas through writing and discussion.
4. Develop a landscape view of cognition knowing and learning that may also reveal gaps in knowledge.
5. Critique and discuss a variety of ways people study design to better understand what methods are appropriate for what kinds of research goals.
6. Examine data drawn from a variety of methods (e.g., verbal protocol analysis, sketches, surveys, debrief interviews and reports).
7. Experience different resources across disciplinary communities.
8. Identify central resources for finding information.
9. Development an awareness of differences across diverse design communities (e.g., differences in language, values, approaches).
10. Experience and reflect on design through in class activities.
11. Examine other designers (peers as well as existing design data) to develop skills of noticing and seeing that may be used to guide personal reflections on a design philosophy, to develop a research proposal, or to develop an awareness of the kinds of challenges learners experience about design knowing.
12. Synthesize ideas through class discussion, activities, and out-of-class reflection blog posts.
13. Give and receive feedback on the final course project at multiple points in the term.
14. Develop an application of research on design knowing and learning (a philosophy statement, a research proposal, an education proposal, a synthesis to identify gaps).
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| ENE 63000 - Cognitive Devices In Science, Technology, Engineering And Mathematics Learning Environments |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the nature of technologies we use to assist in thinking, learning and teaching. Specifical focus is on cognitive tools associated with engineering activities and how to blend these tools with science and mathematical knowledge. These will range from representational tools, computational tools and cognitive tools for supporting individual and group thinking and learning. Participants in this course will be able to evaluate various learning technologies relative to specific learning goals and outcomes and will design a technological tool to support thinking, learning and/or teaching about concepts in science, engineering, mathematics and technology. Participants will also be able to identify assessment methods that indicate cognitive change in learners as a measure of the effectiveness of a device/tool in context of an activity. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Engineering Educ
Department: Engineering Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Evaluate various learning technologies relative to specific learning goals and outcomes and will design a technological tool to support thinking, learning, and/or teaching about concepts in science, engineering, mathematics and technology.
2. Identify assessment methods that indicate cognitive change in learners as a measure of the effectiveness of a device/tool in context of an activity.
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| ENE 69000 - Seminar In Engineering Education |
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Credit Hours: 0.00. Seminar course covering a broad range of current discovery, learning, and engagement topics in Engineering Education. Seminar presentations by representatives from academia, industry, other external institutions, and members of the Purdue University community. This is a required course for the graduate program in the Department of Engineering Education. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Engineering Educ
Department: Engineering Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop an understanding of the field of Engineering Education in its widest possible applications.
2. Develop an appreciation of the various interdisciplinary research efforts being pursued Engineering Education has the potential to provide leadership.
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| ENE 69500 - Advanced Topics In Engineering Education |
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Credit Hours: 0.00 to 6.00. Primarily designed for specialized topic areas for which there is no specific course, workshop, or individual study plan, but having enough student interest to justify the formalized teaching of a course.
Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Engineering Educ
Department: Engineering Education
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ENE 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: School of Engineering Educ
Department: Engineering Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ENG 40700 - Advanced Creative Nonfiction Writing |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced course in creative nonfiction prose featuring seminar study of examples in the genre, adaptation of creative writing techniques for use in nonfiction, class presentations on editing, publishing, and the nonfiction book proposal, and workshop discussion of student work in progress. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| ENG A1900 - Art, Aesthetics And Creativity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores artistic disciplines and associated forms, materials, and practices. Develops students' making, looking, and listening skills. Through the creative process students will explore relationships to other individuals and cultures, and will review the implications of their learning for their personal, academic and professional pursuits. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG A2020 - Literary Interpretation-Advance College Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. For high-school students capable of college-level work. Development of critical skills essential to participation in the interpretive process. Through class discussion and focused writing assignments, introduces the premises and motives of literary analysis and critical methods associated with historical, generic, and/or cultural concerns. Note: Advance College Project A202 will not count toward the English major or satisfy the intensive writing requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ENG A3990 - Art, Aesthetics, And Creativity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores relation between creative writing and other art forms. Interdisciplinary arts projects. Emphasis on independent work, ethical issues of art and society, and the nature of the creative process. Discussion based, writing intensive. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG B1010 - Fundamentals of English Composition I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The first of two consecutive semesters of a portfolio-based course focusing on the development of effective composing, revising, and editing strategies. Introduction to basic research methods. Taught in technology enhanced classrooms.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG B1020 - Fundamentals Of English Composition II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The second of two consecutive semesters of a portfolio-based course focusing on the development of effective composing, revising, and editing strategies. Introduction to basic research methods. Taught in technology enhanced classrooms.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG B1030 - English Composition I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to composition with an emphasis on writing short essays. Includes assigned readings. Introduction to basic research methods. Taught in technology enhanced classrooms.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG B1040 - English Composition II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Further instruction in composition with an emphasis on writing longer essays. Includes assigned readings. Further instruction and practice in research methods.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG B4040 - Independent Study In English |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Designed for those who wish to conduct independent study and research in English.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG B4370 - Methods And Materials In Teaching English To Speakers of Other Languages |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Study and practice of a variety of methods in teaching English as a second or foreign language. Discussion of pedagogical issues in language teaching. Topics vary each semester; consult the English department for a schedule of offerings.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| ENG B5010 - Professional Scholarship In Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Materials, tools, and methods of research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B5020 - Introduction To Literacy Studies And The Teaching of College English |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Historical and cognitive effects of writing, reading, and language use, and the implication of these effects for the teaching and study of literature and writing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B6050 - Critical Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of contemporary critical approaches, to literary, language, and rhetorical studies. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B6120 - Chaucer |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Critical analysis of The Canterbury Tales, Triolus and Criseyde, and selected shorter poems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B6130 - Middle English Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected themes and writers in English from 1100 to 1500. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B6220 - Elizabethan Poetry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Spenser and other major Elizabethan poets. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B6240 - Elizabethan Drama And Its Background |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. English drama, excluding Shakespeare, from the Middle Ages to 1642. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B6250 - Shakespeare |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Critical analysis of selected texts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B6270 - English Poetry of the Early 17th Century |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Major poets and their intellectual milieu, 1600 to 1660. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B6280 - Milton |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Poetry and prose, with special attention to Paradise Lost, Paradise Regained, and Samson Agonistes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B6350 - British Literature 1660-1790 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Poetry and nonfictional prose. Emphasis on Dryden, Pope, Swift, and Johnson and his circle. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B6390 - British Fiction To 1800 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. British fiction to 1800. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B6420 - Romantic Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelley, Keats, and other writers of the British Romantic movement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B6440 - Victorian Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Poetry and non-fictional prose from 1837 to 1900. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B6450 - British Fiction, 1800-1900 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. British Fiction, 1800?1900. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B6480 - 20th Century British Poetry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. 20th Century British Poetry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B6490 - 20th Century British Fiction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. 20th Century British Fiction. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B6510 - American Literature, 1800-1865 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. American Literature, 1800?1865. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B6520 - American Literature, 1865-1914 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. American Literature, 1865?1914. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B6540 - American Literature since 1914 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. American Literature since 1914. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B6550 - American Fiction to 1900 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. American Fiction to 1900. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B6560 - 20th Century American Fiction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. American fiction since 1900, including such writers as Dreiser, Lewis, Fitzgerald, Hemingway, and Faulkner.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B6570 - Recent Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B6600 - Studies In British And Amerian Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENG B6660 - Survey of Children?s Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of literature for children and adolescents from the Medieval period to the present.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B6680 - Topics in Children's Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of a period, a genre, or a group of writers. May be repeated once for credit under a different topic.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENG B6730 - Studies in Women and Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Women writers and literary representations of women. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B6750 - Studies in American Ethnic and Minority Literature and Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B6800 - Special Topics in Literary Study and Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Readings in sociological, political, psychological, and other approaches to literature. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B6880 - Irish Literature and Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of one writer, a group of writers, a period, or a genre. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B6950 - Individual Readings in English |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Independent study. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENG B6990 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Research MS Thesis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENG B7310 - Milton |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Milton. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B7430 - Victorian Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Victorian Literature. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENG B7490 - 20th Century British Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B7510 - Major American Writers 1700-1855 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Two or three writers. Techniques and thematic comparisons. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B7530 - Major American Writers, 1855 to the Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG B7800 - Special Studies in British and American Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG C5010 - Teaching of Composition in College |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Practical teaching of composition; current theories and policies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG C5050 - Teaching Composition: Issues and Approaches |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Fundamental issues in the teaching of writing. Topics include teaching invention and revision, diagnosing errors, teaching style and organization, making assignments, and evaluating student writing.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG C5060 - Teaching Composition Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This is a practicum for teaching assistants (TA’s) in the Department of English and Linguistics who have successfully completed C505 and are in either their first or second semester of teaching composition for the Writing Program. The class focuses on issues involving teaching writing as they arise for the TAs in the college classroom. Subject matter is largely student-driven but mentor-guided to assist and enhance teaching. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG C5070 - Writing Center Theory And Praxis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examine techniques for responding to writers in writing centers, including nontraditional populations and writers in various disciplines. Understand and test cognitive, social constructionist, and collaborative theories through consulting in the writing center mentored by experienced writing consultants and the director. Write journals, a case study outline, and a paper linking theory to practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG C5110 - Writing Fiction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Writing fiction. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG C5130 - Writing Poetry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Writing poetry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG C5150 - Writing Prose Nonfiction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study and practice in such modes as the personal essay, autobiography, and documentary. Review of historical thematic, and stylistic range of work in these modes with emphasis on producing informed, thoughtful, and effective documents. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG C5170 - Professional Scholarship In Writing Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will explore the development of the writing studies discipline through the past five decades, paying particular attention to the growth of creative writing, rhetoric and composition, professional writing, and literacy studies as academic fields of inquiry. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG C5210 - Introduction to Professional Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discourse in professional disciplinary contexts (e.g., engineering, sciences, social sciences, humanities). Emphasis on research tools in professional writing and on methods of contextual, intentional, structural, and stylistic analysis.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG C5310 - Theory and Practice of Exposition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Primarily for secondary-school and junior-college teachers of English.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG C5320 - Advanced Argumentative Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Techniques for analyzing and constructing arguments for different disciplines and professions, especially the use of proofs, evidence, and logic; major issues of argument, such as the ethics of persuading audiences and the uses of style.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG C5650 - Theories And Practices Of Editing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will examine textual and literary approaches to editing given particular rhetorical contexts. Emphasis will be placed on how to make editorial judgments that promote editorial standards without violating authorial intent. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG C5670 - Writing For Multiple Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces principles and practices of multimedia design and implementation, with emphasis on writing in multimedia contexts. Students will consider ways that new media affect the production and reception of writing and its relationship to other forms of communication (e.g., oral and visual). Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG C5720 - Composing The Self |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the ways in which language underlies ways in which our identities are formed, sustained, and reformed, particularly with respect to gender, race, class, and sexuality. Focus on both exploratory and polished writing as well as works by various authors. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG C5760 - Writers Reading |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigation of how writers, readers, and texts are shaped within the contexts of literature, composition, and professional writing. Focus on using current conventions more consciously and flexibly to generate new ways of reading and writing that better serve our specific needs, desires, and goals. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG C5900 - Internship In Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A supervised internship in uses of language in the workplace. Evaluations by workplace supervisor and reports to faculty supervisor including a portfolio of completed assignments and an evaluation of the internship experience are required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG C6010 - History of Rhetoric |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of rhetorical theory from Plato to the present, including the influence of historical rhetoric on present-day composition theory.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG C6020 - Contemporary Theories of Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Current research in rhetoric and composition. Draws on insights from linguistic theory, cognitive theory, and rhetorical theory to develop greater understanding of the writing process and build pedagogical applications.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG C6110 - Writing Fiction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course ENG C6110 description unavailable online at this time. Please contact appropriate department. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG C6130 - Writing Poetry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course ENG C6130 description unavailable online at this time. Please contact appropriate department. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG C6200 - Publications Management And Production |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores the document production process and asks students to practice this process by individually creating a suite of publications and by working with a team of writers to produce a published book or website. Students study theories of publication and production as applied to writing groups. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG C6220 - Creativity And Community |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course addresses questions of what it means to create and be creative¿as writers, scholars, teachers, professionals and citizens-within the contexts of various communities. The course¿s main purpose is to develop each participant¿s creativity in ways that will enhance their participation in the discourse communities of their choosing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG C6250 - Research Methods For Professional Writers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines quantitative, qualitative, and action research practices of professional writers in the light of contemporary theories of researched writing. Take students through the process of designing a scholarly or organizational research project, and the completion of the research proposal or prospectus. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG C6820 - Topics in Rhetoric and Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG C6970 - Independent Study in Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG C7800 - Special Studies In Rhetoric And Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. May be repeated once for credit under a different topic. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| ENG D5520 - Linguistics and the Teacher of English |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics in applied English linguistics, intended for English teachers at all levels.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG D6000 - History Of The English Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of the evolution of the English language from its earliest stages to the present, with reference to its external history and to its phonology, morphology, syntax, and vocabulary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG D6010 - Introduction to Old English |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the phonology, morphology, and syntax of Old English and intensive reading of major prose and verse texts.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG E3010 - Literatures In English To 1600 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The historical study of literature in English from the period 450 to 1600. Selections may include Beowulf, Chaucer's Canterbury Tales, Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG E3020 - Literatures In English 1600-1800 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Representative study of British literature of the sixteenth through the eighteenth centuries in the context of transatlantic cultural developments. Writers may include Shakespeare, Milton, and Swift. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG E3030 - Literatures In English 1800-1900 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Representative study of nineteenth-century British literature in the context of transatlantic cultural developments. Selections may include writers from Wordsworth, Jane Austen, and the Brontes to Kipling and Conrad II. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG E3980 - Internship In English |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. A supervised internship in the use of English in a workplace. Apply during semester before desired internship.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| ENG E4500 - Capstone Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This senior capstone for all English majors integrates students' undergraduate study through writing and reading projects, faculty and student presentations, and creation of capstone portfolios. Students apply linguistic, literary, and rhetorical knowledge in culminating projects and learning portfolios. The course looks back at accomplishments and forward to post-graduation planning. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| ENG G0090 - Intermediate Aural/Oral Skills For Esl Students |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Intensive practice of basic speaking and pronunciation skills, as well as listening comprehension skills, to develop language proficiency required for study at the university level. Students will make extensive use of the Multimedia Language Resource Center. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| ENG G0100 - ESL For Academic Purposes I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course focuses on the development of basic academic reading and study skills as well as the grammar of written English for students who speak English as a second language. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| ENG G0110 - ESL For Academic Purposes II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course provides practice in and clarification of difficult grammatical structures; improves spoken language skills, emphasizing group discussion; focuses on pronunciation skills: word stress, intonation, and difficult sounds; encourages development of reading strategy skills: skimming, scanning, and summarizing; and augments the student's understanding of American culture and functional language use. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| ENG G0120 - Listening and Speaking for Academic Purposes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on developing speaking and listening skills that are essential to academic life, encouraging participation in group discussion, improvement in presentation strategies, and development of questioning and answering skills. It provides community involvement to help students better understand American culture and language use. Reading skills and vocabulary development for the academic context are emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG G0130 - Reading And Writing For Academic Purposes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for graduate ESL students. Its purpose it to develop reading comprehension skills through the use of academic subject area materials and to teach the writing skills necessary to complete academic work. Assignments are complete using materials from the students’ academic disciplines. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Remedial, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| ENG G0150 - Pronunciation Skills |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course focuses on American English pronunciation and stresses active learner involvement in small groups and self-tutorials. Practice in a contextualized format includes drills and multimedia listening and speaking activities. Classwork emphasizes stress and intonation patterns and vowel and consonant production. Individualized instruction focusing on specific needs is a component of the course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| ENG G0200 - Communication Skills For Graduate Students And International Teaching Assistants |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a course for international graduate students and teaching assistants which provides instruction on communication skills, presentation skills, and basic teaching strategies. The oral proficiency required to discuss and present academic materials is developed. Language skills, teaching skills and classroom interaction skills are practiced while focusing on individual needs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ENG G2050 - Introduction To The English Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to reasoning about English syntax and semantics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG G2060 - Introduction To The Study Of Grammar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Presents the basic principles of structural and transformational grammar: phonology, morphology, syntax, and semantics with comparative reference to traditional grammar. Required for advanced elementary education majors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG G2070 - English Grammar & Usage |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A brief look at English grammar, with emphasis upon current American usage; students will review verb usage, subject-verb agreement, pronoun usage, modifier usage, punctuation, and sentence structure. This course does not count toward the humanities distribution requirement for B.A. candidates.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG G3010 - History Of The English Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Historical and structural analysis of English language in stages of its development. Political and social events affecting development of language; interrelationship of language and literature, evolution of modern English phonology, syntax, orthography, and lexicon. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
|
| ENG G3020 - Structure Of Modern English (TESOL) |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Linguistic analysis of present-day spoken and written English to its phonemic, morphemic and syntactical systems and its system of expressive features. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG G3100 - Social Speech Patterns |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course explores the relationships among language, society, and culture. The influence of such social factors as age, sex, status, class, and education on language use are discussed within the framework of various theoretical and methodological approaches. Reasons for positive and negative evaluations of several high and low prestige varieties of English are investigated. Background provided in G205 would be useful in this course. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| ENG G4050 - Studies In English Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics will vary from semester to semester. May be repeated with different topics for a maximum of 9 credits. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| ENG G4320 - Second Language Acquistion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to a broad range of issues in the field of second language acquisition. Provide students with an overview of important approaches to the fundamental questions of how people learn a second language, basic knowledge of theories, and an understanding of how theoretical perspectives inform practical application. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| ENG G4410 - Materials Preparation for ESL Instruction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students learn about materials preparation, syllabus design, and test preparation by applying a variety of theories to books and other ESL English as a Second Language teaching devices e.g. ESL tapes, videotapes, and software programs in order to evaluate their usefulness. Students will learn to evaluate ESL materials for adequacy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ENG G5000 - Introduction To English Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. An introduction to the English language; its nature, structure, and development. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG G5410 - Materials Preparation For ESL Instructions |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Students will learn about materials preparation, syllabus design, and test preparation by applying a variety of theories to books and other ESL (English as a Second Language) teaching devices, (e.g., tapes, videotapes, computer and software programs) in order to evaluate their usefulness and will learn to evaluate ESL materials for adequateness. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG L1010 - Western World Masterpieces I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Literary masterpieces from Homer to Dante. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the Cultural Studies (Western Tradition) requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG L1020 - Western World Masterpieces II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Plays, poems, and fiction from the 16th century to the present, including works by Shakespeare, Ibsen, Shaw, Wordsworth, Whitman, Yeats, Dostoevski, Faulkner, Hemingway. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the Cultural Studies (Western Tradition) requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG L1030 - Introduction To Drama |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Significant plays from various times and countries to acquaint students with the conventions and types of drama; works by such playwrights as Sophocles, Shakespeare, Moliere, Ibsen, Strindberg, Shaw, Miller and Albee. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
|
| ENG L1040 - Introduction To Fiction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Representative short stories and novels from various periods and countries by such writers as Austen, Hawthorne, Melville, Lawrence, Dostoevski, Kafka, Marquez, Faulkner, Hemingway, and Welty. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
|
| ENG L1050 - Appreciation Of Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Stresses the enjoyment and humane values of literature. It will provide workshop experiences and programmed exercises as well as experience in listening to and studying visual adaptations of poems, novels, and dramas. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| ENG L1060 - Introduction To Poetry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Representative poems in English; a course that enables students to read peoptry with pleasure and to talk or write about it with ease. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG L1070 - Masterpieces Of Asia |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the literature of Asia focusing on literary masterpieces of India, China, Japan, and other countries. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Richmond
|
| ENG L1080 - Introduction To Contemporary Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Significant fiction and drama of the past 20 years. The course may emphasize traditional writers like Updike and Solzhenitsyn, or experimentalists like Robbe-Grillet and Brecht. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG L1130 - Introduction to African Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of African oral and written fiction, poetry, and drama. Designed to give students a basic knowledge of African literature and the issues surrounding it. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the non-Western culture studies requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG L1150 - Literature For Today |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Poems, dramas, and narratives pertinent to concerns of our times: e.g., works concerning values of the individual and society, problems of humanism in the modern world, conflicts of freedom and order. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG L1400 - Introduction To English Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comprehensive orientation to the field of English studies. In addition to providing academic advising, the course offers an overview of our curriculum, which includes our two concentrations in writing and literature, career opportunities related to the degree and the knds of reading, writing and oral skills that are needed for success as a major and in a variety of professions.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG L1500 - Representative American Writers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Great American books by such writers as Hawthorne, Melville, Mark Twain, Cather, Faulkner and Wright. Books might include "The Scarlet Letter", "Billy Budd", "Huckleberry Finn", "My Antonia", "The Sound and the Fury", and "Native Son". Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG L2020 - Literary Interpretation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of critical skills essential to participation in the interpretive process. Through class discussion and focused writing assignments, introduces the premises and motives of literary analysis and critical methods associated with historical, generic, and/or cultural concerns. May be repeated once for credit by special arrangement with the Department of English. Completion of the English composition requirement is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| ENG L2030 - Introduction To Drama |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Representative significant plays to acquaint students with characteristics of drama as a type of literature. Readings may include plays from several ages and countries. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG L2040 - Introduction To Fiction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Representative works of fiction; structural technique in the novel, theories and kinds of fiction, and thematic scope of the novel. Readings may include novels and short stories from several ages and countries. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG L2050 - Introduction To Poetry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Kinds, conventions, and elements of poetry in a selection of poems from several historical periods. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG L2060 - Introduction To Nonfictional Prose |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Genre, structure, or other literary aspects of selected works of nonfictional prose. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG L2070 - Women And Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Issues and approaches to critical study of women writers and treatment in British and American literature. May be repeated with different topics for a maximum of 6 credits. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG L2080 - Topics In English And American Literature And Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected works of English and/or American literature in relation to a single cultural problem or theme. Topics vary from semester to semester. May be repeated once for credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| ENG L2130 - Literary Masterpieces I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Literary masterpieces from Homer to the present. Aims at thoughtful, intensive analysis, appreciation of aesthetic values, and enjoyment of reading. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| ENG L2140 - Literary Masterpieces II . |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Literary masterpieces from Homer to the present. Aims at thoughtful, intensive analysis, appreciation of aesthetic values, and enjoyment of reading. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| ENG L2200 - Introduction To Shakespeare |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Shakespeare's best-known plays and poems. Credit not given for both L220 and L315. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG L2220 - Introduction To Literary Criticism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Through discussion and writing, students examine representative literary works to discover how contemporary critical theories such as deconstructionism, feminism, new historicism, and psychoanalysis shape and illuminate interpretation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG L2300 - Introduction To Science Fiction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The major themes and types of modern SF: space opera, utopia, apocalypse, cautionary tale. Writers considered range from Mary Shelley, Verne, and Wells in the nineteenth century, to contemporary figures like LeGuin, Herbert, Clarke, Clement, Lem, and Vonnegut, but the reading list varies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Kokomo
|
| ENG L2320 - Topics In Literature And Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of a particular theme, such as the hero, death, or the city, and the techniques by which it is treated in various literary works, usually in more than one genre. May be repeated with different topics for a maximum of 6 credits. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| ENG L2450 - Introduction To Caribbean Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will introduce students to the basic themes of Caribbean literature. Specifically, we will examine the way in which Caribbean writers present a colonial past and its effect on Caribbean culture in their attempts to "write back" to imperial thoughts. We will examine the politics of decolonization and how writers construct/reconstruct Caribbean cultures and identities. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| ENG L2500 - American Literature Before 1865 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory survey of representative works with an emphasis on major writers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Richmond
|
| ENG L2510 - American Literature Since 1865 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory survey of representative works with an emphasis on major writers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG L2900 - Children's Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Children's Literature. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG L2950 - American Film Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this course we will examine films as cultural documents. We will focus specifically on movies about sports, and consider them in their cinematic and historical contexts (and use a number of readings on American sports history to aid us). We will study how and why these films portray athletes, coaches, and sports situations in certain ways and at certain levels of seriousness, and what these portrayals reveal about American society and culture.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG L2970 - English Literature to 1600 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Representative selections, with emphasis on major writers from Chaucer to Shakespeare and on their critical context.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG L2980 - English Literature from 1600 to 1800 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Representative selections, with emphasis on major writers from Donne to Johnson and on their cultural context.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG L2990 - English Literature Since 1800 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Representative selections, with emphasis on major writers from Blake to the present and on their cultural context. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG L3010 - Critical And Historical Survey Of English Literature I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Representative selections with emphasis on major writers from the beginning to Swift and Pope. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| ENG L3020 - Critical and Historical Survey of English Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A literature course covering "representative selections [of literature by autors from Great Britain and its sometime empire] from the rise of romanticisim to the present. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| ENG L3040 - Old English Language And Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Language and literature of England before the Norman Conquest, with intensive study of original texts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG L3050 - Chaucer |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of The Book of the Duchess, The Parliament of Fowls, Troilus and Criseyde, and selected Canterbury Tales, to acquaint students with the language, conventions, and background of Chaucer's poetry . Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
|
| ENG L3060 - Middle English Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of Middle English lyrics, drama and romance, with special attention to Langland, THE PEARL-POET, and Gower, designed to acquaint the student with the language and literary development of England from 1066 to 1500. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG L3080 - Elizabethan Drama And Its Background |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. English drama from Middle Ages to 1642, including principal Elizabethan and Caroline dramatists and their best plays. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG L3090 - Elizabethan Poetry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Major Elizabethan poets, with special attention to Spenser. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG L3150 - Major Plays Of Shakespeare |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A close reading of a representative selection of Shakespeare's major plays. Credit not given for both L220 and L315. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| ENG L3170 - English Poetry Of The Early 17th Century |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Chief poets and their intellectual milieu (1600-1660). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG L3180 - Milton |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Poetry and prose of John Milton, with special attention to 'Paradise Lost', 'Paradise Regained', and 'Samson Agonistes'. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
|
| ENG L3220 - English Literature 1660-1789 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of nondramatic literature of the Restoration and 18th century. Emphasis on Dryden, Pope, Swift, and Johnson and his circle. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG L3310 - Studies In Nineteenth-Century British Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Intensive study of one writer, a group of writers, or a significant theme or form in the period. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| ENG L3320 - Romantic Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Surveys the principal writers of the Romantic Movement (Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelley, and Keats). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG L3350 - Victorian Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of English poetry and prose from about 1832 To 1900. Attention to figures like Tennyson, Browning, and Carlyle. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG L3450 - 20th Century British Poetry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Modern poets, particularly Yeats, Eliot, Auden; some later poets may be included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG L3460 - 20th Century British Fiction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. 20th-century novel and its techniques and experiments, chiefly Lawrence, Joyce, Woolf, and recent novelists. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG L3470 - British Fiction To 1800 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Forms, techniques, and theories of fiction as exemplified by such writers as Defoe, Richardson, Fielding, Smollett, and Sterne. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG L3480 - 19th Century British Fiction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Forms, techniques, and theories of fiction as exemplified by such writers as Scott, Dickens, Eliot, and Hardy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG L3500 - Early American Writing And Culture To 1800 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of a range of literary and cultural communications from the period of exploration and colonization of the Americas through the Revolutionary era. Special attention paid to the interactions between rhetoric and history, and to religious, scientific, political, racial, and literary discourses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG L3510 - American Literature 1800-1865 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis on Emerson, Hawthorne, Melville, Thoreau, and Whitman. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
|
| ENG L3520 - American Literature 1865-1914 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis on Mark Twain, Dickinson, James, and two or three additional major writers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG L3540 - American Literature Since 1914 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides an understanding of the pivotal literary innovations and cultural changes during this period. Literary movements such as naturalism, realism, and modernism may be the subject of focus, as might changes in race and gender relations, labor politics, immigration policies, regionalism, and the increasing shift from agricultural to urban economics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Richmond
|
| ENG L3550 - American Fiction To 1900 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of representative 19th-century American fiction, with emphasis on works of Cooper, Hawthorne, Melville, Mark Twain, James, and Dreiser. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG L3570 - 20th Century American Poetry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. American poetry since 1900, including such poets as Pound, Eliot, Frost, Stevens, Williams, and Lowell. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Richmond
|
| ENG L3580 - 20th Century American Fiction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. American fiction since 1900, including such writers as Dreiser, Lewis, Fitzgerald, Hemingway, Faulkner, and Bellow. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| ENG L3620 - Modern Drama |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Special attention to Ibsen, Strindberg, Chekhov, Brecht, Shaw, and O'Neill. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG L3640 - Native American Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of traditional and modern literature by American Indians, especially of the high plains and southwest culture areas, with particular attention to the image of the Indian in both native and white literature..Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG L3650 - Modern Drama: Continental |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Special attention to Ibsen, Strindberg, Chekhov, Pirandello, Brecht, Beckett, and the theater of the absurd. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| ENG L3660 - Modern Drama: English, Irish, And American |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Special attention to such dramatists as Shaw, Wilde, Synge, O'Neill, Hellman, Williams, Miller and Albee. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG L3690 - Studies In British And American Authors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Studies in single authors (such as Wordsworth or Melville), groups of authors (such as Minority writers), periods (such as American writers of the 1920's) and genres (such as tragedy). Topics will vary from semester to semester. May be repeated with different topics for a maximum of 9 credits. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| ENG L3700 - Black American Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the major black American writers, with special emphasis on recent writing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-New Albany
|
| ENG L3710 - Introduction To Criticism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected critical approaches from ancient to modern times. May include practice in testing these approaches against a small number of literary texts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Kokomo
|
| ENG L3720 - Contemporary American Fiction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. American fiction of the last twenty years, including such writers as Bellow, Barth, Didion, Malamud, Pynchon, and Updike. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Richmond
|
| ENG L3730 - Interdisciplinary Approaches To English And American Literature I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Social, political, and psychological studies in English and American literature. Topics may vary and include, for example, Freud and literature, responses to revolution, the literature of technology, and literature and colonialism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ENG L3740 - Interdisciplinary Approaches To English And American Literature II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Social, political, and psychological studies in English and American literature. Topics may vary and include, for example, Freud and literature, responses to revolution, the literature of technology, and literature and colonialism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG L3760 - Literature For Adolescents |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the nature and scope of adolescent literature. Wide reading of contemporary literature, with emphasis on the value of selections for secondary school students and appropriate modes of study. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| ENG L3780 - Studies In Women And Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. British and American authors, such as George Eliot, Gertrude Stein; groups of authors, such as the Bronte sisters, recent women poets; or tenres and modes, such as autobiography, film, cirticism. Topics will vary from semester to semester. May be repeated with different topics for a maximum of 9 credits. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Richmond
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| ENG L3790 - American Ethinic And Minority Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of representative authors and works of American ethnic and minority literature with primary focus on Black, Hispanic, and Native Americans. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG L3810 - Recent Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected writers of contemporary significance. May include groups and movements (such as Black writers, poets of projective verse, new regionalists, parajournalists and other experiments in pop literature, folk writers, and distinctly ethnic writers); several recent novelists, poets or critics; or any combination of groups. May be repeated with different topics for a maximum of 9 credits. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| ENG L3840 - Studies in American Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the social context of communication (artist-text-audience) and such regulating agencies as the Comics Code Authority. Cultural critics have only recently accorded comics any status as an art form. How can we understand and read comics as a unique American art form? The approach that this course uses to find answers to such questions is broadly that of narrative semiotics which allows for both ideological and formal analysis of comics as modern American folklore and myth.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Richmond
|
| ENG L3850 - Science Fiction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of British and American science fiction from the nineteenth to the twentieth century with an emphasis on the latter. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| ENG L3880 - Studies In Irish Literature And Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an intensive classroom and on-site study of Irish culture and the literature it has produced. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG L3900 - Children's Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of a wide range (folk tales, fantasy, realistic fiction, poetry and picture books) of literature for children from the early years to junior high school. Readings from the classics of previous centuries and from the best modern works will be treated from the literary-critical perspective, from which pedagogical conclusions follow. Intended for English majors, for the general student, for teachers past and future, and for parents and librarians. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG L3910 - Literature For Young Adults |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of representative literary works suitable for middle-school and high-school students. A variety of genres (poetry, mythology, science fiction and fantasy, historical fiction, realistic fiction, and contemporary problem books) will be treated from the literary-critical perspective, from which pedagogical conclusions follow. Intended for English majors, for the general student, for teachers past and present, and for parents and librarians. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG L3920 - Topics In Children's Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Studies in periods, such as contemporary American children's literature or Victorian fantasies for children; or genres such as picture books or children's poetry. Topics will vary from semester to semester. May be repeated with different topics for a maximum of 9 credits. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| ENG L3990 - Junior Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Small seminar on various topics, encouraging independent thinking and research methods. May be repeated with a different topic for a maximum of six credit hours. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| ENG L4060 - Topics In African American Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on a particular genre, time period, or theme in African American literature. Topics may include twentieth-century African American women’s novels, black male identity in African American literature, or African American autobiography. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| ENG L4110 - Literature And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Literature and Society. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ENG L4310 - Topics In Literary Study |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of characteristics and development of literary forms or modes (e.g., studies in narrative, studies in romanticism). Topics vary from year to year. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| ENG L4330 - Conversations With Shakespeare |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An interdisciplinary and intertextual study of Shakespeare's work and its influence down to the present day. Students will compare Shakespeare texts with latter-day novels, plays, poems, and films that allude to or incorporate some aspect of Shakespeare's art.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ENG L4400 - Senior Seminar In English And American Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Detailed study of one or more major British and American writer or of one significant theme or form. Subject varies each semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| ENG L4600 - Seminar: Literary Form, Mode, And Theme |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of texts written in several historical periods united by a common mode or form (narrative, romanticism, lyric, etc.), or by a common theme (Bildungsroman, the city and the country, the two cultures question, the uses of literacy, etc.). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| ENG L4950 - Individual Readings In English |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. May be repeated with different topics for a maximum of 9 credits. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
|
| ENG L4990 - Senior Independent Study For Honors Students |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. May be repeated with different topic for a maximum of 6 credits. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| ENG L5900 - Internship In English |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00 to 8.00. A supervised internship in the uses of language in the workplace. (For prospective teachers, the workplace may be a class.) Each intern will be assigned a problem or new task and will develop the methods for solving the problem or completing the task. Interns will complete a portfolio of workplace writing and self-evaluation; they will also be visited by a faculty coordinator and evaluated in writing by their on-site supervisors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ENG L6950 - Individual Readings In English |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Individual Readings In English. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENG P1310 - Elementary Composition Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Students who place between W130 and W131 on the placement test take ENG P131 concurrently with ENG W131. This course provides instruction and opportunity for practice in fundamental composing skills such as organization, development, grammar, mechanics, and style. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG R1500 - Reading And Learning Techniques I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Emphasis on mechanics of reading, flexibility in reading, styles of learning, listening comprehension, vocabulary development, word attack, reading comprehension, and other study skills. No credit toward any degree at IPFW. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG R1510 - Reading and Learning Techniques II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Designed to develop higher levels of learning skills with instruction and practice in critical reading and listening, understanding, and applying principles and methods of learning. Must normally be taken in conjunction with a course in social science, or technology. No credit toward any degree at IPFW. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG R1520 - Reading and Learning Techniques III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Reading/rate course with major topics covering reading rate development, comprehension power, skimming, and scanning. No credit toward any degree at IPFW. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG R1850 - Devopmental Reading: Speed Reading |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Increases reading efficiency by improving comprehension and by developing the motor skills involved in reading speed. Motivates reading interest through the use of films and pacers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG S1010 - Honors Western World Masterspiece I: Ancient to Renaissance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Equivalent of L101 for Honors students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG S1080 - Honors Introduction to Contemporary Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Equivalent of L108 for Honors students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG S2030 - Honors Creative Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Equivalent of W203 for Honors students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG S2330 - Honors Intermediate Expository Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Equivalent of W233 for Honors students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG S3900 - Honors Children's Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Equivalent of L390 for Honors students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG T1900 - Literary And Intellectual Traditions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores, in an interdisciplinary way, one of the great humanistic traditions of inquiry regarding one of the following themes: ideas of self, ideas of truth, ideas of beauty, ideas of community, ideas of nature, ideas of conflict. Writing intensive, discussion-focused.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENG T1910 - World Literary And Intellectual Traditions I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A thematic interdisciplinary exploration of a major humanistic tradition of inquiry in the context of world culture before 1600. Themes may include: self, truth, beauty, community, nature, and conflict. Designed to allow Education majors to meet campus general education and state licensing requirements. Writing-intensive, discussion focused. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG T1920 - World Literary And Intellectual Traditions II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A thematic, interdisciplinary exploration of a major humanistic tradition of inquiry, in the context of world culture after 1600. Themes may include: self, truth, beauty, community, nature, and conflict. Designed to allow Education majors to meet campus general education and state licensing requirements. Writing-intensive, discussion-focused. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG T3900 - Literary And Intellectual Traditions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Interdisciplinary exploration of a humanistic tradition of inquiry regarding one of the following themes: ideas of sole, truth, beauty, community, nature, or conflict. Writing-intensive, discussion-focused. Attention to primary texts and research materials. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG W0010 - Fundamentals Of English |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Develops fluency and amplitude in writing through in-class instruction in invention, focus, development, and revision. Grammar instruction is
individualized, and evaluation is based upon a portfolio of the student's work. Credit for W001, a developmental course, does not satisfy the
composition requirement for any degree program. To enter W131, students must earn a C or better in W001. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG W0300 - Developmental English |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Teaches students to read for information; to summarize accurately; to write well-formed paragraphs and larger compositions; to work in Standard English. This is a Student Development Course, and credit for this course does not apply toward a degree. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG W0310 - Pre-Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Concentrates on sentence and paragraph writing and provides practice in the organizational skills needed for college writing. Credit may not be applied toward a degree. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG W1000 - Developmental Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasizes writing paragraphs and larger compositions; learning and practicing forms of academic writing; developing varied sentence structure; review of mechanics and usage. This is a Student Development Course, and credit for this course does not apply toward a degree. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG W1030 - Introductory Creative Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the art of creative writing. Short assignments, independent work, and classroom discussion of the fundamentals of writing in several genres, including poetry and fiction. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
|
| ENG W1150 - Basic English Composition I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. For beginning-level, non-native students of English. Classroom work on vocabulary, word order, sentence structure, and idiom; practice in writing short papers for a variety of purposes and audiences. No credit toward any IPFW degree. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG W1160 - Basic English Composition II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. For intermediate-level, non-native speakers of English. Classroom work on vocabulary, grammar, and idiom; practice in writing for a variety of purposes and audiences. No credit toward any IPFW degree. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG W1290 - Introductory Elementary Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. For students who need to complete the two semester sequence of writing instruction, culminating in ENG W1310. Practice in writing coherent, developed and researched papers for a variety of purposes and audiences. Study of sentence and paragraph structure is integrated into study of the writing process. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG W1300 - Principles Of Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. For students who need a semester of writing instruction before taking W131. Practice in writing papers for a variety of purposes and audiences. Attention to sentence and paragraph structure. No credit toward any degree at IPFW. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG W1310 - Reading, Writing, And Inquiry I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. This course teaches skills of critical reading, thinking, and writing to help students meaningfully engage artifacts, events, and issues in our world. The course builds students’ abilities to read written and cultural texts critically; to analyze those texts in ways that engage both students’ own experiences and the perspectives of others; and to write about those texts for a range of audiences and purposes as a means of participating in broader conversations. Assignments emphasize the analysis and synthesis of sources in making and developing claims. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, UC-Written Communication, UC-Information Literacy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Reading accurately, with attention to details of the assigned readings; learning to interpret the implied meanings and deeper significance of other writers’ ideas.
2. Using examples effectively; summarizing examples from the readings and mobilizing them to build evidence for an argument.
3. Choosing and using quotations effectively.
4. Creating meaningful connections between readings.
5. Developing substantial paragraphs.
6. Organizing an essay so that it progresses logically and coherently from one idea to the next.
7. Constructing a thesis or argument that works from the sources, brings the writer’s own original thought processes to bear, and develops in significance and intellectual engagement throughout the essay.
8. Grammatical flexibility and control; learning to express your ideas with appropriate complexity but also with the clarity and correctness that will allow your readers to understand them.
|
| ENG W1320 - Elementary Composition II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Stresses argumentation and research concurrently, with a secondary emphasis on critical evaluation in both reading and writing. Evaluation is based upon a portfolio of the student's work. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG W1400 - Elementary Composition Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Instruction in analysis of selected prose models and techniques of producing researched papers for a variety of rhetorical situations. Satisfies the two-semester composition sequence for most disciplines. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| ENG W1500 - Elementary Composition Ii/Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Allows an honors student to explore the investigative methods used within a chosen discipline as an introduction to academic writing. Individual projects using these various methods combine primary and secondary skills. Evaluation is based upon a portfolio of the student's work. Replacing ENG W1320 or ENG W2310 for honors students, this course follows ENG W1400. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| ENG W2020 - English Grammar Review |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This one-credit, eight week course will provide a basic understanding of grammatical terms and principles sufficient to enable students to edit their own prose with confidence. Despite the course title, no prior knowledge of grammar will be assumed or required. No authorization is required for this course. Does not count in the major or minor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| ENG W2030 - Creative Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focus in either poetry or fiction writing. Exploration in imaginative writing with focus on one specific genre. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG W2060 - Introduction To Creative Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the techniques and principles of creative writing. Written assignments, independent work, and workshop discussions of the fundamentals of fiction, poetry, and drama. This course is a prerequisite for all other courses in creative writing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG W2070 - Introduction To Fiction Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the techniques and principles of fiction writing. Written assignments, workshop discussions of student work in progress, seminar study of classic and contemporary examples of the genre. This course may be used as a prerequisite for W301. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| ENG W2080 - Introduction To Poetry Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course, ENG W2080, offers students an introduction to the craft and practice of poetry writing: how to find subjects for writing; to create images, similes, and metaphors; to make rhyme sound natural; to produce both metered and free-verse poetry. Part of the class will be a workshop in which students will learn to revise their poems and those of fellow students. This course can serve as a prerequisite for ENG W3030. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| ENG W2100 - Literacy And Public Life |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the uses of literacy in public and civic discourse, with connections made to theories of writing and professional prospects for writers; serves as the required gateway course for the Concentration in Writing and Literacy and as an exploration of this concentration for other English majors and students considering the possibility of an English major.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| ENG W2310 - Professional Writing Skills |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on expository writing for the student whose career requires preparation of reports, proposals, and analytical papers. Emphasis on clear and direct objective writing and on investigation of an original topic written in report form, including a primary research project. Evaluation is based on a portfolio of student's work. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG W2320 - Introduction To Business Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed for students pursuing business careers. Practice in clarity, correctness, organization, and audience adaptation in business letters, inter-office memos, and informal and formal reports. Some emphasis on business research methods, research design, collaborative writing, and oral communication. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG W2330 - Intermediate Expository Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Instruction and practice in producing researched and documented texts appropriate for public audiences. Emphasis on appropriate primary and secondary research methods, organization, writing style, and documentation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG W2340 - Technical Report Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Instruction in preparing engineering and other technical proposals and reports, with an introduction to the use of graphics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG W2350 - Introduction To Web Authoring |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to help students read, analyze, evaluate, and author websites from a variety of perspectives (e.g. historically, usability, rhetorically, and technically). Students will design their own websites by working in raw code and composing with HTML editors, and by capturing, creating, and manipulating graphics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG W2500 - Writing In Context |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Offers instruction in intermediate-level expository writing. Students study a contemporary issue and write papers on that issue. Topics will vary from year to year. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENG W2510 - Introduction To Business Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An introduction to business writing, with an emphasis on developing an effective writing process. (Does not count toward the major in Writing and Literacy.)
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ENG W2600 - Film Criticism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Viewing and critiquing current films, with emphasis on the quality of production and direction. Contemporary films viewed; papers serve as a basis for discussion during class. Students will be expected to pay for their movie admissions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG W2620 - Style And Voice For Writers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Style and Voice for Writers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ENG W2700 - Argumentative Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Open only to students who have completed the English Composition requirement. Offers instruction and practice in writing argumentative essays about complicated and controversial issues. The course focuses on strategies for identifying issues, assessing claims, locating evidence, deciding on a position, and writing papers with clear assertion and convincing arguments.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG W2800 - Literary Editing and Publishing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of editing and publishing literary writing. Kinds of journals, varieties of formats (including print and e-zine),
introduction to editing and production process. Possible focus on genre publishing (fiction, poetry, non-fiction prose), grant writing, Web publishing, etc. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| ENG W2900 - Writing In The Arts And Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Studies academic writing as a means of discovery and record. Study of and practice in the procedures, conventions, and terminology of the humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG W3010 - Writing Fiction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Further exploration in the art of fiction writing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG W3020 - Screen Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A practical course in basic techniques of writing for film and television. Covers the essentials of dramatic structure, story development, characterization and theme, scene construction, dialogue, and, briefly, the practicalities of working as a screenwriter today. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| ENG W3030 - Writing Poetry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Further exploration in the art of poetry writing. May be repeated with different topics for a maximum of 9 credits. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG W3050 - Writing Creative Nonfiction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intermediate course in the theory and practice of creative nonfiction prose, with seminar study of relevant materials and workshop discussion of student work in progress. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENG W3100 - Language And The Study Of Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the logical foundation and rhetorical framework of effective writing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG W3110 - Writing Creative Nonfiction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Writing workshop in such modes as personal essay, autobiography, and documentary. May be repeated once for credit, for a maximum of 6 credits. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| ENG W3130 - The Art of Fact: Writing Nonfiction Prose |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will read and analyze professional and student work as they prepare to practice the art of fact by combining the tools of a researcher with the craft of a novelist. The final portfolio includes a stylistic analysis of the student's and others' nonfiction works as well as two illustrated nonfiction texts based on the student's primary and secondary research.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| ENG W3150 - Writing for the Web |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces students to new forms of writing (beyond word processing and desktop publishing) made possible by computers-hypertext, electronic mail, and computer conferencing-and explores what impact these new forms have on literacy skills for writers and readers of such computer-delivered texts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG W3180 - Finding Your E-voice: Writing For Digital Environments |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course helps students understand and negotiate the creation of a successful e-voice with academic, personal, and professional applications. Reading, exploration, discussions, activities and practice help students transition from an academic to an “e-voice.” Designing and producing a multimedia project meets RISE criteria and further refines developing e-voices. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ENG W3200 - Advanced Writing In The Arts And Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Features scholarly readings on various interdisciplinary types and examines how writers in the humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences define problems, investigate these problems, and report their findings. Focuses on the study and practice of knowledge-making in different discourse communities with particular attention to the student’s major discipline. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Express ideas and facts to others effectively in a variety of written formats.
2. Comprehend, interpret, and analyze texts.
3. Communicate orally in one-on-one and group settings.
4. Make efficient use of information resources and technology for personal and professional needs.
5. Analyze complex issues and make informed decisions.
6. Synthesize information in order to arrive at reasoned conclusions.
7. Evaluate the logic, validity, and relevance of data.
8. Use knowledge and understanding in order to generate and explore new questions.
9. Intellectual depth describes the demonstration of substantial knowledge and understanding of at least one field of study.
10. Intellectual breadth is demonstrated by the ability to compare and contrast approaches to knowledge in different disciplines.
11. Adaptiveness is demonstrated by the ability to modify one’s approach to an issue or problem based on the contexts and requirements of particular situations.
|
| ENG W3210 - Advanced Technical Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Instruction in preparing engineering and other technical proposals and reports, with an introduction to the use of
graphics.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG W3310 - Business And Administrative Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis on proposals, presentations, and collaborative and individual reports needed within a business, administrative, or organizational setting. Students discover how the process and products of writing shape organizational culture by studying documents organizations use, from hiring to setting ethical standards, as they communicate both internally and globally. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG W3500 - Advanced Expository Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Close examination of the assumptions and choices that govern content and style, and practice in the techniques of producing a variety of researched papers incorporating primary and secondary research appropriate to audience and purpose. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG W3640 - Art Of Magazine Editing For Publication And Production |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the writing process from the perspective of the manager who supervises the writing of texts that become products: books, newsletters, websites, etc. It explores the document production process, focusing on design, desktop publishing, web publishing, and the stages of writing project management. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
|
| ENG W3650 - Theories And Practices Of Editing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will examine textual and literary approaches to editing given particular rhetorical contexts. Emphasis will be placed on how to make editorial judgments that promote editorial standards without violating authorial intent. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG W3660 - Written Englishes: Living Cultural Realities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Is standard written English fixed and immutable or a living language variety? This course explores the definition, history, and politics of standard written English, the influence of home and community languages, and the uses and representation of linguistic diversity in both fiction and nonfiction texts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ENG W3670 - Writing For Multiple Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces principles and practices of multimedia design and implementation, with emphasis on writing in multimedia contexts. Students will consider ways that new media affect the production and reception of writing and its relationship to other forms of communication (e.g., oral and visual). Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG W3720 - Composing The Self |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the ways in which language underlies ways in which our identities are formed, sustained, and reformed, particularly with respect to gender, race, class, and sexuality. Focus on both exploratory and polished writing as well as works by various authors. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG W3760 - Writers Reading |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigation of how writers, readers, and texts are shaped within the contexts of literature, composition, and professional writing. Focus on using current conventions more consciously and flexibly to generate new ways of reading and writing that better serve our specific needs, desires, and goals. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG W3770 - Writing For Social Change |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines how writing is used to promote social change, particularly in the United States. Students apply theoretical perspectives learned in the course to analyze the rhetorical nature of texts associated with organizing and social action and to create their own texts, including texts directed to public officials, the media and organizational texts. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Facilitate student growth in core communication skills, critical thinking, and values and ethics.
2. Sharpen both written and oral communication skills.
3. Apply critical analysis to the writing of others and to their own texts.
4. Examine ethical approaches to complex social problems (these have included environmental degradation, gender equality, educational disparities, sustainable living, and more).
|
| ENG W3900 - Topics In Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics will vary each time this course is offered, and the department will specify which area of the concentration in Writing and Literacy each offering will count toward. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| ENG W3950 - Individual Study Of Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Practice in and study of informative, persuasive, or literary writing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| ENG W3960 - Writing Fellows Training Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Internship in University Writing Center. Focuses on the writing of IUPUI students. Emphasis on questioning, strategies, problem solving, and self-analysis. Apply in spring for fall enrollment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENG W3970 - Writing Center Theory And Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on writing center theory and practice, including the writing process, theories of composing, and the dynamics of peer response. Students will conduct original research and observe Writing Center consultations; they may apply to work in the Writing Center upon completion of the course. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
|
| ENG W3980 - Internship In Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Combines study of writing with practical experience of working with professionals in journalism, business communication, or technical writing. Researched reports are required. Evaluations made by both supervisor and instructor. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| ENG W4000 - Issues In Teaching Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on the content of rhetoric and composition and considers fundamental theoretical and practical issues in the teaching of writing. Reviews rhetorical and compositional principles which influence writing instruction, textbook selection, and curriculum development. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Richmond
|
| ENG W4010 - Advanced Fiction Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focused work in the art and profession of fiction writing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| ENG W4030 - Advanced Poetry Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focused work in the art and profession of poetry writing. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| ENG W4050 - Writing Prose-Nonfiction |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Study and practice of the essay. Review of historical, thematic, and stylistic range of the form, with emphasis on producing effective, precise communication of thoughtful, informed personal statements. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain major facets of the theory/practice under consideration.
2. Demonstrate understanding of the theoretical or practical aspects of the theory under consideration in their own written products.
3. Demonstrate an understanding of the process of text production through their participation in course activities such as workshops and their provision of and use of effective feedback on written products.
|
| ENG W4070 - Advanced Creative Nonfiction Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced course in creative nonfiction prose featuring seminar study of models in the genre, including memoir, reportage, portrait/self-portrait, analytic meditation, etc., and workshop discussion of student work in progress. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ENG W4080 - Creative Writing For Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Offers current and future teachers insights into the creative writing process, teaches them to think as writers do, suggests strategies for critiquing creative work, and provides guidance in developing creative writing curriculum.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ENG W4110 - Directed Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individual projects worked out with instructor. Credit varies with scope of project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENG W4120 - Literacy And Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Literacy and technology have multifaceted relationships with each other. This course explores the effects of technologies (ranging from clay tablets to the printing press to computers) on literate practices and the teaching of reading and writing. It prepares students to think critically about the possibilities and limitations associated with different technologies and their impact on literacy over time, the impact of technology on their own literacies, and to analyze educational uses of technology
connected with literacy.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| ENG W4200 - Argumentative Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines techniques for analyzing and constructing arguments, especially the use of proofs, evidence, and logic. Considers such issues of argument as the ethics of persuasion and the use of style. Students write researched arguments on political, legal, scientific, and academic issues. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
|
| ENG W4210 - Technical Writing Projects |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Application of the principles of technical reporting to a major piece of primary research and development, usually a senior project in the major. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENG W4220 - Creativity And Community |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course addresses questions of what it means to create and be creative--as writers, scholars, teachers, professionals and citizens-within the contexts of various communities. The course's main purpose is to develop each participant's creativity in ways that will enhance their participation in the discourse communities of their choosing. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG W4230 - Composing Communities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will study the ways in which communities are formed, sustained, and reformed by examining the role of place in the construction of community and individual identities through the scholarship of folklore and rhetoric/composition. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG W4250 - Research Methods For Professional Writers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines quantitative, qualitative, and action research techniques as practiced by professionals working in various field of writing: technical and business writing, freelance and creative writing, academic writing, community and grant writing, journalism, and the teaching of writing. It includes coverage of both primary (i.e. field) and secondary (i.e. library) research. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG W4260 - Writing Nonfiction: Pop & Prof Publication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Writing Nonfiction: Pop & Prof Publication. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ENG W4600 - Introduction To Literacy Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an overview of literacy studies while also focusing on the literacy practices and beliefs of particular groups. The course moves beyond reductive discussions of literacy by introduction students to a range of literacy studies scholarship that challenges popular conceptualizations of literacy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ENG W4620 - Studies In Rhetoric and Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of major rhetorical theories and their applications for writers and for teachers of composition. Focuses on theories of discourse, invention, form, style, and audience. Aims at developing greater understanding of the writing process. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| ENG W4900 - Writing Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course emphasizes a single aspect or a selected topic of composition and the writing of nonfictional prose. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| ENG W4960 - Writing Tutor Training Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Writing Tutor Training Seminar. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ENG W5090 - Introduction To Writing And Literacy Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This is the core course in the writing and literacy track of the English master's program. Students will read, analuze, discuss, and write about key issues in writing and literacy, laying a foundation for further study. Special emphasis will be placed on research methods in this field. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ENG W6000 - Topics in Rhetoric and Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Topics will vary each time this course is offered.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENG W6090 - Directed Writing Projects |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Individual creative or critical writing projects negotiated with the professor who agrees to offer tutorial assistance. Credit hours will vary according to the scope of the project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENG Z1040 - Language In Our World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A nontechnical introduction to the study of linguistics, this course takes an interdisciplinary approach to language behavior. Particular attention is paid to cultural, social, and psychological aspects of language use. Topics vary and may include language origin, child language acquisition, gender and language, dialects, and slang, among others. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ENG Z2040 - Rhetorical Issues In Grammar And Usage |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to English grammar and usage that studies the rhetorical impact of grammatical structures (such as noun phrases, prepositional phrases, and different sentence patterns). This course considers language trends and issues, the role of correctness in discourse communities, and the relations between writing in context and descriptive and prescriptive grammars and usage guides. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| ENG Z2050 - Introduction To The English Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to how languages, and English in particular, is structured, including sound (phonetics and phonology), words (morphology), sentences (syntax) and meaning (semantics). Discussions focus on examples from everyday language and the application of these basic concepts to real world contexts, including language teaching and learning. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ENG Z2060 - Introduction To Language Use |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to how we use language in our lives. This course explores how and why language varies between different groups and places, as well as the role of context on language meaning and interpretation. Insights are applied to understanding the impact of literature, film, writing, and other disciplines. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ENG Z3010 - History Of The English Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the origins of the English language, focusing on how and why English has changed over time. Topics include: the process of language standardization and its impact on education and literacy, relationships between language and literature, and the changing role of English around the world. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ENG Z3030 - Understanding Language Meaning: Semantics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the question of meaning, with a focus on the English language. After introducing various approaches to the study of meaning, the course examines how linguistic semantics analyzes such concepts as entities, events, time, space, possibility, and negation, and how these relatie to human culture and cognition. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Think in new and interesting ways about what language enables human to encode.
2. Communicate and understand.
3. Examine questions of meaning critically, in a scientific and rigorous manner
|
| ENG Z3100 - Language In Context:Sociolinguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the relationships among language, society, and culture. The interplay between social factors—such as age, sex, status, class, and education—and language use are discussed within the framework of various theoretical and methodological approaches. Perceptions of several varieties of English are investigated. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ENG Z4340 - Introduction To Teaching English As A Second Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course examines recent theories of teaching English as a second or foreign language. Students will get a chance to examine theories and methods and develop knowledge of linguistic resources available to new and/or practicing teachers. Pernission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ENGL 00700 - Writing Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Emphasis on patterns of organization and fundamentals of usage in composition for ENGL 104 students with an English Placement Score between 33 and 37. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 01110 - Community Learning Elective |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. This course should provide students with the opportunity to practice English communication with native speakers while completing community service. Students will travel to an off-campus location in the community. At the sites, students may be engaged in activities such as games, sports, arts and crafts, tutoring, language teaching, and intercultural activities with community members such as elementary school students. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop the ability to interact with members of the community who are native speakers of English as well as with community organizations.
2. Develop effective communication skills outside the formal context of the classroom.
|
| ENGL 01800 - Fundamentals Of Reading |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Aims to build the student's functional reading level to meet the requirements of college textbooks. Stresses improvement of the basic silent reading skills of word recognition, vocabulary building literal comprehension and rate fluency. Some instruction in study techniques. Individualized and performance-oriented. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 01900 - English Composition For English As A Second Language (ESL) Students |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. English composition for those students whose common use of English indicates a need for instruction in English as a second language. An equivalent of ENGL 020. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 02000 - Fundamentals Of Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. A review of writing fundamentals for those who need further training and practice. Emphasis will be on English grammar, punctuation, spelling, sentence structure, and paragraph organization. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 02100 - Low-Intermediate Grammar And Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. This is a "low proficiency" course that focuses on skills and strategies for effective academic writing. This course focuses on developing basic ability to write effectively in English through extensive practice in pre-writing, drafting, revising and editing. Students engage in discussion and small group work to develop and improve basic composition skills, including organization, rhetoric, grammar and mechanics, and sentence structure. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 02200 - Intermediate Grammar And Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. This course focuses on skills and strategies for effective academic writing. This course focuses on the development of composition skills, with emphasis placed on organization, sentence structure, grammar, and idea clarity. Students engage in discussion and small group work to develop and improve composition skills, including organization, rhetoric, grammar and mechanics, and sentence structure. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 02300 - Advanced Grammar And Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. This course focuses on skills and strategies for effective academic writing in the mainstream academic setting. Students at this level are expected to write at an advanced level. Students practice various rhetorical aspects of writing while focusing on improving the cohesion, unity, and clarity of ideas. Students engage in discussion and small group work to enhance and develop advanced composition skills for academic writing. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 02400 - Building Skills With Stories |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Building Skills with Stories is a multi-skills foundations-level course. In this course, students will read fictional stories and use these stories as the context for practicing a variety of skills. A focus will be on developing vocabulary through target words in the stories and through expansion activities. Students will also work on grammar, pronunciation, and spelling as well as improve their writing through responses to the stories and their speaking through discussions about them. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will develop a more extensive vocabulary.
2. Students will review basic skills such as knowledge of the alphabet and penmanship, improve spelling of high frequency words, and improve reading fluency and comprehension.
3. Students will improve their writing and speaking fluency as well as their pronunciation.
4. Students will utilize and improve foundations-level grammar.
|
| ENGL 02500 - Introduction To American Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. This is an elective for students with Low-Intermediate skill level. Each section of ENGL 02500 will introduce American Culture through different themes and skill emphasis, such as film, reading and writing short stories, etc. This course may not be substituted for English 10400 or English 10500, nor be counted toward degree requirements. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 02600 - Foundations Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Foundations Writing is an introductory writing course that focuses on skills and strategies for writing sentences and paragraphs. Through class activities and writing assignments, this course will build your grammar skills and improve your writing fluency. In the second half of the semester, you will be introduced to academic paragraphs. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to produce informal paragraphs on assigned topics with the goals of demonstrating understanding of target grammar, improving fluency, and developing ability to write on one topic.
2. Students should be able to produce a formal paragraph by the end of the semester that goes through a revision process and includes a topic sentence.
3. Students should be able to understand how a topic sentence and supporting sentences are organized into a paragraph and subject-verb-object order and accurately produce it in simple sentences.
4. Students should be able to produce compound and complex sentences and use basic punctuation and capitalization rules and improve spelling and high-frequency words.
|
| ENGL 03000 - Foundations Listening And Speaking |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Foundations Listening and Speaking is a course intended for students who did not meet the qualifications for admittance into the ELP’s level 1 low-intermediate course. The purpose of this course is to prepare the students for successful matriculation into level 1 and to provide them with solid listening and speaking skill sets in English; skills and abilities that will surely increase their chances of future academic success overall. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to use the imperative form; will be able to produce and respond to do and be questions, SVO sentences, and can and could sentences; will be able to form and comprehend basic contractions; and will be able to express basic information about their lives using present, present continuous, and past tenses.
2. Students will demonstrate improved pronunciation and a general enhanced fluency. Their knowledge of the General Service List will be expanded through speaking and listening activities.
3. Students will demonstrate the ability to comprehend and recall words and short phrases during text dictations and communicative information.
|
| ENGL 03100 - Low-Intermediate Listening And Speaking |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. This course focuses on developing basic listening and conversation skills. Students practice listening and speaking about various topics, both inside and outside of the classroom, in order to establish a solid foundation in this essential skill. A wide variety of listening excerpts, discussion prompts, and small-group tasks, assist in the development of listening comprehension and oral fluency and accuracy. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 03200 - Intermediate Listening And Speaking |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. This course focuses on strategies for the further development of listening skills and oral fluency in an academic context. Students at this level practice listening and speaking about various personal and academic topics, both inside and outside the classroom, in order to expand these abilities. A wide variety of listening excerpts, discussion prompts, and small-group tasks, assist in the development of listening comprehension and oral fluency and accuracy. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 03300 - Advanced Listening And Speaking |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. This course focuses on skills and strategies for the further development of effective academic and social listening and speaking skills in English. Students at this level are expected to practice listening and speaking extensively about various topics, both inside and outside the classroom, in order to expand their listening abilities. A wide variety of listening excerpts, discussion prompts, and small-group tasks, prepare students for listening and speaking in a mainstream academic setting. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 03500 - English Communication Skills |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. This is an elective for students with Intermediate skill level designed to provide students with additional instruction in reading, writing, or listening and speaking. Each section of this elective will approach English language skills through a different theme and skill emphasis, such as film, reading and writing short stories, American culture, etc. This course may not be substituted for English 10400 or English 10500, nor be counted toward degree requirements. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 04000 - Foundations Reading |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Foundations Reading is designed for beginning students with limited or no basic formal instruction in reading in English. The purpose of this course is to develop a strong foundation in basic reading literacy skills, the General Service List vocabulary, beginning academic vocabulary, and spelling foundations to improve reading skills. Students at this level engage in silent sustained reading primarily of non-fiction, high interest texts in groups with teacher support. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to demonstrate knowledge of the first 1000 words on the General Service List, demonstrate understanding of key academic vocabulary from Active test.
2. Students will be able to differentiate between details and main ideas in simplified, short texts, demonstrate late within word pattern stage of spelling ability, demonstrate ability to understand the basic concept of inferences and make basic inferences of basic texts.
3. Students will be able to read and understand basic sentences and short texts, understand and complete basic documents and forms, use text titles to make basic predictions about a text, make and check basic reading predictions, locate and identify main ideas of simplified texts.
4.. Students will be able to read and understand basic written instructions for assessment and classroom.
|
| ENGL 04100 - Low-Intermediate Reading Comprehension |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. This is a course that focuses on skills and strategies for effective reading at a basic level. Students at this level are expected to read both inside and outside the classroom in order to improve and refine their reading skills. Students will practice a number of reading strategies for reading faster, understanding vocabulary in context and will practice using strategic reading skills. Discussion and small group work follow reading selections to help develop critical reading and thinking skills. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 04200 - Intermediate Reading Comprehension |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. This course focuses on skills and strategies for effective academic reading. Students at this level are expected to read extensively, both inside and outside the classroom, in order to improve and refine their reading skills. Students practice a number of reading strategies for reading faster, understanding vocabulary in context and will practice using strategic reading skills. Discussion and small group work follow reading selections to help develop critical reading and thinking skills. The increase in contact hours will provide the time needed for effective instruction. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 04300 - Advanced Reading Comprehension |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. This is an advanced reading course that focuses on skills and strategies for effective academic reading. Students at this level are expected to read extensively, both inside and outside the classroom, in order to improve and refine their reading skills. Students practice a number of reading strategies for reading faster and understanding vocabulary in context. Discussion and small group work follow reading selections to help develop critical reading and thinking skills. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 04500 - Academic Study Skills |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. This is an elective for students with Advanced skill level designed to provide students with additional instruction in reading, writing, or listening and speaking. Each section of this course will approach academic study skills through a different theme and skill emphasis, such as film, reading and writing short stories, etc. This course may not be substituted for English 10400 or English 10500, nor be counted toward degree requirements. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 05100 - Topics In English As A Second Language |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. This is a variable title, variable contact hour (0 to 6) course and is available for students at all skill levels. May be repeated as topics vary. This course may not be substituted for English 10400 or English 10500, nor be counted toward degree requirements. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 10000 - English Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. For first-year students needing intensive instruction in the fundamentals of English composition as preparation for enrollment in other composition courses. Upon completion of this course, students will be assigned to subsequent composition courses according to the teacher's recommendation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
|
| ENGL 10100 - English Composition I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The first half of the basic composition sequence. Extensive practice in writing clear and effective prose. Instruction in logic, structure, and style. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Intended to help students write clear and effective prose for their work at the University and beyond. It includes the study of the writing process, matters of grammar, structure and style, and entails extensive practice in the writing and revising of expository essays.
|
| ENGL 10200 - English Composition II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The second half of the basic composition sequence. Extensive practice in writing clear and effective prose. Instruction in logic, structure, and style. Students who receive an "A" in ENGL 10100 may, with their school's approval, substitute an elective course in English for ENGL 10200. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Lafayette
|
| ENGL 10300 - Comprehensive First Year Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An accelerated composition course that substitutes for ENGL 101 for students showing superior writing ability. Students who pass ENGL 103 are excused from ENGL 102; those who fail ENGL 103 must take ENGL 101. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 10400 - English Composition I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis on the organization of the expository theme. Directed writings of themes based on personal experience, on the relationship between experience and language, and on the relationship between experience and ideas. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 10500 - English Composition II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The secon half of the basic composition sequence. Extensive practice in writing clear and effective prose. Instruction in logic, structure, and style. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 10600 - First-Year Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Extensive practice in writing clear and effective prose. Instruction in organization, audience, style, and research-based writing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
NOTE: Concurrent registration is not permitted for ENGL 10600 and COM 11400.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Exempt, Lower Division, GTC-Written Communication, GTC-Information Literacy, UC-Written Communication, UC-Information Literacy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENGL 10800 - Accelerated First-Year Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An accelerated composition course that substitutes for ENGL 10600 for students showing superior writing ability. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Exempt, Lower Division, GTC-Written Communication, GTC-Information Literacy, UC-Written Communication, UC-Information Literacy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 18600 - College Reading And Study Skills |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasizes development of effective textbook reading and review strategies, acquisition of college-level vocabulary, utilization of library resources, improvement of such classroom learning skills as lecture note-taking and test taking. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 20100 - The Nature Of Literary Study |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of literary concepts and critical procedures as applied to representative poetry, fiction, and drama, with practice in critical writing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
|
| ENGL 20300 - Introduction To Research For Professional Writers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to research sources and methods useful for professional writers, including electronic resources. Focus on collecting print and online information, interviewing, surveying, and conducting observations; and on evaluating, summarizing, analyzing, and reporting research. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 20400 - Special Topics In Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course in writing, with the special topic selected by the instructor. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 20500 - Introduction To Creative Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Practice in writing short prose narratives and poetry for students who have finished composition and wish to develop their skills further. Workshop criticism. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
CTL:IEL 1230 Introduction To Creative Writing
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENGL 21600 - Ethics And Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A consideration of ethical questions through analysis of literary texts. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Recognize different ethical perspectives and concepts in literary texts.
2. Recognize ethical issues in the complex, multilayered context of a literary text.
3. Apply different ethical perspectives to literary situations, and consider the implications of this application.
4. Gain experience exploring their own core beliefs in relation to those encountered in literary texts.
5. Staking out and defending ethical positions relative to those of peers and those encountered in literary texts.
|
| ENGL 22000 - Technical Report Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of application of the principles of good writing in industrial reporting with emphasis on the techniques of presenting information graphically as well as in a clear, concise written form. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 22100 - Introduction To Shakespeare |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the works of William Shakespeare. Attention to the challenges of poetic compression and Elizabethan English, the dense web of allusiveness in the plays, their staging and self-conscious theatricality, the historical and cultural surroundings, and the extravagant afterlife of Shakespeare around the world. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| ENGL 22700 - Elements Of Linguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A summary of what is known about human language, its structure, its universality, and its diversity; language in its social setting; language in relation to other aspects of human inquiry and knowledge. Credit will not be awarded for both ENGL 22700 and LC 26100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:IEL 1260 Introduction To Linguistics
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 23000 - Great Narrative Works |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading and discussion of great narratives from Homer's Odyssey to the present, considering works from a variety of cultures and time periods in order to develop an understanding of their ideas, structures, styles, and cultural values. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 23100 - Introduction To Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading and discussion of great works of various types to develop an understanding of their ideas, structures, and styles. Includes poetry, drama, biography, essay, and prose fiction. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:IEL 1270 Appreciation Of Literature
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENGL 23200 - Thematic Studies In Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of a particular theme, such as the hero, death, or the city, and the techniques by which it is treated in various literary works, usually in more than one genre. Current offerings available from counselors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 23400 - Ecological Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Literary study of nature writing; writing from the natural sciences; and canonical poetry, fiction, and essays through an ecological lens. Introduces students to ecocritical thought and environmental literary history. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 23500 - Introduction To Drama |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading and discussion of plays of various styles from significant periods of dramatic literature aimed at enhancing the understanding and appreciation of the form and content of all drama. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 23600 - Mothers And Daughters In Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (WOST 23600) Course acquaints students with a new body of literature by women. Students explore mother-daughter relationships as presented in this literature to enhance their understanding of feminist approaches to life. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 23700 - Introduction To Poetry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. How to read poetry intelligently; function of diction, metrics, figures of speech, and theme; place of a poem in history, uses of poetry. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
CTL:IEL 1271 Introduction To Poetry
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Lafayette
|
| ENGL 23800 - Introduction To Fiction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading and discussion of short stories and seven novels to promote awareness, understanding, and appreciation of the range, values, techniques, and meanings of modern fiction. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
|
| ENGL 23900 - Introduction To Biography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading and discussion of modern biographies and influential earlier texts. Special attention given to the history of biographical writing and to the study of biography as a recognizable form of writing and a means of understanding and ordering human experience. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 24000 - Survey Of The British Literature: From The Beginnings Through The Neoclassical Period |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Surveys authors, periods, and themes of British literature from the beginnings through the eighteenth century. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 24100 - Survey Of The British Literature: From The Rise Of Romanticism To The Modern Period |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Surveys authors, periods, and themes of British literature from the later eighteenth century through the modern period. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 24300 - Introduction To Theories Of Rhetoric And Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is intended to familiarize students with major theories of rhetoric, beginning with Aristotle and continuing to the present century, and to show how the profession of writing has developed historically. One-half the semester will be devoted to ideas of rhetoric and composition, and one-half will give students practice in applying these theories. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| ENGL 25000 - Great American Books |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected works, such as The Scarlett Letter, Moby Dick, Uncle Tom's Cabin, Walden, Huckleberry Finn, Absalom, Absalom!, Their Eyes Were Watching God, Native Son, and Beloved, closely read and discussed as to their literary qualities and their cultural significance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 25700 - Literature Of Black America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of literature written by black American authors. Close attention is paid to the history of black literature and to the historical context in which it was written, as well as to the texts of major works by black writers. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 25800 - Nobel Prize Winners In Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of global issues, especially ethics, economics, education, media and environment, through a close reading of Nobel Prize winners in literature. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 26000 - Introduction To World Literature: To 1700 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comparison of some of the major works of world literature in translation, from the beginnings to 1700. Emphasis on Greek, Roman, Eastern and early European literature. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 26100 - Introduction To World Literature: Since 1700 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comparison of some of the major works of world literature in translation, from 1700 to present. Emphasis on Continental, African, Latin-American and Eastern literature. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 26200 - Greek And Roman Classics In Translation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of important works of Greek and Roman literature, their intrinsic literary values, and their influence on later European and American writing and thinking. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 26400 - The Bible As Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of selections from the Old and New Testaments as examples of Hebrew and early Christian literature. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 26600 - World Literature: From The Beginnings To 1700 A.D. |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (CMPL 26600) World literature in translation. A comparative and chronological survey of the masterpieces of Eastern and Western literature. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 26700 - World Literature: From 1700 A.D. To The Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (CMPL 26700) World literature in translation. A comparative and chronological survey of the masterpieces of Eastern and Western literature. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 27600 - Shakespeare On Film |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Considers the relation of the written text of five or six Shakespeare plays to multiple film versions from a wide variety of times and cultures, e.g., the United States, England, France, Italy, Japan, Denmark, India, and Russia. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 27900 - The American Short Story In Print And Film |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of American short stories of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, their filmed versions, their printed scenarios, and critical writings about the tales and their adaptations. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 28600 - The Movies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (Lec/Lab offering at PWL.) The history and aesthetics of the movies from The Great Train Robbery and The Birth of a Nation or Intolerance to contemporary films. Comparison of the cinematic method with the methods of the drama and the novel. One afternoon or evening a week for the screening of films; two periods a week for discussion. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn how films are constructed, how they represent and challenge cultural and aesthetic values, and how they are distributed.
|
| ENGL 30100 - Ways Of Reading |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Close reading of and significant writing about selected literary texts informed by a variety of critical and/or theoretical perspectives. For English majors and minors only. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 30200 - Publications Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the design, layout and production of various documents using personal computers. Emphasis is given to principles of publication design and page makeup, typography, and the use of personal computers in business publishing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 30400 - Advanced Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed for students who wish additional training in composition beyond the basic requirements. Extensive practice in the writing of mature expository, critical, and argumentative prose. (The course satisfies the Indiana certification requirement of three hours of advanced composition.). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 30600 - Introduction To Professional Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of skill in analyzing rhetorical situations in the workplace. Practice in planning, writing, evaluating, and revising a variety of documents typical of those used in the arts and industry. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 30700 - Written And Oral Communication For Engineers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course focuses on written and oral communication specifically for the environment, with special attention given to purpose, organization, audience analysis, and appropriate situational protocol. Written work emphasizes technical reports, technical descriptions, research skills, principles of document design, collaborative writing, and routine correspondence. Oral work emphasizes project presentations, conference planning and leadership, and small group dynamics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 30800 - Modern English Grammer |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the study of traditional, structural, and generative-transformational analyses of English. Some attention to new directions in grammatical description and application. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 30900 - Computer-Aided Publishing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The development of the ability to write and design documents using electronic publishing technologies. Students will receive instruction in writing, graphics, and publishing software and will write, design, produce, and critique a number of publications. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 31000 - Introduction To Popular Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of mass culture, popular arts and media, including literature (dime novels and westerns), art and architecture (magazine illustrators and prefabricated housing), radio-TV-film, and music (ballads, jazz, rock), from mid-nineteenth century through present day. When appropriate, field trips will be scheduled. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 31100 - Identity In Ethnic American Women's Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of how race, ethnicity, class, and gender influence the construction of female identity and self-worth. Also examined will be the role of the family, community, and media in either advancing or hindering female development. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| ENGL 31200 - Ethnic American Women Writers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores works by women writers of various ethnic backgrounds living and writing in America during the last century. The emphasis is on ways in which a writer's ethnicity informs her writing and influences the content of her literary works. The major purpose is to introduce students to varied cultural voices in dialogue with American traditions as women writers express conflicting experiences within dual cultures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 31300 - African American Women's Fiction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Aftican American Women's Fiction examines novels and short stories produced since the mid-nineteenth cenury, including works by Toni Morrison and Alic Walker, as well as Post-Reconstruction, Harlem Renaissance, modern and contemporary authors as Pauline Hopkins, Nella Larsen, Ann Petry, and Gloria Maylor. The course concentrates on Aftican American women's fictional tradition, including critical theory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 31400 - Modern Poetry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of poetry and poetic forms beginning with the 20th century. The course may examine major figures in North American, British, Continental, and Latin American traditions among others. Emphasis may include studies in prosody, major movements and major themes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 31500 - American Folklore And Folklife in the United States |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to the study of Folklore and Folklife in the United States. The course content will include the basic concepts of oral traditions, customs, and material culture. Students will complete a semester project of collecting and analyzing some expression of Folklore and Folklife. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 31600 - Craft Of Fiction From A Writer's Perspective |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the craft of fiction with some consideration of its underlying principles from a writer's perspective. Topics of study may include works of fiction, statements of aesthetics and craft, and various fictional forms. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain perspective on their own fiction by understanding more about the historical context in which they write.
2. Students will both broaden their own repertoire of craft and deepen their relationship to the practice of fiction by established writers.
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| ENGL 31700 - Craft Of Poetry From a Writer's Perspective |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the craft of poetry with some consideration of its underlying principles from a writer's perspective. Topics of study may include works of poetry, statements of aesthetics and craft, and various poetic forms. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain perspective on their own poetry by understanding more about the historical context in which they write.
2. Students will both broaden their own repertoire of craft and deepen their relationship to the practice of fiction by established writers.
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| ENGL 31800 - Graphic Narrative |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the history and aesthetics of graphic narrative. Readings to include a variety of graphic narrative works, with particular attention to the graphic novel, as well as critical and analytical resources such as Scott McCloud's Understanding Comics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| ENGL 31900 - Creative Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the writing of genres traditionally considered as creative, such as short stories, drama, poetry, and creative non-fiction. Workshop criticism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. To learn the principles of various forms of creative writing.
2. To create documents showing various forms of creative writing.
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| ENGL 32000 - By And About Women |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (WOST 320) Course emphasizes significant texts by major women writers such as Atwood, the Brontes, Cather, Chopin, Dickinson, Eliot, Glaspell, Hurston, Jewett, Lessing, Mansfield, Morrison, Oates, Rich, and Woolf. Although the class will study mainly 19th and 20th century it is not restricted to these. In addition, the readings will also include a variety of literary genres: novel, short fiction, poetry, and drama. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| ENGL 32300 - Sexual Identity In Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores how sexual identity informs literary works. Fiction, poetry, drama, personal narrative, and essays from lesbian, bisexual, gay, and transgendered (LGBT) writers may be included. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| ENGL 32400 - International Women's Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (WOST 324) Course presents an international perspective on women's social, political, economic and imaginative lives. The major emphasis will be global literatures from Africa, the Americas, Asia and the Middle East. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| ENGL 32500 - International Short Story |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course concentrates on an international selection of stories from both the Eastern and Western Hemispheres. Students will read, discuss and write about stories from Asia, Africa, the Americas and the Middle East, among other places. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| ENGL 32600 - English Linguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the nature and structure of language, as well as the study of dialects, semantics, and history of the language. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| ENGL 32700 - English Language I: History And Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the history of the English language, its sounds, inflections, words, and sentence structures. Cultural and historical events affecting this history, and the interplay between language and literature. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| ENGL 32800 - English Language II: Structure And Meaning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The structure of American English and its dialects, with emphasis on syntax and semantics, including parts of speech, sentence structure, and meaning. Implications of recent theory for the teaching of English. Credit will not be given for both ENGL 32800 and LING 32100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ENGL 32900 - English Language III: Sound And Form |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The structure of American English and its dialects, with emphasis on phonology and morphology. Implications of recent theory to the teaching of English. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ENGL 33100 - Medieval English Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of Saxon and Medieval English literature (700-1500 A.D.) through intensive reading of Old English heroic, elegiac, and religious poetry and Middle English romance, allegory, lyric, and drama, exclusive of Chaucer. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| ENGL 33300 - Renaissance English Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of Renaissance literature in England through an intensive reading of representative works by such authors as Spenser, Jonson, and Donne (Shakespeare's plays not included.). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| ENGL 33500 - Restoration And Eighteenth-Century English Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of Restoration and eighteenth-century literature through an intensive reading of representative works by such authors as Dryden, Pope, Swift, and Johnson (the novel and the drama excluded for the most part). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| ENGL 33700 - Nineteenth-Century English Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of Romantic and Victorian literature through an intensive reading of representative works by such authors as Wordsworth, Byron, Keats, Tennyson, Browning, and Arnold (the novel excluded). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| ENGL 33900 - Twentieth-Century British Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on twentieth-century British literature, with attention given to major cultural and historical movements, canonical and emerging authors, various genres. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| ENGL 34000 - Literature By Women Of Color |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on literature written in English by women of color living in the United States. Writers included are of African-American, Native-American, Asian-American, and Latino/Hispanic decent. The course introduces students to the emerging body of writing by women of color, heightening awareness and appreciation of these women's literary contributions, ENGL 34000 examines some of the cultural differences among these groups, as reflected in the literature. The course also explores obstacles, particularly those related to race, gender, and class, that women of color share. Finally, the course enhances understanding of the experiences shared by women from all cultures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| ENGL 34100 - Topics In Science, Literature, And Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on issues in and representation of science and technology in various texts, including literature, film, science, and theory. May be repeated for credit only under a different topic. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
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| ENGL 35000 - Survey Of American Literature From Its Beginnings To 1865 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasizes such major literary figures as Edward Taylor, Franklin, Poe, Hawthorne, Melville, Emerson, Thoreau, and Whitman. The course also treats significant minor writers in relation to literary movements and ideas and includes the works of minority writers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:IEL 1210 American Literature I
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| ENGL 35100 - Survey Of American Literature From 1865 To The Post-World War II Period |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasizes such major literary figures as Dickinson, Twain, James, Crane, Frost, T. S. Eliot, Fitzgerald, Hemingway, and Faulkner. The course also treats significant minor writers in relation to literary movements and ideas and includes the works of minority writers. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
CTL:IEL 1211 American Literature II
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| ENGL 35200 - Native American Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of literature by Native American authors in a variety of genres-novels, short stories, poetry, autobiography--using literary analysis, as well as historical, legal, and ethnographic materials. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ENGL 35400 - Asian American Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of Asian American Literature covering issues such as immigration, identity, class, and gender. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ENGL 35500 - African American Literature Slavery To 1940 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the literary, social, and historical significance of major works of fiction, drama, poetry, and nonfiction. The course begins during slavery, continues through the reconstruction and post-reconstruction periods, and finishes at the conclusion of the Harlem Renaissance. Readings will be explored, when appropriate, with attention to the influence of folklore and music. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Survey and mastery of African American fiction, poetry, and drama beginning with slavery and ending in 1940.
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| ENGL 35600 - American Humor |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Humorous writings of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries are studied as to form and technique and also as a reflection of American life. Special emphasis on Mark Twain. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
|
| ENGL 35800 - Black Drama |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A critical analysis and discussion of selected representative works by African American dramatists - from William Wells Brown to the moderns. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ENGL 35900 - Black Women Writers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (AAS 35900) This course introduces students to the rich and varied literary texts produced by black women writers. Literary analysis, along with a consideration of historical, cultural, gender, and racial contexts will be emphasized. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ENGL 36000 - Gender And Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to feminist approaches to the study of literature, including poetry, drama, fiction, and/or autobiography. Examines how gender intersects with race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, and class in shaping authorship, reading, and representation. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
West Lafayette
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| ENGL 36300 - African American Literature Slavery 1940 To Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of ENGL 35500, this course surveys major works of fiction, poetry, drama, and non-fiction from the 1940s and 1950s, through the Black Arts Era of the 1960s and 1970s, and up to the present. Readings will be explored, when appropriate, with attention to the influence of folklore and music. Typically offered Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Survey and mastery of African American fiction, poetry, and drama from 1940 to present day.
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| ENGL 36500 - Literature And Imperialism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study through cultural and theoretical works of the impact of imperialism on the ruling nations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| ENGL 36600 - Postcolonial Literatures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of Third World Literature, film, and theory that emerged during and after Western rule. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| ENGL 36800 - Sociolinguistic Study Of African American English |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ANTH 36800, AUSL 36800, COM 36800, LC 36800, IDIS 37800, LING 36800) A study of the history, structure, uses, and educational concerns of African American English in African American speech communities and the United States culture at large. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 37000 - Nineteenth-Century American Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on nineteenth-century American literature, with attention given to major cultural and historical movements, canonical and emerging authors, various genres. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 37100 - Twentieth-Century American Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on twentieth-century American literature, with attention given to major cultural and historical movements, canonical and emerging authors, various genres. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| ENGL 37200 - American Folklore |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of Anglo-American traditions: folk tale, song, dance, humor, superstition, games, beliefs, etc., with emphasis on informal discussion of readings, recordings, movies, and lectures. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| ENGL 37300 - Science Fiction And Fantasy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Representative works of science fiction and fantasy examined in relation to both mainstream and popular literature. Emphasis is on technique, theme, and form. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 37500 - British Drama To 1800, Exclusive Of Shakespeare |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of major works of British drama from its medieval beginnings to 1800, including works by such authors as Marlowe, Jonson, Webster, Dryden, Congreve, and Sheridan. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| ENGL 37700 - Major Modern Poetry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The development of new trends in, and the interrelationships among, the poetry of Ireland, Britain, and the United States. Poets central to modernism, such as Yeats, Pound, Eliot, Williams, and Stevens, will be emphasized, and students also will read more recent poets. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| ENGL 37900 - The Short Story |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A historical and critical study of nineteenth- and twentieth-century short stories - Irish, British, American, and Continental. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| ENGL 38100 - The British Novel |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of representative British novels of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries by such authors as Defoe, Fielding, Austen, Dickens, Eliot, and Hardy. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| ENGL 38200 - The American Novel |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of representative American novels of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries by such authors as Cooper, Hawthorne, Melville, Twain, James, and Faulkner. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| ENGL 38300 - Modern Drama: Ibsen To The Absurdists |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of major works of Continental, English, and American drama, including such authors as Ibsen, Chekhov, Shaw, O'Neill, and Beckett. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| ENGL 38600 - History Of The Film To 1938 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the American and European cinema from its origins in technology and realism to the aesthetic implications presented by the coming of sound. Emphasis on the feature film and on the prevalent aesthetic attitudes in the first decades of the motion picture. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 38700 - History Of The Film From 1938 To The Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of international cinema for the period indicated. Emphasis on the feature film and its development as a communication tool, popular art form, medium of personal expression, and self-exploring linguistic system. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 39000 - Practicum In Tutoring Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A practicum to teach undergraduates to teach writing in the one-to-one setting of a writing lab. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 39100 - Composition For English Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of the theory, research, and pedagogy of teaching writing at the secondary level. Topics include the development of writing assignments and related activities, the study of writing process models, and the evaluation of student work in a variety of genres. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 39600 - Studies In Literature And Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course in the study of a special topic directed by an instructor in whose particular field of specialization the content of the course falls. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will think critically about course content.
2. Students will read and write reflectively and critically about course content.
3. Students will engage in course discussions, either online or face-to-face, which encourage critical thought and personal engagement.
|
| ENGL 40000 - Creative Non-Fiction Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of creative nonfiction sub-genres and techniques. Practice in the craft of short creative nonfiction writing. Workshop environment. Instructor permission required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. To learn the principles of creative non-fiction.
2. To create various documents of creative non-fiction.
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| ENGL 40100 - English Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Led by a faculty member, students will attend and prepare public events such as talks, performances, workshops, exhibits, colloquia, etc. that represent the scope of English studies. Required of all students enrolled in the honors program in English. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
|
| ENGL 40200 - English Honors Capstone |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will focus on the significant revision and completion of a research paper or substantial portfolio. Workshop, individual conferences, readings, lectures, short writing assignments, and discussion of various topics in English scholarship will form the center of the course. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ENGL 40300 - Literary Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This seminar addresses three major concerns in the study of literature: the problem and the possibility of theory; the problems of canon, form and genre; and the problems of meaning and significance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 40400 - Web Page Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides students with a theoretical understanding of and practical training in developing Web sites. Students will learn the basics of HTML, and working with Java and Javascript. Emphasis is on analysing real-world contexts (e.g., promotional, informational, instructional) and users of Web sites while authoring texts that meet these needs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 40600 - Review Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive practice in the writing of book, film, and theatre criticism, as well as reviews of musical programs and art exhibits. Readings in critics to serve as possible models. Audience analysis of newspapers and periodicals that would be potential markets. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 40700 - Introduction To Poetry Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of basic methods of composing poetry, with primary emphasis on the student's own work, submitted frequently during the semesters. Workshop criticism. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| ENGL 40800 - Creative Writing Capstone |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will focus on the writing and revision of the capstone thesis in Creative Writing, consisting of a substantial portfolio of either fiction or poetry with an introductory essay. Workshop and individual conferences will form the center of the course with readings, lecture, and discussion of various literary topics to be determined by the instructors. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 40900 - Introduction To Fiction Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Writing of several short fictional narratives. Study of short story techniques in published stories and student manuscripts. Workshop criticism. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| ENGL 41000 - Introduction To Creative Nonfiction Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Writing of several short works of creative nonfiction. Study of creative nonfiction techniques in published texts and student manuscripts. Workshop criticism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Pursue their interest in a particular genre of creative writing
2. Develop an extended portfolio of work
3. Learn more about the contemporary scene of creative nonfiction writing, and seek out models for their own work
4. Learn about opportunities for presentation and publication of their work
|
| ENGL 41010 - Virtual Worlds |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides students with an opportunity to live/work for one semester as an avatar in a virtual world. During this time, students will become part of different inworld communities, produce an ongoing research project that documents their experiences, and transform/repurpose that experience into a 3-D virtual learning space. Additionally, students will acquire skills in building, scripting, and creating machinima. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn about inworld communities, produce research, create a 3-D learning space, learn to build machinima.
|
| ENGL 41100 - Studies In Major Authors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the literary, critical, or cinematic works of one or two influential authors or directors. May be repeated for credit only with a different topic. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 41101 - Introduction To Writing In The Health Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (COM 41101). This course provides an introduction to four areas of writing in the health sciences: Patient education materials, pharmaceutical documentation, medical editing, and medical journalism. The course will involve lectures, guest speakers, team work, and a real world project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn to write patient education materials, pharmaceutical documentation, medical editing, and medical journalism.
|
| ENGL 41200 - Studies In Genre |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of literary or cinematic works that share distinctive formal features. May be repeated for credit only with a different topic. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| ENGL 41300 - Studies In Literature And History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of literature or film produced during a particular well-defined historical period from the point of view of its social, political, religious, and economic contexts. May be repeated for credit only with a different topic. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| ENGL 41400 - Studies In Literature And Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of literature or film from the perspective of the cultural norms and values it expresses, celebrates, challenges, and imaginatively opposes. May be repeated for credit only with a different topic. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| ENGL 41401 - Introduction To Writing In The Health Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to four areas of writing in the health sciences: patient education materials, pharmaceutical documentation, medical editing, and medical journalism. The course will involve lectures, guest speakers, team work, and a real world project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn to write patient education materials, pharmaceutical documentation, medical editing, and medical journalism.
|
| ENGL 41700 - Peer Mentoring Of International Students |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Instruction on intercultural awareness, mentorship, leadership, and education. Daily interactions with peer international students enrolled in the English Language Program. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Through reading, training, practical experience and everyday interaction with international students, students in this class will hone their leadership and cross-communication skills that may be
applied to a variety of professional fields, including international business, management, marketing, communication, etc.
|
| ENGL 41800 - Short Fiction Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of short techniques and practice in the craft of short story literary fiction writing. Workshop environment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. To learn the principles of short story writing.
2. To create short stories.
|
| ENGL 41900 - Multimedia Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Multimedia writing for networked contexts. Emphasizes principles, and practices of multimedia design, implementation, and publishing. Typical genres include Web sites, interactive media, digital video, visual presentations, visual argument, and user documentation. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 42000 - Business Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Workplace writing in networked environments for management contexts. Emphasizes organizational context, project planning, document management, ethics, research, team writing. Typical genres include management memos, reports, letters, e-mail, resumes (print and online), oral presentations. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENGL 42100 - Technical Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Workplace writing in networked environments for technical contexts. Emphasizes context and user analysis, data analysis/display, project planning, document management, usability, ethics, research, team writing. Typical genres include technical reports, memos, documentation, Web sites. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ENGL 42300 - Writing Computer Documentation Manuals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to teach the student how to create software documentation, using contemporary management methods and the state-of-the-art capabilities of the personal computer. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 42400 - Writing For The Computer Industry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Applies principles of effective professional writing to the planning, production, and evaluation of computer user manuals and other writing tasks. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 42501 - Writing For New Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course invites students to explore the emergence of “new” media (primarily online, interactive digital media) both in theory and in practical production terms as writers; students will examine how researchers define new media and experiment with repurposing traditional forms of print media to meet these challenges. Topics will include participatory culture, convergence theory, knowledge communities, transmedia production, among others. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. To research and write about various forms of new media and how they are distributed in online spaces.
2. To understand the concepts associated with researching new media (for example: participatory culture, knowledge communities, transmedia navigation, among others) and produce research-based writing projects to demonstrate that understanding.
3. To take an existing print-based project of the student’s own work and repurpose it in light of concepts learned throughout the course.
|
| ENGL 42600 - Discourse Communities In Professional Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course examines business and technical writers as two separate, yet related, discourse communities and explores to what extent various influences, such as classical rhetoric, modern discourse theory, cognitive psychology, and organizational climate, may shape how members of these communities define, think about, and practice the art of writing. Class will explore how these theoretical approaches may account for interactions between writer, audience, text and subject matter. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 42700 - Senior Writng Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course consists of a research and writing project in professional writing. Such a project should be a culmination of student coursework in professional writing, including the internship or supervised writing. As determined by the instructor in consultation with the student, projects may be in technical writing, business or industrial report writing, technical or scientific journalism, or literary journalism. Individual conferences only; no class meetings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 42800 - Special Topics In Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course in the study of a special topic directed by an instructor in whose particular field of specialization the content of the course falls. Sample topics include writing in the medical field, writing and technology, or publicity and promotional writing. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 42900 - Supervised Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Special writing projects for students in the Writing Option. Individual conferences only; no class meeting. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 43000 - Professional Copy Editing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course offers practice in the skills associated with copy editing including editing for grammar, word usage, and publishing style. Students will also learn about fact checking, page layout/design, and the reference books commonly used by copy editors. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| ENGL 43100 - Web Usability: Writing And Reading On The Web |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course assists students in writing effective Web-based content and understanding how to make Web sites usable. Course examines how users interact with Web sites, how/when sites are successful, and how/when they are not. Students will learn how to write effective online content for Web and Intranets/Extranets, understand usability issues, and conduct user testing of Web sites. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 43500 - Topics In Writing For Interactive Digital Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on examining a specific topic related to writing for interactive digital media. Sample topics include writing for Web-based shared or social media, such as blogs, wikis, and social networks, editing online content, or digital storytelling, among others. Specific attention paid to applications and examples in the areas of education, business, and entertainment. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| ENGL 43600 - Writing For Informational Interactive Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides an introduction to writing for informational interactive media. Material presented includes: the role of the interactive writer, thinking interactively, interactive structure, script format and the special challenges of presenting information interactively. We will study sample informational interactive programs and scripts including: e-learning, educational and reference CDs and DVDs, and multimedia exhibits, among others. Students will create an original design proposal for an informational interactive application with flowchart, script, and treatment. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 43700 - Writing For Video Games |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides an introduction to writing for narrative interactive media. Material presented includes: the role of the interactive writer, thinking interactively, interactive structure, script format, digital storytelling and the special challenges of presenting information interactively. We will study sample narrative interactive programs and scripts including computer/video games, simulations, and worlds, among others. Students will create an original design proposal for a narrative interactive application with flowchart, script, and treatment. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 44000 - Chaucer's Troilus And Criseyde |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Critical readings of Troilus and Criseyde and related works in Middle English, with attention to the literary and cultural background. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 44100 - Chaucer's Canterbury Tales |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Critical reading of The Canterbury Tales in Middle English, with attention to the literary and cultural background. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 44200 - Shakespeare |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Shakespeare's dramatic craftsmanship, poetry, humor, characterization, psychology, and modern pertinence illustrated in representative tragedies, comedies, and history plays. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Lafayette
|
| ENGL 44400 - Milton |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An in-depth study of Milton's work, including some of his early lyric poems, prose, and major works-Paradise Lost, Paradise Regained, and Samson Agonistes. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 45100 - Feature Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (COM 45100) Examination of magazine staff organization, market analysis, and editorial consent. Study of, and practice in, the writing of a variety of nonfiction materials. Emphasis is on the adaptation of topics and presentation of editorial policies and reader groups. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn to write a variety of nonfiction materials, the adaptation of topics and presentation, and about editorial policies and reader groups.
|
| ENGL 45500 - Main Currents Of American Thought |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of dominant ideas and intellectual trends in America from 1607 to the present as revealed through American literature and as related to American life and culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 46000 - Studies In Women's Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of literary works by women according to a specific theme, historical period, genre, or culture, e.g., Nineteenth-Century Women Novelists, Madness in Women's Writing, Caribbean Women Writers. May be repeated only with different topic. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 46200 - The Bible As Literature: The Old Testament |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the Old Testament - Pentateuch, Prophets, and other books such as Psalms, Proverbs, Job, and Ecclesiastes - with emphasis on its unique literary characteristics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 46300 - The Bible As Literature: The New Testament |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the New Testament, with emphasis on its unique literary characteristics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 46600 - Cultural Encounters |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of cross-cultural works that address the encounters of the First and the Third worlds and the subsequent reshaping of history and culture in both contexts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 46800 - Problems In The History Of Criticism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the history of literary criticism and theory through study of selected key terms, debates, figures, and texts. Concentration on such topics as representation, authorship, literary form, and interpretation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 46900 - Issues In Contemporary Criticism And Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of recent critical movements and texts. Emphasis on methods of literary analysis, including philosophical, cultural, and formalist approaches. Discussion of, for example, structuralist, psychoanalytic, feminist, Marxist, poststructuralist, and emerging non-Western critical schools. The teaching schedule may incorporate screening time. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 47000 - Theories Of Rhetoric And Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A general introduction to the field of rhetoric and composition. Overview of studies in written discourse, including studies of the processes and contexts of written discourse as well as methods of research in the field. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 47900 - The Short Story |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An historical and critical study of nineteenth and twentieth century short stories: Irish, British, American, Continental. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 48000 - Internship In Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Assigned internships in business, industrial and other professional situations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 48800 - Internship In Professional Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. This course provides on-the-job experience in various kinds of professional writing, combined with a seminar in applied rhetoric. Students work in selected internship settings, participate in seminar discussions of their work, and read selections appropriate to their internship. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 49000 - Worksite Internship Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Course facilitates the transition between an English undergraduate degree and the workplace or professional life. The course has two components: a professor-guided component and a practicum component in a chosen area. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Individual Study
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| ENGL 49101 - Special Topics In English Language And Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Each time the course is taught, it will focus on a topic that is not currently offered in the catalogue. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Provide in-depth study of a specific topic in English literature and language.
|
| ENGL 49200 - Literature In The Secondary Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of the theory, research and pedagogy supporting the teaching of literature at the secondary level. Topics include text selection, instructional strategies, adolescent literacy, student engagement and the use of alternative texts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 49400 - Research Practicum For Undergraduates |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. This course introduces students to research techniques and trains them to participate in a research laboratory or a professor-sponsored research project. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| ENGL 49500 - Capstone Seminar For Seniors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This seminar trains senior English majors in advanced research and writing in the field of English. Students complete a substantial research project, on a topic of their interest chosen in consultation with the instructor, that demonstrates the skills and knowledge they have gained through their coursework in the English major. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| ENGL 50100 - Introduction To English Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to graduate studies in English with special emphasis on research and reference tools, methods of bibliography, and the writing of scholarly papers. Prerequisite: Fulfillment of the basic composition requirement and 6 credit hours in English. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 50200 - Practicum In Teaching College Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Reading professional literature, preparing syllabi; evaluating student papers, leading discussions. Required of all teaching assistants in their initial semesters. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 50400 - Practicum In The Teaching Of English Composition I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Prepares new graduate aides in the Department of English and Philosophy to teach freshman English. Orients new graduate aides to issues in college and provides practice in applications of those issues. This course is not, however, part of the master's degree requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 50500 - Approaches To Teaching College English |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading professional literature on the teaching of writing, linguistics, and ESL. Studies of methodologies, issues of assessment, and the relationship between theory and pedagogy. This course is not part of the degree requirement. Open only to teaching assistants in the Department of English. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture 1, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 50600 - Introduction To English And General Linguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. General study of language and linguistic theory with emphasis on English. Problems and methods in phonology, morphology, syntax, and semantics. Current techniques of linguistics analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 50700 - Poetry Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A workshop for those experienced in the writing of poetry. Criticism by class and instructor. Study of the work of established writers. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 50900 - Fiction Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the techniques of writing short stories. Workshop. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 51000 - History Of The English Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to theories of linguistic change and their application to the historical development of English from its beginnings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 51100 - Semantics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (AUSL 58800) An introduction to and survey of current semantic theories and methods with an emphasis on English. Basic concepts of linguistic semantics and its relation to the other semantics. Compositional (transformational), model-theoretical (truth-conditional), pragmatic, and contextual semantics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 51200 - English Syntax And Syntactic Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to English syntactic structure, syntactic argumentation, and syntactic theory. Emphasis on one current theory as the primary theoretical framework, with other theories considered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 51300 - English Phonology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to current phonological theory, with applications to descriptions of American and British English. Articulatory description of English phonological structure and contrastive analysis of phonetic variation across dialects. Evolution of the stress system of English and its utilization by poets writing metrical verse. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 51500 - Advanced Professional Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Production of documents and coordination of publishing projects for clients and users; application of advanced principles of document design, rhetoric, collaboration, and project management; and team writing in a computer-networked environment. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 51600 - Teaching English As A Second Language: Theoretical Foundations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of theories of learning and teaching English as a second/foreign/international language. Focus is on current theories and their implications for practice. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 51800 - Teaching English As A Second Language: Principles And Practices |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Studies of issues and principles in ESL/EFL program development. Emphasis is on practical application of theory in a variety of English learning and teaching contexts in the U.S. and abroad. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 52700 - Medieval Drama In English Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of representative mysteries, moralities, and folk plays in their social, political, and religious contexts. Consideration of critical issues including patronage, carnival, subjectivity, and audience reception. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 52800 - Medieval English Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of selected works of Medieval English literature (700-1500 C.E.), exclusive of Chaucer's writings. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 52900 - Language Study For Educators |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDCI 52600). Covers foundational knowledge in language and linguistics for teachers and educational researchers. Topics include structure and functions of language, language acquisition and development, language diversity, classroom discourse, language and media, and literacy-language arts curriculum. A foundation for work in Literacy and Language Education. Typically offered Summer Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. An understanding of the complex workings of language.
2. Practice in the systematic observation of language use.
3. Familiarity with relevant literature in the field and the ability to critically evaluate and discuss this literature.
4. Opportunity to engage in analytic and integrative thinking and writing.
5. Understanding of the ideas and aims that structure the use of language in the classroom.
|
| ENGL 53000 - English Language Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDCI 53000). Focuses on theoretical and practical knowledge for teachers about how second languages are learned, and on the educational and philosophical basis for second language teaching and learning. Links English language development to teaching and learning strategies and is designed for undergraduate and graduate students in education and practicing teachers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop increased understanding of the English language development process by English language learners (ELLs).
2. Describe the importance of the changing demographics in the U.S. and Indiana as they relate to ELLs.
3. Explore the literacy development of ELLs in broader sociocultural contexts.
4. Describe the importance of explicit teaching and the oral and written language development for ELLs.
5. Develop understanding of the nature and role of culture in language development and academic achievement, considering the development of literacy and biliteracy by ELLs.
6. Explore how individual differences affect English development.
7. Gain experience in identifying the learning challenges of ELLs and assessing ELLs’ learning in P-12 classrooms.
8. Collaborate with colleagues in activities and assignments and in planning to build partnerships with ELLs’ families.
9. Develop understanding of their roles as ELL teachers and professionals in advocating on behalf of ELLs.
10. Discuss the role of the teacher in the English language development of ELLs.
|
| ENGL 53100 - The Rise Of The Novel |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the history and theory of the emergent novel genre as it developed in 18th-century Britain and/or America. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 53200 - The English Novel In The Nineteenth Century |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of fiction up to about 1880, including such novelists as Scott, Dickens, Thackeray, the Brontes, Eliot, and Meredith. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 53400 - Seventeenth-Century Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Nondramatic literature from 1603 to 1660. Particular emphasis upon such figures as Jonson, Donne, Marvell, and Herbert, with representative prose from Bacon, Browne, Burton, and others. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 53500 - Restoration And Early Eighteenth-Century Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of nondramatic literature from 1660 to 1744, from Clarendon through Thomson. Emphasizes Bunyan, Dryden, Pope, and Swift. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 53700 - Drama In Early Modern England |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of plays by Marlowe, Jonson, Middleton, Webster, and others with attention to poetics, dramatic structure, and recent critical and cultural theory. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 53800 - English Drama From The Restoration To The Modern Period |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of English drama from Dryden and Wycherley through Robertson and Pinero. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 54100 - Studies In Chaucer's Canterbury Tales |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Critical reading of The Canterbury Tales and related works in Middle English, with attention to the literary and cultural background and to secondary studies. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 54200 - Shakespeare's Dramatic Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of Shakespeare's plays within the dramatic tradition of comedy, tragedy, history, and romance. Consideration of matters such as poetics, dramatic structure and conventions, and textual problems. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 54300 - Shakespeare In Critical Perspective |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Shakespeare's plays read in context of historical and contemporary literary theory and criticism, considering such issues and approaches as structuralism, Marxism, deconstruction, new historicism, colonialism, sexuality, race, and gender. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 54400 - Milton |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of Milton's poetry and prose, with particular emphasis on Paradise Lost, and some attention to the social, political, and literary background. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 54700 - British Romanticism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Readings from among the works of the High Romantics and other figures; discussion of historical, philosophical, cultural debates of the era, with attention to current critical and theoretical developments in the field. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 54800 - Victorian Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of selected English poetry and prose, largely nonfiction, from circa 1830-1900. Includes readings from such figures as Arnold, Barrett, Bronte, Browning, Carlyle, Mill, Rosetti, Ruskin, and Tennyson. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 54900 - Late Victorian And Edwardian Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the rebellion against Victorian conventions that characterized the period from 1880 to 1910. Such movements as aestheticism, decadence, symbolism, and naturalism are examined in the works of such writers as Conrad, Dowson, Hardy, Mansfield, Schreiner, Wilde, and Yeats. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 55000 - Studies In Major Early British Authors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the works of one or two influential early British authors (700-1800 C.E.), exclusive of Chaucer, Shakespeare, and Milton. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| ENGL 55200 - Studies In Major American Authors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the works of one or two influential American authors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| ENGL 55300 - Colonial And Early American Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of American literature to about 1820. Texts of major and minor authors, such as Bradford, Bradstreet, Rowlandson, and Cooper, are viewed within their cultural context. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 55400 - American Literary Culture 1820-1860 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasizes cultural inventory, definition, and production in early nineteenth-century literary culture. The approach is intertextual, moving back and forth between the emerging culture and literary productions, and between one author and other authors. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 55800 - American Literature In The Later Nineteenth Century |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of American literature from about 1865 to 1900. Addresses realism, regionalism, naturalism, and other related movements. Focuses on such writers as Whitman, Dickinson, Stowe, Davis, Stoddard, Alcott, Twain, Howells, James, Jewett, Chopin, Crane, Chesnutt, and Norris. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 56000 - Modern American Poetry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of modern American poetry. Emphasis will be on major writers such as Eliot, Pound, Frost, Stevens, and Lowell, but attention will be paid to lesser figures. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 56100 - Modern British Poetry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Surveys modern British poetry from Hardy to Auden; relates it to the main currents of modern thought and feeling; introduces critical principles. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 56300 - Historical Linguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ANTH 56300, LC 56300) A survey of mechanisms and motivations of linguistic change. Topics include: phonological, morphological, semantic and syntactic change, comparative and internal reconstruction, linguistic variation, language contact, and linguistic typology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 56500 - Sociolinguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ANTH 56500, COM 56500, LC 56500, LING 56500) An introduction to language in its social context, focusing on uses and users of language. Topics include social class, ethnic group, gender, language attitudes, and bilingualism. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 56900 - Contemporary Criticism And Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of contemporary criticism and theory generally focused on such schools and movements as structuralism, psychoanalysis, poststructuralism, feminism, new historicism, cultural studies, and gay and lesbian studies. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 57000 - Introduction To Semiotics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ANTH 51900, AUSL 58900, COM 50700, LC 57000) The study of languages, literatures, and other systems of human communication. Includes a wide range of phenomena which can be brought together by means of a general theory of signs. The course deals with three fundamental areas: 1) verbal communication, 2) nonverbal communication (iconic systems, gestures, body language, etc.), and 3) communication through art forms. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 57300 - Tragedy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The chief tragic views of life, as illustrated in Greek, Shakespearean, and modern drama, as well as in the novel and poetry, with selected reading on the theory of tragedy. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 57600 - Philosophy And Literary Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (PHIL 57600) Explores the interchanges between philosophy and literary theory that animate such areas as hermeneutics, phenomenology, existentialism, Marxism, feminism, African-American studies, postmodern theory, and cultural studies. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 57800 - Early Twentieth-Century American Fiction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of American fiction from about 1900 to 1945. Addresses naturalism, social realism, modernism, and related movements, and such writers as Dreiser, Wharton, Stein, Lewis, Toomer, Cather, Fitzgerald, Hemingway, Glasgow, Roth, Dos Passos, Miller, Faulkner, Hurston, Wright, and Welty. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 57900 - Modern British Fiction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Critical study of twentieth-century novels, mainly before World War II, by such writers as Conrad, Lawrence, Forster, Joyce, and Woolf. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 58000 - Theories Of Modernity And Postmodernity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of theories and models of modernity and postmodernity, with emphasis on cultural and critical issues. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 58200 - Adopting Composition Theory Into Practice, Northwest Indiana Writing Project Institute |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In-depth examination into various theories surrounding the teaching of writing and the adoption of those theories to actual classroom practice. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Acquire knowledge related to composing, rhetoric, language and how to use this knowledge to provide effective classroom learning.
2. Apply theories underlying composing to the teaching of writing.
3. Apply rhetorical and linguistic theories to teaching writing strategies.
4. Apply composing, rhetorical and linguistic theories to the evaluation of student texts.
5. Discover the basics of composing by writing in a wide range of genres for a variety of audiences.
6. Apply their discoveries to teaching writing.
7. Use technology to apply effective strategies for teaching writing.
|
| ENGL 58300 - U S Ethnic/Multicultural Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A critical examination of multicultural literature or the literature of a particular ethnic group or groups, such as African American, Asian American, Jewish American, Latina/o, Native American. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| ENGL 58500 - Creative Nonfiction Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Creative nonfiction workshop, with emphasis on students' own work submitted frequently during the semester; discussion of creative nonfiction texts. Workshop criticism. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
The course objectives are to develop student's understanding of creative nonfiction craft and to develop students¿ understanding of central concepts of the genre through workshop criticism and discussion and analysis of texts. Students who take this class will gain an understanding of creative nonfiction craft; learn the current central concepts and issues of the genre; improve their oral and written communication skills; improve their creative writing skills; and gain a richer understanding of creative writing craft.
|
| ENGL 58501 - Assessment Of Written Texts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In-depth examination into the various theories surrounding the assessment of written texts, with an emphasis on student texts. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn theories of assessment.
2. Students will learn rhetorical strategies inherent in a variety of genres and subgenres.
3. Students will learn criteria/rubrics for evaluating texts in general and the various genres and subgenres specifically.
4. Students will learn the relationship between the rhetorical strategies inherent in the various genres and subgenres and evaluation of the respective texts.
5. Students will learn various models of assessment.
6. Students will learn the application of various models of evaluation in the classroom.
7. Students will learn the annotation of written texts in relation to an assessment of that text.
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| ENGL 58600 - Theory Of Film |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intensive survey of film theory and aesthetics utilizing both films and written texts. Topics covered include: changing conceptions of film language, theories of authorship and genre, theories of narrative, social theory of film, film aesthetics as related to other forms. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ENGL 58900 - Directed Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Writing (creative, popularly technical, biographical, historical, philosophical) on subjects of the student's choice. Individual conferences only; no class meetings. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 59000 - Directed Reading |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Directs the reading of students with special interests. Guides students in profitable reading in subjects of their own choice. Individual conferences; no class meetings. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 59100 - Introduction To Composition Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of major contemporary theories of invention and style, including such topics as heuristics; the aims and modes of discourse; stylistics; readability theories; sentence-combining; error analysis; audience; and evaluation. Applications to teaching will be made. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 59200 - Postcolonial Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of works from once colonized cultures in Africa, Asia, and the Caribbean, and/or postcolonial diasporas. Individual sections will focus on one or more of the following: literature, women's literature, film, or feminist and cultural theory. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 59300 - Contemporary British Fiction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Critical study of the British novel since World War II. Survey of scholarship and criticism. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 59400 - Contemporary Poetry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of poetry of the past two or three decades, both American and foreign, and their interaction. Attention to influences, "schools," and little magazines, as well as to conventional sources. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 59500 - Contemporary American Fiction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive study of contemporary and postmodern American fiction within various formal, theoretical, and cultural contexts, including multiculturalism, postructuralism, and gender analysis, among others. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 59600 - Advanced Studies In Literature Or Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study of a topic within the instructor's fields of specialization. Emphasis on scholarly analysis and research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Think critically about course content.
2. Read and write reflectively and critically about the course content.
3. Engage in course discussions, either online or face to face, which will encourage critical thought and personal engagement.
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| ENGL 59700 - Contemporary Black Feminist Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intense examination of recent literary works by black women along with various critical theories constructed about black women's literature, beginning with the premise that black feminism is a "sign to be interrogated, a locus of contradictions.". Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 59900 - Academic Language And Content Area Learning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDCI 55900) Course focuses on theoretical and practical knowledge for teachers about how second languages are learned, and on the educational and philosophical basis for second language teaching and learning. The course links English language development to teaching and learning strategies and is designed for undergraduate and graduate students in education and practicing teachers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop an understanding of the linguistic challenges of academic language in the content areas of science, language arts, mathematics, and the social studies for ELLs.
2. Gain experience in determining academic tasks that require advanced levels of reading and writing.
3. Learn about the development of academic literacy as ELLs move from elementary into secondary and postsecondary education.
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| ENGL 60200 - Introduction To Literary Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the methods of literary study, including investigation of significant critical modes, bibliographic techniques, and research paper writing. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGL 60500 - Computers In Language And Rhetoric |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Seminar that investigates how computers figure in contemporary theories of text and text making. Typical topics: critiques of technology, hypertext, cyberspace, computer-mediated communication, Internet, electronic writing, online research, pedagogy, and publishing. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 60600 - Seminar In Poetry Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced course in the writing of poetry. Workshop criticism. Study of the work of established writers. Prerequisite: admission to the MA program in creative writing. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 60700 - The Theory And Craft Of Creative Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the craft of poetry, fiction, or drama with some consideration of underlying theories. Prerequisite: admission to the MA program in creative writing. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 60900 - Seminar In Fiction Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced course in the writing of fiction. Workshop critiques. Prerequisite: Admission to the creative writing program. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 61100 - Old English Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the principal prose and poetry from the beginnings to about 1100. Emphasis on the language. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 61200 - Old English Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of Old English literary works, including heroic poetry, religious epic, elegiac poetry, homilies, and secular prose, illustrative of the early development of English literature and culture. Prerequisite: ENGL 61100. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 61300 - Middle English Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of selected readings from the literature of about 1100 to about 1500. Emphasis on the language. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 61400 - Middle English Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of representative works in the major literary traditions and genres of Middle English literature (exclusive of Chaucer): lyric, romance, satire, and allegory. Detailed examination of major works, such as Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Piers Plowman, and Pearl. Prerequisite: ENGL 61300. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 61500 - A Reading Of Beowulf |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intensive reading of Beowulf in the original with a consideration of background sources and interpretive theories. Prerequisite: ENGL 61100. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 61700 - Contemporary English |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focus is on the form and function of contemporary English as it is used in original texts and on the development of course participants' ability to respond in an informed way to texts written or spoken by others. Prerequisite: ENGL 50600. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 61800 - Quantitative Research In Second Language Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of quantitative research methods and designs associated with second language studies. Prerequisite: ENGL 51600. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 61900 - Qualitative Research In Second Language Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces graduate students to the theoretical concepts and practical tools associated with situated approaches to research in second language studies. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ENGL 62000 - Classroom Communication In ESL For Teaching Assistants |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Student must be enrolled in the Graduate School and a non-native speaker of English. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 62100 - Written Communication For International Graduate Students |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course in English composition for non-native English speaking graduate students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ENGL 62200 - Issues In Composition Studies: Classical Period To The Renaissance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course historicizes issues in composition studies from the sophists to the Renaissance. Prerequisite: ENGL 59100. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 62400 - Issues In Composition Studies: Modern Period |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course historicizes issues in composition studies from the eighteenth century to the mid-twentieth century. Prerequisite: ENGL 59100. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 62500 - Seminar On Empirical Research In Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis and evaluation of empirical research concerned with composing processes, critical literacy, disciplinary writing, various writing cultures, and composition pedagogy. Students will study empirical research designs and develop a project in one of the above areas. Prerequisite: ENGL 59100. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 62600 - Postmodernism And Issues In Composition Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course historicizes how various postmodern theories and practices (cultural, political, ethical, philosophical, technological, aesthetic) influence the study and teaching of written discourse. Prerequisite: ENGL 59100. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 62700 - Seminar In Linguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigation of a topic in advanced linguistics research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 62800 - Natural Language Processing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ECE 66900) This course focuses on keyword-driven question answering systems; transition networks; parsing procedures for context-free grammars; theory of transformational grammars; implementation of recursive transition networks; implementation of augmented transition networks; representation of conceptual dependencies; surface semantic conceptual analysis; conceptual dependency parsing; generating natural language from a conceptual base; scripts, plans, and goals; building conversationalist programs. Prerequisite: ENGL 50600 or ECE 57000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 62900 - Seminar In English As A Second Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In-depth study of variable subjects relating to the nature of English as a second/foreign/international language and its learning and teaching. Prerequisite: ENGL 51600. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 63000 - Seminar In Second Language Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview and examination of major issues in the theory, research, and practice of writing in English as a second language. Prerequisite: ENGL 51600 or 59100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 63100 - World Englishes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigation of the use, spread, and development of English as an international language. Topics include: non-native varieties, language contact and change, new English literatures, and the teaching of English as an international language. Prerequisite: ENGL 50600. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 63300 - Seminar In English Literature Before 1660 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Variable subjects (authors, themes, periods, movements) in English literature from Beowulf to Paradise Lost. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 63500 - Seminar In English Literature 1660-1783 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive consideration of one to three or four authors or of literary topics and genres, such as drama, fiction, literary criticism and literary history, the medieval revival, poetic and prose satire, the periodical essay, biography, etc. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 64200 - Seminar In Shakespeare |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Special topics in Shakespeare criticism, concentrating on one or more plays. Topics such as women in Shakespeare's plays, performance theory and practice, and current theoretical approaches. Students investigate a single topic in depth. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 64700 - Seminar In The Romantic Movement |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A close investigation of the works of one or more outstanding writers of English literature from 1783 to 1832, their place in the Romantic Movement, and their historical and cultural relations to the times. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 64800 - Seminar In Victorian Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A detailed study of the works of one or more figures of English literature from 1832 to 1880: their relation to the literary movements and historical and cultural backgrounds of the age. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 64900 - Seminar In English Literature 1880-1920 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Subjects will range from individual authors and specific literary types to transitional literary movements. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 65700 - Seminar In American Literature 1630-1900 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A variable content seminar on authors, themes, genres, movements, geographic regions, or cultural contexts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 66500 - Seminar In Comparative Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (CMPL 65000and LC 63900) Advanced study of international literary movements, influence thematology, literary theory, and genre development. See Comparative Literature Program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 66700 - Seminar In Poetics And Aesthetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of selected influential figures, concepts, and texts in the history of poetics and aesthetics from ancient times to the present. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 66800 - Seminar In Interpretation And Cultural Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of selected developments in social, cultural, and hermeneutical theories from the eighteenth century to the present. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 67200 - Seminar In Women's Literature And Feminist Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A variable topic course investigating gender as a category of analysis. Intensive study of one or two women authors, of a particular genre or period, or of a critical issue relevant to women's literature and/or feminist theory. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 67300 - Seminar In Postcolonial Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study of works from once-colonized cultures in Africa, Asia, the Caribbean, and/or postcolonial diasporas in the first world. Individual sections will focus on one or more of the following: literature, women's literature, film, and feminist and cultural theory. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 67400 - Seminar In Language Testing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the techniques, practices, and history of language testing. Introduces the basic tenets of measurement and the issues and controversies related to the measurement of language ability. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGL 67700 - Seminar In Modern Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Developments in English, American, and European literature in modern times. Individual seminars will ordinarily be concerned with drama, poetry, or fiction, but may treat all three types together. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 67800 - Seminar In Modern American Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A variable content course, focusing on developments, movements, and authors in modern American literature and culture. Major research project required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 67900 - Seminar In Modern British Fiction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study in depth of one or two major novelists, a literary movement, a group of writers, or a form of modern fiction. Oral reports and research papers required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 68000 - Seminar In Rhetoric And Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A variable content course dealing with topics such as cultural studies and composition, medieval rhetoric, renaissance rhetoric, literacy, historiographies of rhetoric, qualitative studies, and professional writing theory. Prerequisite: ENGL 59100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGL 68100 - Hutton Lectures In Rhetoric And Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading and discussion of the work of contemporary scholarship in rhetoric and composition, accompanied by lectures by visiting scholars. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| ENGL 69000 - Internship In Second Language Studies/ESL |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Part-time or full-time practical work experience in selected situations related to the student’s field of study. The internship must be located at an off-campus site. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Internship
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 15 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will have acquired knowledge of how various institutions function and gained competence in the specific area (e.g., testing/test construction, teaching/teacher education, materials and curriculum design) and will have critically reflected upon the experience.
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| ENGL 69100 - Seminar In The English Language Arts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDCI 61300) Problems in the teaching of English: literature, language, rhetoric. Attention to recent scholarship and to its application in the public schools. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ENGL 69600 - Seminar In Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study of special subjects. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Think critically about course content.
2. Read and write reflectively and critically about the course content.
3. Engage in course discussions, either online or face to face, which will encourage critical thought and personal engagement.
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| ENGL 69800 - Research MA Or MFA Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MA Or MFA Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ENGL 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: English
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ENGL V1020 - English Composition II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continued development of writing skills introduced in ENGL 10100. Students learn how to conduct research and how to base their writing on research. In addition to shorter documented papers, all students are required to write a longer investigative paper that must be fully documented according to MLA standards. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
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| ENGR 10000 - First-Year Engineering Lectures |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An introduction to the engineering profession. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: First Year Engineering
Department: Engineering Education
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
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| ENGR 10100 - Introduction To Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to the profession of engineering. Focus is on academic, career, and personal development success strategies including lifelong learning skills and professional ethics. Assignments and projects are of a multidisciplinary nature. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| ENGR 10200 - Introduction To Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course to introduce students to the field of engineering. The course will give students information regarding engineering; what engineers do, engineering concepts and philosophy. It will help students develop positive attitudes toward their academic careers and orient them toward long term success. The course will illustrate engineering design concepts through the design, building, and testing of simple systems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| ENGR 10300 - Introduction To Careers In Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Weekly small group seminars led by faculty, supplementing First-Year Engineering Lectures, enabling a broader understanding of engineering as a career and providing skills for academic success. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: First Year Engineering
Department: Engineering Education
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| ENGR 10400 - Introduction To Engineering And Purdue |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Weekly small group seminars led by upper-class engineering students supplementing First-Year Engineering Lectures, enabling a broader understanding of engineering disciplines at Purdue and providing skills for transition to the professional schools and academic success. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Presentation 1, Presentation
Offered By: First Year Engineering
Department: Engineering Education
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ENGR 10500 - First-Year Engineering Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A selection of invited lectures, participation exercises, and lab tours designed to acquaint exceptionally well-motivated students with opportunities to enhance their undergraduate engineering education through independent study, special research projects, overseas study, and other opportunities that may be available for students who are inclined to seek extraordinary challenges. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: First Year Engineering
Department: Engineering Education
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ENGR 11700 - First-Year Engineering Honors Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course in computer programming, covering fundamentals of the C programming language. Other language(s) or materials will be covered to prepare Honors students to do the best possible work in their professional school courses. Students will be introduced to structured problem solving and top-down programming techniques. Laboratory exercises will accelerate learning of fundamental materials through supervised repetitive practice, while more traditional individual and team projects will provide practice in the decomposition and solution of larger problems. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: First Year Engineering
Department: Engineering Education
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ENGR 12000 - Graphical Communications And Spatial Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The principles of engineering grapics are applied to the visualization, communication, and graphical analysis of problems. Included are the utilization of sketching and computer-aided design to create and analyze computer generated geometric models, manipulative coordinate systems, generate selective views, conform to graphic and data standards, and interpret engineering drawings. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| ENGR 12100 - Computer tools for Engineers |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to computer software for solving engineering problems. Emphasis on problem solving techniques with applications of modern high-level structured programming languages and spreadsheets: algorithm development, looping techniques, files and data structures, solving linear algebraic equations, simple statistical analysis, and plotting techniques. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ENGR 12600 - Engineering Problem Solving and Computer Tools |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the solving of open-ended engineering problems and the use and of computer software, including UNIXTM, computer communications, spreadsheets, and MATLAB. Explicit model-development activities are utilized, and students are expected to develop skill at working in teams. This is emphasized both in laboratories and on projects. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: First Year Engineering
Department: Engineering Education
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| ENGR 12700 - Engineering Fundamentals I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course introduces students to engineering application, analysis, experimentation, and design. The key focus is on the application of mathematical analysis in solving engineering problems. The course introduces a project-oriented studio that emphasizes team work, communication, project management, and professional/ethical responsibilities. Significant writing is included. A studio component introduces engineering computer tools for visualization and spreadsheet calculation. The course provides an overview of the engineering profession and preparation for success in engineering study. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Formulate and solve engineering problems using linear and quadratic equations.
2. Formulate and solve engineering problems using trigonometry in planar systems.
3. Formulate and solve engineering problems using descriptive statistics
4. Formulate and solve engineering problems using derivatives.
5. Formulate and solve engineering problems using systems of equations.
6. Explain and apply appropriate study and success strategies, concepts and habits to be used in an engineering major and exhibit the work ethics necessary to succeed in engineering.
7. Solve and document the solution of problems involving new elements by using multiple approaches including visual problem solving and problem solving formalisms.
8. Describe the broad nature of various engineering majors and the engineering profession and use this information to make appropriate career choices.
9. Plan and carry out a disciplined experimental study following a systematic project process of project planning and management.
10. Utilize appropriate analytical and computer tools in project work.
11. Communicate effectively using simple memos, properly formatted tables properly formatted following an engineering format and style guideline.
12. Identify and demonstrate the behaviors of an effective team member and/or leader, prepare a project schedule.
13. Explain and apply the concepts of professional and ethical responsibility, evaluate ethical issues in engineering practice in terms of a Code of Ethics apply to ethics as an engineering student.
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| ENGR 12800 - Engineering Fundamentals II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This second course in engineering fundamentals continues the introduction to engineering, applications, analysis, experimentation, and design with a focus on the application of mathematical analysis. The course’s project studio emphasizes team work, project management, and communication with significant writing and speaking and also introduces engineering computer tools for manipulation of data sets and structured programming. The course continues the overview of engineering majors and the engineering profession. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Formulate and solve engineering problems using linear and quadratic equations.
2. Formulate and solve engineering problems using trigonometry in planar systems.
3. Formulate and solve engineering problems using descriptive statistics
4. Formulate and solve engineering problems using derivatives.
5. Formulate and solve engineering problems using systems of equations.
6. Explain and apply appropriate study and success strategies, concepts and habits to be used in an engineering major and exhibit the work ethics necessary to succeed in engineering.
7. Solve and document the solution of problems involving new elements by using multiple approaches including visual problem solving and problem solving formalisms.
8. Describe the broad nature of various engineering majors and the engineering profession and use this information to make appropriate career choices.
9. Plan and carry out a disciplined experimental study following a systematic project process of project planning and management.
10. Utilize appropriate analytical and computer tools in project work.
11. Communicate effectively using simple memos, properly formatted tables properly formatted following an engineering format and style guideline.
12. Identify and demonstrate the behaviors of an effective team member and/or leader, prepare a project schedule.
13. Explain and apply the concepts of professional and ethical responsibility, evaluate ethical issues in engineering practice in terms of a Code of Ethics apply to ethics as an engineering student.
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| ENGR 13100 - Transforming Ideas To Innovation I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A partnership between Schools and Programs within the College of Engineering, introduces students to the engineering professions using multidisciplinary, societally relevant content. Developing engineering approaches to systems, generating and exploring creative ideas, and use of quantitative methods to support design decisions. Explicit model-development activities (engineering eliciting activities, EEAs) engage students in innovative thinking across the engineering disciplines at Purdue. Experiencing the process of design and analysis in engineering including how to work effectively in teams. Developing skills in project management, engineering fundamentals, oral and graphical communication, logical thinking, and modern engineering tools (e.g., Excel and MATLAB). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio, Studio 1
Offered By: First Year Engineering
Department: Engineering Education
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the engineering disciplines at Purdue and the interrelationships among them as well as know what graduates of at least three disciplines of engineering do.
2. Use a problem formulation and solving process to translate written problem statements into a mathematical model that allows for a logical comparison of approaches and tradeoffs in an engineering design.
3. Communicate technical information orally and visually and develop basic knowledge and introductory skills for cross-cultural communication.
4. Explain how an engineering problem solving process in related to a design process.
5. Apply a design process to: generate ideas, model, analyze, predict, and build an innovative object of engineering interest taking into consideration its societal and environmental impact.
6. Implement simple algorithmic solutions to engineering problems and in design using the most appropriate engineering tool.
7. Demonstrate appropriate knowledge and behaviors for effective and ethical membership on a technical team (i.e., teaming skills).
8. Exhibit a work ethic appropriate for the engineering profession.
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| ENGR 13200 - Transforming Ideas To Innovation II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A partnership between Schools and Programs within the College of Engineering continues building on the foundation developed in ENGR 13100. Students take a more in depth and holistic approach to integrating multiple disciplines perspectives while constructing innovative engineering solutions to open-ended problems. Extending skills in project management engineering fundamentals, oral and graphical communication, logical thinking, team work, and modern engineering tools (e.g., Excel and MATLAB). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio, Studio 1
Offered By: First Year Engineering
Department: Engineering Education
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the engineering disciplines at Purdue and the interrelationships among them as well as know what graduates of at least three disciplines of engineering do.
2. Apply engineering fundamentals and basic engineering science concepts to create feasible engineering solutions that are justifiable.
3. Use a problem identification process to create written engineering criteria to satisfy a problem.
4. Use an engineering formulation and solving process to translate an engineering scenario into a model.
5. Explain how an engineering problem solving process relates to a design process.
6. Design a process to communicate technical information orally and visually and demonstrate skills for cross-cultural communication.
7. Apply an engineering problem solving and design process to: generate ideas, model, analyze, predict, and build an innovative object of engineering interest taking into consideration its societal and environmental impact.
8. Apply a systems approach in solving engineering problems and in undertaking design projects.
9. Demonstrate appropriate knowledge and behaviors for effective and ethical membership on a technical team (i.e., teaming skills).
10. Exhibit a work ethic appropriate for the engineering profession.
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| ENGR 14100 - Honors Creativity And Innovation In Engineering Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.50. This course introduces students to the engineering professions using multidisciplinary, societally relevant content. Students develop engineering approaches to systems, generate and explore creative and innovative ideas, and use of computational methods to support design decisions. Design challenges and projects engage students in innovative thinking across the engineering disciplines at Purdue. Students experience the process of design and analysis in engineering including how to work effectively in teams. Students also develop skills in project management, engineering fundamentals, oral and graphical communication, logical thinking, and modern engineering tools (e.g., Excel®, LabView®, MATLAB®, and Python). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Studio
Offered By: First Year Engineering
Department: Engineering Education
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the engineering disciplines at Purdue and the interrelationships among them as well as know what graduates of at least three disciplines of engineering do.
2. Understand and apply engineering fundamentals and basic engineering science concepts to model, analyze, predict build, and evaluate an object of engineering interest using a design process.
3. Develop the ability to evaluate complex systems.
4. Develop strategies to facilitate generating creative ideas for complex design challenges.
5. Show how the engineering problem solving is related to the design process.
6. Use the engineering problem solving process to translate written problem statement into a mathematical model that is suitable for algorithmic development.
7. Communicate technical information to justify decision made during a problem solving situations (e.g. design, troubleshoot, or product selection).
8. Develop a logical and systematic problem solving process and use that process for software development, which includes sequential structures, conditional structures, and repetition structures.
9. Implement simple algorithmic forms of engineering models/problems using the most appropriate computer tool (LabVIEW, MATLAB, and Python).
10. Perform basic file management tasks using an appropriate computer tool.
11. Demonstrate appropriate knowledge and behaviors for effective and ethical membership on a technical team (il.e., teaming skills).
12. Develop skills for cross-cultural communication.
13. Exhibit a work ethic appropriate for the engineering profession.
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| ENGR 14200 - Honors Creativity And Innovation In Engineering Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.50. This course continues building on the foundation developed in ENGR 14100. Students take a more in depth and holistic approach to integrating multiple disciplines perspectives while constructing innovative engineering solutions to open-ended problems. The students extend and continue to develop skills in project management, engineering fundamentals, oral and graphical communication, logical thinking, team work, and modern engineering tools (e.g., C, Excel®, LabView®, MATLAB®, and Python). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Studio
Offered By: First Year Engineering
Department: Engineering Education
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe, in greater depth, the engineering disciplines at Purdue and the interrelationships among them as well as know what graduates of at least three disciplines of engineering do.
2. Apply engineering fundamentals and basic engineering science concepts to create feasible engineering solutions that are justifiable.
3. Use a problem identification process to create written engineering criteria to satisfy a problem.
4. Use an engineering formulation and solving process to translate an engineering scenario into a mathematical model.
5. Explain how an engineering problem solving process relates to a design process.
6. Design a process to communicate technical information orally and visually and demonstrate skills for cross-cultural communication.
7. Further development of strategies to facilitate generating creative ideas for complex design challenges.
8. Apply an engineering problem solving and design process to: generate ideas, model, analyze, predict, and build an innovative object of engineering interest taking into consideration its societal and environmental impact.
9. Implement complex algorithmic solutions to engineering problems/designs using the most appropriate computer tool (C , Excel, LABVIEW, MATLAB, and Python) and be able to explain your rationale for your choice.
10. Apply a systems approach in solving engineering problems and in undertaking design projects.
11. Synthesize your knowledge of effective and ethical membership on a technical team (i.e., teaming skills) to appropriately behavior.
12 Exhibit a work ethic appropriate for the engineering profession.
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| ENGR 15100 - Software Tools For Engineers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to MATLAB and engineering problem solving with MATLAB. Students will be introduced to arrays, relational and logical operations, control flow of sequence, selection and repetition, function definition, 2-D and 3-D graphics, data analysis, Graphical User Interface (GUI) development and Simulink. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGR 17100 - Engineering Fundamentals I |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. An introduction to approaches and techniques for solving engineering problems. Software tools are introduced and used for solving engineering case studies. Engineering report writing is included. Presentation techniques are also demonstrated. In the laboratory, students use various software packages to solve real-world problems. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| ENGR 17600 - Professional Internship I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in engineering. Program coordinated by department with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit a summary report. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: First Year Engineering
Department: Engineering Education
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGR 18000 - Minorities In Engineering Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Explores the challenges that minority engineering students have in making a smooth and informed transition to college from high school. The content and activities may be of particular interest to engineering students from underrepresented groups as they adjust to the University's environment. The course provides a setting for entering students to explore career opportunities in the various fields of engineering. Open to all entering engineering students. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: First Year Engineering
Department: Engineering Education
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGR 18100 - Engineering Fundamentals II |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. A more advanced approach to engineering problem solving. More in-depth use is made of programming and applications software. Students work in teams to perform real-world case studies, using several programming languages and software packages. Numerous oral and written presentations are required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| ENGR 18500 - Engineering Career Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An engineering-oriented course designed to assist students in planning for their educational, career, and personal development. Individual and group projects, computer-aided guidance. Course will incorporate autobiographies, resumes, and academic and career planning exercises. Interest inventories and personal appraisal surveys will be utilized. Computer-based guidance systems will be utilized, including ESCAPE (Engineering Specific Career Advisory Problem-solving Environment). (Eight week session.). Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: First Year Engineering
Department: Engineering Education
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGR 18600 - First Year Seminar For Engineers |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The course will provide the foundations for students enabling them to: learn to succeed, work together in teams, understand the field chosen for study, and orient to the University life and environs. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGR 18900 - C++ Language Programming For Engineering and Technology Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to "C++" language programming. Course topics include data types, control flow, operators and expressions. Applications to engineering and technology.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| ENGR 19000 - Elementary Engineering Design |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An introduction to engineering design. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
|
| ENGR 19400 - Women In Engineering Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An overview of the career opportunities for women in engineering. The content and activities of the course may be of particular interest to women. Speakers from a variety of engineering organizations discuss their career paths and share their strategies for success. Students also meet weekly in small groups led by engineering seniors for additional information, interaction, and support from their peers in engineering. Open to all entering engineering students. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Presentation
Offered By: First Year Engineering
Department: Engineering Education
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGR 19500 - First-Year Engineering Projects |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lab 1, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation, Studio, Studio 1
Offered By: First Year Engineering
Department: Engineering Education
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGR 19600 - Introduction to Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of the engineering profession and methodologies of engineering design. Students develop skills using computer-aided design and simulation software for engineering systems. Projects and homework are implemented and tested in a laboratory environment. The course also introduces the students to standard computer application software and university network and software resources. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ENGR 19700 - Introduction To Programming Concepts |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Basic concepts and applications of software programming for solving engineering problems. Topics include techniques for developing structured algorithms, data input and output, conditional statements, loops, recursion, functions, arrays, and elementary concepts in mathematical programming. Examples, homework, and applications of programming concepts make extensive use of the C programming language. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ENGR 19800 - Industrial Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Engineering practice in local industry. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGR 19900 - Introduction To Engineering Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the engineering design process as a heuristic approach. Techniques for defining problems, generating solutions and deciding between them are used to setup and solve design problems that are analyzed by students using fundamental engineering principles. Computer modeling of systems is introduced for use in design. Students learn both written and oral technical communication skills by presenting their engineering work and conclusions in the form of reports and oral presentations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ENGR 20000 - Cooperative Education Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A semester or summer of external, full time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's preparedness for an intended career with business, industry or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the internship practice is required.
A minimum of 10 weeks and 200 hours are required for credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Coop, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Translate theory into practice.
2. Behave appropriately in the professional work environment.
3. Work within the ethical framework of the industry.
|
| ENGR 20010 - Engineering Career Enrichment Internship I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Semester of external career related experiences designed to enhance the student’s preparedness for entering an initial or second career. A minimum of 10 weeks and 200 hours are required for credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Translate theory into practice.
2. Behave appropriately in the professional work environment.
3. Work within the ethical framework of the industry.
|
| ENGR 20100 - Engineering In Global Context |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides students with opportunities to study how engineering is intertwined with larger economic, social, cultural, and technological dynamics in an era of intensified globalization. Its major goals are to help students understand and appreciate what engineering is, how engineers are trained, what engineers do, and how engineering and society interact. The course approaches these themes through discussion of: the relation and interaction of engineering, science, technology, and society; the historical origins and development of engineering as a profession; diversity issues in engineering and other STEM fields; engineering in cross-national/cultural contexts; and contemporary challenges related to globalization, ethics, and sustainability. In summary, the course is designed to help students understand what it means to identify as, and/or work with, engineers. Recitation sections and/or independent projects (at the instructor’s discretion) provide further opportunities for students to expand their knowledge and improve their skills in relation to course themes. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: First Year Engineering
Department: Engineering Education
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe and evaluate the specific kinds of knowledge and methods typically employed by engineers, including in comparison with other professional fields.
2. Understand the historical development of engineering education and the engineering profession in the United States.
3. Recognize how national differences are important in engineering work, including by comparing and contrasting different national cultures and styles of engineering.
4. Explain the significance of diversity in engineering education and professional practice, including by evaluating competing perspectives on diversity in different historical and sociocultural contexts.
5. Understand contemporary trends and issues related to globalization, ethics, social responsibility, and sustainability, and interpret their significance in relation to engineering education and practice.
6. Demonstrate written communication capabilities at the level of “emerging” or higher (as defined by the Purdue Core Curriculum guidelines).
|
| ENGR 22000 - Introductory Engineering III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Continuation of ENGR 160. Further lectures on the engineering profession and a continuation of computer programming design and implementation. Emphasis on engineering applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ENGR 22100 - C & C++ Programming For Engineers |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to programming in C and C++ to solve engineering problems: integer and floating-point data, standard mathematics library, control structures, pointers, user-defined functions, arrays, input and output, classes. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ENGR 22200 - Object Oriented Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will introduce the fundamentals of object oriented programming in C++. Students should gain understanding of the implementation of overloading, inheritance, polymorphism, and templates. A rudimentary introduction to Java is also included. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ENGR 25000 - Cooperative Education Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A semester or summer of external, full time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's preparedness for an intended career with business, industry or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the internship practice is required.
A minimum of 10 weeks and 200 hours are required for credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Translate theory into practice.
2. Behave appropriately in the professional work environment.
3. Work within the ethical framework of the industry.
|
| ENGR 25010 - Engineering Career Enrichment Internship II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Semester of external career related experiences designed to enhance the students’ preparedness for entering and initial or second career. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ENGR 29199 - Professional Practice Extensive I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Engineering. Program coordinated by Office of Professional Practice with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit a summary report and company evaluation. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Ofc of Professional Practice
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The Director of the Office of Professional Practice serves as the facilitating body to:
a) moderate the progress of students after each academic work session
b) assess course outcomes via student evaluation of work sessions, supervisor evaluation of student and work session technical report
|
| ENGR 29299 - Professional Practice Extensive II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Engineering. Program coordinated by Office of Professional Practice with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit a summary report and company evaluation. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Ofc of Professional Practice
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The Director of the Office of Professional Practice serves as the facilitating body to:
a) moderate the progress of students after each academic work session
b) assess course outcomes via student evaluation of work sessions, supervisor evaluation of student and work session technical report
|
| ENGR 29500 - Selected Topics In Engineering II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Selected topics in general or interdisciplinary engineering (sophomore level).
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ENGR 29700 - Computer Tools For Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to the use of Matlab for solving engineering problems. Topics include computational methods, data input and output, plotting and curvefitting, functions, conditional statements, loops, and introduction to Matlab toolboxes. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ENGR 30000 - Cooperative Education Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A semester or summer of external, full time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's preparedness for an intended career with business, industry or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the internship practice is required.
Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| ENGR 30010 - Engineering Career Enrichment Internship III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Semester of external career related experiences designed to enhance the student’s preparedness for entering an initial or second career. A minimum of 10 weeks and 200 hours are required for credit. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Translate theory into practice.
2. Behave appropriately in the professional work environment.
3. Work within the ethical framework of the industry.
|
| ENGR 35000 - Cooperative Education Practice IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A semester or summer of external, full time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's preparedness for an intended career with business, industry or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the internship practice is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Coop, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Translate theory into practice
2. Behave appropriately in the professional work environment
3. Work within the ethical framework of the industry
|
| ENGR 38199 - Professional Practice Co-Op I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Engineering. Program coordinated by Office of Professional Practice with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit a summary report and company evaluation. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Ofc of Professional Practice
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The Director of the Office of Professional Practice serves as the facilitating body to:
a) moderate the progress of students after each academic work session
b) assess course outcomes via student evaluation of work sessions, supervisor evaluation of student and work session technical report
|
| ENGR 38299 - Professional Practice Co-Op II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Engineering. Program coordinated by Office of Professional Practice with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit a summary report and company evaluation. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Ofc of Professional Practice
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The Director of the Office of Professional Practice serves as the facilitating body to:
a) moderate the progress of students after each academic work session
b) assess course outcomes via student evaluation of work sessions, supervisor evaluation of student and work session technical report
|
| ENGR 38399 - Professional Practice Co-Op III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Engineering. Program coordinated by Office of Professional Practice with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit a summary report and company evaluation. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Ofc of Professional Practice
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The Director of the Office of Professional Practice serves as the facilitating body to:
a) moderate the progress of students after each academic work session
b) assess course outcomes via student evaluation of work sessions, supervisor evaluation of student and work session technical report
|
| ENGR 39399 - Professional Practice Extensive III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Engineering. Program coordinated by Office of Professional Practice with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit a summary report and company evaluation. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Ofc of Professional Practice
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The Director of the Office of Professional Practice serves as the facilitating body to:
a) moderate the progress of students after each academic work session
b) assess course outcomes via student evaluation of work sessions, supervisor evaluation of student and work session technical report
|
| ENGR 39499 - Professional Practice Extensive IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Engineering. Program coordinated by Office of Professional Practice with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit a summary report and company evaluation. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Ofc of Professional Practice
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The Director of the Office of Professional Practice serves as the facilitating body to:
a) moderate the progress of students after each academic work session
b) assess course outcomes via student evaluation of work sessions, supervisor evaluation of student and work session technical report
|
| ENGR 39500 - Selected Topics in Engineering III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGR 39599 - Professional Practice Extensive V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Engineering. Program coordinated by Office of Professional Practice with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit a summary report and company evaluation. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Ofc of Professional Practice
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The Director of the Office of Professional Practice serves as the facilitating body to:
a) moderate the progress of students after each academic work session
b) assess course outcomes via student evaluation of work sessions, supervisor evaluation of student and work session technical report
|
| ENGR 39699 - Professional Practice Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Engineering. Program coordinated by Office of Professional Practice with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit a summary report and company evaluation. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Ofc of Professional Practice
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
Learning Objectives:
1. The Director of the Office of Professional Practice serves as the facilitating body to:
a) moderate the progress of students after each academic work session
b) assess course outcomes via student evaluation of work sessions, supervisor evaluation of student and work session technical report
|
| ENGR 39799 - GEARE Domestic Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Domestic internship experience for GEARE program. Program coordinated by Office of Professional Practice with cooperation of participating employers. Students to obtain professional practice with domestic employers within industry, government or small business. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Ofc of Professional Practice
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The Assistant Director of Global Professional Practice Programs in the Office of Professional Practice serves as the facilitating body to:
a) moderate the progress of students through the requirements of the GEARE program requirements
b) assess course outcomes via student evaluation of work sessions and work session technical report
|
| ENGR 39899 - GEARE Global Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Global internship experience for GEARE program. Program coordinated by Office of Professional Practice with cooperation of participating employers. Students to obtain professional practice with global employers within industry, government or small business. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Ofc of Professional Practice
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The Assistant Director of Global Professional Practice Programs in the Office of Professional Practice serves as the facilitating body to:
a) moderate the progress of students through the requirements of the GEARE program requirements
b) assess course outcomes via student evaluation of work sessions and work session technical report
|
| ENGR 40000 - Cooperative Education Practice V |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A semester of external career experiences designed to enhance the student's preparedness for entering an initial or second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship practice is required.
Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Translate theory into practice, behave appropriately in the professional work environment, work within the ethical framework of the industry.
|
| ENGR 40400 - Instruction, Mentorship And Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Selected students enrolled in professional programs in the Schools of Engineering lead sections of ENGR 10400. Common instruction on appropriate teaching methods, ENGR 10400 content, mentorship, and leadership. Preparation of class outlines, development of teaching evaluation method, and formal reflection on performance and growth resulting from the teaching experience. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: First Year Engineering
Department: Engineering Education
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGR 40600 - Engineering Ambassador Leadership Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students will engage in a weekly seminar that includes topics such as leadership, professional skills, teamwork, and Purdue culture. Students will utilize these skills while representing Purdue College of Engineering to current and prospective students, alumni, donors, legislators, and other supporters of Purdue College of Engineering. Student must be selected as a College of Engineering Ambassador; be currently enrolled full-time in the College of Engineering; have completed no less than three academic semesters at Purdue; have a cumulative GPA of 2.8 or higher. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: First Year Engineering
Department: Engineering Education
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Provide students with theoretical and experiential basis from which they may acquire and enhance their knowledge and skills in the areas of: Leadership principles and models; Purdue structure, culture, and engineering education opportunities; Personal/professional effectiveness, including teamwork and public speaking.
2. Provide students with the opportunity to develop a personal philosophy of leadership that includes an understanding of self, others, and community.
|
| ENGR 41000 - Interdisciplinary Senior Engineering Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The first course of a two-semester sequence of senior capstone design. Provides students with experience in the process and practice of mechanical/electrical component/system design from concept through final design. Emphasis on teamwork, project management, oral and written communication. General lectures on issues important to the engineering profession, such as professional and ethical responsibility, the impact of engineering solutions in a global and societal context, and other contemporary issues. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ENGR 41100 - Interdisciplinary Senior Engineering Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of ENGR 41000. Teams complete their projects by implementing what they have designed in ENGR 41000. This includes building, testing, evaluating, and demonstrating their end products. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ENGR 45000 - Engineering Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Preparation for the senior design project course, ENGR 46100. Case studies are used to examine how a major project is accomplished, from start to finish. Ways to avoid and/or correct design problems are examined. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| ENGR 45100 - Engineering Analysis II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced engineering methods and applied math to prepare students for the senior design project course, ENGR 46100. The course will focus on numerical techniques in engineering analysis including finite element analysis, finite difference analysis, quadrature and more. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
Students successfully completing this course will be able to:
1. Choose the appropriate mathematical methods to solve a given problem.
2. Apply calculus and analysis methods to solve engineering problems using numerical techniques.
3. Analyze a variety of problems in mechanical and electrical engineering.
4. Include a course project with an oral presentation of results.
|
| ENGR 46100 - Engineering Design Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Capstone project course, designed to integrate the various subjects the student has studied. Both individual and group project formats may be used. An oral presentation and written project report is required at the end of the semester. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| ENGR 49500 - Select Topics In Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Available upon arrangement with the head of the department. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGR 49900 - Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 9.00. Hours and subject matter to be arranged by staff. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
|
| ENGR 50000 - Global Design Team V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Global Design Team brings together undergraduate and graduate students from different disciplines, inside and outside of the College of Engineering to design solutions to solve real-world problems over the course of one academic semester. Depending on the size and scope of the project, teams may range from one to twenty students under the advisement of a faculty member. GDTs partner student teams with non-governmental organizations, businesses and/or other research institutions in international development projects. Approval for registration is granted based on an application process that takes into consideration previous design experience, level of interest in the topic and GPA. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Coll of Engr Adm&Engr Exp Stn
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. An awareness of varying regulations, codes of practice, standards, technical specifications testing/inspection procedures, environmental regulations, and systems of measurement between countries and regions.
2. Familiarity with the concept of a "global product platform".
3. Ability to apply familiar concepts to unfamiliar, real-world problems.
4. Ability to use design tools to solve engineering problems.
5. Ability to adapt to cultural norms in a professional arena and act appropriately.
6. Ability to make ethical and socially responsible decisions in the context of a culture divergent from my own.
7. Ability to analyze problems from a different cultural frame of reference.
8. Ability to communicate professionally in a culturally-appropriate manner.
9. Ability to practice social and cultural responsibility, e.g. resource sustainability.
10. Proficiency in a second language.
11. Ability to be cross-culturally adaptable/flexible.
12. Ability to contribute to a culturally-diverse team.
|
| ENGR 58000 - Engineering Optimization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course concentrates on recognizing and solving convex optimization problems that arise in engineering. Convex sets, functions, and optimization problems. Basics of convex analysis. Least-squares, linear and quadratic programs, semi definite programming, minmax, extremal volume, and other problems. Optimality conditions, duality theory, theorems of alternative, and applications. Interior-point methods. Applications to signal processing, control, digital and analog circuit design, computational geometry, statistics, finance, and engineering. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. To give students the tools and training to recognize convex optimization problems that arise in engineering.
2. To present the basic theory of such problems, concentrating on results that are useful in computation.
3. To give students a thorough understanding of how such problems are solved, and some experience in solving them.
4. To give students the background required to use the methods in their own research or engineering work.
|
| ENGR 59500 - Selected Topics In Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course number serves as a means to offer one-time, interdisciplinary specialty topics in engineering such as engineering optimization, design innovation, engineering management, and infrared radiometry (an interdisciplinary topic that is relevant to a local employer). It will also be used as a vehicle for the Engineering Department to develop new interdisciplinary engineering curriculum offerings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. To give students the tools and training to recognize convex optimization problems that arise in engineering.
2. To present the basic theory of such problems, concentrating on results that are useful in computation.
3. To give students a thorough understanding of how such problems are solved, and some experience in solving them.
4. To give students the background required to use the methods in their own research or engineering work.
|
| ENGR 69199 - Professional Practice Graduate Co-Op I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Graduate cooperative education experience. Program coordinated by the Office of Professional Practice with cooperation from academic disciplines and participating employers. Students submit technical report and company evaluation. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Coll of Engr Adm&Engr Exp Stn
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGR 69299 - Professional Practice Graduate Co-Op II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Graduate cooperative education experience. Program coordinated by the Office of Professional Practice with cooperation from academic disciplines and participating employers. Students submit techncial report and company evaluation. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Coll of Engr Adm&Engr Exp Stn
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGR 69399 - Professional Practice Graduate Co-Op III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Graduate cooperative education experience. Program coordinated by the Office of Professional Practice with cooperation from academic disciplines and participating employers. Students submit techncial report and company evaluation. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Coll of Engr Adm&Engr Exp Stn
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGR 69499 - Professional Practice Graduate Co-Op IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Graduate cooperative education experience. Program coordinated by the Office of Professional Practice with cooperation from academic disciplines and participating employers. Students submit techncial report and company evaluation. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Coll of Engr Adm&Engr Exp Stn
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENGR 69699 - Professional Practice Graduate Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Graduate internship experience. Program coordinated by the Office of Professional Practice with cooperation from academic disciplines and participating employers. Students submit technical report and company evaluation. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Coll of Engr Adm&Engr Exp Stn
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
|
| ENGR 69800 - Master Of Science In Engineering Thesis Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Original research in systems engineering leading to the preparation of a thesis or dissertation. Project will be supervised by a faculty member after being approved by the Engineering Department thesis committee. After project initiation, thesis projects will be periodically reviewed by the thesis committee. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENGR 90000 - New Student Orientation |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: First Year Engineering
Department: Engineering Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENTM 10500 - Insects: Friend And Foe |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A one-semester course for nonscience students who want to know more about insects - the most numerous organisms on earth. An introduction to insects and their relationship with humankind, including interesting aspects of insect biology; insects in music, decoration, history; use of insects in teaching at the elementary school level; their use in art, photography, and drawing; insects as human food. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, GTC-Science, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENTM 11100 - Insects In Prose And Poetry |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Intended for anyone with an interest in insects and related arthropods as they appear in written materials. Offered during weeks 9-16 of the semester. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENTM 20600 - General Entomology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A general course on insect structure, function, biology, ecology and population management. Coordinated with the ENTM 20700 laboratory as an introductory course in entomology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ENTM 20700 - General Entomology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory exercises parallel topics presented in ENTM 20600. Insect structures and function are studied as a basis for learning to identify insects and other arthropods. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ENTM 20800 - Insects Of Field And Forage Crops Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory experiences focus on recognition, biology, and management of economically important insects of field and forage crops. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
|
| ENTM 20900 - Insects Of Livestock And Companion Animal Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory experiences focus on recognition, biology, and management of economically important insects of domestic animals. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
|
| ENTM 21000 - Introduction To Insect Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Description and introductory analysis of innate and learned insect behavior, including basic orientations and movements, behavioral periodicity, communication, chemical and structural defenses, host selection and feeding, reproduction, and insect societies. General biology and introductory entomology are desirable, but not essential. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENTM 21700 - Insects In Elementary Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A laboratory class designed for students preparing for a career in elementary education. Students will learn to use insects in the classroom as learning tools to achieve educational objectives relevant to their intended grade level. Enrollment should be limited to elementary and secondary education majors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
|
| ENTM 21800 - Introduction To Forensic Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to forensic investigation. Includes crime scene techniques, firearms, arson and explosives, entomology, blood spatter, blood chemistry, pathology, toxicology, anthropology, soils, botany, trace evidence, computer crime, behavioral analysis, courtroom activities and new trends in forensic investigations. The course features guest speakers with professional duties in forensics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| ENTM 27500 - Honors Course - Lower Division |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Utilized to offer a new honors course for a maximum of three years. Variable title, credit, and instructional type. Course may be repeated for credit if content and titles are different. Offered primarily to first and second-year students. Courses offered must be approved by departmental or program faculty, and the College of Agriculture Honors Committee. Must be enrolled in an Honors program. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and a professional conduct.
2. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
|
| ENTM 29400 - Topics In Forensic Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. This course will address the needs for our students to have current information about important emerging areas of Forensic Science and will provide a mechanism for recording such studies on their transcript. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. The series is intended to develop content knowledge and critical thinking skills and allow students to demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
|
| ENTM 29500 - Topics In Entomology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Special topics in entomology not available in other entomology courses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 12 credits
|
| ENTM 31100 - Insect Ecology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Insect ecology investigates the fundamental concepts of ecology as they relate to insects, including insect interactions, other insects and their environment. Topics include population and community ecology, plant-insect interactions, insect biodiversity and biogeography, and theoretical and applied ecology. Examples from current entomological and ecological studies are used. Completion of college biology or an introductory course in entomology is recommended. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Comprehend ecological principles at different scales of biological organization, from the individual to the population to the community to the ecosystem.
2. Understand the mechanisms that mediate interactions of insects with their biotic and abiotic environments.
3. Appreciate the importance of insects as stabilizing and destabilizing components of food webs.
4. Recognize the value and application of insect ecology n solving real-world problems.
5. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
|
| ENTM 31700 - Insects in Agricultural Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is designed for students preparing for a career in agricultural education. Students will learn to use insects in the classroom as learning tools to achieve educational objectives relevant to middle school and secondary schools. Course meets during weeks 1-5. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENTM 31800 - Criminalistics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Crime scene management, analysis and techniques. Includes crime scene recognition and the documentation, collection, preservation, and processing of crime scene evidence. The course features guest speakers with professional duties in forensics. A year of introductory chemistry is recommended. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENTM 33500 - Introduction To Insect Identification |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This class is designed for learning more about the collection and identification of adult insects. Emphasis will be placed on collection and sampling techniques, the preparation of specimens for future study, and identification. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Content Knowledge.
2. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
|
| ENTM 35100 - Bee Biology And Bee Keeping |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course that covers aspects of honey bee biology and agriculture intended for anyone interested in learning the necessary knowledge, skills, and confidence to become a hobby beekeeper. Colony life, social insects, bee behavior and anatomy, colony management, pollination and honey production are major topics studied. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENTM 39000 - Professional Experience Programs In Entomology |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Supervised professional experiences in entomology, integrated pest management, or urban/industrial pest control. Programs must be preplanned and conducted under the direction of the departmental coordinator with the cooperation of an employer. Students must submit a summary report. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENTM 39100 - Professional Experience Programs In Forensic Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. The course provides a mechanism for students to record unpaid internships and appropriate professional experiences in Forensic Science on their transcript. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Experiential learning through interactions with professionals.
|
| ENTM 40000 - Entomology Study Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. Utilized to record credits earned through participation in Purdue study abroad programs with cooperating foreign universities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENTM 41800 - Advanced Criminalistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (HSCI 41800) Advanced laboratory techniques for analysis of crime scene evidence. Includes toxicology, computer crime, behavior; field collection and analysis of biological evidence, DNA, bloodstains, and explosives; forensic microscopy, document examination and preparation of courtroom testimony. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENTM 44100 - Forest Entomology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (FNR 44100) An introduction to the identity, natural history and management of insects affecting forest ecosystems. Topics include biodiversity, natural history and ecology of forest pests; forecasting and assessing the risk of insect outbreaks; and silvicultural, biological and chemical strategies for preventing and managing insect pests. Offered in odd-numbered years. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENTM 44300 - Arthropods And Diseases Of Turfgrass |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (BTNY 44300) The course is designed to introduce students to the biology, ecology, and management of arthropods and diseases associated with turfgrass ecosystems. The course is divided into two discrete segments with a focus on arthropods during the first half of the semester and diseases during the second half of the semester.
Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENTM 44600 - Integrated Plant Health Management For Ornamental Plants |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (BTNY 44600) Principles and practices for diagnosing and managing diseases, insects, and abiotic disorders of woody and herbaceous ornamental plants and turf. Designed for those students in urban forestry, horticulture, and turf management who want a one-semester course on integrated plant health management. A course in plant pathology is recommended, but not required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and professional conduct.
2. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
|
| ENTM 47500 - Honors Course-Upper Division |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Utilized to offer a new honors course for a maximum of three years. Variable title, credit, and instructional type. Course may be repeated for credit if content and titles are different. Offered primarily to third and fourth-year students. Courses offered must be approved by departmental or program faculty, and the College of Agriculture Honors Committee. Must be enrolled in an Honors program. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and a professional conduct.
2. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
|
| ENTM 49200 - Capstone Experience Entomology I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Requirements, options, procedures and skills needed for a successful Entomology capstone experience with emphasis on techniques and guidelines for formulating projects and principles of organizing and presenting information. A capstone experience proposal is produced. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENTM 49300 - Capstone Experience In Entomology II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Students complete capstone requirement for a project and oral and written communication about the capstone project. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENTM 49400 - Advanced Topics In Forensic Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. This course will provide an avenue for students to pursue knowledge in emerging advanced areas of Forensic Science. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. The series is intended to develop content knowledge and critical thinking skills and allow students to demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
|
| ENTM 49500 - Advanced Topics In Entomology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Special topics in entomology at upper division level not available in other entomology courses. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 12 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Will address the needs for our students to have current information about important emerging areas of entomology including but not limited to new invasive species, advance in biotechnology, advances in insect science and topics that prepare students to address emerging problems at the state, national and global levels. The series is intended to develop content knowledge and critical thinking skills.
2. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
|
| ENTM 49700 - Special Problems In Forensic Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. This course will provide an opportunity for qualified sophomores, juniors and seniors to engage in the study of special Forensic Science problems not covered in regular coursework. It will also provide a mechanism for recording these independent studies on their transcript. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. To develop content knowledge and critical thinking skills and allow students an opportunity to demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
|
| ENTM 49800 - Special Problems In Entomology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Open to qualified sophomores, juniors, and seniors who want to study special problems in entomology not covered in regular coursework. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENTM 50600 - Advanced Insect Taxonomy |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Classification and relationship of insects and related Arthropoda. Introduction to systematic principles. Survey of North American fauna, with emphasis on family identification of adults. Knowledge of college-level entomology is strongly recommended. Offered in even-numbered years. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENTM 51000 - Insect Pest Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Concepts of pest management and dynamics of pest populations, with emphasis on population regulation in theory and practice. The principles of applied ecology that pertain to insects and agricultural crops and systems. Identification, biology, behavior, and relationships of pests of forage, fiber, and vegetable crops. A knowledge of introductory entomology is recommended. Offered in even-numbered years. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENTM 52100 - Urban And Industrial Insect Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles and practices of insect pest management in and immediately around urban and industrial structures (pests of property, food, health, and turf and ornamental plants) with emphasis on issues, new technologies, diagnosis of pest problems, pest biology and behavior, implementation of management strategies, future directions and opportunities, and analysis of advances in urban pest management. Course offered in even-numbered years. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENTM 52500 - Medical And Veterinary Entomology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the biology and control of arthropods of medical and veterinary importance, and coverage of the natural history and abatement of selected arthropod-related diseases, including arboviral encephalitis, filariasis, leishmaniasis, Lyme disease, malaria, plague, spotted fever, trypanosomiasis, and myasis. Offered in odd-numbered years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENTM 52600 - Urban And Industrial Vertebrate Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles and practices of vertebrate pest management in urban and industrial environments, with emphasis on the impact of these pests on our health, food supplies and property, diagnosis of pest problems, pest biology and behavior, practical implementation of management strategies, future directions and opportunities, and analysis of advances in pest vertebrate management. Course offered in odd-numbered years. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENTM 55100 - Insect Physiology And Biochemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic physiology and biochemistry of insects covering development, functions of internal systems, and interactions of insects with their environments. An introductory course in entomology, or familiarity with insects, and concurrent enrollment in a biochemistry course is recommended. Offered in even-numbered years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ENTM 59500 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Specialized topics not covered in other courses. May be repeated for credit if the course topic is not repeated. The specific topic offered is indicated on the student's record.
. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ENTM 60000 - Graduate Student Orientation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction and orientation to the requirements and culture of the Department of Entomology, the College of Agriculture, and Purdue University. Intended for graduate students in their first year. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Students will:
Know the administrative regulations and procedures of Entomology and the Graduate School
Know the history of Entomology
Know the land grant mission and the role of Entomology
Know the University hierarchy
Know the roles, rules and expectations of the apprentice and mentors
Begin creation of a career plan
Develop strategies for effective networking
Learn how to communicate within the discipline through oral and poster presentations
Participate in independent activities
|
| ENTM 60200 - Insect Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comprehensive course in entomology, for graduate students with little entomological background, that introduces students broadly to insect structure, function, behavior, ecology, pest management, and systematics. Students apply broad knowledge in each of the topic areas to a specific insect and are expected to be able to read and critically evaluate primary literature and summarize it in written and oral presentations. One year of college biology is strongly recommended. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will become conversant with entomology terms and definitions.
2. Students will be proficient in search techniques for the primary literature, to read, evaluate and discuss the primarily literature, and be able to extract information from primary sources and apply it to their own area of research.
|
| ENTM 60300 - Insect Molecular Genetics, Systematics, And Phylogeny |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction of new concepts and methods in molecular genetics, systematics, and phylogeny. The new lines of inquiry are introduced via current significant journal publications. Sufficient background information is presented concurrently to make the concepts accessible to every student. Journal articles used are updated and/or changed frequently, as new publications appear. A college course in genetics (AGRY 32000 or equivalent) is strongly recommended. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The goal of this course is to introduce new concepts and methods in molecular genetics, systematic and phylogeny to students of varied interests and backgrounds. The focus is on arthropods and their unique genetic qualities to benefit entomology students and other students who will use arthropods for their research. The new lines of inquiry are introduced via current significant journal publications, and the students themselves lead many of the discussions about the papers. Sufficient background information is presented concurrently to make the concepts accessible to every student. The course is designed to facilitate student interest, participation, and learning. Journal articles used are updated and/or changed frequently, as new publications appear.
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| ENTM 61100 - Toxicology Of Insecticides |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The chemistry, mode of action, and metabolism of insecticides and related compounds in both insect and vertebrate systems. Evaluation of toxic action, principles of selective toxicity, insecticide resistance, and environmental effects are also discussed. A minimal knowledge of entomology is required. Knowledge of biochemistry and neurobiology is useful. Offered in even-numbered years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ENTM 61500 - Advanced Insect Behavior |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The first half of the course examines the design and implementation of behavioral experiments, including subject selection, types of questions that can be tested, observation techniques, data collection, equipment used to conduct behavioral experiments, ethogram construction, and data analysis. The second half of the course examines specifics of reproductive, migratory, defense, communication, and feeding behaviors. Class time is a mixture of traditional lecture, class discussion of published literature, and observational periods of demonstrating research techniques. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ENTM 69000 - Seminar |
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Credit Hours: 0.00 or 1.00. Current problems in the field of entomology, with special reference to technical research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ENTM 69100 - Special Problems |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 12.00. Special research topics of interest to graduate students and not included in assigned coursework. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ENTM 69200 - Special Topics |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Advanced topics in specialties of department members such as, but not limited to: biochemistry and physiology; biological control; insect pest management; veterinary entomology; nematode systematics; pathology; systematics. The field in which work is offered will appear on the student's record. Doctoral student standing. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ENTM 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ENTM 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Entomology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ENTR 10000 - Introduction To Entrepreneurship |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic business skills are surveyed and case studies of successful entrepreneurs will be studied to develop a broad understanding of this important force in the economy. Guest speakers and selected readings will introduce the student to the scope of opportunities that exist for entrepreneurs. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| ENTR 10100 - Entrepreneurship In Arts And Design |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic business skills are surveyed and case studies of successful self-employed artists and entrepreneurs will be studied to develop a broad understanding of this important force in the economy. Guest speakers and selected readings will introduce the student to the scope of opportunities that exist for converting artistic and design skills into self-employment and entrepreneurship. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| ENTR 20000 - Introduction To Entrepreneurship And Innovation |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey course designed to introduce students to the concept of entrepreneurship and the commercialization of new technology, its importance in the world economy, and related career options. Students completing this course will understand entrepreneurial roles and possibilities, begin developing required skills required of successful entrepreneurs, including leadership and basic business skills, and will develop a sense of their own aptitude for entrepreneurial endeavors, thereby allowing an informed decision regarding the pursuit of the full 15 credit Certificate in Entrepreneurship and Technology Innovation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: Burton D Morgan Entrprnshp Ctr
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ENTR 30000 - Small Business Management |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasizes the strategic management of growth associated with a rapidly changing business,as distinguished from "small business management", which could include small enterprise units that are static. Teaches the practical aspects of managing a growing business on a day-to-day basis. Practical application to "intrapreneurship", such as growing a division or department within a larger organization. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| ENTR 30100 - Introduction To Technical Entrepreneurship |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic business skills are surveyed and case studies of successful entrepreneurs in high-tech businesses and will be studied to develop a broad understanding of this important force in the economy. Guest speakers and selected readings will introduce the student to the scope of opportunities that exist for promoting the growth of technical entrepreneurship. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| ENTR 30200 - Innovation And New Product Development |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores the very earliest stages of firm and product development: the process of idea generation, evaluation, and development. In addition to idea generation, focus will be on identifying ideas and developing products that have the best chance of success in the marketplace. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| ENTR 30300 - Entrepreneurial Finance |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. For students interested in business start-up or management of a growing firm. Exposure to the principles, methods and tools used in financial planning, analysis, and control of the small business enterprise. Covers short-term financial planning and control, creation of pro forma financial statements, and business valuation techniques. Presents how and where to seek financing via a variety of debt and equity sources. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| ENTR 31000 - Marketing And Management For New Ventures |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Second in a two course sequence designed to develop a foundation of basic skills in the areas of entrepreneurship and innovation. Students completing this course will gain greater depth in areas essential to the creation and management of new ventures, including marketing and selling, finance and accounting, project management leadership, team building and ethics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: Burton D Morgan Entrprnshp Ctr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Analyze and develop business models for venture opportunities.
2. Demonstrate how to define, assess and reach target markets.
3. Conduct financial analysis and forecasts.
4. Describe critical factors in team recruiting, development and performance.
5. Demonstrate effective and persuasive communications skills necessary to convince potential investors.
6. Describe legal, regulatory, and ethical issues facing businesses.
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| ENTR 39000 - Special Topics In Entrepreneurship And Innovation |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. The requested course will provide the opportunity to develop courses which fulfill the "option" course requirement for the Certificate in Entrepreneurship and Innovation Program. Option courses are designed to provide depth in certain disciplines related to entrepreneurship and innovation, and/or entrepreneurship and innovation in relation to specific industries or markets. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: School of Management
Department: Burton D Morgan Entrprnshp Ctr
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ENTR 40000 - Small Business Consulting |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Student consultant teams are assigned to individual, local, client companies to look at, study, and analyze one or more of their existing business problems or challenges. Each consultant team, with the active involvement and help of the instructor, will conduct the consulting assignment and submit a final report by the end of the semester. Consulting teams will also make a live presentation to the client. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| ENTR 40100 - Social Entrepreneurship |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an experiential learning course designed to show students that entrepreneurship can be useful for community enrichment and not just direct generation of wealth. In the course, students will learn about various aspects of social entrepreneurship and undertake a project of their choice designed to improve the local community. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| ENTR 42000 - Business Plan Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The components of a business plan are analyzed. The focus is on the research, preparation, and presentation of the plan in a critical environment. Major components are marketing analysis, financial calculations, and the applications of sound managerial principles. Public and private resources available to fund new start- ups, expansions, and acquisitions will be explored and proforms statements will be constructed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| ENTR 47000 - Women And Leadership |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to expose advanced undergraduate students to the topic of women leaders. The first half of the class will cover the social and historical perspective of women in leadership and second half of the course will cover practical skills that women leaders can use to develop their leadership skills. This class will be team taught and the course will largely be based on class discussion. The readings will consist of articles from various publications, including the Harvard Business Review and The Wall Street Journal in order to expose students to important publication that business leaders often read regularly. Assignments will include a research paper, a book review, and leading class discussion. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: Burton D Morgan Entrprnshp Ctr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ENTR 48000 - Entrepreneurship Capstone |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The requested course will provide the opportunity to develop capstone courses for the Certificate in Entrepreneurship and Innovation Program. Capstone courses are designed to provide students with the opportunity to apply the knowledge acquired in Certificate Program "core" and "option" courses to hands-on, real world activities related to entrepreneurship and innovation. Typically Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: Burton D Morgan Entrprnshp Ctr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ENTR 49000 - Senior Level Special Topics In Entrepreneurship And Innovation |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. The requested course will provide the opportunity to develop capstone courses for the Certificate in Entrepreneurship and Innovation Program. Capstone courses are designed to provide students with the opportunity to apply the knowledge acquired in Certificate Program "core" and "option" courses to hands-on, real world activities related to entrepreneurship and innovation. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: Burton D Morgan Entrprnshp Ctr
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ENTR 49500 - Internship In Entrepreneurship |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. A special course in selected areas of management, designed to provide practical field experience under professional supervision in selected situations. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Summer Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 12 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Gain practical experience in the field of entrepreneurship.
2. Apply prior course knowledge to real world situations.
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| ENTR 49900 - Undergraduate Research In Entrepreneuership |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Student will work with a faculty member on a research project in their major. They will contribute to ongoing research while learning current research techniques in management. During this process the students will develop critical thinking and oral and written communication skills. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Conduct research in the area of marketing.
2. Learn current research techniques in management and business.
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| ENTR 50000 - Seminar In Technology Realization Topics |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is a seminar that focuses on topics related to technology realization, commercialization, and entrepreneurship. Topics pertaining to these areas are covered through readings, class discussion, and presentations by invited speakers.
. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: Burton D Morgan Entrprnshp Ctr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ENTR 50100 - Technology Realization Workshop |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. This course introduces a variety of cross-disciplinary topics to develop the skills needed to realize technology. Each week, students learn specific methodologies and techniques and apply these through case studies and class projects.
. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture 1, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: Burton D Morgan Entrprnshp Ctr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ENTR 59000 - Graduate Level Special Topics In Entrepreneurship And Innovation |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. The requested course will provide the opportunity for graduate students to participate in entrepreneurship courses focused on the skills and knowledge necessary to launch and lead new business ventures, the examination of the feasibility and market potential of new technologies, and/or the development of business plans. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Acquistion of the skills and knowledge necessary to launch and lead new ventures.
2. Examininsation of the feasibility and market potential of new products or technologies.
3. The development of business plans for new ventures.
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| EPCS 10100 - First Year Participation In EPICS |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Together, Engineering Projects in Community Service (EPICS) courses create a vertical project track under which students work in multidisciplinary teams on long-term engineering-based design projects. Projects of at least one-year in duration are intended to solve real problems that are defined in consultation with "customers" from not-for-profit community and education organizations. EPCS courses are open to students from all disciplines; each student contributes expertise in his/her academic discipline. Each team consists of a mix of first year, sophomores, juniors, and seniors. Students are encouraged to participate in an EPICS project team for two or more semesters. First year students participating in EPCS 10100 gain insight into the specific project, and more generally, into the design and development process. They attend planning and reporting meetings with the customer and are expected attend all team meetings. Under the mentorship of the team's sophomores, juniors and seniors they perform and report upon tasks consistent with their level of discipline expertise. May be repeated for credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Engr Prog In Community Service
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to apply material from their discipline to the design of community-based projects.
2. An understanding of design as a start-to-finish process.
3. An ability to identify and acquire new knowledge as a part of the problem-solving/design process.
4. An awareness of the customer.
5. An ability to function on multidisciplinary teams and an appreciation for the contributions from individuals from multiple disciplines.
6. An ability to communicate effectively with audiences with widely-varying backgrounds.
7. An awareness of professional ethics and responsibility.
8. An appreciation of the role that their discipline can play in social contexts.
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| EPCS 10200 - First Year Participation In EPICS |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Continuation of EPCS courses (see EPCS 10100). Participants in EPCS 10200 gain insight into the specific project, and more generally, into the design and development process. They attend planning and reporting meetings with the customer and are expected to attend all team meetings. Working with team’s sophomores, juniors and seniors they perform and report upon tasks consistent with their level of discipline expertise. EPCS 10200 is offered for two credits and is intended for students who have exhibited significant achievement in EPCS 10100 and desire the level of responsibility that is appropriate for two credits. May be repeated for credit. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Engr Prog In Community Service
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to apply material from their discipline to the design of community-based projects.
2. An understanding of design as a start-to-finish process.
3. An ability to identify and acquire new knowledge as a part of the problem-solving/design process.
4. An awareness of the customer.
5. An ability to function on multidisciplinary teams and an appreciation for the contributions from individuals from multiple disciplines.
6. An ability to communicate effectively with audiences with widely-varying backgrounds.
7. An awareness of professional ethics and responsibility.
8. An appreciation of the role that their discipline can play in social contexts.
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| EPCS 20100 - Sophomore Participation In EPICS |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Continuation of EPCS courses (see EPCS 10100). Sophomores participating in EPCS 20100 gain insight into the specific project, and, more generally, into the design and development process. They attend planning and reporting meetings with the customer and are expected attend all team meetings. Under the mentorship of the team's juniors and seniors they perform and report upon tasks consistent with their level of discipline expertise. EPCS 20100 is offered for 1 credit. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Engr Prog In Community Service
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to apply material from their discipline to the design of community-based projects.
2. An understanding of design as a start-to-finish process.
3. An ability to identify and acquire new knowledge as a part of the problem-solving/design process.
4. An awareness of the customer.
5. An ability to function on multidisciplinary teams and an appreciation for the contributions from individuals from multiple disciplines.
6. An ability to communicate effectively with audiences with widely-varying backgrounds.
7. An awareness of professional ethics and responsibility.
8. An appreciation of the role that their discipline can play in social contexts.
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| EPCS 20200 - Sophomore Participation In EPICS |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Continuation of EPCS courses (see EPCS 10100). Sophomores participating in EPCS 20100 gain insight into the specific project, and, more generally, into the design and development process. They attend planning and reporting meetings with the customer and are expected attend all team meetings. Under the mentorship of the team's juniors and seniors they perform and report upon tasks consistent with their level of discipline expertise. EPCS 20200 is offered for 2 credits. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Engr Prog In Community Service
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to apply material from their discipline to the design of community-based projects.
2. An understanding of design as a start-to-finish process.
3. An ability to identify and acquire new knowledge as a part of the problem-solving/design process.
4. An awareness of the customer.
5. An ability to function on multidisciplinary teams and an appreciation for the contributions from individuals from multiple disciplines.
6. An ability to communicate effectively with audiences with widely-varying backgrounds.
7. An awareness of professional ethics and responsibility.
8. An appreciation of the role that their discipline can play in social contexts.
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| EPCS 30100 - Junior Participation In EPICS |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Continuation of EPCS courses (see EPCS 10100). The responsibilities of juniors include working with the seniors in the planning and organization of the project, contributing to the design process, problem solving by contributing expertise from their discipline, meeting with the customer, and the mentorship of sophomores and freshmen. EPCS 30100 is offered for 1 credit. The EPICS procedures manual provides information on expected relative workload for EPCS 30100 and EPCS 30200 students. May not be taken concurrently with EPCS 30200.
Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Engr Prog In Community Service
Course Attributes: GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to apply material from their discipline to the design of community-based projects.
2. An understanding of design as a start-to-finish process.
3. An ability to identify and acquire new knowledge as a part of the problem-solving/design process.
4. An awareness of the customer.
5. An ability to function on multidisciplinary teams and an appreciation for the contributions from individuals from multiple disciplines.
6. An ability to communicate effectively with audiences with widely-varying backgrounds.
7. An awareness of professional ethics and responsibility.
8. An appreciation of the role that their discipline can play in social contexts.
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| EPCS 30200 - Junior Participation In EPICS |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Continuation of EPCS courses (see EPCS 10100). The responsibilities of juniors include working with the seniors in the planning and organization of the project, contributing to the design process, problem solving by contributing expertise from their discipline, meeting with the customer, and the mentorship of sophomores and freshmen. EPCS 30200 is offered for 2 credits. The EPICS procedures manual provides information on expected relative workload for EPCS 30100 and EPCS 30200 students. May not be taken concurrently with EPCS 30100.
Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Engr Prog In Community Service
Course Attributes: GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to apply material from their discipline to the design of community-based projects.
2. An understanding of design as a start-to-finish process.
3. An ability to identify and acquire new knowledge as a part of the problem-solving/design process.
4. An awareness of the customer.
5. An ability to function on multidisciplinary teams and an appreciation for the contributions from individuals from multiple disciplines.
6. An ability to communicate effectively with audiences with widely-varying backgrounds.
7. An awareness of professional ethics and responsibility.
8. An appreciation of the role that their discipline can play in social contexts.
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| EPCS 40100 - Senior Participation In EPICS |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Continuation of EPCS courses (see EPCS 10100). Seniors are responsible for the management tasks of planning and organizing their team project activity. They are expected to contribute expertise from their discipline to the design of the team's projects throughout most of the design process phases of problem identification, specification development, design, production, and deployment. Seniors will also meet with the customer and mentor the freshman, sophomores and juniors. Seniors using EPCS 40100/40200 to fulfill capstone or design requirements where approved for their major may be required to satisfy additional course requirements specified by their degree program. EPCS 40100 is offered for 1 credit. The EPICS procedures manual provides information on expected relative workload for EPCS 40100 and EPCS 40200 students. May not be taken concurrently with EPCS 40200.
Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Engr Prog In Community Service
Course Attributes: GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to apply material from their discipline to the design of community-based projects.
2. An understanding of design as a start-to-finish process.
3. An ability to identify and acquire new knowledge as a part of the problem-solving/design process.
4. An awareness of the customer.
5. An ability to function on multidisciplinary teams and an appreciation for the contributions from individuals from multiple disciplines.
6. An ability to communicate effectively with audiences with widely-varying backgrounds.
7. An awareness of professional ethics and responsibility.
8. An appreciation of the role that their discipline can play in social contexts.
|
| EPCS 40200 - Senior Participation In EPICS |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Continuation of EPCS courses (see EPCS 10100). Seniors are responsible for the management tasks of planning and organizing their team project activity. They are expected to contribute expertise from their discipline to the design of the team's projects throughout most of the design process phases of problem identification, specification development, design, production, and deployment. Seniors will also meet with the customer and mentor the freshman, sophomores and juniors. Seniors using EPCS 40100/40200 to fulfill capstone or design requirements where approved for their major may be required to satisfy additional course requirements specified by their degree program. EPCS 40200 is offered for 2 credits. The EPICS procedures manual provides information on expected relative workload for EPCS 40100 and EPCS 40200 students. May not be taken concurrently with EPCS 40100.
Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Engr Prog In Community Service
Course Attributes: GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to apply material from their discipline to the design of community-based projects.
2. An understanding of design as a start-to-finish process.
3. An ability to identify and acquire new knowledge as a part of the problem-solving/design process.
4. An awareness of the customer.
5. An ability to function on multidisciplinary teams and an appreciation for the contributions from individuals from multiple disciplines.
6. An ability to communicate effectively with audiences with widely-varying backgrounds.
7. An awareness of professional ethics and responsibility.
8. An appreciation of the role that their discipline can play in social contexts.
|
| EPCS 41100 - Senior Design Participation In EPICS |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Continuation of EPICS courses. Seniors using EPCS 41100 to fulfill capstone or design requirements where approved for their major may be required to satisfy additional course requirements specified by their degree program. EPCS 41100 is offered for 1 credit. The EPICS procedures manual provides information on expected relative workload for EPCS 41100 and EPCS 41200 students. Seniors are responsible for the management tasks of planning and organizing their team project activity. They are expected to contribute expertise from their discipline to the design of the team's projects throughout most of the design process phases of problem identification, specification development, design, production, and deployment. Seniors will also meet with the customer and mentor the first year, sophomores and juniors. May not be taken concurrently with EPCS 41200. Typically offered Fall, Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Engr Prog In Community Service
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to apply material from their discipline to the design of community-based projects.
2. An understanding of design as a start-to-finish process.
3. An ability to identify and acquire new knowledge as a part of the problem-solving/design process.
4. An awareness of the customer.
5. An ability to function on multidisciplinary teams and an appreciation for the contributions from individuals from multiple disciplines.
6. An ability to communicate effectively with audiences with widely-varying backgrounds.
7. An awareness of professional ethics and responsiblity.
8. An appreciation of the role that their discipline can play in social contexts.
|
| EPCS 41200 - Senior Design Participation In EPICS |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Continuation of EPICS courses. Seniors using EPCS 41200 to fulfill capstone or design requirements where approved for their major may be required to satisfy additional course requirements specified by their degree program. EPCS 41200 is offered for 2 credit. The EPICS procedures manual provides information on expected relative workload for EPCS 41100 and EPCS 41200 students. Seniors are responsible for the management tasks of planning and organizing their team project activity. They are expected to contribute expertise from their discipline to the design of the team's projects throughout most of the design process phases of problem identification, specification development, design, production, and deployment. Seniors will also meet with the customer and mentor the first year, sophomores and juniors. May not be taken concurrently with EPCS 41100. Typically offered Fall, Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Engr Prog In Community Service
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to apply material from their discipline to the design of community-based projects.
2. An understanding of design as a start-to-finish process.
3. An ability to identify and acquire new knowledge as a part of the problem-solving/design process.
4. An awareness of the customer.
5. An ability to function on multidisciplinary teams and an appreciation for the contributions from individuals from multiple disciplines.
6. An ability to communicate effectively with audiences with widely-varying backgrounds.
7. An awareness of professional ethics and responsiblity.
8. An appreciation of the role that their discipline can play in social contexts.
|
| EPCS 49000 - EPICS Special Topics Course |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Projects of special interest outside the scope and structure of the standard EPICS courses. Interested students seek a faculty advisor in their area of special interest and together prepare a brief description of the work to be undertaken. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Engr Prog In Community Service
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| EQU 10000 - Introduction To Equine Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course provides an introduction to the various facets of the equine industry and discusses their impact on state and national economies. Topics include but are not limited to equine sports and disciplines, career opportunities, national organizations and governing bodies, international equine operations, and equine economics contributions. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| EQU 20000 - Software For Equine Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Microsoft Office is used to create business newsletters and databases. Hands-on-experience using various equine software packages and creation of a business web site. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| EQU 22000 - Global Perspective Of Equine Industry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the global scope of the equine industry and the economic, political and social forces influencing growth. Attention will be given to the effects of changing political systems, regulation, taxation, exchange rates, global competition, demographics and other forces. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| EQU 30000 - Equine Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will work in an equine management environment in an organized and supervised situation designed to provide experience and challenges in a management situation. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| EQU 32000 - Equine Taxation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The focus is on Federal income tax laws and their impact on the equine operations. Business v. Hobby issue will be addressed by analyzing cases applying the nine regulatory factors determining the issue. Also to be addressed are forms of business, e.g. proprietorships, syndicates, partnerships, corporations, limited liability companies, cash and accrual methods of accounting, passive losses, depreciation, sales and exchanges. State and foreign taxes will be reviewed as they effect equine operations. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| EQU 33000 - Equine Staff Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the organizational structure and human resources and people required for equine operations whether that be a horse show, breeding farm, race track, or horsemen’s organization. Examples include the identification of a chain of command and the process of coordinating work. Topics that will be discussed include recruitment, selection, training, and employee evaluation. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to function as a Human Resorce person for Equine Operations.
|
| EQU 34000 - Equine Ethical Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course provides an introduction to ethical issues in the equine industry. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| EQU 35000 - Equine Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to methods combining accounting with budgeting, spreadsheets, risk analysis, and business plans to facilitate event operations. Equine industry related problem solving incorporating research techniques, data collection, quantitative analysis and decision making. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| EQU 37000 - Equine Sales And Services Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. . Marketing principles applied to the equine industry. Emphasis on services marketing in equine businesses including application of 4 P’s to services, design and management of service processes, crafting a service environment, and managing relationships and building loyalty . Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand the concepts of marketing Equine Services and will be prepared to perform in equine marketing positons.
|
| EQU 37200 - Equine Evaluation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course presents concepts on equine evaluation and teaches students to apply selection criteria established by National Breed Associations for equine performance and value. Tpyically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain basic equine terms and anatomy.
2. Understand form to function aspects of anatomy.
3. Identify breed association standards.
4. Discuss required breed judging components.
5. Discuss required discipline judging components.
6. Discuss assessment of equine market value.
|
| EQU 40000 - Equine Legal Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the legal aspects of the equine industry, to include an overview of commercial transactions, such as private and public sales of horses, stallion syndicate agreements, stallion service contracts, training agreements, boarding contracts, and applications of the Uniform Commercial Code to the equine industry. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| EQU 41000 - Equine Governance Structures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course discusses the role of international and national equine competition governance bodies, breed registry and association governance, and USDA governance role in the equine industries. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify international equine governance organizations.
2. Identify breed association governance organizations.
3. Identify discipline governance organizations.
4. Discuss roles and relationship of these governance organizations.
|
| EQU 42000 - Horse Racing And Gaming Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of the economics of casino gaming, lottery stems, and pari-mutuel wagering. Emphasis will be placed on factors affecting wagering and gaming, including product pricing, quality, competition, profits, and marketing strategy. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| EQU 44000 - Equine Stable Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course presents management practices essential for economic planning of equine stable operations. Students are provided with application examples and industry contacts. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify correct operational procedures for equine operations.
2. Staff and operate an equine operation.
3. Plan and create a budget for equine operations.
4. Order basic operational management procedures.
5. Create a business plan.
|
| EQU 45000 - Equine Senior Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course requires students to combine their experience in an internship with their course work to produce a 3-year business plan for an equine operation. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| EQU 48000 - Horse Show Project Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers basic project management skills applied to horse shows and includes scheduling, resource allocation, budgeting, and reporting to regulatory agencies. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| EQU 49000 - Equine Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Arrange with instructor before enrolling. Investigation in a specific equine management field. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 5 times
|
| ESC 10600 - Introduction To Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to careers in engineering technology, with a focus on academic, career, and personal development success strategies including lifelong learning skills and professional ethics. Introduction to analytical and computational problem-solving techniques using the electronic calculator, the factor-label method of unit conversion, engineering graphs, and spreadsheets. Introduction to laboratory testing and technical reports through the integrated use of software packages. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand engineering technology disciplines, and the similarities and differences between engineering technology and engineering degree programs.
2. Understand technical approaches to societal problems, including sustainable use of energy and materials.
3. Understand and apply concepts of professional and ethical responsibility.
4. Perform technical computations using an electronic calculator.
5. Convert units within and between the English and International systems of units.
6. Use dimensional analysis to yield units that are dimensionally correct for all physical quantities.
7. Solve engineering equations.
8. Work on a team to collect engineering laboratory data.
9. Write an engineering laboratory report using MS Word and MS Excel.
10. Make a team engineering presentation using MS PowerPoint.
11. Present engineering laboratory data using graphs.
12. Develop Gantt charts using MS Project.
|
| ESC 19000 - Statics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to fundamentals of applied mechanics, including equilibrium of structures under the influence of forces; trusses; frames; beams; friction; properties of areas; stress and strain in axial systems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ESC 20000 - Strength Of Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of applied strength of materials, including shear and bending moment; shear and bending stresses; bearing, connections; column analysis; and deflection of beams. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ET 10000 - Introduction To Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will introduce engineering technology students to resources and skills that will help them to be successful in their studies and ultimately in their careers. This course will help students explore engineering technology by introducing campus, regional, and national resources such as professional societies in their chosen fields. It will also help students improve in areas important to becoming better students. These areas may include topics such as planning academic careers, mentoring, improving study skills, goal setting, and utilization of library resources. In addition, the course will focus on specific introductory concepts important to engineering technology students such as using campus computer resources and the TAC of ABET outcomes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ET 15100 - Internship Program I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A practicum designed to combine University study with work experience directly related to the student's plan of study. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ET 25000 - Industrial Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Co-op work experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ET 25200 - Internship Program II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A practicum designed to combine University study with work experience directly related to the student's plan of study. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ET 30000 - Industrial Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Co-op work experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ET 35000 - Industrial Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Co-op work experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ET 35300 - Internship Program III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A practicum designed to combine University study with work experience directly related to the student's plan of study. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ET 40000 - Industrial Practice IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Co-op work experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ET 45000 - Industrial Practice V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Co-op work experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ET 45400 - Internship Program IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A practicum designed to combine University study with work experience directly related to the student's plan of study. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ET 49500 - Senior Project Survey |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will consider several projects and develop a topic for the following ET 49700 course. They will develop project scope, establish time schedules, and give a written and oral report on their proposal. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ET 49700 - Senior Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Senior project directed work on individual projects for senior engineering technology students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Successfully complete a complex, open-ended project using multiple areas of knowledge.
2. Demonstrate written communication skills at a professional level by preparing a report detailing the chosen project.
3. Demonstrate oral communication skills at a professional level by giving a presentation to the faculty, other students, and guests detailing the chosen project.
4. Demonstrate knowledge of ethical principles.
5. Demonstrate application of Risk Assessment.
|
| ET 49900 - Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Hours and subject matter to be arranged by staff. Course may be repeated for credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| ETCS 10600 - Introduction To Computers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A general introduction to computers and their applications with emphasis on breadth of coverage. Computer system components, terminology, programming concepts, and representative applications. History of computing. Contemporary issues. Productivity tools such as spreadsheets, database, computer graphics and their applications. Course will not count toward a Bachelor's degree in the computer science department. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ETHN 10000 - Introduction To Ethnic Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course provides students with general knowledge about racial and ethnic history, identity, and experience in the United States. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ETHN 20100 - The Hispanic American Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Dimensions of the Hispanic American experience, including history, education, politics, psychology, economics, religion, social organization, and art are covered in the course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ETHN 20200 - The African American Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Dimensions of the African American experience, including history, education, politics, psychology, economics, religion, social organization, and art are covered in the course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ETHN 31300 - African Amercan Women In Fiction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines fiction by African American women during the last century, emphasizing literary, cultural, and political aspects of the writing. The intersection of gender, race, class, and sexuality emerge as dominant issues within the fiction and the course as well. Both novels and short stories are explored. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ETHN 34000 - Literature By Women Of Color |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on literature written in English by women of color living in the United States. Writers included are of Aftican American, Native American, Asian American and Latino/Hispanic descent. The course introduces students to the emerging body of writing by women of color, heightening awareness of these women's literary contributions. English 340 examines some of the cultural differences among these groups, as reflected in the literature. The course also explores obstacles, particularly those related to race, gender, and class, that women of color share. Finally, the course enhances understanding of the experiences shared by women from all cultures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ETHN 39000 - Topics In Ethnic Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Variable titles. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ETHN 47500 - Ethnic Identity In Film |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Ethnic Identity in Film explores the construction of American ethnicity in mainstream American films. By examining films that reflect a particular ethnic sensibility and created by an individual of that particular ethnicity, this course will explore ethnic values and traditions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| EXPL 90000 - Orientation |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Exploratory Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EXPL 90100 - EXPL Fall Welcome |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Exploratory Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| EXPL 90200 - EXPL Block For GS |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Exploratory Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FCSM B1000 - Introduction To Interior Design |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An overview and analysis of the interior design profession including its many aspects and challenges, the academic preparation required, identification of the role of the interior designer, and career options.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FILM C2920 - Introduction To Film |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to the study of film as an aesthetic, cultural, and historical form. We examine the vocabulary of cinema, and elucidate various aspects of the filmmaking process. A grounding in the concepts of film studies will enable us to explore how cinema represents reality and chart the multi-faceted relationship between cinema and society.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FILM C3510 - Musicals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Why should we care about this seemingly quaint, esoteric genre in which characters burst into song here in our supposedly advanced era? Musicals are often regarded as in effect a historical genre. They are seen as speaking a dead language (pre-rock Broadwayese and Tin Pan Alley) as breaking the narrative of the classical Hollywood-style film, and of being excessively and cutely associated with show business, fairy tale realms, and folklorish Americana. Musicals are those things, and much more. We will look at the evolution of the one genre that didn’t exist in silent cinema, and how it affected the development of the Hollywood studio system. We’ll sample the works of Busby Berkeley, Astaire, and Rogers, Minnelli, Kelly, and Garland as well as a few of the better Broadway adaptations, as well as a bit of the musical revival that our current decade has had to offer (and that seems to have been successful). We also look at evolutions of the genre in the last three decades, beginning with Cabaret (1972) and extending to medications on the form like Pennies from Heaven (1981), up to the neo musicals (Moulin Rouge!, Chicago, etc.) of recent times. You’ll come away from a head-pulsing understanding that there couldn’t be cinema and media as we know them without musicals. It’s an essential genre. Students will learn how to talk about and recognize genre in its textual, historical, and cultural aspects. You will learn how to analyze film texts, how to research and think about the evolution of the genre and how to discuss that in a specific film. You will learn how musicals fit into the overall framework of entertainment, film art, and popular culture of the past eighty-some years and how to think critically about them and to analyze and communicate your own responses to the genre. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FILM C3620 - Hollywood In The 1950s |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course, the second in a series on the history of the sound film, concerns one of the most critical periods of change both in American life and in the American film as art and entertainment. The late forties and early fifties in America brought the end of two decades of depression and world war and the coming of prosperity, suburbs, the baby boom, the Cold War, television, and the first stirrings of the Civil Rights movement. For Hollywood, the era forced the end of the unified mass audience and with it the breakup of the old powerful studios. Now came the (first) age of the blockbuster, of widescreen and stereophonic sound, of youth films, and Method acting, of a measure of psychological realism, and a new division, however, artificial, between art and entertainment films. The fifties are a fascinating period of reinvention and transition. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FILM C3800 - French Cinema |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Arguably the world's most fervid and versatile film culture; the first public film showings; the first fantasy/science fiction films; the wide-screen lens; the idea of film noir, the Auteur Theory, the New Wave; philosophy and aesthetics, culture and politics; the cross-pollenation between French and U.S. cinemas. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FILM C3900 - The Film And Society: Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FILM C3910 - The Film: Theory And Aesthetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Film form and techniques; aesthetic and critical theories of the cinema; relationships between film movements and literary and artistic movements; relationships of word and image; analysis of significant motion pictures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FILM C3920 - Genre Study In Film |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the cinema of science fiction through representative SF films, primarily American, since the 1950's. We will explore the complex thematology of SF films (cyborgs, time travel, first contact with aliens, mutations, etc.) as it is manifested in the main types or categories of SF film, including space opera and "hard" SF. We will be concerned with analyzing how these thematic conventions and narrative types working together produce the science fiction "effect" and differentiate SF from other adjacent genres. The course also examines the relevance of literary and structural models for understanding the aesthetic effect of the science-fiction film. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FILM C3930 - History of European and American Films I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. C393 is a survey of the development of cinema during the period 1895-1926 the silent film era; Particular attention paid to representative work of leading filmmakers, emergence of film movements and development of national trends, growth of film industry, and impact of television.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FILM C3940 - History Of European And American Films II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. C394 is a survey of European and American cinema since 1927. Particular attention paid to representative work of leading filmmakers, emergence of film movements and development of national trends, growth of film industry, and impact of television. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FILM C4910 - Authorship In Cinema |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FILM C4930 - Film Adaptations Of Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of the processes and problems involved in turning a literary work (novel, play, or poem) into a screenplay and then into a film. Close study of literary and film techniques and short exercises in adaptation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FILM K1010 - Introduction To Film |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Nature of film technique and film language, analysis of specific films, major historical, theoretical, and critical developments in film and film study from the beginnings of cinema to the present. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FILM K2010 - Survey Of Film History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of film history from its beginnings to the present, emphasizing major developments in narrative cinema. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FILM K3020 - Genre Study In Film |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topic varies: the evaluation of typical genres; problems of generic description or definition; themes, conventions, and iconography peculiar to given genres, etc. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| FILM K3900 - The Film And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Film and politics; censorship; social influences of the cinema; rise of the film industry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| FILM K5020 - Genre Study In Film |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topic varies: major periods of film history and their relationship to the intellectual and social climate of the time; studies in genres or individual artists; studies of technology and modes of production; close reading of major works of film theory; new developments in theory and criticism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FIN 21000 - Principles Of Finance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of the basic problems a business will confront in the formation, financial operations, and termination of a business. Important financial issues including capital formation, utilizing capital markets, and investments will be covered as well as a general understanding of money and capital markets and monetary institutions. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify the role of financial management and the use of financial statement analysis.
2. Solve classic time value of money problems as applied to the area of financial management.
3. These topics would include present and future value, interest rate and number of payments, payment amounts, and variable cash flows.
4. Solve problems using the relationship between risk and return.
5. Evaluate the cost of capital to the organization and apply the capital asset pricing model.
6. Demonstrate critical thinking skills by analyzing problems and recommending appropriate solutions by solving capital budgeting problems using criteria such as payback periods, net present value, and internal rate of return (IRR).
7. Apply concepts needed to manage working capital for an organization.
8. Demonstrate the skills necessary to assess firm performance by analyzing financial statements.
|
| FIN 24000 - Personal Financial Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Lectures and case analysis of managing one's personal finances; includes budgeting, credit analysis, insurance, taxation, housing, estate planning, private and business investment. Not available for credit in Management concentrations. Credit will only be given for one of the following: ECON 24000, FIN 24000 OR FIN 44200. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Create a personal balance sheet.
2. Create a personal income statement.
3. Create a personal budget.
4. Solve basic time-value-of-money problems.
5. Calculate personal income taxes.
6. Compare and contrast rent vs. buy housing decisions.
7. Calculate a mortgage payment schedule.
8. Describe the basic characteristic of different investment instruments.
|
| FIN 31000 - Financial Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Management of the financial affairs of the industrial enterprise. Working capital management, current asset management, capital budgeting, stock and bond valuation, and capital structure decisions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn about the management of financial affairs of the industrial enterprise, including working capital management, current asset management, capital budgeting, stock and bond valuation, and capital structure decisions.
|
| FIN 34000 - Corporate Financial Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced topics in financial management of corporations, from the viewpoint of an internal financial officer. A continuation of FIN 31000 with additional depth and topic coverage emphasizing applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Evaluate the performance of a corporation using value based management metrics.
2. Calculate the value of a corporation using the corporate valuation model.
3. Estimate project cash flows and perform a capital budgeting analysis using a spreadsheet model.
4. Describe financial risk and its impact on the value of the firm.
5. Formulate a financial strategy for a corporation using a case approach.
6. Estimate the value of a target firm in a M&A transaction using the APV model.
7. Identify reasons why firms go global; demonstrate the application of interest rate parity in international capital budgeting.
8. Determine optimal portfolios using a spreadsheet model.
9. Analyze a lease-buy financing decision for a corporation.
|
| FIN 41200 - Financial Markets And Institutions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to financial markets and management of financial institutions. Emphasis on determinants of interest rates, and measurement and management of financial risk. Concentration on management of depository firms such as banks and savings and loans. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be introduced to financial markets and management of financial institutions through learning about determinants of interest rates, and measurement and management of financial risk, with particular attention on management of depository firms such as banks and savings and loans.
|
| FIN 44000 - Management Of Financial Institutions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Management and policy topics providing insight on the internal operating procedures, and problems of financial institutions. Principles of loan analysis and the role of financial institutions in the capital markets are studies with an emphasis on commercial bank management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the business of banking and financial services management.
2. Analyze and evaluate the performance of financial institutions using financial statements, key ratios, operating trends, and peer comparisons.
3. Explain the function of investment portfolio management and the value of liquidity management for financial institutions.
4. List and describe the primary sources of funds for financial institutions.
5. Describe the meaning of capital adequacy for financial institutions and calculate the regulatory capital requirements.
6. Describe the various types of loans available from financial institutions and explain how credit risk is managed.
7. Explain how effective asset-liability management strategies create value for financial institutions.
|
| FIN 44100 - Futures And Options |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Characteristics of futures and options and their relationship to stocks, bonds, and other financial assets. The determination of futures and options prices and how they are used for hedging and immunization purposes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the role of derivatives in risk management.
2. Distinguish between options and futures contracts.
3. Calculate the theoretical price of a call and put option using the Black-Scholes model .
4. Calculate profit and loss functions of call and put options positions.
5. Explain the concept of put-call parity and the arbitrage implications.
6. Describe option spreads; calculate profit and loss functions for bull and bear spreads.
7. Calculate profit and loss functions of long and short futures positions.
8. Determine the hedge ratio for various futures positions.
|
| FIN 44200 - Personal Finance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Lectures and discussion on problems of managing one's personal finances. Covers budgeting; use of and cost of credit; life and property insurance; income and estate taxation; housing; wills, trusts and estate planning; saving and investments. Not available for credit towards economics and business economics concentrations. Credit only for one of the following: ECON 24000, FIN 24000, OR FIN 44200. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the personal financial planning process including the use of time value of money concepts to put a monetary value on financial goals.
2. Prepare a personal balance sheet, income statement and a cash budget and use it to monitor and control spending.
3. Understand the basics of an effective tax planning strategy, home buying and developing a strong credit history.
4. Explain the concept of risk and the basics of life, liability, health and property insurance.
5. Identify and evaluate alternative investments in stocks, bonds, mutual funds and real estate to accomplish personal financial goals.
6. Recognize the importance of retirement planning and estimating income needs in retirement.
7. Describe the role of estate planning in personal financial planning and use of effective planning techniques to minimize estate taxes.
|
| FIN 44300 - Fundamentals Of Investments |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Operations of the markets in which securities are traded, and investment alternatives are studied. Theory and application of security valuation and portfolio selection techniques are examined with emphasis upon evaluation of investment performance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Discuss the key considerations in setting investment objectives.
2. Discuss the implications of the efficient market hypothesis.
3. Describe the relationship between risk and return on investments.
4. Understand the process of fundamental analysis.
5. Interpret economic, industry and company data to arrive at estimates of variables that determine the value of common stocks.
6. Understand the basic principles of bond valuation, and risks faced by bond investors.
7. Understand how mutual funds operate and how their performance is measured.
8. Understand how options and futures contracts are valued.
9. Explain how the portfolio effect works to reduce the risk of an individual security.
|
| FIN 44400 - Investment Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Treatment of problems of portfolio analysis, securities investment selection, and capital markets. Theoretical development, as well as quantitative and practical applications, at the level of the individual decision-maker. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the effect of general economic conditions on the profitability of different instruments.
2. Calculate the return and standard deviation of portfolios formed by different instruments.
3. Calculate option prices by using the binomial and the Black-Scholes models.
|
| FIN 44700 - Derivatives |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of derivative contracts and their relationship to stocks, bonds and other tradeable assets. Also, a description of risk and risk management. Specific topics include forward, futures, options, swaps, and related contingent claims contracts. The determination of their theoretical prices as well as their application in hedging and portfolio immunization. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the role of derivatives in risk management.
2. Distinguish between options and futures contracts.
3. Calculate the theoretical price of a call and put option using the Black-Scholes model .
4. Calculate profit and loss functions of call and put options positions.
5. Explain the concept of put-call parity and the arbitrage implications.
6. Describe option spreads; calculate profit and loss functions for bull and bear spreads.
7. Calculate profit and loss functions of long and short futures positions.
8. Determine the hedge ratio for various futures positions.
9. Design a plain vanilla interest rate swap.
10. Calculate value at risk for a stock portfolio.
|
| FIN 44800 - Real Estate Principles |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the key aspects of negotiation, acquisition, and financing of real estate. Other topics include amortization, renovation, restoration, management and depreciation of real estate assets. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Create amortization schedules.
2. Evaluate a rent vs. buy decision in the context of real estate.
3. Evaluate a lease vs. build decision in the context of real estate.
4. Analyze tax implications of real estate acquisition decisions.
5. Describe how financial markets provide financial capital for real estate development.
6. Describe the regulatory environment of real estate markets.
|
| FIN 44900 - International Financial Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the financial management of the international operations of the business. The course develops the international financial environment within which the multinational firm operates. Instruments such as currency forward, futures, and options contracts availiable for the firm to manage additional risk associated with international operations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Compare different methods to shield exchange rate exposure.
2. Choose the best method to shield exchange rate exposure based on the cost for the firm of each method.
3. Explain the effect of changes in interest rate, inflation, and national income in the exchange rate.
4. Use Interest Rate Parity to calculate a synthetic forward.
|
| FINA A1000 - An Introduction To Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores, in a non-chronological fashion, issues of creativity and visual communication. The aim will be to build visual literacy and an understanding of the relationship of art, society, and culture. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA A1010 - Ancient & Medieval Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of major styles and monuments in art and architecture from prehistoric times to the end of the Middle Ages.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA A1020 - Renaissance Through Modern Art Through Modern Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to art from Giotto and van Eyck through Picasso and Matisse. Emphasis on analytical skills. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA A1080 - Art Of The Western World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Western art from ancient Greece through the present day, focusing on major artists and artwork of western culture, stressing underlying social, cultural, as well as historical circumstances for each period. Does not count toward the fine arts major. Credit not given for both FINA-A 108 and H 100.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA A1090 - Ways Of Seeing: Visual Literacy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This survey provides an overview to assist students in their appreciation and understanding of visual culture throughout human development. It investigates the nature and culture of "seeing": how we see ourselves and our world as influenced by physiological, environmental and cultural conditions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA A1700 - Women Artists/Visual Arts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of major areas of visual arts in which women have played a substantial part as artists. Major emphasis on women as artists in relationship to the major movements of the time. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA A1900 - Art Aesthetics And Creativity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores artistic disciplines and associated forms, materials, and practices. Develops students' making, looking, and listening skills. Through the creative process, students explore relationships to other individuals and cultures, and review the implications of their learning for their personal, academic, and professional pursuits. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA A2700 - Women in the History of Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An in-depth study of the lives and works of women artists from a single historical period (e.g 1550-1750, 1750- 1900, etc.) Emphasis on the relationships between the specific historical circumstances and women's achievements in the arts. May be repeated with different topic for a maximum of six credits. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA A2800 - The Art Of Comics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of the visual and narrative language of comics from the earliest newspaper strips to the graphic novels of today. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
Learning Objectives:
1. Comprehend the evolution and history of comics and graphic novels.
2. Obtain extensive knowledge of the creation of comics from the written story to the colorist.
3. Delve deeply into the artist’s works, allowing for breadth and depth of the art from this period.
4. Acquire an understanding of correlation of word and image along with historical context surrounding each work.
5. Strengthen abilities of writings about art with greater understanding.
6. Become familiar with traditional and digital forms of resources.
7. Discuss current research in the field
8. Ability to recognize the significance in the development of art history.
9. Identify artwork from major and minor writers and artists.
10. Further develop a critical lens in viewing, discussing, and writing about art history.
|
| FINA A3060 - Women In The Visual Arts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The works and life of Western female artists are discussed. The relation to, and difference of, the female artist’s approach to art historical traditions is analyzed. Feminist theories in art history are employed for analyzing the production of art by women in the West as to how it reflected and, at the same time, affected its political and cultural milieus. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA A3070 - Introduction To Non-Western Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to Non-Western Art will introduce students to the cultural art of
Non-Western societies. The course will discuss how art is categorized in Non-Western cultures. The historical, social and cultural role played by the arts in Non-Western cultures will be analyzed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA A3400 - Topics In Modern Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a topics course in the history and study of nineteenth and twentieth-century European and American art. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| FINA A3430 - American Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of American art from the colonial period to the beginning of abstraction in 1945. Emphasis on painting and theory of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA A3450 - American Art To 1913 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. American architecture, sculpture, painting, photography, and graphics from the seventeenth century to the Armory Show of 1913. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA A3480 - American Architecture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of American architecture from the colonial period to the late twentieth century, including public, commercial, and domestic design with an emphasis on historical context and the role of architecture as signifier of social, cultural, and political ideologies. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA A4470 - Modernism And Anti-Modernism In American Art 1900-1945 |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A survey of Amerian painting, sculpture, photography, design, and commerical art in the early Modern period. Topics include the urban realism of the "Ash Can School"; the early avant-garde; New York Dada; the cult of the machine; regionalist painting and the American heartland; the expressionist landscape; and surrealism American style. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA D210 - Digital Art: Survey And Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Beginning class on digital media’s role in the world of art production and reception. Class emphasizes learning to use digital media to produce original, creative art work. Topics include digital imaging, communicative art and interactivity. Credit given for only one of FINA D2100 or T2300. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FINA F1000 - Fundamental Studio Drawing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. F100 Drawing is an introductory course that provides students a free hand linear approach to pictorial representation. Various graphic media, methods, and skills define form and personal geometric and expressive studies from nature, constructed objects, and imaginary sources. Initially, the curriculum emphasized geometrical line principles that develop hand-eye coordination and a visual awareness for the interpretation of a two-dimensional image. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA F1010 - Fundamental Studio-3D |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to three dimensional (3D) form and space, and their interrelation with structure, materials, and expression in all the three dimensional visual arts. It is a prerequisite to any other 3D studio course and is part of the required Fundamental Studio program for all art majors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA F1020 - Fundamental Studio 2D |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The aim of this course is to study, through practice, the dynamic relationships of 2D design components: Color-shape, value and line. The ultimate goal of the course is to develop, through experience, by trial and error, the student?s visual imagination and understanding. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA H1000 - Art Appreciation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A broad introduction to the art and cultural productions of a variety of the world's cultures, from the earliest times to the present, for the general student. Emphasis is on an appreciation of art through and understanding of its history, themes, and purposes. Does not count as credit toward a fine arts major or minor.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA H1010 - Art Appreciation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Objectives: to acquaint students with outstanding works of art and to provide an approach to appreciation through knowledge of purposes, techniques, form and content. No credit toward a fine art degree. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA H1110 - Ancient Through Medieval Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A multi-cultural survey of art and art history from prehistoric times through the 14th century. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA H1120 - History Of Art II: Renaissance To Contemporary |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of art from the 14th century to the present. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA H1500 - History Of Comic Book Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In their juxtaposition of words and images, comic books have fashioned one of the most sophisticated narrative languages in the history of visual art; this course will explore the formation of that language from the earliest newspaper comic strips to today’s graphic novels. We will also study the evolution of comic-book graphic styles, and place the development of the comics in its social context. In addition to American mainstream and underground comics, we will study other traditions, such as the French-language Bandes dessinées and Japanese Manga. A special focus of the course will be the rise and critique of the concept of the superhero in
American comic books from the thirties to today. The artists and titles studied will include Krazy Kat, Little Nemo in Slumberland, Peanuts, the Golden- and Silver-Age superheroes, R. Crumb, Harvey Pekar, Moebius, Hergé’s Tintin, Hugo Pratt’s Corto Maltese, Koike and Kojima’s Lone Wolf and Cub, Frank Miller’s Dark Knight, Alan Moore’s Watchmen, Art Spiegelman, Ben Katchor, and Chris Ware. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FINA H3110 - Art of the Ancient World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comprehensive study of the art and theory of the Greco-Roman period. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA H3120 - Art of the Medieval World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comprehensive study of the art and art theory of the Medieval period. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA H3130 - Art of the Renaissance and Baroque |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comprehensive study of the art and art theory in the Renaissance and Baroque periods. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA H3140 - Art of the Modern World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comprehensive study of the visual arts in the 19th and 20th centuries. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA H3230 - Ancient Greek Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of ancient Greek art from the eighth through the second century BCE. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA H3240 - Roman Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of ancient Roman art from the Republic through the fourth century CE. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA H3320 - Early Medieval Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of early medieval art from the emergence of Christian art in the third century through the end of the first millennium. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA H3330 - Later Medieval Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of later medieval art from the turn of the first millennium through the fourteenth century. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA H3410 - Italian Renaissance Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of Italian Renaissance art. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA H3420 - Northern Renaissance Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of Northern Renaissance art. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA H3510 - Nineteenth-Century Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of European art in the nineteenth century. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA H3520 - Twentieth-Century Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.0. A study of art in the twentieth century. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA H3630 - African Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.0. A study in African art. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA H3900 - Topics In Art History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In-depth projects and studies in special directions of art history, closely related to existing areas of concentration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Kokomo
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| FINA H4010 - Art Theory IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Art theory of the 19ht and 20th centuries. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA H4110 - 19th Century Art I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. 1780-1850. Major artistic movements in Western Europe and the United States during the first half of the 19th century. Eligible for Graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA H4120 - 19th Century Art II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Major artistic movements in Western Europe and the United States during the second half of the 19th century. Eligible for Graduate Credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA H4130 - 20th Century Art: 1900-1924 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. European artists and movements of the first part of the 20th century: Symbolism, Fauvism, Expressionism, Cubism, etc. for painting, and Art Nouveau, de Stijl, Bauhaus, Sullivan, and early Wright for architecture. Eligible for Graduate credit. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA H4140 - 20th Century Art: 1925 - Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Painting, scuplture, and architecture from 1925 to the present. Emphasis on American developments, including historical background from Armory Show to migration of Surrealism, Abstract Expressionism, Op, Pop, Minimal, and Kinetic art. A worldview of architecture will cover such topics as International Style and New Brutalism. Eligible for Graduate credit. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA H4150 - Art Of Pre-Columbian America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the arts of pre-Hispanic America with emphasis on the arts of ancient Mesoamerica. Eligible for Graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA H4160 - History Of The Print |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The history of printmaking will be the focus of this class. Materials, methods, artists, and stylistic development as well as the influence of technology will be the content. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA H4310 - Research Seminar In Medieval Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A seminar in which students conduct individual, semester-long research projects on medieval works of art. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA H4320 - Reading Seminar In Medieval Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.0. A seminar in which students read scholarship from a variety of disciplines on a theme selected by the professor and of particular interest to medieval art historians. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA H4900 - Topics In Art History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In-depth projects and studies in special directions of art history closely related to existing areas of concentrations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FINA H4950 - Readings and Research in Art History |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 12 credits
|
| FINA N1080 - Introduction to Drawing for Non-majors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces the student to the basic elements of drawing. Line, shape, value, and perspectives will be studied before moving on to the more complex use of color. Landscape and still life will be the source of subject matter for the semester. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA N1100 - Introduction to Studio Art for Nonmajors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A & H Introduces nonmajors to the elements and principles of visual language. Students will explore drawing, two-dimensional and three-dimensional design. Development of compositional skills that will result in a more sensitive visual aesthetic and sensibility. For nonmajors who are exploring practice in the visual arts. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA N1980 - Introduction to Photography for Nonmajors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. For those who use automatic snapshot cameras but do not require darkroom expertise. Covers
basic camera operation, film choice, composition, color, lighting, visual communication, and
aesthetics. Considers journalism, commercial, and fine art photography. Also discusses home
video and new imaging technology. A 35mm camera required. Assignments completed on
slide film.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA N2980 - Intermediate Digital Photography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. N2980 is an intermediate photography course exploring digital photography using more advance photography techniques including compositional strategies for shooting individuals and groups of people, lighting techniques using natural and off-camera strobe light and editing workflow using the latest versions of Lightroom and Photoshop. Special attention will also be paid to journalism or documentary photography. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| FINA P1210 - Drawing Fundamentals I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The fundamentals of representation are taught through the drawing of simple objects, forms, and volumes in line, tone, and texture using simple tools and free-hand drawing skills with a variety of media; emphasis on sound understanding of values, proportion, and perspective. (P121 Fall; P122 Spring). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P1220 - Drawing Fundamentals II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The fundamentals of representation are taught through the drawing of simple objects, forms, and volumes in line, tone, and texture using simple tools and free-hand drawing skills with a variety of media; emphasis on sound understanding of values, proportion, and perspective. (P121 Fall; P122 Spring). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P1240 - Figure Drawing Fundamentals II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to drawing the human figure using various media and techniques. Basic anatomy; the skeletal and muscular structure of the human figure as related to drawing is included. (P123 Fall; P124 Spring). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P1330 - Metalsmithing Fundamentals For Non-Art Majors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will learn various basic fabricating techniques using non-Ferris metals (copper, brass, silver) on a small object/jewelry scale. Processes studied will include silver brazing with acetylene gas touches, metal stretching and forming by hand using polished hammers, wax working, and silver lost-wax casting. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P1510 - Design Fundamentals I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (VCD P1510) Two dimensional design: In design fundamentals, the student becomes familiar with the vocabulary and elements of the visual language. Also, the expressive powers of the elements of line, shape, texture, space and color are explored through a series of sequential exercises. Many different problems in building visual units provide the training artists need to make individual, yet clear, expressive and complete statements. (P1510 Fall; P1520 Spring). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P1520 - Design Fundamentals II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (VCD P1520) Three dimensional design: In design fundamentals, the student becomes familiar with the vocabulary and elements of the visual language. Also, the expressive powers of the elements of line, shape, texture, space and color are explored through a series of sequential exercises. Many different problems in building visual units provide the training artists need to make individual, yet clear, expressive and complete statements. (P1510 Fall; P1520 Spring). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P2210 - Advanced Drawing I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced concentration in drawing. Focus is upon the figure, various media, and independent and supervised assignments. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P2230 - Figure Drawing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to drawing the human figure using various media and techniques. Basic anatomy; the skeletal and muscular structure of the human figure as related to drawing is included. (P123 Fall; P124 Spring). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P2250 - Painting Fundamentals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to painting methods and media and the further application of basic principles of composition through varied pictorial problems from still life, landscape, memory, and imagination. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P2260 - Painting Fundamentals II, Watercolor Painting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Watercolor painting class. Introduction to painting methods and media and the further application of basic principles of composition through varied pictorial problems from still life, landscape, memory, and imagination. (P225 Fall; P226 Spring). Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P2310 - Sculpture Fundamentals I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Student will work in a wide variety of sculptural mediums. Assignments will focus on idea based expression as well as a thorough introduction to different tools and processes of sculptural construction. Projects will allow student expression within a guideline that explores natural and abstract images. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P2320 - Sculpture Fundmntls II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Student will work in a wide variety of sculptural mediums. Assignments will focus on idea based expression as well as thorough introduction to different tools and processes of sculptural construction. Projects will allow student expression within a guideline that explores natural and abstract images. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P2330 - Metalsmithing Fundamentals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Understanding of the possibilities of the materials and an appreciation of the use of the tools essential for the creation of forms and objects in metal. Basic techniques, raising, planishing, casting, forging, and fabrication are taught. Inventiveness, within the discipline imposed by this traditional art form, is encouraged. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P2350 - Ceramics Fundamentals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals techniques of forming by hand-building methods, glazing and firing clay objects. Introduction to the creative possibilities of this craft through projects in tile, pottery form and sculpture. Emphasis on self expression through good design and understanding the medium. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P2410 - Printmaking Fundamentals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of materials, tools, processes in the various methods of printmaking (block printing, lithography, and intaglio) as they are used for contemporary graphic concerns. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P2510 - Advanced Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced topics in design. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P2520 - Advanced Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced topics in design. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P2730 - Computer Art & Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course introduces the Macintosh computer environment and imaging software that supports digital imaging and design. May be taken concurrently with F100, F101, or F102.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA P2800 - Desktop Publishing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Photoshop, QuarkExpress, Adobe Illustrator. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FINA P3210 - Advanced Drawing I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of P122. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P3220 - Advanced Drawing II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of P122. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P3230 - Introduction To Web Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the technical and design fundamentals and principles of web design. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| FINA P3250 - Advanced Painting I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of P226. (P325 Fall; P326 Spring). Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P3260 - Advanced Painting II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of P226. (P325 Fall; P326 Spring). Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P3310 - Advanced Sculpture I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of P231. Advanced problems related to individual interests and objectives. (P331 Fall; P332 Spring). Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P3320 - Advanced Sculpture II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of P231. Advanced problems related to individual interests and objectives. (P331 Fall; P332 Spring). Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P3330 - Advanced Metalsmithing I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced problems in metalsmithing determined by the student's skill, interest, and major objectives. (P333 Fall; P334 Spring). Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P3340 - Advanced Metalsmithing II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced problems in metalsmithing determined by the student's skill, interest, and major objectives. (P333 Fall; P334 Spring). Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P3350 - Advanced Ceramics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced problems in ceramics focusing on wheel throwing and pottery form. Stoneware and porcelain will be used and an understanding of glazing techniques will be emphasized. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P3360 - Advanced Ceramics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced problems in ceramics focusing on wheel throwing and pottery form. Stoneware and porcelain will be used and an understanding of glazing techniques will be emphasized. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P3370 - Site Specific Ceramic Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Develop techniques and concepts in designing and creating site specific ceramic tile murals and sculptural installations. Exposure to historical precedents in the use of ceramic in architecture and architectural settings. Develop techniques for creating ceramic tile and sculpture for indoor and outdoor application. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P3410 - Advanced Printmaking I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will concentrate on the use of their preferred print techniques (wood-cut, serigraphy, intaglio, lithography) while seeking their own personal images. (P341 Fall; P342 Spring). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P3420 - Advanced Printmaking II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will concentrate on the use of their preferred print techniques (wood-cut, serigraphy, intaglio, lithography) while seeking their own personal images. (P341 Fall; P342 Spring). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P3740 - Computer Art and Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 6.00. Continuation of exploration of features of graphics software programs. Familiarization with procedures for optimal image scanning, including file formats and image resolution. Students work with page layout, combining images and text to create dynamic design.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA P3800 - Web Design |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Photoshop for the Web, HTML, and Dreamweaver.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FINA P3900 - Topics in Studio Fine Art |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. In-depth projects and studies of special studio art topics closely related to existing areas of concentration. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 18 credits
|
| FINA P4210 - Advanced Drawing III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of P322. Eligible for graduate credit. (P421 Fall; P422 Spring). Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P4220 - Advanced Drawing IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of P322. Eligible for graduate credit. (P421 Fall; P422 Spring). Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 5 times
|
| FINA P4250 - Advanced Painting III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of P326. Eligible for graduate credit. (P425 Fall, Summer; P426 Spring, Summer). Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P4260 - Advanced Painting IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of P326. Eligible for graduate credit. (P425 Fall, Summer; P426 Spring, Summer). Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 5 times
|
| FINA P4310 - Advanced Sculpture III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of P332 with advanced problems determined in relation to the major objectives and interests of the student. Eligible for graduate credit. (P431 Fall; P432 Spring). Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 5 times
|
| FINA P4320 - Advanced Sculpture IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of P332 with advanced problems determined in relation to the major objectives and interests of the student. Eligible for graduate credit. (P431 Fall; P432 Spring). Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 5 times
|
| FINA P4330 - Advanced Metalsmithing III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced problems in metalsmithing determined by the skills, interests, and major objectives of the student. Eligible for graduate credit. (P433 Fall; P434 Spring). Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 5 times
|
| FINA P4340 - Advanced Metalsmithing IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced problems in metalsmithing determined by the skills, interests, and major objectives of the student. Eligible for graduate credit. (P433 Fall; P434 Spring). Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 5 times
|
| FINA P4350 - Advanced Ceramics III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced problems in ceramics determined by the skills, interests, and major objectives of the student. Eligible for graduate credit. (P435 Fall; P436 Spring). Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 5 times
|
| FINA P4360 - Advanced Ceramics IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced problems in ceramics determined by the skills, interests, and major objectives of the student.Eligible for graduate credit. (P435 Fall; P436 Spring). Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 5 times
|
| FINA P4410 - Advanced Printmaking III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of P342. Advanced problems in printmaking determined in relation to the major objectives and interests of the student. Eligible for graduate credit. (P441 Fall; P442 Spring). Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 5 times
|
| FINA P4420 - Advanced Printmaking IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of P342. Advanced problems in printmaking determined in relation to the major objectives and interests of the student. Eligible for graduate credit. (P441 Fall; P442 Spring). Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 5 times
|
| FINA P4500 - Fine Arts Senior Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Major thesis required of fourth-year students. In this course, a body of work must be developed that ultimately results in the B.F.A. thesis exhibition prior to graduation. A committee of full-time fine arts faculty and FINA P4500 students meet a minimum of three times during a semester to critique and approve the body of work. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| FINA P4540 - Graphic Design IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Professional problem solving in graphic design. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA P4800 - Supervised Study in Drawing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Supervised study in drawing in concert with full-time drawing faculty. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P4810 - Supervised Study in Painting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Supervised study in painting in concert with full-time painting faculty. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P4820 - Supervised Study In Sculpture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Supervised study in sculpture in concert with full-time sculpture faculty. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P4830 - Supervised Study in Metalsmithing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Supervised study in metalsmithing in concert with full-time metalsmithing faculity. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P4840 - Supervised Study In Ceramics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Supervised study in ceramics in concert with full-time ceraqmics faculty. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P4850 - Supervised Study In Printmakng |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Supervised study in printmaking in concert with full-time printmaking faculty. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA P4900 - Topics in Studio Fine Arts |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. In-depth projects and studies of special studio art topics closely related to existing areas of concentration. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| FINA P4950 - Independent Study In Fine Arts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides the opportunity for a student to pursue studio interests (such as mixed media) not served in other course offerings. Projects may vary. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| FINA P5900 - Topics Of Studio Fine Art |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FINA S1050 - Introduction to Design For Non-Majors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to design for non-majors introduces students to the basic elements of design. Line, shape, space, focus, and color are the elements which are covered in class. Formal and informal systems of design will be explained in classroom exercises. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA S1350 - Introduction To Drawng for Non-majors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces the student to the basic elements of drawing. Line, shape, value, and perspective will be studied before moving on to the use of color. Landscape and still life will be the source of subject matter for the semester. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA S1650 - Ceramics For Non-Majors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to ceramics is a creative art course in which students use handbuilding techniques to create tile, pottery form and ceramic sculpture. Various lowfire surfaces and firing atmospheres will be explored. Slide lectures will accompany projects, exposing students to the work of various cultures and ceramic artists. Classroom projects and discussions will promote a greater understanding of form and creative processes. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA S1900 - Fundamentals Of Photography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic practice of camera operation, exposure calculation, exposing, printing and enlarging monochrome photographs. Guidance toward establishment of a personal photographic aesthetic.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA S1960 - Printmaking For Nonmajors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Understanding of basic printmaking techniques through hands-on experience with monotype, relief, and intaglio (etching). Appreciation and sensitivity to the art of the print will be cultivated.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA S2000 - Drawing I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Basic drawing course for all areas of studio art. The course deals with the perception of forms in space, the light source, and composition. In addition, the students are introduced to figure drawing and landscape. The intention of the course is to familiarize the student with the history of drawing ideas and how artists use drawing to aid in their work. Secondly, the history of techniques is stressed so that the student has a comprehension of the choice of material available to her or him. This course primarily meets in the drawing rooms with occasional field trips to draw on location. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA S2150 - Studio In Digital Media I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory work in the use of digital media tools, including video, animation, image manipulation, and digital illustration, in the creation of art. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| FINA S2200 - Textile Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Textile Design I. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FINA S2300 - Painting I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Working in a studio workshop setting, students will be introduced to basic painting techniques, variety of materials, and to ideas that are fundamental to painting. Construction and preparation of surfaces is covered as well as introduction to oil painting as a substance, its plastic, chemical and visual properties. Color mixing is demonstrated. Technical assistance continues throughout the semester. Elements stressed are line, 2-dimension, value, color, 3-dimension and surface. The student is made aware of the function of each element and its importance compositionally. Each student is encouraged to investigate their personal response to the quality of each element and to use it intelligently and meaningfully in an organized fashion. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FINA S2390 - Painting For Non-Majors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to painting in oil. Study of the spatial and expressive qualities of color, with an emphasis on composition and pictorial design. Development of technical skills in image making through exploration of traditional and modern methods of paint application. Introduction to surface preparation, framing, and display of paintings. (Will not count toward a major in Fine Arts.). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA S2400 - Basic Printmaking Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory course to printmaking with emphasis on three basic media: intaglio, lithography, and silkscreen. Five weeks of concentrated work in each area with faculty critiques at the end of each session. Sections are taught by our most mature and experienced graduate students. Drawing and pictorial composition are stressed with serious study of the interrelationships of all graphic media. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA S2500 - Graphic Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Drawing and perception in the history and practice of visual communication, including a basic introduction to the field and exercises with pencil, marker, computer, and other tools, to produce symbols, letter forms, and symbol-letter combinations. The application of color theory, perspective, basic drawing, basic composition, basic typography, and combination of these elements for the role of non-verbal communication. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA S2600 - Ceramics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Offered every semester, this course offers a limited introduction to handbuilding, throwing, glaze mixing, glaze application, including a few lectures on basic ceramic techniques. Demonstrations, slide presentations, critiques, self-initiated projects, instructor initiated projects all insure the development of student basic techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA S2700 - Sculpture I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. The study of sculpture with an emphasis on the relationships of volume and space through modeling, carving, and construction. A variety of materials including wood, steel, and plaster are utilized in exploring and developing sculptural ideas. Well equipped work shop is available for further exploration in construction areas. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA S2800 - Metalsmithing And Jewelry Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory course for exploring metalworking and jewelry design as a serious form of creative expression. Focuses on the basic techniques of piercing of metals, soldering, sheet metal construction, surface embellishment, mechanical joining, wire forming and forging, stretching of sheet metals and various metal finishing techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA S2910 - Fundamentals of Photography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic practice of digital camera operation, exposure calculation, exposing, image file management, image optimization and digital printing. Guidance toward establishment of a personal photographic aesthetic. A digital SLR camera is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA S2960 - Fundamentals Of Digital Photography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to Digital Photography. DSLR Camera operation, exposure calculation, printing and the connoisseurship of digital images will be studied along with the formal and aesthetic understanding of photography in a historical and contemporary context. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA S3010 - Drawing II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intermediate course in drawing from the model and other sources. This class will draw at various locations in the community as well as models and still lifes in the classroom. The various materials available are stressed as well as the different effects these materials can produce. The emphasis will be on drawing as a means of expression rather than as a sketch or study. Exercises will be given that will help the student isolate and explore the principles of drawing such as line, volume, mass, tone, space and scale. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA S3060 - Digital Illustration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Digital Illustration is an introduction to drawing and painting using a computer. Emphasis is on developing conceptual skills and narrative compositions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| FINA S3210 - Woven And Construction Textile Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course looks at the woven and construction of textile design. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FINA S3230 - Intermediate Photoshop |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Comprehensive coverage of page layout. Strong emphasis on typograpy, including formatting, style sheets, and combining text with imagery. Files will be prepared for print, including preparation of collate-for-output reports and management of images and fonts. Features such as templates, libraries, and managing large documents will be covered.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA S3240 - Page Layout And Design |
|
Credit hours: 3.00. This course involves comprehensive coverage of page layout, strong emphasis on typography, including formatting, style sheets, and combining text with imagery. Files will be prepared for print, including preparation of collect-for-output reports and management of images and fonts. Features such as templates, libraries, and managing large documents will be covered. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA S3300 - Studio In Digital Media II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| FINA S3310 - Painting II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intermediate course in painting from the model and other sources. Emphasis on technical command and understanding of the components of painting space, color, volume, value, and scale. Media: oil or acrylics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FINA S3410 - Printmaking II Intaglio |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study with emphasis on intaglio. Problems in pictorial composition and drawing stressed. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA S3510 - Graphic Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Graphic Design course emphasizing typography and page layout.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA S3570 - Graphic Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Further studies exploring design principles. Students utilize both hand and digital methods to solve design problems creatively and effectively. Course includes typographic exploration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| FINA S3610 - Ceramics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continued practice in forming and glazing, with emphasis on wheel throwing, surface decoration, and kiln firing techniques. Instruction through lectures, demonstrations, and critiques. May be repeated once. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times or for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| FINA S3710 - Sculpture II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of skills in both traditional and contemporary sculpture methodology. Rotating semester topics include figurative sculpture, casting, steel/wood construction, installation art, and ideas through the sculptural form and knowledge of materials and historical traditions. May the repeated once. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| FINA S3810 - Metalsmithing and Jewelry Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Extensive designing and model making for exploring forms and ideas in metal and mixed media, either as jewelry, hollowware objects, flatware, tea strainers and infusers, boxes, or small-scale sculpture. Focus on techniques of angle raising, repousse and chasing, forging of flatware, stone setting, and lost-wax casting, jewelry mechanisms, hing making, and patination of metals. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| FINA S3920 - Intermediate Photography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to theory and practice of photography for the serious student. There will be a series of progressive exercises aimed at developing the student?s awareness and understanding of photography and the relationship of creativity to the individual. There will be an attempt made to strike a balance between doing (crafts aspect) and thinking (creative problem solving). Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA S4000 - Independent Studio Projects |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 12.00. Individual studio projects under guidance of faculty member or committee. Does not fulfill a specific course requirement for a fine arts major. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FINA S4010 - Drawing III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced work in drawing. Emphasis on development of personal vision and style, coupled with a thorough knowledge of drawing techniques. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| FINA S4170 - Hand Papermaking I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to papermaking. An introduction to materials and processes of hand papermaking and investigation of their aesthetic potential. In addition to basic resources and bibliographic references, the course covers theory and process of beating, sizing, sheet formation, couching, pressing and drying; surface variation; color potential; and casting and structural experimentation.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA S4610 - Ceramics III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Further practice in advanced ceramic techniques. Instruction through lecture demonstrations and critiques. Topics vary by instructor and semester. Consult the online schedule of classes for current information on content. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Richmond
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 5 times
|
| FINA S4620 - Clay Body And Glaze Preparation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuing opportunity for extensive practice in ceramic glaze techniques. Does include body preparation, glaze, and clay body. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FINA S4970 - Independent Study in Studio Art |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA T2300 - Computer Art: Survey And Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Beginning class on digital media’s role in the world of art production and reception. Class emphasizes learning to use digital media to produce original, creative art work. Topics include digital imaging, communicative art and interactivity. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FINA T2550 - Crafts And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to formal elements of two-dimensional and three-dimensional design and how these apply to contemporary crafts. Aesthetic judgment and personal creativity emphasized. Required for elementary education majors. No credit towards a fine art major. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Richmond
|
| FINA T3200 - Video Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of the medium of video as an aesthetic expression. Time and sound are elements incorporated into visual composition's traditional concerns. Emphasis on technical command of video camera and digital editing procedures in conjunction with development of a visual sensitivity. Readings and a research project are required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| FINA T3380 - Special Topics In Digital Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics cover the latest in digital media applications and trends. Topics can vary. IUS Fine Arts is offering digital photography which includes understanding how to shoot and process digital photographs using the latest computer applications. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FINA U2000 - Digital Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to digital art will cover a variety of digital means for the creation of art work and design work. Photoshop, Illustrator, Flash, Dreamweaver, and digital audio will be introduced and examined in projects designed to create a familiarity with the digital work flow, storage and output. This course is cross listed with New Media N200. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FINA U3700 - 2D Animation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course teaches the basics of two-dimensional animation including storyboarding, drawing extremes and in-betweens, defining motion paths, creating illusion of depth, digital lighting, and other animation techniques. Photoshop and illustrator plus Flash will be used in addition to traditional methods for creating animations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| FIS 10101 - Investigating Forensic Science |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Forensic science is the application of scientific methods to matters involving the public. One if its principle applications is the scientific analysis of physical evidence generated by criminal activity. During this laboratory course you will learn basic techniques used to analysis forensic evidence. This will start with concepts in evidence documentation and collection. You will then learn concepts used in pattern recognition, forensic chemistry and biology, and trace evidence. There will be hands on activities in all these disciplines. Topics will include but are not limited to crime scene, fibers, hairs, explosives, fire debris, serology, DNA, illicit drugs, fingerprints, footwear, questioned documents, inks, glass, paints, blood splatter, and soils. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Forensic Science investigations-introduction to the forensic laboratory and crime scene investigation.
2. Pattern Evidence-physical matches, pattern and impression evidence.
3. Biological Evidence-bodily fluid identification, blood splatter, DNA analysis.
4. Chemical Evidence-ink analysis, explosives, fire residue examination, illicit drug analysis.
5. Trace Evidence-use of microscopy to examine trace evidence including hair and fibers.
|
| FIS 20500 - Concepts Of Forensic Science I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Forensic science and the criminal justice system. Evidence collection and analysis. Fingerprints, firearms, questioned documents, engineering, behavioral forensic sciences, pathology, entomology, anthropology. Forensic science and the law. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FIS 20600 - Concepts Of Forensic Science II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of FIS 20500. Forensic chemistry and biology; hairs and fibers, fires and explosions, paints and coatings, blood and DNA, drugs and toxicology. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FIS 25000 - Photography At A Crime Scene I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course teaches the basics of photography using film, digital and video cameras in the recording of a crime scene. Lectures, discussions and practical exercises help students practice each system applying specific photographic principles that will be used to document mock crime scenes. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FIS 25100 - Photography At A Crime Scene II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course teaches how to document a crime scene with high quality photographs that fairly and accurately represent what was found at a scene so that the implications can be conveyed to others sitting in judgment. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FIS 26000 - Scientific Digital Imaging I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Digital Imaging technology provides the opportunity for increased efficiency and effectiveness in processing images for legal matters. It is possible to more quickly capture the right images and it is possible to extract more information from images using high-speed computers and advanced software. This course teaches the techniques and processes that can be used. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FIS 26100 - Scientific Digital Imaging II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course teaches the basics of image processing for images that may be used for courtroom purposes. Digital imaging methods, following guidelines of the Scientific Working Group on Imaging Technology of the FBI will be utilized to produce high quality, valid and reliable images suitable for courtroom applications. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FIS 30500 - Professional Issues In Forensic Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Ethical issues in forensic science. History, development and culture of crime laboratories. Expert testimony, quality assurance and control in a crime lab. Preparing for employment in a forensic science agency; locating jobs and preparing for interviews. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FIS 30600 - Forensic Microscopy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will learn analysis techniques of forensic microscopic evidence. Topics include: property of light, compound light microscopy, micrometry, refraction, dispersion, stereomicroscopy, sample preparation, polarizing light microscopy, and instrumental microscopy. Microscopes are used every day in class to handle forensic type of evidence. The overall goal of this course is to develop techniques to analyze trace evidence. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the fundamentals of crime laboratory culture and organization.
2. Understand the role of forensic science in crime scene investigation.
3. Explain and be able to classify evidence.
4. Explain and describe quality assurance and control used in forensic science laboratories.
|
| FIS 40100 - Forensic Chemistry I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will cover the major techniques and instruments used in the analysis of chemical and pattern evidence commonly encountered at crime scenes. Techniques of instrumental microscopy, gas, thin layer and liquid chromatography, and UV-visible and infrared spectrophotometry will be studied extensively. Lecture components of the types of instrumental analysis covered in the course. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify processes for collection and preservation of evidence.
2 Identification of statistical techniques and classification of statistical techniques and classification of statistical data.
3. Presumptive testing.
4. Application of various techniques for forensic evidence.
5. Compare and interpret types of forensic evidence results from instrumentation.
|
| FIS 40101 - Forensic Chemistry I - Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will cover the major techniques and instruments used in the analysis of chemical and pattern evidence commonly encountered at crime scenes. The techniques of instrumental microscopy, gas, thin layer and liquid chromatography, and UV visible and infrared spectrophotometry will be studied and used extensively. There will be lab components for each of the type of instrumental analysis covered in the course. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstration of good laboratory procedures.
2. Application of statistical data to forensics.
3. Communicate knowledge of methods of sample preparation in forensic chemistry.
4. Presumptive testing.
5. Classification and application of techniques.
6. Identification of fibers, paints and inks.
7. Collection of evidence.
8. Analysis of evidence.
|
| FIS 40200 - Forensic Biology I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to the use of biological materials to assign identity to persons associated with a crime. The course will introduce methods for the preliminary detection of biological evidence and introduce the use of DNA. The materials learned will encompass broader topics such as immunology, molecular biology, and genetics. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand and explain the principles, instrumentation and forensic applications of: collection and preservation of evidence, presumptive and confirmatory tests, DNA typing, single source DNA profiling.
2. Desribe the biological composition, origins and significance for common types of biological evidence: determine appropriate scheme to be used on biological evidence at crime scenes.
|
| FIS 40201 - Forensic Biology I - Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This laboratory includes practical exercises that reflect common practice in forensic science laboratories, including but not limited to collection and preservation of biological evidence, presumptive and confirmatory tests, DNA extraction, and PCR amplication. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Recognition of appropriate evidence that should be collected from a crime scene.
2. Understanding of optimal collection and preservation techniques.
3. Recognition of the presence of human biological materials.
4. Understanding of DNA analysis.
|
| FIS 40300 - Forensic Biology II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a continuation of FIS 40200 and will go into more detail about the structure of DNA, the application of molecular biology techniques for the determination of individual identity. The materials learned will encompass broader topics such as immunology, molecular biology, genetics, population genetics and statistics. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand principles, instrumentation and forensic applications of: PCR amplification, single source DNA profile analysis, mixture analysis, statistical interpretation of DNA profiles.
2. Describe biological composition, origins, significance and molecular methods for common types of biological evidence.
3. Determine appropriate molecular scheme to be used on biological evidence.
|
| FIS 40301 - Forensic Biology II Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This laboratory section includes practical exercises that reflect common practice in forensic science laboratories. This lab is a continuation of FIS 40201. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Analysis using DNA markers.
2. Interpret DNA electropherograms.
3. Perform statistical analysis from samples representative of common biological materials found at crime scenes.
|
| FIS 40400 - Forensic Chemistry II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will cover the major techniques used in the analysis of chemical and trace evidence commonly encountered at crimes scenes. This course will be broken down into two modules. The overall course will cover techniques used during the analysis of trace and chemical evidence in a forensic laboratory. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Distinguish and classify evidence.
2. Apply instrumental techniques.
3. Classify specific terminology.
|
| FIS 40900 - Forensic Science Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Forensic science or literature research with a report. Can be elected only after consultation with a research advisor and approval of the program. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FIS 41500 - Forensic Science And The Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of various laws and rules of evidence to the forensic sciences and how the admission of evidence derived from forensic sciences can impact the administration of justice in the United States. Topics include preparation for testimony, expert testimony, subpoenas, basic judicial processes, admissibility of scientific evidence. Open only to majors in the FIS program or with consent of instructor. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FIS 49000 - Forensic Science Capstone |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. One of the following: Internship at approved forensic science or other organization, library research or laboratory research supervised by FIS faculty. Final paper required in all cases. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FIS 49600 - Special Topics In Forensic Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Topical course covering various and specialized areas of Forensic Science. This course will have different topics that focus on the latest theory and best practices in forensics laboratories. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FIS 50500 - Seminar In Forensic Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of Forensic Science. Ethics and quality assurance and control. Laboratory management and use of scientific evidence in the criminal justice system. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand and describe the development of forensic science.
2. Critically evaluate the role of forensic science in the judicial system.
3. Apply the pertinent rules of evidence to the admissibility of scientific evidence in court.
4. Analyze and synthesize the major codes of forensic science ethics and propose a unified code.
5. Learn the methods of collection and preservation of physical evidence and maintenance of the chain of custody and apply them to forensic science.
6. Develop and apply methods of classification of forensic evidence.
7. Apply methods and strategies of presentation of scientific evidence in court.
|
| FIS 50600 - Forensic Microscopy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Techniques in the analysis of forensic microscopic evidence. Topics include property of light, compound microscopy, micrometry, refraction, dispersion, stereomicroscopy, sample preparation, polarizing light microscopy, and instrumental microscopy. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply stereomicroscopy to the analysis of trace evidence.
2. Apply compound microscopy to the analysis of trace evidence.
3. Apply polarized light microscopy to the analysis of trace evidence.
4. Apply infrared microscopy to the analysis of trace evidence.
5. Apply UV-visible microspectrophotometry to the analysis of trace evidence.
6. Analyze basic types of trace evidence.
|
| FIS 51100 - Forensic Chemistry I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will focus on the analysis and identification of commonly abused chemicals such as ethanol, controlled substances and prescription drugs. The history, legal issues, synthesis, chemical/physical properties, and laboratory analysis of these materials will be discussed. Special topics of the student's choosing will also be included in the form of student presentations. A separate laboratory section will also be offered in which students will complete practical exercises utilizing spectroscopy, chromatography, and mass spectrometry that reflect common practice in forensic science laboratories. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the principles of chromatography and the techniques of gas, liquid and thin layer chromatography and their applications to the analysis of controlled substances.
2. Describe the principles of spectroscopy and the techniques of UV, fluorescence and IR spectroscopy and mass spectrometry.
3. For each of the following controlled substances: describe its “street” forms and at least one coherent scheme for analysis. Be able to carry out the complete analysis of a representative sample of each controlled substance.
4. Describe the classes of designer drugs.
5. Describe the various types of clandestine drug laboratories and schemes of processing and analysis of clandestine laboratories.
|
| FIS 51101 - Forensic Chemistry I - Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This laboratory section includes practical exercises utilizing spectroscopy, chromatography and mass spectrometry that reflect common practice in forensic science laboratories. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Use knowledge and employ analytical/critical thinking skills to determing the appropriate use of specific techniques when presented with examples of circumstances typically encountered in the profession.
2. Demonstrate knowledge in the performance of analytical methods for alcohol and drugs using gas chromatography, ultra-violet spectroscopy, infrared spectroscopy, and thin layer chromatography.
|
| FIS 51200 - Forensic Chemistry II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will focus on the use of instrumental techniques to analyze trace evidence types such as ink fibers, paint, adhesives, tape, ignitable liquids, and explosives. A separate lab section will include practical laboratory exercises utilizing spectroscopy, chromatography and mass spectrometry that reflect common practice in forensic science laboratories. Special topics will also include current research such as pattern recognition techniques, novel sampling methods and provenance determination. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the common types and forms of the evidence as it occurs in crime scenes.
2. Classify each type of evidence as class or individual evidence.
3. Describe the scientific tests performed on the evidence and what information can be gained from each test.
4. From the tests above, be able to construct a scheme of analysis for the evidence that extracts the maximum amount of information about that evidence.
5. Be able to perform an independent analysis of unknown evidence.
6. Be able to write a comprehensive laboratory report describing the analysis of unknown evidence.
|
| FIS 51201 - Forensic Chemistry II - Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will include practical laboratory exercises utilizing spectroscopy, chromatography and mass spectrometry that reflect common practice in forensic science laboratories. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be expected to use their knowledge and employ analytical and critical thinking skills to perform practical laboratory exercises utilizing spectroscopy, chromatography and mass spectrometry.
2. Students will be expected to demonstrate their proficiency in the use of the following techniques: TLC, HPLC, and GC; FTIR and Raman; MS using EI, CI and ESI.
3. Students must also demonstrate their ability to determine the appropriate analytical scheme to be used in the evaluation and analysis of trace evidence.
|
| FIS 51500 - Forensic Science And The Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of various laws and rules of evidence to the forensic sciences and how the admission of evidence derived from forensic sciences can impact the administration of justice in the United States. Topics include: preparation for testimony, expert testimony, subpoenas, basic judicial processes, and admissibility of scientific evidence. Open only to students enrolled in the Master of Science in Forensic Science program or students enrolled in the Law School. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FIS 52100 - Forensic Biology I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to the use of biological materials to assign identity to persons associated with a crime. The course will introduce methods for the preliminary detection of biological evidence and introduce the use of DNA. The materials learned will encompass broader topics such as immunology, molecular biology and genetics. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Determine is a stain of blood.
2. Determine if a blood stain is human.
3. Identification of other body fluids.
4. Determine the motion and directionality of blood spatter pattern.
5. Determine the point of convergence and the point of origin of blood spatter pattern.
|
| FIS 52101 - Forensic Biology I - Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This laboratory section includes practical exercises that reflect common practice in forensic science laboratories, including but not limited to collection and preservation of biological evidence, presumptive and confirmatory tests, DNA extraction, and PCR amplification. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Use knowledge and employ analytical/critical thinking skills in the recognition of the appropriate evidence that should be collected at a crime scene.
2. Demonstrate understanding of DNA analysis and recognition of optimal collection and preservation techniques and the presence of human biological materials.
|
| FIS 52200 - Forensic Biology II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a continuation of FIS 52100 and will go into more detail about the structure of DNA, the application of molecular biology techniques for the determination of individual identity. The materials learned will encompass broader topics such as immunology, molecular biology, genetics, population genetics and statistics. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Recognize the biological evidence for forensic DNA analysis.
2. Extract DNA from blood and other body fluids.
3. Perform forensic DNA typing suing standard methodologies.
|
| FIS 52201 - Forensic Biology II - Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course includes practical exercises that reflect common practice in forensic science laboratories. This laboratory is continuation of FIS 52101. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be expected to use their knowledge and employ analytical and critical thinking skills in the use of techniques for the determination of identity through the analysis of DNA markers and interpretation of DNA electropherograms.
2. Students will perform statistical analysis from samples representative of common biological materials found at crime scenes.
|
| FIS 59000 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Lecture or lecture/lab courses offered on topic areas that are not part of the regular M.S. curriculum. These topics may include: firearms and tool marks, questioned documents, forensic pathology, fingerprints, and others. They are electives in the M.S. in Forensic Science Program. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
Learning objectives and method of evaluation will vary with each course.
|
| FIS 59400 - Internship In Forensic Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. The internship provides students with an opportunity to experience the workings of a practicing forensic science laboratory. Although a research project is usually the centerpiece of the internship experience, students are given exposure to all of the sections of the laboratory including case management. Students are given an opportunity to attend a crime scene as an observer and to attend court to observe a forensic scientist offer expert testimony. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. To understand all sections of a working forensic science laboratory.
2. To learn crime scene investigation and apply what is learned in the classroom to real-world problems.
3. To understand the preparation involved when giving expert testimony in a court of law.
4. To be able to explain what was learned and to better understand the management of real-world cases.
|
| FIS 59700 - Design Of A Research Project |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Develop a graduate-level research project in forensic science, including literature searches, writing a research proposal, and defending the proposal. Open only to part-time students in the Master of Science in Forensic Science Program. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. To learn how to develop an idea for a graduate level research project in forensic science.
2. To learn to use the printed and electronic literature in the development of a research proposal.
3. To learn how to write a research proposal.
4. To be able to defend the research proposal to a group of faculty and peers.
|
| FIS 69500 - Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Weekly seminars presented by FIS faculty, visiting faculty, and FIS graduate students. Required for graduate students admitted into the M.S. in Forensic Science Program. Concurrent Prerequisites: FIS 50500. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn the latest techniques in forensic and investigative sciences.
2. Develop a cutting edge seminar topic with appropriate audio-visual aids and present it to a professional audience.
3. Increase their oral communication skills.
4. Synthesize and integrate diverse topics related to forensic science.
|
| FIS 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Credit hours arranged. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 5 times
|
| FLAC F4500 - Computers In Translation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis is on topic, author, or genre. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FLL 10300 - Freshman Experience Worldviews |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course would include utilization of campus resources, goal setting, values exploration, relationship of academic planning and life goals, discipline specific career exploration and critical thinking relative to the study of foreign languages and literature. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate effective communication skills in English.
2. Demonstrate effective computer utilization skills.
3. Demonstrate an understanding of various cultures and their interrelationships.
4. Demonstrate an understanding of the relationships between technology and society.
5. Demonstrate the requirements for the freshman experience course.
|
| FLL 19000 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Special topics related to world languages, cultures, and literatures. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FLL 20300 - French Cinema- Introduction To Film Study |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course is based on close readings of individual films. We will look at the concept of film analysis and the relationship between films, politics, and society. The written assignments are designed to develop students’ writing skills in English and their ability to engage critically with a visual document. Students are expected to participate actively in class discussions and to lead discussions on assigned topics. Course taught in English and open to all students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Recognize, analyze, and interpret the human experience in terms of personal, intellectual, and social contexts.
2. Be able to “read” a film and analyze the aesthetic experience of viewing.
3. Acquire the skills to view films as an art form.
4. Study the terminology associated with film criticism.
5. Write a film analysis, and explore the relationship between film, politics, and society.
6. Reach a balance between broadening students’ knowledge of French culture and expanding their critical thinking abilities.
7. Develop the skills required to decipher the complexities of the visual culture in which they live.
8. Students will become visually literate citizens.
|
| FLL 20700 - Franco-American Cultural Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will primarily focus on the cultural relationships between France and the United States. It will encourage students to investigate the cultural interactions between these two nations in the course of history. Although the concentration will be on Franco-American connections, the course will foster a broader awareness and understanding of cultural differences essential in today's increasingly global society. Course taught in English and open to all students. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Gain an awareness of the cultural differences in today's increasingly global society and international relations.
2. Understand the cultural interactions between France and the United States from the Enlightenment period through the twenty-first century.
3. Be able to critically discuss a variety of texts and topics.
4. Demonstrate an increased proficiency in reading and writing due to written assignments and short papers.
|
| FLL 29000 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Special topics related to world languages, cultures, and literatures. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FLL 39000 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Special topics related to world languages, cultures, and literatures. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FLL 40300 - National, Racial And Ethnic Identities In Austrian Literature Of The 20th Century |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores diverse representations of identity in post-1914 Austrian literature and films, especially in the aftermath of the two world wars. The goal of this course is to examine questions linked to national, ethnic, racial, and gender identity within the above historical, social, cultural, intellectual, and political context. Issues such as the self and the "other", historical burdens of fascism, the holocaust and responsibility, migration, transnationality, colonialism, race, and gender are advanced via narrative and/or cinematic representations of the Austrian context. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| FLL 40500 - Globalization: Latin American Literature And Transnational Conflicts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course addresses degree requirements for global awareness and diversity. It provides students with an opportunity to explore interdisciplinary approaches to many of the most significant changes occurring in today's world. This course will be added as an elective in the proposed Latin American Studies Minor. The course will fit into Curriculum 2000 as an additional elective. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| FLL 46400 - Comparative Study Of Modern Languages |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of French, German and Spanish phonology, syntax and morphology. Representative presentations of historical and contemporary descriptive considerations of these languages. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| FLL 49000 - Special Topics In Foreign Languages And Literatures |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FLLC Q1000 - Residential Learning Workshop |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Small discussion groups led by undergraduate students from Foster International Living Learning Center will consider topics relevant to community living as well as the structure and operation of FILLC in relation to the university. Students will complete a project contributing to the purpose of the center. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FM 10000 - Individualized Wellness Strategies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The course will provide students with a working knowledge of healthy living practices, an assessment of the students' present wellness status, and an opportunity to choose a physical activity, as well as develop additional wellness strategies that can be enjoyed throughout life. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FM 10100 - Cardiovascular Exercise Machines |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will provide students with a working knowledge of healthy living practices, an assessment of the students' present wellness status, and an opportunity to choose a physical activity, as well as develop additional wellness stategies, that can be enjoyed throughout life.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FM 10200 - Weight Training |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will provide students with a working knowledge of healthy living practices, an assessment of the students' present wellness status, and an opportunity to choose a physical activity, as well as develop additional wellness strategies, that can be enjoyed throughout life.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FM 10300 - Walking/Jogging |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will provide students with a working knowledge of healthy living practices, an assessment of the students' present wellness status, and an opportunity to choose a physical activity, as well as develop additional wellness strategies, that can be enjoyed throughout life.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FM 10400 - Physical Fitness |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will provide students with a working knowledge of healthy living practices, an assessment of the students' present wellness status, and an opportunity to choose a physical activity, as well as develop additional wellness strategies, that can be enjoyed throughout life. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FM 10500 - Yoga |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will provide students with a working knowledge of healthy living practices, an assessment of the students' present wellness status, and an opportunity to choose a physical activity, as well as develop additional wellness strategies, that can be enjoyed throughout life. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FM 10600 - Racquetball |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will provide students with a working knowledge of healthy living practices, an assessment of the students' present wellness status, and an opportunity to choose a physical activity, as well as develop additional wellness strategies, that can be enjoyed throughout life. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FM 10700 - Basic Self-Defense |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will provide students with a working knowledge of healthy living practices, an assessment of the students' present wellness status, and an opportunity to choose a physical activity, as well as develop additional wellness stategies, that can be enjoyed throughout life. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FM 11200 - Aikido |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will provide students with a working knowledge of healthy living practices, an assessment of the student's present wellness status, and an opportunity to choose a physical activity, as well as develop additional wellness strategies that can be enjoyed throughout life. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FM 11300 - Tai Chi |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will provide students with a working knowledge of healthy living practices, an assessment of the student's present wellness status, and an opportunity to choose a physical activity, as well as develop additional wellness strategies that can be enjoyed throughout life. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FM 11400 - Pilates |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will provide students with a working knowledge of healthy living practices, an assessment of the student's present wellness status, and an opportunity to choose a physical activity, as well as develop additional wellness strategies that can be enjoyed throughout life. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FM 11600 - Wing Chun |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will provide students with a working knowledge of healthy living practices, an assessment of the student's present wellness status, and an opportunity to choose a physical activity, as well as develop additional wellness strategies that can be enjoyed throughout life. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FM 11700 - Latin Ballroom Dance Partner |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is an introduction to dance partnering techniques in Latin dance. It is an exercise class to facilitate the development of proper style and understanding of ballroom/Latin dance partnering movements and techniques while providing aerobic benefit. This course also provides students with a working knowledge of healthy living practices, and assessment of students’ present fitness status and the opportunity to develop wellness strategies that can be enjoyed throughout life. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to explain factors that influence physical and mental wellness.
2. Students will be able to explore strategies that enhance wellness for themselves and others.
|
| FM 11701 - Latin Ballroom Dance Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is an introduction to ballroom techniques in Latin dance. It is an exercise class to facilitate the development of proper style and understanding of ballroom/Latin dance movements and techniques while providing aerobic benefit. This course also provides students with a working knowledge of healthy living practices, an assessment of students’ present fitness status and the opportunity to develop wellness strategies that can be enjoyed throughout life. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to explain factors that influence physical and mental wellness.
2. Students will be able to explore strategies that enhance wellness for themselves and others.
|
| FM 11702 - Advanced Weight Training |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course follows FM 10200, Weight Training, and is an advanced physical activity class designed to instruct students in advanced weight training principles and techniques. This course also provides students with a working knowledge of healthy living practices, an assessment of students’ present fitness status and the opportunity to develop wellness strategies that can be enjoyed throughout life. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to explain factors that influence physical and mental wellness.
2. Students will be able to explore strategies that enhance wellness for themselves and others.
|
| FM 11703 - Jiu Jitsu |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course provides instruction and practice of this martial art and combat sport that focuses on grappling and grouped fighting, achieving a dominant position, and application of submissions techniques. This course also provides students with a working knowledge of healthy living practices, an assessment of students’ present fitness status and the opportunity to develop wellness strategies that can be enjoyed throughout life. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to explain factors that influence physical and mental wellness.
2. Students will be able to explore strategies that enhance wellness for themselves and others.
|
| FM 11704 - Zumba |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is an introduction to Zumba, a Latin-inspired dance fitness class that incorporates Latin and international music and dance movements. It is an exercise class to facilitate the students’ development of a dynamic, exciting and effective fitness system which provides aerobic benefit. This course also provides students with a working knowledge of healthy living practices, an assessment of students’ present fitness status and the opportunity to develop wellness strategies that can be enjoyed through life. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to explain factors that influence physical and mental wellness.
2. Students will be able to explore strategies that enhance wellness for themselves and others.
|
| FM 21900 - Issues And Problems In Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to acquaint students with various aspects of personal and community health problems. Emphasis will be on current health issues such as pollution, mental health, venereal disease, aging, medical care, etc. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| FM 25000 - Principles Of Adult Fitness |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The purpose of this course is to expose students to the effects of exercise on health over the life course. The health benefits of different types of exercise will be reviewed. Students will have the opportunity to utilize fitness equipment and develop their own exercise plans. Existing community programs and resources will be discussed. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| FM 26800 - Physiology Of Exercise |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Physiological concepts and principles underlying human responses and adaptations to exercise. Selected methods and techniques of assessing physiological function and evaluating performance in physical efforts in a laboratory setting. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| FM 28000 - Principles Of First Aid |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A course designed to instruct students in the immediate and temporary care given victims of an accident or illness. Covers dressings, bandaging, CPR, lacerations, insect and animal bites and other first aid topics. Certification included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| FM 30000 - Practicum In Health, Fitness And Nutrition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Clinical field experience of at least 300 hours in an approved health, fitness, and/or nutrition facility under the direction of a certified or registered instructor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| FM 30100 - Recreation Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides instruction in various aspects of recreation. Community, school, camping, travel and leisure time activities will be part of the instruction. Identification of the principles of recreation and the many organizations promoting recreational activities are included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| FM 30200 - Anatomy And Kinesiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of human body structures and functions appropriate for exercise science. Emphasis on musculoskeletal and neuromuscular systems as they relate to human movement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| FM 30500 - Practicum In Fitness Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Second level of clinical field experience of at least 300 hours in an approved health, fitness, and or nutrition facility under the direction of a certified or registered instructor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| FM 31300 - Beginning Concepts Of Personal Training |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is designed to give students the knowledge and understanding necessary to prepare for the ACE Personal Trainer Certification Exam and become personal trainers. This course presents the ACE Integrated Fitness Training (ACE-IFT) Model as a comprehensive system for designing individualized programs based on each client’s unique health, fitness and goals. The information covered by this course and the ACE IFT Model will help students learn how to facilitate rapport, adherence, self-efficacy and behavior changes in clients, as well as design programs that help clients to improve posture, movement, flexibility, balance, core function, cardiorespiratory fitness, and muscular endurance and strength. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. To prepare students for the ACE Personal Trainer Certification Exam and become effective personal trainers.
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| FM 31400 - Beginning Concepts Of Group Exercise |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is designed to provide theoretical knowledge and practical skills in preparation for the ACE Group Fitness Instructor Certification Exam. Topics include guidelines for instruction safe, effective and purposeful exercise, essentials of the instructor-participant relationship, the principles of motivation to encourage adherence in the group fitness setting, effective instructor-to-participant communication techniques, use of music and music selection, methods for enhancing group leadership, and the group fitness instructor’s professional role. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Prove competency in developing safe and effective exercise programming in the group exercise area of cardiovascular, strength and flexibility fitness. Demonstrate practical competency in the areas of client assessment, program design, client coaching and basic nutritional advice.
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| FM 32000 - Physical Growth Throughout The Life Span |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Designed to acquaint fitness and health professionals with the physical growth and development of individuals throughout the life span. Includes factors relating to movement, behavior, learning, motor skills, and nutrition. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| FM 37500 - Sport-Related Tourism And Leisure Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (HTM 37500) Integration of Sport and Tourism disciplines. Sport participation and spectator travel, hard and soft adventure tourism, and management of leisure time are emphasized. Focus on the dynamics behind the explosion in Sport and Adventure Tourism. Not open to students with cedit in HTM 37500. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| FM 39000 - Undergraduate Special Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 6.00. Individual or group participation in supervised reading, laboratory experiences, field experiences, or research in special areas of the field of fitness management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| FM 41000 - Evaluation, Testing And Assessment Of Exercise |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Instruction and laboratory experience in the scientific evaluation, testing and assessment of exercise. Includes data collection, analysis and statistical applications. Oriented toward interpreting test data and applying it toward the design of individual exercise programs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| FM 47400 - Physiology Of Exercise II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Advanced level exercise physiology course exploring physiological concepts and principles assessing physiological function and evaluating performance in physical efforts in a laboratory setting. Includes integration of metabolic, cardiovascular, respiratory, endocrinological and biochemical functions of the human body in response to exercise. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| FN 10500 - Nutrition In The 21st Century |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Overview of the scope of nutrition science. Consideration of current nutrition and food safety controversies. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| FN 10600 - The Profession Of Dietetics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Semester two offered only through videotapes and e-mail. Overview of the dietetics profession, including standards, ethics, educational and employment opportunities, and professional credentialing. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| FN 12000 - Nutrition for a Healthy Lifestyle |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Basic understanding of nutrition guidelines and lifestyle risk factors related to diet. Assessment of the individual's diet and related behaviors. Solutions to everyday nutrition problems that lead to lifestyle enhancements are presented. (Course does not meet nutrition competency requirement for Nursing, Early Childhood Education or Hospitality and Tourism Management majors). Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| FN 12100 - Vegetarian Nutrition |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Issues to review when considering adoption of a vegetarian diet. Nutrition guidelines and risk factors related to vegetarianism are addressed. Various types of vegetarian diets and the benefits/risks each pose are discussed. Course does not meet nutrition competency requirement for nursing, early childhood education or hospitality and tourism management majors. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| FN 20300 - Foods Selection And Preparation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of food selection, preparation, and meal planning. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
|
| FN 20400 - Food, History And Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Food, History & Culture is designed to examine the fundamental tenets that govern human behavior around food choices and foodways. The symbolic value and meaning of food will be looked at; the relationship of food cultures to consumer behavior will be scrutinized. Study in this course will explore the historical development of the current food cultures in Europe, Asia, Africa, the Middle East and the Americas. Course study will also explore the impact of foodways and food choices on nutritional status and health. Foods representing select cultures and traditions will be studied and prepared during the laboratory portion of the course. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| FN 20500 - Food Science I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Chemical and physical composition of foods: their changes during processing, storage, and preparation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| FN 20800 - Nutrition in Women's Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of women's health issues with emphasis on nutrition. Review of current research in normal and preventative nutrition throughout the lifecycle. Focus on women as individuals and on those who counsel and educate women. (Course does not meet nutrition competency requirements for Nursing, Early Childhood Education or Hospitality and Tourism Management majors. Not open to students with credit in WOST 20800). Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| FN 26000 - Nutrition For Early Childhood Educators |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the basic principles of food and nutrition from pregnancy through the primary years and methods to achieve good nutritional status. Special emphasis on nutrition education, legislation, and regulation in pre-school and elementary classrooms (grades K-3). (This course does not satisfy the nutrition competency for Nursing or HTM majors). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| FN 26100 - Nutrition For Health, Fitness, And Sports |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the relationship between physical fitness/sports activity and nutrition resulting in optimum health. Special emphasis on nutritional demands during exercise or sports activities. Laboratory experience in the Fitness Center required. (This course does not satisfy the Nutrition competency for Nursing or HTM majors). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| FN 30200 - Nutrition Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic nutrition and its application to current trends and controversies. Emphases placed on teaching techniques and communicating sound nutritional concepts to the lay audience. For non-science majors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| FN 30300 - Essentials Of Nutrition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic nutrition and its application in meeting nutritional needs of all ages. Credit not given for both FN 30300 and FN 31500. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
|
| FN 30400 - Nutrition's Place In Hospitality |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on fundamental nutrition for the student¿s personal and professional life. Needs for, functions of, and food sources of nutrients will be covered. Emphasis in this course will be on food habits, trends, and factors affecting selection of foods, and how this relates and can be used in menu planning and evaluation of personal use and in the food service/culinary industry. Emphasis in this course is on nutrition topics pertinent to the food service/culinary industry. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| FN 30900 - Vegetarian Lifestyles |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Course topics will include reasons for selecting vegetarianism and types of vegetarianism.
. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FN 31300 - Principles Of Healthy Menu Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic principles of nutrition as applied to menu planning, food preparation, and recipe modification. Computerized nutrient analysis and laboratories will be used to practice principles.
. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FN 31500 - Fundamentals Of Nutrition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic principles of nutrition and their application in meeting nutritional needs during the life cycle. Credit not given for both FN 30300 and FN 31500. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
|
| FN 32200 - Community Nutrition And Health Promotion Entrepreneurship |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Study of strategies for improving nutritional status and community health. Examination of principles of entrepreneurship and application to the practice of community nutrition. Includes reviews of existing federal and non-governmental programs designed to meet food and nutrition needs of various population groups. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| FN 33000 - Diet Selection And Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Diet selection for health maintenance in culturally diverse populations based on current dietary guides with utilization of the computer for diet evaluation. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
|
| FN 36000 - Nutrition For The Aging |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Nutritional needs and problems of the aging. Includes a review of community and institutional nutrition and food programs. Emphasis on the aging and their environment. Participation in community activities for the aging may be required. (This course does not satisfy the Nutrition competency for Nursing or HTM majors). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| FN 39000 - Independent Undergraduate Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individual research projects undertaken with faculty supervision. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Research
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| FN 40300 - Advanced Nutrition: Food From Farm To Fork |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores processes involved in the transformation of food as a raw commodity on the farm to a consumable item at the ¿table¿. Literally, to study food from farm to fork. This course reviews local, regional, and global food supply systems; industrial as well as non-industrial. Historical perspective is included with comparisons of current and past food supply chains. Study encompasses traceability of food and food sustainability as well as regional and seasonal factors affecting the food supply chain. Included is study of the food supply chain, food availability, and how these influence consumer behavior including food preparation and consumption. The impact of the food supply system on communities, family dynamics, nutritional status, and health is also included. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| FN 59000 - Special Problems In Nutrition |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Individual problems dealing with various aspects of nutrition. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Summer Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture 1, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FNR 10000 - Introduction To Forestry: Luger-Purdue Future Of Forestry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The Lugar-Purdue Future of Forestry Program is an academic program designed to introduce students to the science of forestry. The program consists of two parts. One part is this online course. The second part is a research project that is designed and implemented by the student under the guidance of a natural resource professional and the program facilitator. The general intent of the program is to introduce students to forest science and to encourage students to pursue forestry as a career. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students completing this course should have a basic knowledge of what is forest science.
2. In the 7-module online component, students will demonstrate knowledge of forest science by completing quizzes, conducting and reporting on field observations and individual investigations, and post observations and comments in the online course management tools.
3. In the research part of the course, students will demonstrate knowledge of research methods by designing, implementing, and reporting on a forestry research project which they develop with the assistance of a practicing forestry professional.
|
| FNR 10300 - Introduction To Environmental Conservation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to ecological principles, history of conservation, natural resource management, human impacts on the environment, and environmental ethics. For all students interested in an introductory natural resource or environmental science elective. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 19800 - Introductory Topics In Forestry And Natural Resources |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Subjects and problems of interest to the student. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FNR 20100 - Marine Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the major groups of marine organisms and their habitats. Emphasis on application of ecological principles to the conservation of important marine species. Offered in even numbered years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate hypothesis tests, conduct and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
2. Demonstrate critical thinking by using evidence-based information to develop sound responses to complex problems.
3. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and ethics.
|
| FNR 20300 - Freshwater Ecology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Comprehensive overview of the form, function, and biological organisms of freshwater ecosystems. Students will learn the fundamental biological and ecological components of continental streams, rivers, and lakes with some additional consideration given to global freshwaters. Concepts will be taught based upon two lectures and one laboratory each week during the fall semester. Labs are partially field-based and require outside activities. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate hypothesis tests, conduct and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
2. Demonstrate critical thinking by using evidence-based information to develop sound responses to complex problems.
3. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and ethics.
|
| FNR 21000 - Natural Resource Information Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to natural resource and land information systems and data management technologies. Principles of data storage, organization, and retrieval for both textual and spatial data (geographic information systems), data acquisition, accuracy assessment, mapping, and use of this data in natural resource management are presented. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 22500 - Dendrology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Field identification, taxonomy, and ecological characteristics of trees, shrubs, and herbs found in forests, prairies, old fields, and wetlands. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 23000 - The World's Forests And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of structure, function, and environmental and cultural significance of forest ecosystems throughout the world. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 24000 - Wildlife In America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. History of the occurrence, exploitation, and management of North America's wildlife resources. Life histories, habitat relationships, and human impacts on selected species. Current conservation practices and future prospects. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 24100 - Ecology And Systematics Of Fishes And Mammals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the ecology and systematics of fishes and mammals. Discuss the evolutionary adaptations and ecological processes of these vertebrate groups at the individual, population, and community levels. Examine the roles of phylogeny, physiology, morphology, and behavior in influencing organismal responses to the environment. Assess issues related to the conservation of fishes and mammals. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate hypothesis tests, conduct and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
2. Demonstrate critical thinking by using evidence-based information to develop sound responses to complex problems.
3. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and ethics.
|
| FNR 24200 - Laboratory In Ecology And Systematics Of Fishes And Mammals |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Basic anatomy, classification, and identification of fishes and mammals. Identification deals with representative species from selected phylogenetic and geographic groupings in North America. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 25100 - Ecology And Systematics Of Amphibians, Reptiles, And Birds |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the ecology and taxonomy of amphibians, reptiles, and birds. Discuss the evolutionary adaptations and ecological processes of these vertebrate classes at the individual, population, and community levels. Examine the roles of phylogeny, physiology, morphology, and behavior in influencing organismal responses to the environment. Assess the issues related to the conservation of amphibians, reptiles, and birds. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate hypothesis tests, conduct and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
2. Demonstrate critical thinking by using evidence-based information to develop sound responses to complex problems.
3. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and ethics.
|
| FNR 25200 - Laboratory In Ecology And Systematics Of Amphibians, Reptiles, And Birds |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Basic anatomy, classification, and identification of amphibians, reptiles, and birds. Identification deals with representative species from selected phylogenetic and geographic groupings in North America. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 30100 - Wood Products And Processing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Wood processing methods, including hardwood and softwood sawmilling, veneering, pallets, lumber drying, plywood, particleboard, medium density fiberboard, and oriented strandboards; wood preservation including crossties, poles, and pilings; furniture; cabinets; millwork; pulp and paper; and wood residues. In addition to processing methods, the grading of material, including logs, and consideration of applicable standards, and trade journals are emphasized. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 30500 - Conservation Genetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals and principles of genetics, including Mendelian inheritance, genetic mapping & linkage, DNA fingerprinting, phylogeography, and speciation. Topics cover the theoretical and empirical evidence illustrating how mutation, migration, drift, and natural selection influence the evolution of genes in natural populations. Designed for ecologists and natural resource professionals. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 31000 - Harvesting Forest Products |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Principles and techniques of timber harvesting. Terminology, machine performance, operating costs, and efficient management of labor, capital, machines, and timber. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 31100 - Wood Structure, Identification, And Properties |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An outline of the macroscopic, and to a lesser extent, the microscopic characteristics of commercial North American woods. These characteristics allow identification of most woods on sight. Uses, availability, distribution, and unique characteristics are discussed. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 32200 - Forest Soil: Properties, Processes, And Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Forest soil characteristics with respect to site evaluation, watershed management, planting, problems, and silvicultural applications. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 33100 - Forest Ecosystems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to ecosystem processes, with emphasis on structural dynamics, energy flows, nutrient cycling, spatial patterns, classification and interaction of plant and animal populations. Processes will be related to human activities. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 33300 - Fire Effects In Forest Environments |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Use of natural and set prescribed fire as a tool in management of forest and prairie ecosystems. Requires class trips. Students will pay individual lodging or meal expenses when necessary. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 33900 - Principles Of Silviculture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Silviculture systems; establishment of stands; control of stand composition, growth, and quality. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 34100 - Wildlife Habitat Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles, practices, and justification of the habitat management approach to the manipulation of wildlife populations. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate hypothesis tests, conduct and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
2. Demonstrate critical thinking by using evidence-based information to develop sound responses to complex problems.
3. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and ethics.
|
| FNR 34800 - Wildlife Investigational Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to current wildlife research techniques that are used in managing populations and habitats. Laboratory and field exercises are used to gather and analyze data; basic data analysis and written dissemination of results is emphasized. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate hypothesis tests, conduct and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
2. Demonstrate critical thinking by using evidence-based information to develop sound responses to complex problems.
3. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and ethics.
|
| FNR 35100 - Aquatic Sampling Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to laboratory and field sampling methods in aquaculture, limnology, and fisheries biology. Emphasis will be placed on the proper use of laboratory equipment and sampling gears, as well as the development of sampling protocols for collecting representative, non-biased fisheries and aquatic sciences data. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate hypothesis tests, conduct and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
2. Demonstrate critical thinking by using evidence-based information to develop sound responses to complex problems.
3. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and ethics.
|
| FNR 35300 - Natural Resources Measurement |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to sampling techniques and fundamental principles for measuring natural resources. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate hypothesis tests, conduct and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
2. Demonstrate critical thinking by using evidence-based information to develop sound responses to complex problems.
3 . Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and ethics.
|
| FNR 35500 - Quantitative Methods For Resource Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of analytical and computational techniques for the purpose of making decisions regarding the management of forests. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 35700 - Fundamental Remote Sensing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the principles of remote sensing, aerial photo interpretation, photogrammetry, geographic information systems, and global positioning systems. Primary applications of geospatial science and technology in forestry and natural resources. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 35900 - Spatial Ecology And GIS |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the principles of landscape ecology and biogeography with a laboratory devoted to the analysis of spatial data using geographic information systems. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate hypothesis tests, conduct and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
2. Demonstrate critical thinking by using evidence-based information to develop sound responses to complex problems.
3. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and ethics.
|
| FNR 36500 - Natural Resources Issues, Policy, And Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The process, history, and development of natural resource conservation laws and policies, and current issues as they affect resource management in the United States. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 37000 - Natural Resources Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Field instruction and practice during the summer following the sophomore year. All students focus on land measurement and surveying, inventory of forest, wildlife, and aquatic resources, and integrated resource management. Followed by specific modules in fisheries, foresty, and wildlife management. Students pay university tuition plus a fee for living facilities and subsistence. Typically offered Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 37100 - Fisheries And Aquatic Sciences Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Specific field instruction in fisheries and aquatic sciences. Students pay university tuition plus a fee for living facilities and subsistence. Typically offered Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 37200 - Forestry Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Specific field instruction in forestry. Students pay university tuition plus a fee for living facilities and subsistence. Typically offered Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 37300 - Wildlife Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Specific field instruction in wildlife science and management. Students pay university tuition plus a fee for living facilities and subsistence. Typically offered Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 37400 - International Natural Resources Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This is an international alternative to the required departmental summer practicum that may be elected by students in the different disciplines in FNR. Field instruction and practice in an international setting during the summer following the sophomore year. Students take two weeks of common coursework with FNR 37000 students in forestry, wildlife, fisheries, and natural resources, and then undertake international training according to area of interest for three or more weeks. The location of international training is open, but a plan of study, and a cooperating institution must be approved by departmental faculty. Students pay university tuition plus a fee for living facilities and subsistence. Typically offered Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 37500 - Human Dimensions of Natural Resource Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the human dimensions of foresty, wildlife, and recreation; students will learn how values, attitudes, community, and behavior relate to natural resource management and decision-making; various natural resource management stakeholders such as private landowners, natural resource agencies, the judiciary, and environmental and natural resource interest groups will be discussed; course will utilize case studies specific to Indiana and the Midwest; course includes weekly discussions during recitations. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 38200 - Natural Resources And Man |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the interrelationships among man, natural resources, and the environment. Course satisfies conservation requirement for teacher certification.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| FNR 38800 - Ichthyology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Functional morphology, physiology, behavior, and ecological relationships of fish; classification and identification of freshwater species; introduction to fishery management principles.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| FNR 38900 - Ichthyology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory on classification and identification of freshwater species; introduction to fisheries management principles.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| FNR 39000 - Cooperative Professional Program |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Supervised professional experience in forestry. Programs must be preplanned and conducted under the direction of a forestry faculty coordinator with the cooperation of an employer. Students must submit a summary report. Admission to forestry Co-op program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FNR 40000 - Forestry And Natural Resources Study Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. Utilized to record credits earned through participation in Purdue study abroad programs with cooperating foreign universities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FNR 40600 - Natural Resource And Environmental Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (AGEC 40600) Introduction to economic models of renewable and nonrenewable natural resources and the use of these models in the analysis of current resource use and environmental issues. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 40700 - Forest Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Implications of unique economic characteristics of forest resources, including a tree as both capital and output, high capital to output ratio, location utility of in-forest uses, long investment periods, and non-market outputs. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 40800 - Natural Resources Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Management concepts and decision making emphasizing formal planning processes including development of objectives, analysis of alternatives, and decision making within the constraints of changing social and political trends, economic feasibility, and sustainability of ecosystem functions for a property. Laboratory activities are focused on the development of a management plan by an interdisciplinary team for a specific area and set of objectives. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate hypothesis tests, conduct and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
2. Demonstrate critical thinking by using evidence-based information to develop sound responses to complex problems.
3. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and ethics.
|
| FNR 40900 - Timber Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of financial and biological principles to determine optimal production of wood as a raw material on industrial and non-industrial ownerships. Optimal rotation and stocking level for individual trees and stands. Forest regulation for both even-aged and uneven-aged stands for long-term sustainability and certification. Timber harvest scheduling using mathematical programming techniques. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 41200 - Natural Resources Decision Making |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will learn decision analysis and how to apply it to a mix of natural resource problems. Students will learn the elements of a decision model, how to structure decision problems, making choices, and conducting sensitivity analyses under certainty. Decision making under conditions of uncertainty and the preferences of one or more decision makers will be introduced to reflect real world decision making. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 41800 - Properties Of Wood Related To Manufacturing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Orthotopic nature of wood, grain, texture, moisture content, shrinking, swelling, specific gravity, machining, thermal properties, electrical properties, elastic properties, strength properties, vibration properties, bending, natural characteristics affecting mechanical properties, effect of manufacturing and service environment on mechanical properties, changing quality of available resources and implications of wood quality changes for manufacturing. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 41900 - Furniture And Cabinet Design And Manufacture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Qualitative and quantitative principles of furniture construction, performance testing of furniture, and computer-based applications and solutions. Course features laboratory evaluation of fasteners and furniture joints. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 42500 - Secondary Wood Products Manufacturing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Secondary wood products manufacturing; structure of the industry, organization of a furniture factory, raw materials, rough mill, finish mill, assembly, finishing, machinery, wood machining, plant layout, production methods, modern industrial engineering concepts; includes visits to manufacturing operations. Requires class trips. Students will pay individual lodging or meal expenses when necessary. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 43400 - Tree Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of physiology of growth and development of woody plants. Emphasis on the structure and function of trees and their physiological response to environmental factors. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 44100 - Forest Entomology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ENTM 44100) An introduction to the identity, natural history and management of insects affecting forest ecosystems. Topics include biodiversity, natural history and ecology of forest pests; forecasting and assessing the risk of insect outbreaks; and silvicultural, biological and chemical strategies for preventing and managing insect pests. Offered in odd-numbered years. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 44400 - Arboricultural Practices |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Course covers a broad spectrum of arboriculture principles and techniques, including pruning, transplanting, fertilization, climbing, rigging, removal, cabling, bracing, lightning protection, hazard tree evaluation, tree appraisal, and street tree inventory. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 44500 - Urban Forest Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course presents an array of topics germane to the management of trees in the urban environment. This includes the benefits of trees and general tree care, tree appraisal, tree ordinances, tree inventory and management plans, and tree preservation and construction. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 44700 - Vertebrate Population Dynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Estimation and analysis of populations; computer modeling of sampling methods, population dynamics, population and habitat management. Knowledge of computer programming not required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate hypothesis tests, conduct and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
2. Demonstrate critical thinking by using evidence-based information to develop sound responses to complex problems.
3. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and ethics.
|
| FNR 45200 - Aquaculture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Historical perspectives and current practices in aquaculture, including production systems, feeds, water quality requirements, and diseases of commercially important species. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate hypothesis tests, conduct and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
2. Demonstrate critical thinking by using evidence-based information to develop sound responses to complex problems.
3. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and ethics.
|
| FNR 45300 - Fish Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Presentation and discussion of physiological mechanisms exhibited by freshwater and marine invertebrates and vertebrates. Primary materials used for class presentation and discussions will be examples from primary research literature. Topics include respiration, osmoregulation, stress physiology, absorption and metabolism of compounds, and hormonal control of selected physiological mechanisms. Offered in odd-numbered years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate hypothesis tests, conduct and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
2. Demonstrate critical thinking by using evidence-based information to develop sound responses to complex problems.
3. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and ethics.
|
| FNR 45400 - Fisheries Science And Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and practice of fisheries management, with emphasis on strategies utilized for the management of freshwater and marine fisheries. Application of quantitative methodologies for the assessment and manipulation of aquatic habitats, sport and commerical fish populations, and human resource users and non-users are considered as in the setting of appropriate goals and objectives for effective, science-based management. One weekend field laboratory is required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate hypothesis tests, conduct and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
2. Demonstrate critical thinking by using evidence-based information to develop sound responses to complex problems.
3. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and ethics.
|
| FNR 45500 - Fish Ecology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The relationship of fishes to the physical, chemical, and biological features of the environment in both natural and perturbed aquatic ecosystems. An emphasis will be placed on diversity in morphology, behavior, feeding, and reproductive strategies as they relate to individual and population adaptation, community structure, and anthropogenic effects. Offered in even-numbered years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate use of the scientific method to identify problems, formulate hypothesis tests, conduct and analyze data, and derive conclusions.
2. Demonstrate critical thinking by using evidence-based information to develop sound responses to complex problems.
3. Demonstrate proficiency in their chosen discipline that incorporates knowledge, skills, technology, and ethics.
|
| FNR 46000 - International Natural Resources Summer Program |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A four-week, intensive program examining the management and conservation of natural resources in Europe and the United States. Jointly taught with faculty and students from the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences. The program topic and venue change each year, but emphasis is placed on student interaction and internationalization as well as on cross-cultural communication skills within a natural resources framework. Offered in even-numbered years at Purdue University and in odd-numbered years at the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences in Sweden. Typically offered Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FNR 47000 - Fundamentals Of Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will overview key steps involved in natural resources planning, expose students to a variety of different natural resource plans, and engage students in critically evaluating the effectiveness of planning. (Course meets during weeks 1-5.). Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 48400 - Design For Computer Numerical Controlled Manufacturing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course objective is to familiarize students with Computer Aided Design (CAD), Computer Aided Manufacturing (CAM), Computer Numerical Controlled (CNC) router operation, rapid prototyping and basics of secondary wood products manufacturing. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 48800 - Global Environmental Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of the state of the world in terms of natural resource consumption, environmental quality, and global change. Techniques to analyze and evaluate information. Survey threats to soil productivity, the changing atmosphere, water quality and quantity, energy impacts, and biodiversity from an ecosystem perspective. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 49800 - Special Assignments |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FNR 49900 - Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FNR 50500 - Molecular Ecology And Evolution |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Lectures cover the genetic attributes of both conventional and contemporary molecular markers. Discussions focus primarily on the use of DNA-based markers to address conceptual issues in ecology and evolutionary biology (e. g., mating systems, systematics, phylogeography.) Offered in odd-numbered years. One course in biochemistry is recommended. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| FNR 51100 - Population Genetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (AGRY 51100, ANSC 51100) Basic concepts of population genetics. Characterization of populations using gene frequencies, gametic and zygotic disequilibrium; forces changing gene frequencies (mutation, migration, selection, and random genetic drift) and genotypic frequencies (mating systems: inbreeding, crossbreeding, and phenotypic assortative) and related hypothesis testing; gene trees and the coalescent process; and molecular phylogenies. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 52200 - Advanced Forest Soils Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the nutrient dynamics of forest ecosystems with emphasis on the physical, chemical, and biological processes influencing nutrient cycling, roots and soil-root interactions, in-depth study of the C, N, and P cycles, and the impact of environmental change on the processes controlling these cycles. Special topics include fertilization, soil management, and acidic deposition. Class trips may be required. Students will pay individual lodging or meal expenses when necessary. Offered in even-numbered years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 52300 - Aquaculture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Historical perspectives and current practices in aquaculture, including production systems, feeds, water quality requirements, and diseases of commercially important species. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
|
| FNR 52600 - Aquatic Animal Health |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This is an introductory course designed to provide instruction on the methodology of diagnosis and treatment of parasitic, fungal, bacterial, viral, nutritional, and environmental diseases of fishes and other aquatic organisms (amphibians, reptiles, and bivalves). Courses in chemistry and biology are expected and in animal physiology is preferred, but not required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
At the end of this course, students should be able to:
1. Demonstrate an understanding of basic pathology and epidemiology.
2. Recognize the signs and symptoms of the most common pathogens afflicting fish, amphibians, reptiles, and bivalves.
3. Apply the knowledge acquired during laboratory exercises on how to collect, preserve, and analyze different tissue samples for submission and/or analysis of histopathological lesions, parasites, bacteria, fungi, viruses, and chemicals.
4. Understand the basic principles associated with treatment and prevention of disease.
|
| FNR 52700 - Ecotoxicology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course covers theoretical and applied approaches to the science of ecotoxicology, including application of the tools and procedures used to understand toxicant fate and effects in free-ranging animals and ecosystems. Students are expected to be knowledgeable in chemistry, biology, and animal physiology. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
This course will introduce basic concepts in ecotoxicology including:
1. Review of basic ecotoxicological principles.
2. The various types, sources and environmental fate and effects of contaminants.
3. Modes of toxicant uptake, transformation, storage and depuration.
4. Dose/concentration-response, exposure routes.
5. Factors that influence toxicity.
6. Contaminant distribution, bioaccumulation, and biomagnifications.
7. Biomarkers of exposure and effects: Molecular to ecosystem-levels.
8. Basic principles in aquatic toxicity testing.
9. Common toxicity assays using invertebrates, fish, amphibians, birds, and mammals (in vitro, in vivo, mesocosms, and in situ bioassays).
10. Field case studies: Complex effluents (sewage and paper mills); Persistent Bioaccumulative Toxicants (PCBs, PAHs, dioxins); Endocrine disrupting chemicals; Heavy metals; Nutrients and pathogens.
11. Statistical analyses of toxicity data.
12. Introduction to ecological risk assessment.
|
| FNR 53500 - Forest Regeneration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of the dynamics associated with the regeneration of forestlands in North America. Topics include: seed collection and handling, forest tree nursery operations, seedling quality, managing for environmental stresses, planting operations, early stand management, and natural regeneration. Offered in odd numbered years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 53600 - Ecology Of Disturbance |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Advanced lecture-and discussion-based class examining how disturbance shapes the composition and structure of communities and landscapes across major terrestrial biomes. Students will examine and discuss the relationships between disturbance intensity, frequency, and spatial extent and how these characteristics affect ecological processes and ecologically-based management of forest and grassland ecosystems. The class will also examine the synergistic effects of multiple disturbances and the restoration of endemic disturbance regimes in contemporary ecosystems. Course is reading intensive; students will read and discuss on average 3-8 journal articles per week. Typically offered in even years. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe how disturbance shapes community composition and structure for several major terrestrial biomes.
2. Understand how disturbance regulates biological diversity across terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems.
3. Understand the relationship between disturbance intensity, frequency, and spatial extent and how those factors affect management of forest and grassland ecosystems.
4. Describe the synergistic nature of disturbance and identify how disturbance factors interact across a landscape.
5. Describe how contemporary and restored disturbance regimes may facilitate or suppress the spread of invasive species.
6. Understand how management activities can mimic endemic disturbance regimes to promote biodiversity and sustainability.
|
| FNR 53601 - Ecology Of Disturbance Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is the practicum for FNR 53600, hence enrollment is contingent upon enrollment in FNR 53600. Course consists of a one or two week long field trip to a remote site; prior trips have been taken to the Great Smokey National Park over spring break. Course requires an addition travel fee, depending on location visited. Typically offered in even years. Typically offered Spring, but may be offered occasionally during summer session.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. How disturbance shapes community composition and the distribution of species across landscapes.
2. How alterations to endemic disturbance regimes affect the composition, structure, and function of ecosystems.
3. How interactions between natural disturbance and invasion of exotic species influence forest community development.
4. Managemnet that uses natural disturbance to restore and maintain biotic communities and ecosystems.
|
| FNR 54000 - Wetlands Ecology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of the biotic and abiotic factors that influence wetlands, including the ecological, socioeconomic, and hydrological values of wetlands. Restoration and wildlife utilization also are examined. Laboratories involve examinations of various aspects of wetland ecology. Class trips are required. Students will pay individual lodging or meal expenses where necessary. Offered in odd-numbered years. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| FNR 54300 - Conservation Biology I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to conservation biology, including population dynamics and genetic structure of rare organisms. Recovery planning, restoration ecology, environmental policy making, and sustainable developments are considered, as is ethics in conservation of biological diversity. Offered in odd-numbered years. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 54400 - Conservation Biology II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study of specific topic within the field of conservation biology. Topic varies from year to year, depending on interests of students enrolled, and emphasizes current advances or issues in the field. Offered in even-numbered years. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FNR 54500 - Fisheries Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and practice of fisheries management, with an emphasis on strategies utilized for the management of freshwater and marine fisheries. Application of quantitative methodologies for the assessment and manipulation of aquatic habitats, sport and commercial fish populations, and human resource users and non-users are considered, as is the setting of appropriate goals and objectives for effective, science-based management. One weekend field laboratory is required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| FNR 55000 - Fisheries Stock Assessment And Modeling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and application of models and other quantitative analyses for the assessment and management of recreational, commercial, and non-game fishes. Emphasis is placed on the estimation of basic fish population dynamics, and the development and application of models used to predict and assess fisheries management outcomes. (Offered in odd-numbered years.). Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 55100 - Advanced Ichthyology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced ichthyology presents an advanced study of the biology of fishes. In particular, the course covers aspects of the morphology, physiology, development, behavior, evolution, diversity, and ecology of fish throughout the world. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the prehistoric and current diversity of fishes.
2. Demonstrate understanding of fish evolution.
3. Explain the biological function of fishes.
4. Demonstrate understanding of the ecological roles that fishes play in freshwater and marine communities and ecosystems.
5. Identify a wide range of fish specimens, both preserved and live, in the laboratory and the field.
|
| FNR 55200 - Advanced Freshwater Ecology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced freshwater ecology presents a comprehensive overview of the form, function, and biological organisms of freshwater ecosystems. Specifically, students learn the fundamental biological and ecological components of continental streams, rivers, and lakes, with some additional consideration given to global freshwaters. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the fundamental ecological theories associated with major freshwater types (e.g., streams, rivers, and lakes).
2. Describe physical properties that form freshwater habitats and explain how these physical properties influence species and communities of organisms.
3. Describe chemical properties of freshwater habitats and explain how these chemical properties influence species and communities of organisms.
4. Demonstrate an understanding of the ecological roles and interactions of representative organisms that comprise freshwater communities.
5. Demonstrate critical thinking and writing skills relevant to concepts in freshwater ecology.
|
| FNR 55800 - Digital Remote Sensing And GIS |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced course in the use of digital remote sensing techniques and geographic information systems (GIS) for renewable natural resources management. Emphasizes the physical principles behind the digital remote sensing of vegetative features, present-day instrument technology, spatial data processing and analysis algorithms, error analysis and accuracy assessment procedures, and multi-source data integration. Provides hands-on experience with forest canopy modeling, atmospheric modeling, image processing, and GIS software on microcomputer and workstation platforms. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 56700 - Advanced Mammalogy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The class explores approaches to mammalian research and wildlife management through readings, discussions, field, and laboratory exercises. Topics such as mammalian behavior, ecology, phylogeny, taxonomy, and conservation are emphasized. The intention of this class is to help students who have a sincere interest in mammalian research and management to progress beyond identification in their understanding of mammals. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the diversity of topics currently being examined using wild mammal populations and communities.
2. Integrate the results of published research into the design and exploration of research topics in which the students are interested.
3. Exhibit improved abilities in critical thinking, writing, and oral communication in discussing mammalian research and management topics.
|
| FNR 57100 - Advanced Ornithology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of current avian research topics and techniques. Class discussion of recent scientific literature; field and laboratory exercises to illustrate approaches to ornithological research. One weekend field trip is offered. (Offered in odd-numbered years.). Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 57200 - Community Involvement In Natural Resource Management |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Engaging the public in natural resource decision making is an increasingly important and complex task. This course provides an overview of how to include diverse stakeholders in decision making, collaboration, and conflict resolution through readings, class discussions, and role plays. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 57300 - Community Involvement Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students who enroll in this course will participate in a service learning activity that enables them to apply course concepts from FNR 57200 to a “real life” context. Students enrolling in FNR 57200 are not required to take this course. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To introduce students to the complexity of involving the public in decisions about natural resource management.
2. To understand the factors that make collaborative natural resource management successful.
3. To learn techniques for resolving conflicts.
4. To learn a variety of participatory techniques.
5. To learn facilitation techniques.
|
| FNR 58000 - Research Methods For Natural Resource Social Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This class covers basic elements of research design for social scientists, with an emphasis on issues pertinent to natural resource management. Topics to be covered include the role of theories and paradigms in designing sound research, writing research questions and hypotheses, and the importance of validity and reliability in research design. Qualitative, quantitative, and mixed methods designs are presented and discussed. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand fundamental concepts such as theories and paradigms that are essential precursors to designing sound research.
2. Be able to articulate clear research questions and testable hypotheses.
3. Differentiate between different research designs and know which are appropriate under which circumstances.
4. Understand overarching issues such as validity and reliability.
5. Know under which circumstances qualitative, quantitative or mixed methods are appropriate.
6. Demonstrate knowledge of a variety of commonly-used research methods.
7. Articulate basic steps involved in analyzing qualitative and quantitative data.
8. Demonstrate the ability to write a research proposal.
|
| FNR 59800 - Topical Problems In Forestry And Natural Resources |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Subjects and problems of interest to the student. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Presentation, Recitation
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FNR 60500 - Molecular Ecology And Evolution |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Lectures cover the genetic attributes of both conventional and contemporary molecular markers. Discussions focus primarily on the use of DNA-based markers to address conceptual issues in ecology and evolutionary biology (e.g., mating systems, systematics, phylogeography). Offered in even-numbered years. Prerequisites: AGRY 32000 or BIOL 24100. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 63900 - Stand Dynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced lecture and discussion based class examining wood formation and growing-use efficiency during the first unit, and stand development after natural or arthropogenic disturbance during the second unit. Other topics include introduction to disturbance ecology and disturbance-based management. Students will learn basic dendrochronology techniques while completing two independent lab projects that correspond to each of the aforementioned units. At least one class trip may be required. Typically offered in odd-numbered years. Prerequisites: FNR 33100 and FNR 33900 and (STAT 50300 or STAT 51100.) Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the patterns of tree growth and wood allocation.
2. Understand how growing use efficiency and specific leaf area vary by tree age, species and social position, and by stand composition and structural diversity.
3. Describe the natural development of stand structure for even- vs. uneven-aged, coniferous vs. hardwood, and pure vs. mixed species stands, both with and without natural disturbances.
4. Describe how silvicultural manipulation affects stand development and how it can be used to create structural elements for wildlife habitat and biodiversity.
5. Have basic understanding of dendrochronology as a tool for reconstructing stand dynamics, including the use of WinDendro, a dendrochronological software program.
6. Write concise lab reports in the style of a journal manuscript.
|
| FNR 64700 - Quantitative Methods For Ecologists |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the assumptions and utility of statistical and other data analytic techniques that are encountered commonly or increasingly being used in ecological research. Emphasis is placed on the potential applications of these quantitative methods in an ecological context. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: STAT 51200. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FNR 67900 - Forest Resources Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 or 1.00. Required for graduate students in forestry and natural resources. Topics vary. Prerequisite: Required of graduate students in forestry, natural resources. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FNR 69100 - Topical Problems In Forestry |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Subjects and problems of interest to the student. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FNR 69300 - Topical Problems In Wildlife Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Subjects and problems of interest to the student. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FNR 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FNR 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Forestry and Natural Resources
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FOLK F1010 - Introduction To Folklore |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A view of the main forms and varieties of folklore and folk expression in tales, ballads, myths, legends, beliefs, games, proverbs, riddles, and traditional arts. The role of folklore in the life of mankind. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FOLK F1110 - Introduction To World Folk Music |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to world traditional music. Study of the interrelationship of music sound and behavior. Focus on music events in life and year cycles of selected cultures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FOLK F1310 - Introduction To American Folklore |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Folklore and traditional expressive behavior within the context of American culture. Art and traditional philosophies of folk groups found in America, including ethnic groups, occupational groups, regional groups, religious groups, etc. The function of folklore within the lives of American people. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| FOLK F2050 - Folklore In Video And Film |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Acquaints students with current systems of folk belief diffused, reinforced, and originated by film and video, both in the form of documentary and the feature-length drama. Aids students in the process of thinking and writing critically about the content, meaning, and social function of these modern forms of information systems. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FOLK F2200 - Introduction To American Folklore |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The folk cultures of the United States. The art and traditional philosophies of Indians, European-Americans, Afro-Americans, and occupational groups. The adaptation and interrelation of distinct American cultures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FOLK F2300 - Music In Social Movements |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines music in socio-political movements, ranging from political and cultural revolutions to government-sponsored campaigns, environmental, and social activism. Explores concepts about the transformative power of music and of organized groups of people, analyzing the practices of movements aimed at changing perception and behavior. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FOLK F2510 - Folklore Methods and Theories |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic theoretical approaches to the study of folklore. Relation of folklore to other academic disciplines. History of folklore scholarship. Classification of folklore genres and their function in society. Methods of collecting, analyzing, and indexing traditional materials. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FOLK F2520 - Folklore And The Humanities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic theoretical approaches to the study of folklore, emphasizing the relationship to other humanistic disciplines such as literary and religious studies and history. May be repeated for a total of 6 credits when topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| FOLK F2540 - Social History of Rock and Roll |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of rock and roll music as a uniquely American art form, traced from its roots in Anglo-American folk and country music and African-American gospel and blues through its sundry subsequent phases, each viewed within its defining aesthetic, sociocultural, historical, political, and technoeconomic contexts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FOLK F3050 - Asian Folklore |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Forms and functions of folklore, folklife, or folk music in the traditional and developing societies of Asia. Folklore as a reflection of culture. Relationship between folklore forms and belief systems in Asia. May be repeated once when topics vary. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the Cultural Studies (Non-Western Culture) requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| FOLK F3100 - American Urban And Ethnic Folklore |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Processes by which folklore has arisen in predominantly urban environment and adaptation of rural folklore to urban environment. Ethnic folklore as a manifestation of the urban experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FOLK F3500 - Folklore And Women |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces the field of folklore by focusing on women's folklore in terms of life cycle and role, by exploring the range of women's occupations and related traditional knowledge, and by looking at women as traditional verbal and visual artists. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FOLK F3520 - Native American Folklore |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Comparative examination of various verbal, musical, and dance forms of Native American societies. Consideration of cultural systems of Native Americans within the context of general american culture. May be repeated once when topics vary. Approved by Arts & Sciences for the Cultural Studies (Non-Western Culture) requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| FOLK F3540 - African-American Folklore, Folk Life and Folk Music |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. African American culture in the United States viewed in terms of history and social change. Folklore, folk music, and oral history as means of illuminating African-American culture and history. May be repeated with different topics for a maximum of 9 credits. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| FOLK F3600 - Indiana Folklore/Folklife/Folk Music |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of folklore, folklife, or folk music of Indiana with particular attention to the persistence into the present of preindustrial culture. Students are encouraged to do fieldwork in the state. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FOLK F3630 - Women's Folklore/Folklife/And Music |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course identifies key issues in women's folklore and examines the ways in which women have been represented in myths, legends, and folktales, past and present. The various ways in which visions of womanhood inform, reflect, and challenge gender roles will also be analyzed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FOLK F3640 - Children's Folklore |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The traditional rhymes, riddles, stories, games, folklife, or music associated with "the culture of childhood." The role these forms polay inpeer-group activity and in the social and cognitive development of the child.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FOLK F3780 - Irish Folk Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Forms and functions of folklore in traditional Irish society. Relationship of major folklore genres and of traditional life to literature. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FOLK F3910 - Indiana Folklife |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Historical and cultural influences on the development of folk tradition in Indiana. The role of the Indian, the pioneer, the backwoodsman, and the immigrant. Traditional festivals, beliefs, legends, and customs. The role of tradition in an urbanizing society. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FOLK F3940 - Afro-American Folklore |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Afro-American Folklore. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FOLK F4000 - Individual Study In Folklore |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Students enrolled in this course will work under the close supervision of a faculty member. Projects may entail fieldwork, archival or library research, or a combination of these methods subject to mutual agreement between the student and the supervising faculty member. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FOLK F4040 - Topics In Folklore |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics not covered in depth in existing courses, such as proverbs and riddles, folk drama, folk medicine, folk dance, folk cookery. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| FOLK F4250 - Folklore In Its Literary Relationships |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Ways in which folk themes have been carried into professional literature, development of literary forms in relation to folk patterns, and interrelationships among folktales and literary narratives. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FOLK F4300 - Advanced Study of Folklore and Related Disciplines |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced studies of folklore and/or ethnomucicology in relationship to other disciplines. Focuses on such interdisciplinary topice as folklore and literature, folklore and psychology; folklore and history; folklore and religion; or folklore, culture, and society. May be repeated with different topics for a maximum of 9 credits. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| FOLK F4550 - The Legend |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The legend as a separate form of traditional narrative. Relation to other forms, such as memorates and Marchen; and to folk
belief, custom, and ritual. Function, style, historicity, classification, and use in literature and art.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FOLK F4650 - Ballads And Folksongs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Ballads and folk songs of the Western world; their origins, diffusion, relationship to literature, and function. Special attention to the British-American tradition. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FOLK F4870 - The Folk Roots Of American Popular Music |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of folk tradition as source and resource in world popular music, focusing on the English-speaking world and the folk connections of such styles as rock, country and western, rhythm and blues, and soul, or of such trends as the folksong revival, the British invasion, and world music. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FOLK F5120 - Survey Of Folklore |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Content and scope of folk belief and tradition; various genres (tale, legend, myth, ballad) and approaches to folklore. Folklore of both literate and nonliterate peoples. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FOLK F6000 - Asian Folklore/Folk Music |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Folk religion, material culture, social customs, oral literature and folk music of Asian societies. Relationship between political movements and the use of folklore scholarship. Transformations of traditions in modern contexts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FOLK F6400 - Native American Folklore/Folk Music |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Comparative examination of various verbal, musical, and dance forms of Native American societies in North and South America. Examination of contributions of folklore and ethnomusicological scholarship to Native American studies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FOLK F8010 - Teaching Folklore |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. A consideration of the philosophical, cultural, and practical issues attached to the teaching of folklore. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FR 10100 - French Level I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A beginning French course with emphasis on communicative skills (listening and speaking), literacy skills (reading and writing) and culture. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:IWL 1901 French Level I
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lab 1, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| FR 10200 - French Level II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of FR 10100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:IWL 1902 French Level II
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lab 1, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| FR 10300 - Review Of French Levels I And II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A review of French 101 and 102. Two or more years of high school French, grades 9 through 12. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| FR 11200 - Elementary French Conversation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Development of oral skills for self-expression. Guided practice to enhance communicative competence. Small group discussions in French on practical topics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 2 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop elementary listening skills and improve oral French proficiency.
2. Acquire elementary vocabulary and grammar through discovery in various media and conversation.
3. Read, view, listen to and discuss assigned materials in French.
|
| FR 19000 - Special Topics In French |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Special topics related to French and to francophone cultures and literatures. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FR 20100 - French Level III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A lower intermediate French course with emphasis on communicative skills (listening and speaking), literacy skills (reading and writing) and culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:IWL 1903 French Level III
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| FR 20200 - French Level IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of FR 20100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:IWL 1904 French Level IV
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| FR 21100 - Elementary French Conversation II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Continuation of FR 11200. May be taken concurrently with FR 20100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FR 21200 - Intermediate French Conversation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Development of oral skills for self-expression. Guided practice in conversation to enhance communicative competence. Small group discussions in French on practical topics. Not open to students enrolled in or having credit for FR 30100 or above. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 2 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop intermediate listening skills and improve oral French proficiency.
2. Acquire intermediate vocabulary and grammar through discovery in various media and conversation.
3. Read, view, listen to and discuss assigned materials in French.
|
| FR 22400 - French Level IV Business French |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Practical reading, writing, speaking, and listening comprehension skills will be developed toward use of French for business purposes. Course materials cover daily business dealings as well as national and international trade. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FR 23000 - French Literature In Translation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading and analysis of selected French writers and their works, with particular emphasis on the social, political, and intellectual climate of their times. The course content will change from semester to semester. Knowledge of French not required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Student will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| FR 24100 - Introduction To The Study Of French Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading and discussion of selected poetry, prose, and theatre from France and the Francophone world; introduction to critical discourse and basic concepts of literary theory. Texts, discussion, and written assignments in French. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FR 26100 - French Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The essentials of French grammar as applied in composition. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| FR 28000 - Second-Year French: Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected topics on the civilization, culture, and literature of France. Lectures and readings primarily in English, but knowledge of French at the first-year level necessary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FR 29000 - Special Topics In French |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Special topics related to French and to francophone cultures and literatures. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FR 30100 - French Level V |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continued development of French speaking, listening, reading, and writing abilities, using materials dealing primarily with everyday life and civilization in France and the other French-speaking countries from various sources (e.g., newspapers, magazines, TV, recent literature, etc.). Conducted primarily in French. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FR 30200 - French Level VI |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Further work to develop speaking, listening, reading, and writing abilities in French on the basis of materials dealing with the ideas and events that have shaped present-day France and the other French-speaking countries. Conducted primarily in French. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FR 30700 - Commercial French |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will provide students with the fundamentals of effective expression and communication as these apply to French business situations. It will concentrate on commercial vocabulary, reading, writing and speaking as related to international business. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| FR 31200 - Advanced French Conversation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. One credit hour advanced French conversation focused on the development of oral and aural skills for self-expression. Course provides students with guided practice in conversation to enhance communicative competence. Discussions in French on various topics. Course may be taken concurrently with FR 30100, 30200, 40100 or 40200. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 2 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop advanced listening skills and improve oral French proficiency.
2. Acquire advanced vocabulary and grammar through discovery in various media and conversation.
3. Read, view, listen to and discuss assigned materials in French.
|
| FR 32400 - Business French |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Practical reading, writing, speaking, and listening comprehension skills at an intermediate level will be developed toward the use of French for business purposes. Course materials cover daily business dealing as well as national and international trade. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To pursue the acquisition of vocabulary and grammatical structures necessary to interact in professional situations in French-speaking countries.
2. To develop students’ writing and speaking skills in professional situations.
3. To pursue students’ familiarization with business protocol in France and other French-speaking countries.
4. To get students to reflect on the necessity to adapt their behavior and language to given situations and to be aware especially of differences between American and French business environments.
5. To help students to connect classroom knowledge with the real world and the job market.
6. To make the students better understand what living in a global world means.
|
| FR 33000 - French Cinema |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A general survey of major French cinematic trends from the earliest examples (Melies, Lumiere) to the New Wave (Chabrol, Truffaut, Resnais, Godard, etc.), with a discussion of the historical, social, political, aesthetic, and literary contexts. The French film in relation to world cinema. The relationship between the French cinema and French literature. Reading and analysis of scripts and historical and critical materials. Knowledge of French not required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| FR 34100 - French Literature I: From The Middle Ages To The Enlightenment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading of selected poetry, prose, and theatre of France from the Middle Ages through the Enlightenment in historical and cultural context. Readings, discussion, and papers in French. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FR 34200 - French Literature II: The 19th And 20th Centuries |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading of selected French poetry, novels, theatre, and short fiction of the 19th and 20th centuries in historical and cultural context. Readings, discussion, and papers in French. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FR 36100 - The Structure Of French I: Pronunciation And Sound Structure |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course presents the sound system of French by examining the structural patterning of various levels (phonetic, phonemic, etc.). The course provides models and sufficient practice for students to develop good pronunciation and intonation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FR 36200 - The Structure Of French II: Grammar And Sentence Structure |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course presents the grammatical structure of French, dealing both with word-level phenomena (inflectional and derivational morphology, etc.) and with phrase- and sentence-level phenomena (syntactic structure, sentence constituents, word order, etc.). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FR 36500 - French Conversation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive practice in French conversation. Pattern practice, preparation and delivery of dialogues and topical talks. Introduction to basic phonetics and practice in pronunciation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| FR 38000 - Special Topics In French Culture And Civilization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected topics on the contemporary civilization of the French-speaking world and on the development of its culture throughout history. Explores trends in society, daily life, the arts, ideas, and technology. Conducted in French. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FR 39000 - Special Topics In French |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Special topics related to French and to francophone cultures and literatures. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FR 39400 - Special Topics In French Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Studies a particular aspect in French literature (e.g., theme, device, character type, motif, place) by reading a varied selection of works of different genres, styles and/or periods. Readings, discussion, and papers in French. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FR 39600 - Special Topics In French Language Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines a particular aspect entailed in the study of French language, e.g., language acquisition and teaching, language in society, regional dialects of France, French around the world, French creoles. Conducted in French. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FR 39900 - Special Study Abroad Credit In French |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. This course number is for assignment after the fact of credits in French earned while enrolled at a foreign university on a Study Abroad program which cannot be appropriately accommodated under an established Purdue course number. It is not for use for courses offered at or conducted by Purdue. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
|
| FR 40100 - French Level VII |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced work on development of French speaking, listening, reading, and writing abilities, focusing on materials dealing primarily with culture and the arts in France and the other French-speaking countries. Conducted primarily in French. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FR 40200 - French Level VIII |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Further advanced work on speaking, listening, reading, and writing abilities in French. Course materials will cover a variety of topics illustrated by film and other media, both print and nonprint. Conducted primarily in French. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FR 40500 - Introduction To French Literature I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the periods of French literature from the beginning through the eighteenth century. Reading and discussion of representative works. The rudiments of literary criticism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| FR 40600 - Introduction To French Literature II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the periods of French literature from the late eighteenth century to the present time. Reading and discussion of representative works. The rudiments of literary criticism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| FR 40800 - Language Practicum In Business |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course will consist of on-the-job experience in international corporations, industry, commerce, government, or health and social agencies where French is used. The course is designed to expose students to their chosen vocational field. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| FR 42400 - Business French |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the terminology and techniques used in commercial transactions, including the interpretation and writing of business materials. Development of the four language skills, with emphasis on writing and speaking. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FR 44300 - Introduction To Francophone Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of the most representative Francophone poets, playwrights, and novelists from various countries, such as Leopold Senghor, Aime Cesaire, Jacques Romain, Gabrielle Roy, Michel Tremblay, Mohamed Dib. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FR 45000 - French Civilization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of modern French life with emphasis on the customs and daily life of the people. Lectures in the language. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| FR 46100 - Intermediate French Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of FR 26100. In this course, stress is given to the development of more complex grammar and its application in the written language. Emphasis is placed on the structure of composition and basic refinement and precision brought about by grammar and vocabulary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| FR 46500 - Intermediate French Conversation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continued and more advanced practice in French conversation and study of phonetics for accuracy in pronunciation and intonation. Students are encouraged to study contemporary French culture as a basis for their conversations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| FR 48000 - French Civilization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of modern French life, with special emphasis on the customs and daily life of the people. Lectures in French. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FR 49000 - Topics In French |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| FR 51100 - Advanced French Conversation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Additional practice in speaking and understanding French. Extensive listening (outside of class) to recordings of natives from various parts of the French-speaking world. Talks based on this material given in class. Graduate students other than M.A.T. candidates may not include this course in the plan of study. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Student will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| FR 51500 - Advanced French Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Additional training in writing French. Free and guided composition, as well as direct translation. Special attention to grammatical points where needed. Graduate students other than M.A.T. candidates may not include this course in the plan of study. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| FR 51900 - Teaching College French |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course designed to provide a forum for ideas connecting theory and research to teaching practice. Explores issues related to how learning and teaching can be enhanced and presents practical ideas that can be implemented in the classroom. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FR 52700 - Etudes de Style |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the expression of affective and artistic values in literary French. Detailed grammatical analyses and study of stylistic procedures. Comparison with English usage. Introduction to explication de texte as an approach to literature. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FR 54100 - Renaissance French Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Major works in verse and prose of the sixteenth century. Marot, du Bellay, Ronsard, Rabelais, Montaigne. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| FR 54200 - The Classical Age |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The social background and the formation of the classical traits of the seventeenth century in France. Readings from Corneille, Racine, Moliere, and other minor authors. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Student will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| FR 54300 - The Age Of Reason |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The political writers, the encyclopedists, and the social philosophers of the eighteenth century, such as Voltaire, Diderot, Montesquieu, Beaumarchais, Le Sage, and Rousseau. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FR 54900 - French Literature And Film |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the interrelationships of contemporary French literature and film. Discussion of the potential of each medium as an art form, problems of visual transposition of literary works, and extension of literary concepts such as Dadaism and Surrealism into cinema. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FR 55800 - French Novel Of The Twentieth Century |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Consideration of the character, aesthetics, and evolution of the twentieth-century French novel. Readings from such representative novelists as Proust, Gide, Bernanos, Giono, Malraux, Camus, Robbe-Grillet, Saporta. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Student will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| FR 56100 - The Structure Of French I: Phonetics And Phonology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course presents the sound system of French by examining descriptive and theoretical issues in the patterning of segments on various levels (phonetics, phonemics, morphology, etc. ). Students will study current phonological and phonetic issues in recent literature. Credit will not be given for both FR 35100 and 56100. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FR 56200 - The Structure Of French II: Syntax And Morphosyntax |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course presents descriptive and theoretical issues concerning the grammatical structure of French, dealing both with word-level phenomena (inflectional and derivational morphology, etc. ) and with phrase-, sentence-, and discourse-level phenomena (syntactic structure, sentence constituents, word order, etc. ). Credit will not be given for both FR 36200 and 56200. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FR 56300 - History Of The French Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the historical development of the French language from Vulgar Latin to the present and of the French language of today as a reflection of past cultural and socio-political conditions. Knowledge of a Romance language or of Latin is recommended but not required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FR 56400 - Introduction To Old French |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the study of Old French. Phonetic, syntactic, and stylistic questions will be addressed through the analysis of original texts. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FR 58100 - French Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of the cultural life of the French people as reflected in architecture, art, history, literature, music, and philosophy. Lectures in French. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Student will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| FR 58200 - Francophone Cultures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines at least three French-speaking regions outside of France (e. g., Caribbean, Maghreb, Quebec, West Africa), including contemporary civilization and the development of cultures throughout history. Explores trends in society, daily life, the arts, and the ideas. Lectures in French. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FR 59000 - Directed Reading In French |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Directed readings in French. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FR 59400 - Special Topics In French Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Special topics in French Literature. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FR 59600 - Special Topics In French Linguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FR 60100 - First Course To Establish Reading Knowledge |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. First Course To Establish Reading Knowledge. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FR 60500 - Second Course To Establish Reading Knowledge |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Second Course to Establish Reading Knowledge. For those in the humanities and social sciences. Prerequisite: FR 60100. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FR 63000 - Bibliography And Literary Criticism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The use of general and specific reference materials and bibliographical aids in literary research: the basic concepts and terminology of literary criticism. Required of all MA candidates in French. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FR 65900 - Seminar In French Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study of special subjects. Topics to be announced in advance. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FR 67900 - Seminar In French Linguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study and research on a significant topic in French linguistics. Topic to be announced in advance. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FR 69800 - Research MA Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MA Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FR 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FREN F1000 - Elementary French I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to the French language and selected aspects of French civilization and culture. Credit given for only one of F100, F115, and F491. Refundable $25 deposit to borrow required audiocassettes. The same textbooks are used in F150.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FREN F1010 - Elementary French I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to contemporary French and Francophone cultures. Emphasis on interaction and communication. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FREN F1020 - Elementary French II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to contemporary French and Francophone cultures. Emphasis on interaction and communication. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FREN F1110 - Elementary French I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to French language as well as to French and francophone cultures. Emphasis on development of communicative competence in speaking, listening, reading, and writing. Weekly attendance at supervised lab required. F111 is a course for beginners. Students with two years of high school French must take F113. (F111 Fall; F112 Spring). Typically offered Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FREN F1120 - Elementary French II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to French language as well as to French and francophone cultures. Emphasis on development of communicative competence in speaking, listening, reading, and writing. Weekly attendance at supervised lab required. F111 is a course for beginners. Students with two years of high school French must take F113. (F111 Fall; F112 Spring). Typically offered Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FREN F1130 - Accelerated First Year French |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Required beginning course for students with at least two years of high school French who did not place into F203 or higher. Review of selected material from F111 before proceeding to F112 material. Weekly attendance at supervised lab required. Credit will not be given for both F112 and F113. Typically offered Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FREN F1170 - Beginning French I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory language courses designed for students with no prior training in French. Emphasis on developing basic speaking, writing, listening, and reading skills, as well as awareness of French and Francophone cultures. Three semesters are required to fulfill the foreign language requirement. Credit not given for F117-F118-F119 and F131-F132. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FREN F1180 - Beginning French II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory language courses designed for students with no prior training in French. Emphasis on developing basic speaking, writing, listening, and reading skills, as well as awareness of French and Francophone cultures. Three semesters are required to fulfill the foreign language requirement. Credit not given for F117-F118-F119 and F131-F132. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| FREN F1190 - Beginning French III |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introductory language courses designed for students with no prior training in French. Emphasis on developing basic speaking, writing, listening, and reading skills, as well as awareness of French and Francophone cultures. Three semesters are required to fulfill the foreign language requirement. Credit not given for F117-F118-F119 and F131-F132. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| FREN F1310 - First-Year French I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Introductory French language course. Emphasis on developing basic speaking, writing, listening and reading skills as well as awareness of Francophone cultures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FREN F1320 - First-Year French II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Continuation of introductory French language course. Emphasis on developing basic spaeking, writing, listening, and reading skills as well as awareness of Francophone cultures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| FREN F1500 - Elementary French II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. These are first-year introductory courses, taught over two semesters, in which little or no prior experience with the language is necessary. These courses target all four skills of language learning -- listening, speaking, reading, and writing. Goals include: acquisition and practice of new vocabulary and structures; focus on oral (listening, speaking) and written (reading, writing) communication in the target language; increased knowledge and appreciation of Francophone cultures. Placement test or other prerequisite may be required.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FREN F2000 - Intermediate French I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. These are second-year courses, taught over two semesters, which complete the foreign language sequence. These courses will focus on culture and communication, and will emphasize the following skills: the review of previous structures and vocabulary; the addition of new structures and vocabulary; the improvement the receptive skills of listening and reading, as well as of the active skills of reading and writing; the increased understanding of Spanish-speaking cultures as seen in authentic texts, music, and film. Placement test or other prerequisite may be required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FREN F2030 - 2nd-Year French I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive review of grammar, and development of vocabulary, reading, conversation, and writing skills. Reading and discussion of modern French fiction and nonfiction, some composition. Weekly attendance in audio laboratory required. (F203 Fall; F204 Spring). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FREN F2040 - 2nd-Year French II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Intensive review of grammar, and development of vocabulary, reading, conversation, and writing skills. Reading and discussion of modern French fiction and nonfiction, some composition. Weekly attendance in audio laboratory required. (F203 Fall; F204 Spring). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FREN F2130 - 2nd Year French Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course integrates the four language skills into a structured approach to composition. Compositions will treat topics both creative and expository; emphasis will be on correct usage, vocabulary building, and stylistic control. Review of selected points of French grammar will be included; tests will cover both grammar and reading comprehension. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FREN F2500 - Second Year French II: Language And Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Grammar, composition, and conversation coordinated with the study of expository, literary, and cultural texts. Attendance in the language lab may be required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| FREN F2600 - French Literature and Civilization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Readings of representative literature from period chosen, their political, social and philosophical background, and parallel trends in the arts and music. May be repeated once with different topic. Lectures in English, Readings in English. Eligible for foreign language option. No credit for French major. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FREN F2960 - Foreign Study in France |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Credit for foreign study in french language and/or literature done at second-year level when no specific equivalent is available among departmental offerings.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FREN F3000 - Lectures Et Analyses Litteraires |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Preparation for more advanced work in French literature. Readings and discussion of one play, one novel, short stories, and poems as well as the principles of literary criticism and "explication de texte.". Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-New Albany
|
| FREN F3050 - Literature Francaise I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. French literature, origins to 1789. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FREN F3060 - Literature Francaise II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. French literature, 1789 to present. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FREN F3070 - Masterpieces Of French Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Includes material from both classical and modern periods. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| FREN F3100 - Topics In French Literature In Translation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Readings in English translation novels, plays, essays, and poetry or other works that reflect a specific topic chosen by the instructor. No credit in French. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FREN F3130 - Advanced Grammar And Composition I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Detailed review of grammar, Writing practice, chiefly theme et version. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| FREN F3140 - Advanced Grammar And Composition II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Detailed review of grammar, writing practice, chiefly theme et version. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| FREN F3150 - French Conversation And Diction I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course devoted to oral practice and basic phonetic rules. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| FREN F3170 - French Language Skills I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Advanced grammar, structures, composition, and conversation. Conducted in French. Required for teaching certification. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FREN F3180 - French Language Skills II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced grammar, structures, composition, and conversation. Conducted in French. Required for teaching certification. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FREN F3250 - Oral French For Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 8.00. Practice in diction and phonetic analysis. Study of idiomatic expressions, and intensive review of irregular verbs. Individual diagnosis of speech difficulties, with corrective exercises in audio laboratory. Some conversation and practice-teaching presentations. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
|
| FREN F3260 - French In The Business World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the language of business activities in France, with an introduction to the structure and functioning of various aspects of French economic life. Useful for students preparing for the profiency examinations of the Chambre de Commerce de Paris. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| FREN F3280 - Advanced French Grammar And Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study and practice of French thinking and writing patterns. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| FREN F3290 - Phonetics And Pronunciation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Combined lectures on problems of pronunciation and phonetic transcription, and oral practice sessions. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FREN F3300 - Introduction To Translating French And English |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comparative study of the style and grammar of both languages with focus on the difficulties involved in translating. Introduction to the various tools of the art of translation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| FREN F3310 - French Pronunciation And Diction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Thorough study of French phonetics and intonation patterns. Corrective drill. Includes intensive class and laboratory work. Oral interpretation of text. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FREN F3400 - Introduction To Contemporary French Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will introduce students to various aspects of French culture and society. Through selected readings and films students will develop an understanding of the contemporary history, politics, and geography of France. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FREN F3560 - Introduction To French Cinema |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course presents a chronological survey of French films, genres, and directors, from the Lumiere brothers to the New Wave. It will introduce students to basic techniques of film analysis. The course is conducted in French. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FREN F3600 - Introduction Socio-Culturelle A La France |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of France and its people through an examination of France's political and cultural development. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FREN F3710 - Topics In French |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics in French literature and culture will be explored from a variety of perspectives. The course will be given in English. It may be taken twice for credit if topic differs. Does not count towards the major. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Richmond
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FREN F3800 - French Conversation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to develop conversational skills through reports, debates, and group discussions with an emphasis on vocabulary building, mastery of syntax, and general oral expression. Both FREN F380 and FREN F480 may be taken for credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FREN F3960 - Foreign Study In France |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Credit for foreign study in French language or literature when no specific equivalent is available among departmental offerings. May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credit hours. Does not count towards the major. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| FREN F4020 - Introduction To French Linguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the structure of the French language: phonology, morphology, and syntax. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FREN F4080 - Women In French Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Readings of texts by such writers as Marie de France, Marguerite de Navarre, Louise Labe, Christine de Pisan, Madame de Lafayette, Madame de Sevigne, George Sand, Colette, Simone de Beauvoir, Nathalie Sarraute Marguerite Duras. Analysis of themes, imagery, and language as they relate to the feminine condition. Taught in French. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FREN F4100 - French Literature Of The Middle Ages |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to Old French language and major literacy works. Readings may be broadly representative of the period or reflect a particular thematic concern. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FREN F4130 - The French Renaissance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Rabelais, Montaigne, the Pleiade, and others. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FREN F4210 - Fourth-Year French |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced work in language with a focus on stylistics, theme et version. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FREN F4230 - Craft Of Translation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Tragedie Classique. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FREN F4240 - Comedie classique |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Neo-classical comedy is one of the treasures of French literature and Moliere, its greatest practitioner, is renowned and performed throughout the world. In this course, we will examine several plays of Moliere and of his predecessors. This study, covering almost the entire 17th century with a glance toward the 18th, will consider the changes that occured in the public, in taste, in stage craft, and in the language that culminated in what is generally known as neo-classical French comedy. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FREN F4250 - Prose et poesie du dix-septieme siecle |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In their study of prose and poetry from seventeenth-century France, students will be asked to pose questions concerning gender identity and sexual politics. What is the difference between sex and gender? What debates from previous centuries persisted to have an impact on the representation of gender? Do writers treat gender as an essence or do they point out its social construction in their texts? How do writers of different sexes use literary language to discuss gender identity? Students will keep these questions in mind as we read literary examples of various esthetic traditions: libertinage erudit, baroque, preciosity, classicism, and proto-enlightenment. Prose readings will include Honore d'Urfe's L'Astree, Guilleragues' Lettres portugaises, and Mme de Lafayette's Princesse de Cleves. We will also study the poetry of Theophile de Viau, Malherbe, Maynard, Voiture, Benserade, Regnier, Boileau, and Mme Deshoulieres. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FREN F4390 - La Grammaire Francaise |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study of French grammar to follow the intermediate courses FREN F3170 and FREN F3180. Particular attention will be paid to verbal tenses and modes, the passive voice, indefinite adjectives and pronouns, prepositions and prepositional phrases. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FREN F4400 - Medieval And Renaissance French Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this course students will read and analyze French literary texts from the Middle Ages through the sixteenth century within a socio-historical context. Among others, texts by Marie de France, Chretien de Troyes, Beroul, Rabelais, Montaigne, Marguerite de Navarre, Ronsard, and Du Bellay will be studied. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FREN F4420 - La Poesie Francaise/Francophone |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of French and francophone poetry from the Middle Ages to the 20th Century. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FREN F4430 - 19th Century Novel I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. 19th Century Novel I. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FREN F4440 - 19th Century Novel II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Sand, Flaubert, Zola, Maupassant, and others. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FREN F4460 - Poesie 19 Siecle |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of 19th century poetry from Lamartine to Mallarme. Readings and explications. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FREN F4500 - Colloquium In French Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Emphasis on one topic, author, or genre. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FREN F4520 - La Civilisation Et Litterature Quebecoises |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of the history of French Canadian literature and civilization from its origins down to the present leading to the "Quiet Revolution" as seen through the contemporary poetry, novel, and drama of Quebec. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FREN F4530 - Literature Contemporaine I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. 20th century French literature. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FREN F4540 - Literature Contemporaine II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. 20th century French literature. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FREN F4590 - L'Autobiographie |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of autobiographical literature from the Renaissance to present. Texts by writers such as Montaigne, Rousseau, Sand, Sartre, Duras, and Djebar will be studied considering the ways in which self-representation has changed and has stayed the same through the centuries. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FREN F4600 - French Fiction In Film |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Involves reading works of French fiction and studying them as works of literature, followed by the viewing of a film version of each work and the preparation of a comparative analysis of the two versions. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FREN F4610 - France Contemporaine |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. France since 1945: political, social, economic, and cultural aspects. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| FREN F4630 - Civilization Francaise I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. French civilization from medieval period through 17th century. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FREN F4640 - Civilization Francaise II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. French civilization from 18th century to contemporary period. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| FREN F4740 - Theme Et Version |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Translation of selected passages, alternating between English and French, to teach students to write with precision and clarity in both languages. Discussion of theoretical works related to the art of translation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
|
| FREN F4800 - French Conversation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to develop speaking skills through content-based conversation with emphasis on developing fluency and accuracy.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| FREN F4950 - Individual Readings In French Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. May be repeated for credit with a different topic. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FREN F4970 - Capstone In French |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A senior level summative experience for French majors that integrates students' undergraduate study in the discipline. Students showcase academic progress through a capstone portfolio, a reflective journal, discussions with a faculty capstone director, and by a final presentation to students and faculty.
Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| FREN W3990 - Internship In Modern Foreign Language |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Practical application of French language skills. Credit may be counted toward the major with the approval of the department chair. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FRST F4000 - Special Topics In Foreign Study |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 9.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| FS 16100 - Science Of Food |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Chemical and physical properties of foods; issues pertaining to safety, food-diet-health relationship; government regulations pertaining to food safety, quality and additives; preservation techniques and transformation of agricultural commodities to food products; Food facts, myths, and practices that are important for making intelligent food decisions. Course may also be offered for dual credit with cooperating Indiana high schools upon documented approval by the Department of Food Science. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Concurrent Credit
West Lafayette
|
| FS 16200 - Introduction To Food Processing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Application of introductory food science principles (e.g. food chemistry, food microbiology, and unit operations) to food processing; emphasis will be placed on food formulation, pilot-scale process design, and resulting food quality. May require class trips
. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FS 24500 - Food Packaging |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Elements of packaging science and technology applied to preservation, distribution, and marketing of food products; packaging materials; principles of diffusion and permeability; procedures for developing, evaluating, and testing food packages; packaging requirements for specific types of foods; other special topics of current interest. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Appreciate the important role that packaging plays in today’s sophisticated food processing operations, its effect on final product quality and self-life, and its influence on distribution methods and marketing related decisions.
2. Understand the basic packaging materials and the technology to produce food packages.
3. Understand basic concepts of diffusion, permeation, and migration, especially as they relate to package properties, food quality, and product shelf-life.
4. Develop general guidelines for selecting appropriate packaging materials to fit the needs of specific food products.
5. Have a general appreciation of the methods used to test and evaluate packaging materials for specific properties and whole containers for integrity, suitability, and overall performance.
6. Intelligently discuss current food packaging related topics (i.e. package degradability/recyclability, tamper evident/proof packaging, modified atmosphere packaging, aseptic packaging, microwaveable packaging, etc.)
|
| FS 27500 - Honors Course - Lower Division |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Utilized to offer a new honors course for a maximum of three years. Variable title, credit, and instructional type. Course may be repeated for credit if content and titles are different. Offered primarily to first- and second-year students. Courses offered must be approved by instructor and College of Agriculture Honors Committee. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 12 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Critical thinking.
2. Communication.
3. Cultural understanding.
4. Civic responsibilities.
5. Professional preparation.
6. Scientific principles.
7. Social science principles.
8. Teamwork.
|
| FS 29100 - Special Assignments |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Open to primarily freshmen and sophomores who desire to study special problems in science not covered in regular coursework. May be repeated for credit with instructor permission. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| FS 29800 - Sophomore Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Current food science issues will be discussed by students, staff, and guest speakers. Career planning and improvement of communication skills will be emphasized. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Construct a professional resume that includes educational background and experience.
2. Construct a professional cover letter in reference to a job posting.
3. Demonstrate the ability to professionally answer interview questions in an interview setting.
4. Demonstrate the ability to present information with PowerPoint software.
5. Identify your Myers Briggs personality profile.
6. Explore some current issues in the food industry.
7. Plan your coursework for each semester through graduation.
|
| FS 33000 - Culinary Arts For The Food Scientist |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Course bridges the gap between culinary arts and product development. It includes real-world case studies of science-based food product development by industry specialists on commercial development. In addition there are hands-on applications of textbook culinary arts topics under the direct supervision of the specialists. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Acquaint students with terms used by culinary professionals, so they may communicate clearly with them.
2. See and practice preparation methods for a variety of food products, both commercially and as would be done by an expert chef.
3. Demonstrate the concept of “Gold Standard” foods.
4. See how different preparation methods can affect the final quality and consumer acceptance of various food products.
5. Learn how commercial food preparation methods differ from home preparation.
6. Learn how culinary professionals and food scientists work together to develop new food products.
|
| FS 34000 - Introduction To Food Law And Regulations |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will cover basic knowledge and familiarity of the principal law and regulations governing raw and processed foods. Class meets during weeks 1-5.
. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To gain a basic knowledge and familiarity of the principal laws and regulations governing raw and processed foods.
2. To develop an understanding of the law's core - adulteration and misbranding.
3. To learn basic food labeling and health claim regulations.
4. To obtain a working knowledge of US food law and promulgated regulations, current issues concerning food regulations, and how to obtain further information for specific regulatory problems.
|
| FS 34100 - Food Processing I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Applications of the fundamentals of food engineering, microbiology, and chemistry to methods of food processing and preservation; emphasis will be on processing concepts, preparation for food processing, food formulation, and thermal processing. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the sources of variability of raw food materials and their impact on food processing operations.
2. List and describe the major methods covered in class to control deterioration and spoilage in foods.
3. Identify the conditions under which important pathogens are commonly inactivated, killed, or made harmless in foods.
4. Identify conditions including sanitation practices under which microorganisms are commonly inactivated, killed, or made harmless in foods.
5. Demonstrate use mass and energy balances for a food process.
6. Explain the transport processes and unit operations involved in processing a particular food.
7. Identify the principles and current practices of processing techniques and the effects of processing parameters in product quality.
8. Predict changes in food quality during storage or processing.
9. Understand the requirements for water utilization and waste management in food and food processing.
|
| FS 34200 - Food Processing I Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This laboratory course applies food engineering principles and thermal processing methods for production of safe and high quality foods. The course will include applications of mathematics and physics principles in food processing operations, engineering problem solving exercises and laboratory demonstrations. Engineering concepts such as heat transfer, fluid flow, mass and energy balances applied to various food systems will be a major portion of this laboratory. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply mathematical principles to food processing application.
2. Demonstrate an understanding of energy, heat transfer and fluid flow principles.
3. Apply engineering principles to thermal processing of foods.
4. Identify conditions under which microorganisms are commonly inactivated, killed, or made harmless in foods including pasteurization, sterilization, and aseptic processing.
5. Demonstrate use mass and energy balances for a food process.
|
| FS 36100 - Food Plant Sanitation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Relation of food-plant sanitation to good manufacturing practices and regulations affecting sanitation; organization of a food-plant sanitation program; sanitary building and equipment construction; selection of cleaning, sanitizing, and pesticidal compounds; water, air, and waste treatment; food storage and transportation. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FS 36200 - Food Microbiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Microbiology of foods, with emphasis on the conditions for growth of microorganisms and degradation of food components, preservation methods, use of Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point (HACCP) concepts, and microorganisms associated with foodborne illness, and modern detection methods. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students should be able to identify the major components of food that affect microbial growth, to identify degradation in foods when microorganisms grow.
2. Students will be able to explain how preservations methods affect microbes in food, to explain major foodborne pathogens and under what conditions they thrive, to use microbiological information and molecular techniques to solve practical problems of the food industry.
|
| FS 36300 - Food Microbiology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Classic and molecular methods for enumerating, isolating, and identifying spoilage, fermentative, and pathogenic food microorganisms in food systems. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Perform proper aseptic technique.
2. Sample foods for microbial analyses.
3. Test food products for common microorganism.
4. Interpret data obtained from microbiological analysis.
4. Understand basic molecular techniques used to identify foodborne pathogens.
|
| FS 36800 - Dairy Products |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Scientific and technical aspects of procurement, processing, packaging, and quality control of milk products and frozen dairy foods. Emphasis is placed on process unit operations. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FS 36900 - Dairy Products Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Practical laboratory applications of processing, packaging, and quality control of fluid milk products and frozen dairy foods. May require field trips. Students are responsible for providing their own laboratory coats. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| FS 39000 - Food Science Cooperative Work Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Supervised professional experiences in the food science industry. Programs must be preplanned and conducted under the direction of the departmental coordinator with the cooperation of an employer. Students must submit a summary report. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| FS 40000 - Food Science Study Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. Utilized to record credits earned through participation in Purdue study abroad programs with cooperating foreign universities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
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| FS 43100 - Physical Chemistry For Food And Agriculture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the principles of physical chemistry applied to food and agricultural materials. Topics: state of matter, work, heat, enthalpy, entropy, free energy, phase equilibrium and transitions, chemical equilibrium, chemical kinetics, surfaces, and introduction to macromolecules, transport and spectroscopy. Examples and problems taken from the agricultural sciences. Teaches functional properties in terms of structure, energetics, and dynamics. Offered in odd-numbered years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| FS 43500 - Sensory Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to the fundamental concepts and practices of sensory analysis of food products. Technical aspects of planning and conducting human sensory panels on food products including analysis and interpretation of collected data. Course meets weeks 1-8. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Solve typical sensory problems occurring in the food industry.
2. Conduct sensory testes, analyze and interpret the results.
3. Write a report and executive summary of the findings.
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| FS 44200 - Food Processing II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Study of food processing and preservation methods based on the integrated knowledge of microbiology, chemistry, and food engineering; emphasis will be on temperature reduction, water activity, concentration, dehydration, irradiation, and extrusion. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Have sufficient knowledge of food chemistry to control reactions in foods.
2. Understand the major chemical reactions that limit shelf-life of foods.
3. Identify the conditions under which the important pathogens are commonly inactivated, killed, or made harmless in foods.
4. Understand the principles involving food preservation via fermentation processes.
5. Be able to identify the conditions, including sanitation practices under which the important pathogens and spoilage microorganisms are commonly inactivated, killed, or made harmless in foods.
6. Explain the spoilage and deterioration mechanisms in foods and methods to control deterioration and spoilage.
7. Understand the principles that make a food product safe for consumption.
8. Be able to use mass and energy balances for a given food process.
9. Explain the unit operation required to produce a given food product.
10.Understand the principles and current practices of processing techniques and the effects of processing parameters on product quality.
11.Be able to apply and incorporate the principles of food science in practical, real-world situations.
12.Define a problem, identify causes and possible solutions, and make thoughtful recommendations.
13.Work effectively on a team project.
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| FS 44300 - Food Product Design (Capstone) |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Teams develop a new product from concept through marketing. Final case study defense is presented to faculty and peers. Classes include guest lectures from the food industry. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply fundamental aspects of food chemistry, microbiology, food safety, nutrition, processing and packaging in the design and develop a new product from market concepts to practical prototype.
2. Apply knowledge food ingredient sourcing and functionality to the product development process.
3. Understand the basics of project management in the context of group projects.
4. Develop insight into bench top to pilot scale prototyping of food products.
5. Apply statistical principles through process control, experimental design and assessment of experimental data.
6. Have an appreciation for factors impacting product shelf-life and methods to control spoilage.
7. Intelligently discuss current topics in food science and trends that impact the food industry.
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| FS 44400 - Statistical Process Control |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Basic concepts and techniques of solving quality problems and assuring the quality of production processes; emphasis is on quality improvement programs, problem-solving tools, control charts for variables and attributes, process capability analysis, and sampling methods. Course meets during weeks 6-10. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| FS 44600 - Food Process Automation |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Practical and descriptive aspects of automatic control of food manufacturing processes. Use of control systems simulation; tuning of control loops; sensors; data acquisition and transmission; simple statistical process control. Students will have hands-on experience in the pilot lab. Intended for non-engineers. Offered in odd-number years. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| FS 44700 - Food Processing II Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This lab is designed to build upon fundamental concepts associated with the preservation and processing of various food products. Concepts to be covered include water activity, dehydration (drum, spray and freeze drying), frying, high pressure, microwave and ohmic heating. The focus of this lab will be hands-on production of various food products and the demonstration of fundamental food processing unit operations and calculations related to each preservation method. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Perform experiments using appropriate food processing unit operations to create various food products.
2. Write a lab report that includes analysis and interpretation of the results.
3. Work on a project team to duplicate a commercial food product and present the finding of the project in an oral and written report.
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| FS 45300 - Food Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of fundamental laws and concepts of chemistry, physics, and biology to the properties, composition, and storage of foods. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the importance of food chemistry and the relationship of food chemistry to other food science areas.
2. Understand the structures and functions of major food components, including water, proteins, carbohydrates, lipids, vitamins, and minerals.
3. Understand major reactions occurring with macronutrients (water, proteins, carbohydrates, lipids) in foods and impacts on shelf-life.
4. Identify the major components and reactions occurring in major food groups, including fruits, vegetables, grains, legumes, red meats, poultry, eggs, fish, and shellfish.
5. Be able to describe types and uses of basic sensory tests.
6. Be able to identify functions of most or all ingredients listed on the ingredient label of a food product.
7. Be able to discuss alternative ingredient choices for food products.
8. Be able to write a scientific abstract using IFT formatting.
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| FS 45400 - Food Chemistry Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory to demonstrate application of fundamental laws and concepts of chemistry, physics, and biology to the properties, composition, and storage of foods. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Performance of the students' progress will be evaluated by 7 lab reports and 3 in-class problem solving activities.
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| FS 45500 - Cereal Chemistry And Processing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Cereal grain structure, chemical and functional properties, and nutritional aspects related to grain milling and processing. Cereal processing covers dry and wet milling, brewing, baked products, pasta, breakfast cereals, snack foods, and traditional cereal foods from other countries. (Offered in even-numbered years.). Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To gain a fundamental knowledge and familiarity of the chemistry of cereal grain components and the major cereals processed to consumer products.
2. Have a working knowledge of the relationship between chemical structures, interactions and processing.
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| FS 46700 - Food Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of quantitative and qualitative physical, chemical, and instrumental methods of analysis to the examination of food products; evaluation of methods for specific applications. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the principles of the official and rapid methods of analysis for the following food components: moisture, ash, fat, and protein.
2. For any given food product, select and justify the use of: a) an official method, and b) a rapid method of analysis for the following food components: moisture, ash, fat, and protein.
3. Describe the principles of the method(s) of analysis for the following food components or properties: individual sugars, starch, total dietary fiber, individual minerals, oxygen demand, texture, color, lipid oxidation, lipid saturation, titratable acidity, extraneous matter, protein nutritional quality, protein functional properties.
4. Explain the principles and applications of the following techniques in food analysis: chromatography, electrophoresis, spectroscopy, spectrometry, immune-based assays, enzymatic assays, animal assays.
5. Identify government regulations that dictate industrial standard practices of food analysis.
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| FS 46900 - Food Analysis Laboratory |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Practical laboratory applications of food analysis, including relevant calculations using data gathered and interpretation of data. (Intended for upper-division students.) Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate practical proficiency in a food analysis laboratory, including relevant calculations using data gathered.
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| FS 47000 - Wine Appreciation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of wine production and marketing principles with an emphasis upon consumption responsibility. Historical perspectives form the foundations for wine classification systems and traditional serving procedures. Cardinal scale sensory evaluations are conducted in relationship to various food pairings. Must be 21 years of age or older to register for this course. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the nature of wine - its production, history, uses and related responsibilities.
2. Develop the ability to recognize different classes, types, and origins of wines.
3. Learn proper etiquette and tasting techniques.
4. Gain direct experience, both individually and as part of a team, in adopting these manners and methods.
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| FS 47500 - Honors Course - Upper Division |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Utilized to offer a new honors course for a maximum of three years. Variable title, credit, and instructional type. Course may be repeated for credit if content and titles are different. Offered primarily to third- and fourth-year students. Courses offered must be approved by instructor and College of Agriculture Honors Committee. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Critical thinking.
2. Communication.
3. Cultural understanding.
4. Civic responsibilities.
5. Professional preparation.
6. Scientific principles.
7. Social science principles.
8. Teamwork.
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| FS 48200 - Food Science Senior Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Oral and written reports on selected food science topics. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| FS 49100 - Special Assignments In Food Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Open primarily to qualified seniors who desire to study special problems in science not covered in regular coursework. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| FS 49900 - Thesis Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. For honors students doing independent research. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
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| FS 50600 - Commerical Grape And Wine Production |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (HORT 50600) A study of professional grape growing and wine production with an emphasis on Midwestern climates, adapted varieties, and recommended wine styles. This course is especially intended for upper level undergraduate, or graduate students in the College of Agriculture that have completed basic course work in plant sciences, biology and chemistry. Students will learn the principles of viticulture and enology and the practices of commercial grape growing and wine making. Must be 21 years old. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Ability to solve a range of real-life production problems.
2. Ability to produce a batch of commercially acceptable wine from vineyard to bottle.
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| FS 53000 - Food Ingredient Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Identifies functions of ingredients listed on ingredient labels of food products and discusses alternative ingredient choices for food products. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| FS 54100 - Postharvest Technology Of Fruits And Vegetables |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. (HORT 54100) Theoretical and applied aspects of methods being used for enhancing the quality and shelf life of harvested fruits and vegetables. Factors that affect the longevity of produce and technology used to control these factors and reduce deterioration of produce between harvest and consumption/processing will be emphasized. Meets during weeks 11-15). Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| FS 55001 - Food Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Principles and concepts of the effects of heat, light, oxygen, and water activity on chemical reactions and physical events involved in processing, storage, and preparation of food products and their relationships to nutritional quality, organoleptic quality, stability, and safety. Class meets for 5 weeks. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Students are expected to have a working knowledge of the following topics:
1. Structures and functions of major food components, including water, proteins, carbohydrates, and lipids; Major chemical reactions or structural changes occurring with macronutrients (water, proteins, carbohydrates, lipids) in foods and impacts on shelf-life.
2. Major components and reactions occurring in major food groups, including fruits, vegetables, grains, legumes, red meats, poultry, eggs, fish, and shellfish.
3. Examples of the effects of processing on food constituents and end product quality; Basic principles of dispersed systems: colloids, gels, emulsions, foams; Problem solving using basic food chemistry knowledge.
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| FS 55101 - Food Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Principles and applications of chemical, physical, and sensory techniques to analyze foods. Class meets for 5 weeks. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify government regulations that dictate industrial standard practices of food analysis.
2. Describe the principles of the official and rapid methods of analysis of the following food components: moisture, ash, fat, protein.
3. For any given food product, select and justify the use of 1) an official, and 2) a rapid method of analysis for the following food components: moisture, ash, fat, protein.
4. Describe the principles of the methods of analysis for the following food components/properties: individual sugars, starch, total dietary fiber, vitamins, individual minerals, oxygen demand, texture, color, sensory evaluation, lipid oxidation, lipid saturation, titratable acidity, extraneous matter, protein nutritional and functional properties.
5. Relate the various analyses discussed in class to quality assurance of specific food products.
6. Explain the principles and applications of the following techniques in food analysis: chromatography, electrophoresis, spectroscopy (including mass spectroscopy and MALDI), enzymatic assays, immuno-based assays.
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| FS 55201 - Nutritional Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Study of perspectives on established nutrition knowledge, concepts, and principles pertinent to the field of food science. Contemporary information about diet as it relates to health and safety issues. Controversies regarding nutrients and functional foods. Class meets 5 weeks. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Students will learn about the scientific principle relevant to:
1. Newly released dietary guideline for Americans 2010, & components in diets and foods.
2. Digestion, absorption and metabolism of macro-nutrients.
3. Digestion, absorption and metabolism of vitamins and minerals frequently used in food processing.
4. Influence of food components on energy balance and body weight management.
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| FS 55301 - Food Microbiology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Principles and applications of the microbiology of foods. Focuses on many of the important conditions that may lead to foodborne illness and food spoilage. Structured in three main sections related to foodborne hazards: 1) identification, 2) control and prevention, and 3) detection. Class meets weeks 1-5. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Upon completion of this course, student should be able:
1. To identify the major components of food that affect microbial growth.
2. To explain major foodborne pathogens and under what conditions they thrive.
3. To use microbiological information and molecular techniques to solve practical problems of the food industry.
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| FS 55401 - Food Processing And Packaging |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Covers relevant basic engineering concepts and their applications to solve food processing and packaging problems. Key unit operations and regulations or recommended practices for manufacture of a variety of foods also will be covered. Students work in teams on a project and present their findings to the entire class. Class meets weeks 6-15. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the rationale and principle of operation behind common food processing operations.
2. Identify and explain the unit operations involved in the manufacture of specific food products.
3. Explain how processing parameters will affect quality and safety of processed products.
4. Communicate effectively with food technologists and engineers.
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| FS 55501 - Case Study |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A brief overview of problem-solving and teamwork concepts will be presented in class. A problem will be given by an industrial sponsor, and work groups (teams) will be assigned to solve the problem and present the findings. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Work to solve a defined technical problem in food technology.
2. Gain an experience for solving a problem by effective literature search and preliminary experimentation.
3. Analyze data and evaluate the outcome for solving a problem.
4. Coordinate personal contributions within the team.
5. Organize and communicate thoughts/data in a well-organized manner.
6. Present both written and oral reports outlining the approach, procedure, outcome, and recommendation to solve the stated problem.
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| FS 56400 - Commercial Food And Beverage Fermentations |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course will provide a study of the principles and practices of international food and beverage fermentations with emphasis on the microbiology, biochemistry and processing techniques used in commercial fermentations that utilize fruits, vegetables, grains, dairy, and meats. Instructional Format: This is a two credit lecture that can be linked to a separate optional one credit hour laboratory combination. Students must be 21 years of age with ID check for proof of age. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To gain a fundamental understanding of the principles and practices of traditional and novel fermentation techniques in the international food and beverage industries.
2. To acquire an advanced scientific knowledge in food microbiology, safety, biochemistry and processing.
3. To gain a learning experience with both production and sensory aspects of applied food and beverage fermentations.
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| FS 56500 - Microbial Foodborne Pathogens |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The primary focus is to study the microbial pathogens involved with foodborne diseases. Course emphasis is on molecular and genetic basis of virulence of foodborne pathogens and host parasite interactions. Topics include incidence and source of pathogens, immune response to infection, virulence factors, and mechanism of pathogenesis of specific infectious and intoxicating foodborne bacteria, mycotoxins, viruses and parasites. Typically offered Spring (odd years).
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| FS 56600 - Microbial Techniques For Food Pathogens |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Molecular biology, immunochemistry and tissue culture-based rapid and automated techniques currently used for detection and identification of foodborne pathogens. The techniques include metabolic fingerprinting identification system, enzyme immunoassay and dot blotting, lateral flow assay, polymerase chain reaction, genomic fingerprinting, cytotoxicity assays, and selected biosensor tools. Laboratory experiments are scheduled for four hours, with up to two additional hours of arranged time. Offered in even-numbered years. (Weeks 6-16). Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| FS 59000 - Special Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Specialized study in research laboratories, libraries, or computer laboratories for problems related to food science that are not taught in regular courses. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| FS 59100 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Specialized topics not covered in other courses will be offered as one-credit minicourses. Topics, requirements, and credits will be determined yearly. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture 1, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| FS 60900 - Food Lipids |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. (NUTR 60900) Importance of lipids in the diet and food systems with emphasis on changes occurring during processing, preparation, and storage. Nomenclature, physical attributes, and oxidation of lipids as well as properties and characteristics of antioxidants will be major components of the course. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: BCHM 56100 and FS 65000 or FS/NUTR 45300. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| FS 61000 - Food Proteins |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (NUTR 61000) Chemical and physical properties, distribution and function, and alteration of proteins in food. Protein toxicology and nutritional quality. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: BCHM 56100 and FS 65000. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| FS 62000 - Scientific Writing In Food Science |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course covers the essential elements of publishing original research at professional meetings (oral presentations and papers) and in peer-reviewed journals (original research manuscripts). Topics include: ethics in writing, effective reading of the literature, organizing research data, choosing a journal, writing the manuscript (results, materials and methods, introduction, discussion, title, abstract, references), publication process, revising and reviewing, poster presentation, and short oral presentations. Each student will write a paper, prepare a 12-minute oral presentation, and prepare a poster, based on data from his/her graduate research project. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| FS 63000 - Carbohydrates |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (NUTR 63000) Carbohydrates with an emphasis on those of low molecular weight in foods. Structures, reactions, and properties of mono- and oligosaccharides. Introduction to polysaccharides and food gums. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: 6 credit hours in Organic Chemistry. Prerequisite: Nine credits of chemistry. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| FS 63200 - Laboratory In X-Ray Fiber Diffraction |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Molecular model building and X-ray diffraction analysis of fibrous polymer structures such as nucleic acids, polysaccharides, and polypeptides. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1.Students learn the fundamentals of specimen preparation, data collection and solving the three-dimensional structures of helix-forming polymers towards understanding their structure-function relationships.
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| FS 64000 - Aseptic Processing Technologies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Overview of aseptic processing and packaging systems; thermal processing and fluid flow in continuous heat exchangers; food microbiology, chemistry, and packaging as applied to aseptic processing. Establishing processes for aseptic processing of liquid and particulate foods. Typically offered Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| FS 66000 - Intestinal Microbiology And Immunology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. (ANSC 66000) Discussion and critique of recent journal articles related to intestinal microbiology/immunology. The specific areas covered under this forum are: (1) intestinal microbiology, (2) food microbiology as it relates to gastrointestinal diseases, (3) probiotics and prebiotics-related to intestinal health or pathogen control, and (4) mucosal immunity with major emphasis on intestinal immunology. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate effective oral and written communication skills. This includes such skills as writing technical reports and making formal presentations.
2. Apply critical thinking skills to new situations including critical evaluation of published papers.
3. Independently research scientific and nonscientific information and use library resource.
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| FS 68400 - Food Science Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Current topics in food science. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| FS 69000 - Special Topics In Food Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individual study of specialized materials. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| FS 69700 - Supervised University Teaching In Food Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students assist a faculty member in teaching a food science course to obtain training and experience in various aspects of classroom and laboratory teaching. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| FS 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| FS 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Department of Food Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| FVS 26100 - Technical Video Production I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course introduces students to the principles and practice of professional video production. Through lectures, viewing, discussions, and laboratory exercises, students will acquire the tools necessary to transform their concepts, or those of their clients, into successful video productions. Film Video Studies majors have priority. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| FVS 33200 - Technical Video Production II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. This experiential course furthers the students' understanding of technical video production. Lectures, viewings, discussions, and laboratory exercises increase the students' proficiency with the technology and equipment as well as the art involved in the craft. Film Video Studies majors have priority. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| FVS 33600 - Screenwriting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will gain a working knowledge of basic narrative elements and how these elements work to form a story. Writing and re-writing a three act outline and an original screenplay will give you an understanding of script language and process. (Film Video Studies majors have priority.). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| FVS 33700 - Editing I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course introduces students to the principles of non-linear/non-destructive editing. Lectures, viewings, discussions, and laboratory exercises expose students to the technical and artistic aspects of the editing process. Film Video Studies majors have priority. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| FVS 33800 - Editing II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course instructs students in advanced principles of non-linear/non-destructive editing. Lectures, viewings, discussions, and laboratory exercises will be used to help the student learn advanced technical and artistic aspects of the editing process. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| FVS 44200 - Digital Film Production |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Students will gain knowledge of all phases of film production in the course of completeling two short digital films. This class will emulate standard film industry practices and guidelines. Film Video Studies majors have priority. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1.Students who complete the course should be competent at assembling and using camera chains, preparing simple graphics, basic editing for live broadcasts, and simple technical direction. They will demonstrate professional standards for filming live events and will have mastered sufficient filming and editing techniques so they can succeed in the more advanced filmmaking and editing classes in the major.
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| FVS 45000 - Internship In Film/Video/Media Production |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Internships in one of the professional areas of film, video or media production. Internships are supervised by appropriate faculty in a particular field of specialization. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| FVS 49000 - Directed Readings In Film/Video Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Readings under the direction of the instructor in a particular field of study. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| FVS 49100 - Special Topics In Film/Video Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Special topics or projects under the direction of an instructor in a particular field of specialization. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| FWAI A4500 - Senior Project I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| FWAI B4500 - Senior Project II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| FWAS 11100 - Interdisciplinary Natural Science I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to help nonscience majors learn the nature of science as a human enterprise through active exploration in enough depth to confront critical questions such as: How do we know? and Why do we believe? First course of a two-course sequence; includes a three-week introductory module and two six-week modules on specific topics and/or issues such as acid raid, the extinction of dinosaurs, or the solar system. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| FWAS 11200 - Interdisciplinary Natural Science II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Second course of a two-course sequence for non-science majors. Includes two six-week modules on specific topics and/or issues and a final three-week capstone module designed to help students compare and contrast their experiences in the four topics/issues modules to identify how major themes and processes were present throughout and to explore the unity of the sciences while showing something of their diversity. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
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| FWAS 20100 - Humanities I: The Ancient World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This interdisciplinary course investigates art, architecture, literature, philosophy, and religion in the ancient world (to 1300 AD) from a multi-cultural perspective. The focus is on representative works; the course proceeds chronologically and each work is given a historical/cultural setting. The laboratory develops critical appreciation through interpretive reading and observation. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| FWAS 20200 - Humanities II: Foundations Of The Modern Western World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This interdisciplinary course investigates art, architecture, literature, philosophy, and religion in the ancient world (to 1300 AD) from a multi-cultural perspective. The focus is on representative works; the course proceeds chronologically and each work is given a historical/cultural setting. The laboratory develops critical appreciation through interpretive reading and observation. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| FWAS H2010 - Humanities I: The Ancient World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This interdisciplinary course investigates art, architecture, literature, philosophy, and religion in the ancient world (to 1300 AD) from a multi-cultural perspective. The focus is on representative works; the course proceeds chronologically and each work is given an historical/cultural setting. The practicum develops critical appreciation through interpretive reading and observation. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| FWAS H2020 - Humanities II: Foundations Of The Modern Western World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigates art, architecture, literature, philosophy, religion, and music from 1300 to present. Primary focus on Western tradition. Representative works treated chronologically in their historical/cultural settings. Practicum develops critical appreciation through interpretive observation, listening, and reading. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| GBA 22700 - Principles Of Accounting I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Not open to students with credit in MGMT 200. Introductory accounting includes the basic language, principles, and procedures of accounting. Emphasis on recording, classifying, and summarizing accounting data for financial statement reporting and analysis. Assumed Ability: Students who can perform at the level of MA 111 should enroll in this course. Students below that level of ability should not. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| GBA 22800 - Principles Of Accounting II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of GBA 22700 with emphasis on accounting for partnerships, corporations, and analysis of financial statements. Accounting for manufacturing firms, managerial controls and cost determination are included
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| GBA 32000 - Introduction To Federal Taxation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course that emphasizes the taxation of individuals and sole proprietorships. A study of taxation law cases will be explored, but course will concentrate on practical applications of federal tax form preparation as it pertains to gross income inclusions/exclusions, adjustments, deductions, credits, and penalties. A computerized tax program will be used by the students. Selected topics include: sale of capital assets, deferred compensation plans, IRS practice and procedures, and personal tax planning.
. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| GBA 33000 - Cost Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Not open to students with credit in MGMT 201. Accounting for management planning and control, including cost accounting, budgeting, accounting control system, capital budgeting, and use of accounting information in management decisions.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| GBA 34000 - Intermediate Accounting I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Accounting theory and principles of asset valuation and income determination concentrating on cash, receivables, inventory, fixed assets, and intangible assets. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| GBA 34100 - Intermediate Accounting II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Accounting theory and principles of liability measurement and stockholders equity valuation with emphasis on contingencies, contributed capital, retained earnings, pensions, leases, and financial statement analysis.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| GBA 35000 - VITA Program |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a service-learning opportunity for students in the area of personal tax preparation. It provides students with hands on experience in preparing income tax returns for the public. In addition, students gain familiarity with income tax preparation software. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| GBA 35500 - Advanced Cost Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced cost accounting topics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| GBA 36000 - Federal Taxation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced course that emphasizes the taxation of C-Corporations, S-Corporations, Partnerships, Estates, and Trusts. Course will address tax planning opportunities for shareholders and partners as well as estate planning for individuals. Compliance with federal agencies and the preparation of appropriate tax forms will be explored. Also included is an overview of tax research using computerized retrieval and loose leaf tax services.
. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| GBA 37100 - Advanced Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Accounting theory and principles of business combinations, consolidated entities, foreign currency translation, and interim financial reporting and partnerships.
. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| GBA 37200 - Auditing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles, standards, and procedures applied in auditing the financial records and financial statements of an entity, including the legal aspects and ethical responsibilities of the accountant.
. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| GBA 37500 - Governmental Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Accounting theory and principles for nonprofit entities, governmental entities, and schools and hospitals. Distinguishes between for-profit and not-for-profit accounting concepts.
. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| GBA 38000 - Accounting For Information Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the systems for collecting and processing information necessary in planning decision making and the control of business organizations. It covers system development, documentation techniques, database systems, internal control, and application systems. Through projects, students will apply their systems expertise and improve their skills in using applications software such as spreadsheet programs. Assumed ability: Computers: Students who have had a semester of computer literacy or a similar course will find GBA 38000 less difficult than students with no computer background.
Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| GBA 39000 - Independent Study |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Hours and subject matter to be arranged with General Business Section.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| GBA 41000 - Financial Statement Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a continuation of Principles of Finance. It provides participants with a review of topics covered in finance and an opportunity for practical application of those topics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Able to analyze financial statements using finance topics from the various perspectives including investor, creditor (short-term and long-term), and manager including a competitor analysis.
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| GBA 41200 - Financial Fraud and International Financial Reporting Standards |
|
Credit hours: 3.00. An examination of schemes used to produce fraudulent financial statements and methods to detect such schemes; a survey of International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) used by non-US firms for their financial reporting. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the various schemes used by management to produce fraudulent or deceptive financial statements.
2. Explain how to detect and prevent the use of such schemes through techniques of financial statement analysis.
3. Explain how International Financial Reporting Standards differ from U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles.
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| GBG 12700 - Development Of Business In The United States |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of the development of American business enterprise and business practices that have evolved historically from the colonial period to the present. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| GBG 25000 - Principles Of Business Budgeting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of general budgetary operations in a business organization. This course content includes the various types of budgets, capital and operating budgets, expenditures, use of budgets to control operations and relationship of budgets to the accounting functions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the purpose of a budget in a business.
2. Develop and interpret basic capital and operating budgets.
3. Use budgetary information to make managerial decisions.
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| GBG 25900 - Law And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to and overview of the American legal system. The student will also learn how the law affects individuals and businesses on a daily basis. Topic coverage will include the various sources of law, legal reasoning, the courts and dispute resolution, the legal profession, governmental power, individual rights, criminal versus civil law, family relationships, torts, contracts, business relationships, and property. Upon completion of the course, the student will have a thorough understanding of the institutions and processes of the American legal system. The student will be able to distinguish civil law from criminal law, describe the litigation process and its objectives and goals, and will possess a basic knowledge of legal issues that most Americans face in their daily lives. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBG 26000 - Business Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course designed to give students an understanding of laws covering business transactions. Covers uniform commercial code, contracts, negotiable instruments, and sales of personal and real property. The laws governing partnerships, corporations, nd individual entrepreneur are included.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBG 27000 - Small Business & Entrepreneurial Ventures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the basic principles of business operations associated with starting and managing small businesses. Major emphasis is given to strategic planning, organization, direction, and control of the small business. Topics will include marketing, financing, and management techniques.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| GBG 29000 - Independent Study |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Hours and subject matter to be arranged with General Business Section chairperson.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GBG 30000 - Business Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Open to students in the general business associate degree program, the Bachelor of Liberal Studies program or the bachelor's degree program in supervision who have completed a minimum of 45 semester hours of course work and have a high academic standing.
. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| GBG 33300 - Principles Of Finance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Management of the financial affairs of the business; use of financial statements, tools, andconcepts for measuring and planning for profitability and liquidity.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBG 34400 - Business Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the situations and facts which give rise to ethical problems in a business setting, and the discussion of alternate courses of action which might and should be taken. The course introduces students to ethical concepts that are relevant to resolving moral issues in business; to the reasoning and analytical skills needed to apply ethical concepts to business decisions; o identify the moral issues involved in the management of specific problem areas in business; and to provide an understanding of the social and natural environments within which moral issues in business arise.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| GBG 35100 - Organization And Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the modern enterprise from the perspective of the organization and management of its internal operations and the theory and practice of management. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBG 35200 - Organization And Management II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of GBG 3510, with an emphasis on designing mechanisms to integrate the individual into the organization and management systems through an examination of decision making, communication and interpersonal relations from the perspective of the process of management. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBG 35300 - Organization And Environment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the managerial issues surrounding the relationships and interactions that occur between the enterprise and individuals, organizations, and institutional structures outside its direct control. Topics include inter-organizational networks, trade associations, regulatory bodies and market structures. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBG 35400 - Management Information Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to Information Systems and Technology from the perspective of the line manager. Emphasis is on the role and function of information systems in decision making and as an element of organizational design. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBG 36000 - Commercial And Property Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course presents a study of the law of property, sales, commercial paper, bank transactions and secured transactions with particular reference to the Uniform Commercial Code along with the nature of personal property and bailments and some examination of the rules pertaining to real property estates and conveyances. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBG 36100 - Agency And Sports Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the doctrine of agency and how it relates to management of sports and sport talent as well as to the general employment field. Sports contracts, agents, torts and labor issues will be explored. Special emphasis will be given to the growing area of tort liability to participants and spectators in both amateur and professional sports. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBG 36200 - Employment And Labor Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to the growing body of law that governs the employment relationship. The four primary areas to be explored include the laws concerning union organization and collective bargaining, the employment-at-will doctrine, employment discrimination, and the growing complexity of managing the employment life cycle in light of changes in the laws governing the workplace. A 12-15 page case analysis is required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBG 36300 - Regulation And Forms Of American Business Enterprises |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an in-depth examination of a variety of business entities (including sole proprietorships, partnerships, and corporations and limited liability companies), and their management contracts and franchises will also be explored. A minimum of 12-15 page paper and presentation are required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBG 36400 - Constitutional Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course studies the United States Constitution and how it has been interpreted by the United States Supreme Court. Selected issues will illustrate legal techniques for describing, analyzing, and influencing the process by which the U.S. Supreme Court resolves disputes, with focus on the Bill of Rights and their interpretation. A short unit on the Constitution of the State of Indiana will also be presented. A minimum 12-15 page paper is required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBG 37900 - Movies In Business |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course addresses the relationship between how business activities are conducted in the modern world and the nature of the larger society which shapes and is shaped by commercial activities. Specific attention will be paid to the nature of business, managerial and leadership theory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand what is peculiar about the modern world and the role of business within it.
2. Identify the basic assumptions about business, management and leadership that are implicit in works of popular entertainment.
3. Critique commonly held ideas about business that are likely to be presented in popular entertainment.
|
| GBG 39000 - Undergraduate Special Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individual participation, supervised reading, laboratory or field experiments, or research in special areas of the general business field.
. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GBG 40500 - Business Strategy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A capstone course for Business and Accounting students which focuses on the formulation and implementation of business strategy within the enterprise. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBG 42000 - Legal Research And Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to the field of legal research with an overview of the various legal sources and their uses. Student will be able to a certain extent, to choose subject matter of interest to research and make a legal argument. Through discussion, demonstration, and actual use of the materials in class, students are given hands-on training in the use of primary and secondary legal sources. A minimum of a 12-15 page paper, a group project and an oral presentation/defense are required. Extensive internet and library use required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBG 45000 - Women In Business |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an investigation of the role of women in the contemporary American business settings. The course will focus on: women in a corporate management setting, women in small/entrepreneurial ventures, the development and maintenance of male/female business roles, and the cultural meaning of gender differences in the workplace. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBG 49000 - Independent Study: Contemporary Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Special subjects for investigation and experiment according to the individual student's interest and need.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GBH 20000 - Medical Terminology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course which provides an overview of the terminology, including roots, prefixes, and suffixes, used in the medical/health professions fields. The various systems in the body are examined, such as the respiratory system, the cardiovascular system, and the nervous system, and the various parts in each system are identified. In addition, terminology as it relates to various symptoms, ailments and medical procedures is studied. The emphasis will be placed upon pronunciation and spelling of the various terms ratherthan upon an understanding of the operation of the various systems.
Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBH 30300 - Principles Of Health Insurance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course consists of an introduction and overview of health insurance form preparation, filing, refiling, maintaining and follow up. Several types of insurance forms -Universal Medical (HIC), Superbills, Worker Compensation, Medicare, Medicaid, HMOs - will be covered. This course is supplemented by several hands-on experience activities and sample forms with the latest information on electronic claims, and hospital and physician billing especially related to Medicare and Medicaid.
. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBI 30100 - International Business |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course studies the subject of international business which includes administration, marketing, finance and other broad managerial concerns at the international level. The conceptual base of the course is the basic economic fundamentals that affect trade, finance, and other business activities among countries. Government policies, social and cultural issues in international business activities are also discussed.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBI 33000 - Foreign Trade Documentation & Procedures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Involves the student directly in the actual details of processing an export order from the time it is received until payment is received. Covers import/export shipping, documents, packaging, traffic procedures and insurance. The course is structured for the person who had had no previous foreign trade experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBI 34000 - International Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of international marketing and business emphasizing the important aspects of cross-cultural communication and the factors of the international marketing mix. Some of the topics covered include cultural dynamics, political environment, international legal environment, global market opportunities, global marketing strategies, and related case presentations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBI 37000 - International Trade |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Aspects of interntional economic behavior of households, firms, and national governments. Develops and uses tools of economic theory to discuss the benefits and costs of international economic interdependence and the implications of increasing international linkages of households and firms on the role of national governments. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBI 45000 - International Finance And Banking |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will provide students with an awareness of the various issues, theories, and practices related to international finance. The course will provide insights into the role of international banking and finance with special attention given to exchange rates, importing and exporting, foreign markets, tourism, currency loans, capital budgeting for foreign projects, and policies which affect foreign funding. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBM 30000 - Business Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Open to students in the general business associate degree program, the Bachelor of Liberal Studies program or the bachelor's degree program in supervision who have completed a minimum of 45 semester hours of course work and have a high academic standing.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBM 32500 - Marketing Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Systematic gathering, recording and analysis of data about problems relating to the marketing of goods and services. Topics covered include: choice of research design, methods of data collection, survey sampling, analysis and interpretation of data, and preparing the research report.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBM 32900 - Principles Of Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of marketing for all undergraduates designed to give a basic understanding of the principles of marketing and the operation of our marketing system. Marketing decision-making will explore the process of planning and executing the conception, pricing, promotion and distribution of ideas, goods, and services to create exchanges that satisfy individual and organizational objectives.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBM 38000 - Selling Principles & Practices |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course which examines the phases of salesmanship: preapproach, approach, demonstration, objections, and closing. This course includes development of a sales force, the role of selling in our economy and the relationship of personal selling to other elements in the marketing mix.
. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBM 38100 - Principles Of Advertising |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides an understanding and evaluation of the advertising function within the modern business environment. Strategic advertising planning emphasizes the design, management, and integration of a firm's promotional strategy. Course covers history of advertising; the advertising agency; budgeting; advertising media including: print, broadcast, outdoor, specialty, and nonmedia; and the role of advertising in the marketing mix.
. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBM 38500 - Consumer Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An interdisciplinary survey of consumer behavior theory focused on psychological, sociological, and cultural influences on consumer choice and use of products and services. Topics include personality,
societal influences, information processing, information search, product choice, purchase, and postpurchase activities. Applications to promotion, product design, distribution, pricing, and segmentation strategies are also emphasized.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBM 38800 - Principles Of Retailing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Functions of a retail establishment are examined. The topics covered include retail operations planning; buyer behavior, store design, location, and layout; organizing and staffing the retail firm; merchandise management; pricing strategies; promotional strategy; credit; financial management; and a discussion of thefuture of retailing. Significant developments in the social, economic, technological, and legal aspects of retailing are emphasized.
. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBM 38900 - Marketing Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Integration of marketing courses to relevant marketing problems through the analysis of cases and use of a marketing simulation. This capstone course is expected to establish the basis for strategic marketing, planning, and the practice of marketing decision making. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBM 39000 - Special Topics-Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individual participation, supervised reading, laboratory or field experiments, or research in special areas of the general business field.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GBM 40000 - Marketing Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Marketing planning and decision-making are examined from the firm and the consumer's point of view. The course content includes product differentiation, segmentation, product policy, positioning, and commercialization. The discussions involve case analyses of how these concepts have been implemented in actual business operations. Criticism will involve the effectiveness of the marketing strategies selected and the decisions that were implemented. The primary assessment involves case analyses, case presentations, and an analytical assessment of a real case scenario. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBM 42500 - Sports Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This seminar is designed to introduce students to the complex and diverse nature of sports marketing. A framework will be presented to help explain and organize the strategic sports marketing process. Students will explore not only major league/professional sports marketing, but also minor league, collegiate, and recreational levels of the field. The student will gain an appreciation for the growing popularity of women's sports and the globalization of sports. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GBM 47500 - Social Media Marketing And Branding |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course overviews the various uses and forms of social media, ranging from web-pages, forums, and blogs to social networking sites. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. To provide a broad overview of social media and the social web.
2. To learn from an array of successful practitioners in the space.
3. To focus in integrating social media into the communications strategy and integrated communications mix.
4. To practice a hands-on research project for researching and understanding social media and its scope.
|
| GBM 49000 - Directed Study |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Special subjects for investigation and experiment according to the individual student's interest and need.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GEOG 30500 - American History To 1877 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This class addresses general topics in the discipline of Geography. It seeks to educate students so that they can consider the spatial dimensions of historical, political, economic, and social themes and problems. In addition, the course seeks to develop the general skills of the discipline, especially those related to cartography. Students receiving credit for this as GEOG class may not also receive credit as a HIST class and vice versa. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| GEOG B1010 - Earth Sea And Sky: A Geographic View |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected aspects of the physical environment and their relationship to human occupancy of the earth. Regularly scheduled laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GEOG B1500 - Global Geography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A basic survey course emphasizing geographic facts and interdependencies between the developed and developing world. Particular emphasis is given to physical and social environmental interdependencies.
thanks
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GEOG G1070 - Physical Systems Of The Environment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores the physical processes of the Earth -- its weather, climate, landforms, oceans and ecosystems -- and analyzes a range of environmental issues. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GEOG G1080 - Physical Systems Of The Environment: Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Laboratory session to complement G107 Physical Systems of the Environment. Practical and applied aspects of meteorology, climatology, vegetation, soils, and landforms. This laboratory session is optional for students enrolling in G107. G107 must be taken prior to or concurrently with G108. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GEOG G1090 - Weather And Climate |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. What causes severe weather? What is climate change and why is it occurring? This course introduces the processes responsible for weather and climate, and addresses topics including atmospheric composition and structure, weather patterns, severe weather, and global climate change. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GEOG G1100 - Introduction To Human Geography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. How do languages, religions, customs, and politics change from local to global scales? Learn how humans shape geographic patterns of migration, agriculture, industry, and urbanization. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn how to read maps in order to extrapolate pertinent data regarding human spatial patterns and processes.
|
| GEOG G1110 - Hurricanes |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to processes involved in the initiation and development of hurricanes, forecasting and modeling tools used to predict their effects, and impacts on the natural environment and humans. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOG G1120 - Thunderstorms and Tornadoes |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to the processes involved in the initiation and development of thunderstorms and tornadoes, forecasting and modeling tools to predict their spatial pattern and effects, and impacts on the natural environment and humans. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOG G1140 - Greenhouse Effects And Global Warming |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to the greenhouse effect and global carbon cycle. Attention will be directed to how, when, and where humans have altered this cycle and the implications for future climates. Methods for monitoring climate change will be studied and areas of greatest uncertainty identified. Particular attention will be directed to the spatial pattern of projected effects produced by global climate models. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOG G1200 - Regions Of The World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. What do bananas, the 1979 Islamic Revolution, and drone warfare have in common? How do economic development, geopolitics, and resource extraction shape current events? Answers to these and other questions are used to explain the roots of contemporary global events. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Define the region, physical geography, land use and human adaptations, historical geography, cultural geography, population geography, economic geography, geopolitical issues, and regional subdivisions.
|
| GEOG G1230 - Soil Survey |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An introduction to soil geography. Soil development processes, USDA soil survey map interpretation, physical and mechanical soil properties, and land use analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| GEOG G1300 - World Geography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of the existing and emerging geographic patterns in the world and of the processes and trends producing such patterns. An examination of the global scale of human activities and interaction with the environment and the linkages tying the various regions of the world into a single, global system. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GEOG G2010 - World Rregional Geography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Geographical analysis of regions occupied by European cultures and of indigenous spatial developments in non-Western areas.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GEOG G2080 - Human Impact On Environment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Aspects of the human role in changing the earth’s environment. Examples of how expanding use of the physical environment has altered the equilibrium of natural systems or accelerated the rate of natural changes in the environment. Environmental changes from a global or world regional perspective. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOG G2130 - Introduction To Economics Geography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of economic geography including theories concerning industrial location, competition for land, economic nature of resources, and geographic background of international trade.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GEOG G2370 - Mapping Our World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Mapping lets us visualize our world and see how patterns change across places. For example, we can analyze how a bike-share program changes commuting patterns, or how urban farming emerges in a transforming city. Students learn how to develop digital maps and interpret spatial processes while gaining valuable experience with GIS software. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Read, use, and create maps informed by a contextual understanding of how maps reflect the relationship between technology and society and how mapping is an essential form of social science inquiry.
2. Gain hands-on experience with making their own maps with a variety of technologies, ranging from paper and pencil to web-based maps and satellite data, to address a variety of societal issues, such as land use planning and political gerrymandering.
3. Gain insight into the technical underpinnings of mapping as a social science approach for later courses, complement on-going interest and activities, or provide an applied focus for research and policy.
|
| GEOG G3020 - Introduction To Transportation Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of movement of people, goods, and information over space using spatial analysis and planning techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| GEOG G3030 - Weather And Climate |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Systematic study of atmospheric processes and interrelationships, with a focus on understanding the physical basis of weather and climate. Emphasis on components of radiation and energy balances, atmospheric circulation, global weather systems, human effects on climate, and climate change. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| GEOG G3040 - Physical Climatology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the physical basis of the climate system from the global to the local scale, emphasizing the surface energy and water balances. Examples are drawn from forested, agricultural, urban, and aquatic environments, as well as issues related to climate change. Develops skills used to study and quantify climate processes. Credit given for only one of G3040 or G3400. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GEOG G3060 - Geography of Current Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of current problems from a geographical perspective. The specific topics to be considered will vary from semester to semester, but may include American poverty, rural poverty, black America, the urban ghetto, non-Western urbanization, crime and environmental quality. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GEOG G3070 - Biogeography: The Distribution Of Life |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the present and past distributions of the world's plants and animals, emphasizing ecological explanation of species distributions. Topics include evolution and distribution of major plant and animal groups, world vegetation, plant and animal domestication, introduction of plant and animal pests, destruction of natural communities, and extinction. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-New Albany
|
| GEOG G3090 - Frontiers In Geographic Thought |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides a survey of the development of philosophical frameworks and theories used in physical and human geography. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| GEOG G3100 - Human Impact on Environment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A systematic examination of how people have altered patterns of climate, hydrology, land forms, soils, and biota. Course emphasizes that understanding human impacts requires knowledge of both the sociocultural forces that drive human activity and the natural processes that determine enviornmental patterns. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| GEOG G3110 - Introduction To Research Methods In Geography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to geographic research questions and methodologies. Focus on special characteristics of geographic problems in the realms of both physical and human geography. Study of scientific versus nonscientific methods, the nature of geographic data, methods of data analysis, interpretation, and presentation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| GEOG G3130 - Political Geography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Geographical influences which have continually affected development of political units, such as nations, states, and parties, as background for current events. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-South Bend
|
| GEOG G3140 - Urban Geography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study and interpretation of urban spatial structures, design, policies, and problems with an emphasis on the geographic perspective. Topics include urban housing markets, racial segregation, homelessness, and urban crime. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOG G3150 - Environmental Conservation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. This course deals with the environmental impact of global population growth, natural resources utilization, and pollution. Current problems relating to energy consumption, farming practices, water use, resource development and deforestation will be examined from geologic and ecological perspectives. Strategies designed to avert predicted global catastrophe will be examined to determine success potentials. Class participation through debate is strongly encouraged. Students should be able to the internet as a resource. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GEOG G3210 - Geography Of Europe |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Geographical analysis of the physical features of the European environment and the spatial patterns and interrelationships of the cultural, economic, and political landscapes. Emphasis placed on human impact on the environment through long-term occupance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOG G3230 - Geography Of Latin America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. National and regional variations in terrain, climate, natural resources, and economic and social life in Mexico, Central America, the West Indies, and South America. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| GEOG G3240 - Geography Of The Caribbean |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the Caribbean, stressing global and regional political and economic relationships, physical and natural
environments, human activities and human-environmental relationships which give coherence and identity to the diversity of Caribbean landscapes, peoples and cultures.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOG G3260 - Geography Of North America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continental and regional variations in terrain, climate, and economic and social life of the United States and Canada, with emphasis on geographical principles, sources of data, and techniques of investigation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GEOG G3270 - Geography Of Indiana |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A geographical analysis of the state of Indiana. Emphasis placed on the interrelationship of the state's physical and human geography. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| GEOG G3280 - Rural Landscapes Of North America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Rural geography of the United States and Canada, focusing on rural settlements, culture, economic activities, and land subdivision. The spatial impacts of economic and technological changes on land use are considered through an examination of relict structures and urban expansion into rural areas. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOG G3300 - North American House Types |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Houses are a visible semi-permanent record of human values, political ideas, historical settlement, and community development. This record is reflected in the types of houses built during a particular time period, by certain groups of people, or in a certain area of the country. This course examines house types for the purpose of identifying and analyzing geographic patterns that occur in North America. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| GEOG G3310 - Economic Geography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the spatial dynamics and locational patterns of economic activities, behavior, and systems. The study of the spatial organization of resource utilization, agricultural production, manufacturing, business, transportation, and trade. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GEOG G3330 - Introductory Cartography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Use, interpretation, and sources of topographic maps, thematic maps, vertical aerial photography and related materials. Includes projections and grids, relief symbolization, map classification, mapping agencies and history or maps and mapping. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| GEOG G3360 - Introduction To Remote Sensing And Air Photo Interpretation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Nature and interpretation of remotely sensed data collected from field, airborne, and space-borne sensors. Data from the visible, infrared, and microwave portions of the electromagnetic spectrum are discussed and analyzed from a geographic applications perspective. Visual, photogrammetric, digital image processing, and GIS interpretation approaches are presented. Lecture and laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOG G3370 - Computer Cartography And Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Compilation, design, production, and evaluation of maps and related graphic materials. Includes cartometric procedures, symbolization, color use guidelines, map typography, photographic manipulations, computer animation, and geographic visualization techniques. Hardcopy and internet-based outputs. Lecture and laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| GEOG G3380 - Introduction To Geographic Information Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of the principles and practices of Geographic Information Systems (GIS). The course will deal with issues of spatial data models, database design, introductory and intermediate GIS operations, and case studies of real-world GIS applications. Laboratory exercises will provide significant hands-on experience. Lecture and laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-New Albany
|
| GEOG G3450 - Field Study In Geography |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Faculty-supervised fieldwork in selected areas of geography. May be repeated up to a maximum of 6 credit hours. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| GEOG G3550 - Political Geography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the spatial organization of political systems and the interaction of geographical area and political processes. Emphasis on the geographical characteristics of states and the geographical dimensions of international relations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOG G3600 - Geography Of Wine |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Geography Of Wine. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| GEOG G3630 - Landscapes And Cultures Of The Caribbean |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Field courses are taught during summer. Includes two weeks of preliminary lectures at IUPUI followed by approximately two weeks of intensive field study in the Caribbean. Destinations may vary from year to year; consult class schedule for more information. Typically offered Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOG G3900 - Topics In Geography |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An examination of selected problems and issues in geography or from a geographic perspective. Topics vary from semester to semester. Recent offerings include the Caribbean, Wine, and Italy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GEOG G4040 - Soils Geography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Soil genesis, morphology, and classification; soil's physical, chemical, mechanical, and biological properties. Soil maps and related data in land use analysis and the planning process. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOG G4100 - Medical Geography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the ecology of human disease and the distributional patterns of disease on the earth. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOG G4180 - Historical Geography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Migration and diffusion, rural and urban settlement, industrialization, and transport development as spatial processes shaping the changing regional configurations of Western societies since about 1500 A.D. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| GEOG G4210 - Environments Of Tropical Lands |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A geographical analysis concerned with developing countries and focusing on issues related to development and the environmental consequences. Concern for the natural environment is expressed with regard to how it is affected by population pressures, economic advancement, and urbanization. An understanding of Third World people and their cultures is presented. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOG G4320 - Current Issues In Environment Conservation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Qualitative and quantitative analysis of topics of special importance in regard to environmental quality, including such topics as air and water quality, radiation, energy, and waste disposal.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GEOG G4360 - Advanced Remote Sensing: Digital Image Processing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced remote sensing theory and digital image processing techniques with an emphasis on environmental applications. Hands-on computer exercises provide significant experience in introductory digital image processing for extraction of qualitative and quantitative information about Earth's terrestrial environments.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOG G4380 - Advanced Geographic Information Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intermediate and advanced topics in geographic information science and spatial analysis techniques using GIS software. This advanced course is for upper-division undergraduates and graduates who seek a greater understanding of this rapidly developing field and to learn how to construct, manage, and analyze their own GIS data and models. Lecture and laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOG G4390 - Seminar In Geographic Information Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Extension of GEOG G4380 that develops advanced methods of spatial data analysis in the context of GIS. Emphasis on applications and individualized projects. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| GEOG G4500 - Undergraduate Readings And Research In Geography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Individual readings and research in geography. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| GEOG G4750 - Climate Change |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced course on the evidence for and theories of climate change over a range of time scales, focusing on the period before the instrumental record. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOG G4880 - Applied Spatial Statistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Extension of traditional statistical analysis to two-dimensional Earth space. Examination of centers, dispersion, nearest neighbor analysis, quadrat methods, and contiguity analysis. Problems of analyzing areally aggregated spatially distributed data. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOG G5350 - Environmental Remote Sensing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Nature and interpretation of remotely sensed data collected from field, airborne, and space-borne sensors. Data from the visible, infrared, and microwave portions of the electromagnetic spectrum are discussed and analyzed from a geographic applications perspective. Visual, photogrammetric, digital image processing, and GIS interpretation approaches are presented.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOG G5360 - Advanced Remote Sensing: Digital Image Processing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced remote sensing theory and digital image processing techniques with an emphasis on environmental applications. Hands-on computer exercises provide significant experience in introductory digital image processing for extraction of qualitative and quantitative information about the Earth's terrestrial environments. Lecture and laboratory.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOG G5370 - Computer Cartography And Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Compilation, design, production, and evaluation of maps and related graphic materials. Includes cartometric procedures, symbolization, color use guidelines, map typography, photographic manipulations, computer animation, and geographic visualization techniques. Hardcopy and internet-based outputs. Lecture and laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOG G5380 - Introduction To Geographic Information Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of the principles and practices of Geographic Information Systems (GIS). The course will deal with issues of spatial data models, database design, introductory and intermediate GIS operations, and case studies of real-world GIS applications. Laboratory exercises will provide significant hands-on experience Lecture and laboratory.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOG G5390 - Advanced Geographic Information Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intermediate and advanced topics in geographic information science and analysis techniques using GIS software. This advanced course is for graduates who seek a greater understanding of this rapidly developing field and to learn how to construct, manage and analyze their own GIS data and models. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOG G5880 - Applied Spatial Statistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Extension of traditional statistical analysis to spatial data. Spatial means and spatial variances, the examination of differences in samples over space, spatial autocorrelation, nearest neighbor analysis, map comparison techniques, emphasis on practical applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOL B1010 - Planet Earth |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory study of the materials, structure, and surface features of the earth; the processes responsible for their development; and the application of geologic knowledge to mankind's environmental and resource problems. Local area field trip. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GEOL G1000 - General Geology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Survey of physical geology and introduction to historical geology. Elements of crystallography, mineralogy, petrology, geomorphology, seismology, structural geology, paleontology, historical geology, and plate tectonics. Optional Saturday field trip. Honors version is S100. Credit given for only one of the following: G100, S100, G103. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GEOL G1030 - Earth Science: Materials And Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to origin and classifiacation of minerals and rocks. Relationships among rock types, rock structures, surficial geoligiccal processes of running water, sub-surface water, glaciation, wind, waves, tides, and landform evolution. Geologic time. Internal processes, vulcanism, plutonism. Plate tectonics. Two lectures and a laboratory each week. Credit given for only one of the following: G100, S100, G103. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GEOL G1040 - Earth Science: Evolution Of The Earth |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. History of geology. Principles of interpretation of earth history. Geologic age dating, correlation, facies analysis, study of geosynclines, and plate tectonics as applied to reconstructing geological events. History of plant and animal life. Recommended for students to take GEOL G1000. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GEOL G1070 - Environmental Geology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to geology through discussion of geological topics that show the influence of geology on modern society. Topics include mineral and energy resources, water resources, geologic hazards and problems, geology and health, and land use. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GEOL G1080 - Selected Earth Science Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Selected topics of general interest in earth science. No more than 3 credit hours can be applied toward a major in geology. Typically offered as: Geology of the National Parks Origin of the scenery, rocks, structures, and fossils of the National Parks and Monuments of the United States. Emphasis on geomorphic processes and geologic history. Interpretation of geologic maps of park areas. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| GEOL G1090 - Fundamentals Of Earth History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Basic principles of earth history: geologic time, basic rock types, reconstructing past environments. Physical development of the earth: its interior, mountain formation, plate tectonics. Origin and development of life: evolution, the fossil record. With laboratory GEOL G1190, equivalent to IU GEOL GEOL G1040, IU GEOL GEOL G1120, and PU GEOS 11200 Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GEOL G1100 - Physical Geology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to processes within and at the surface of the earth. Description, classification, and origin of minerals and rocks. The rock cycle. Internal processes: volcanism, earthquakes, crustal deformation, mountain building, plate tectonics. External processes: weathering, mass wasting, streams, glaciers, ground water, deserts, coasts. With laboratory GEOL G1200, equivalent to IU GEOL GEOL G1030, IU GEOL GEOL G1110, and PU GEOS 11100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GEOL G1110 - Physical Geology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic concepts of geology. Geological time, formation of rocks, erosion and landscape evolution. Interpretation of earth history from geological data, and the evolution of the planet and life. Emphasis on plate tectonics and planetary science. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GEOL G1120 - Historical Geology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of interpreting earth history from geological data, geologic time, biological evolution, plate tectonics, and ancient environments. Consent of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| GEOL G1130 - Directed Study In Earth Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Field, laboratory, or library research in any area of the earth sciences. Credit not granted toward B.A. or B.S. degrees in geology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| GEOL G1150 - Introduction To Oceanography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Nonmathematical introduction to the geology, biology, and physical characteristics of the ocean. Includes waves, tides, and currents of the world ocean, the adaptations and distribution of marine animals, pollution of the marine ecosystem, and an introduction to the global ocean/atmosphere system. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GEOL G1170 - Environmental Geology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory exercises in environmental aspects of the geosciences. To accompany GEOL G1070. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| GEOL G1190 - Fundamentals Of Earth History Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory studies of rocks, fossils, and stratigraphic principles to reconstruct past environments and interpret earth history. To accompany GEOL G1090. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GEOL G1200 - Physical Geology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory studies of minerals and rocks, landscapes, and earth structures. To accompany GEOL G1100 for non-geology majors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GEOL G1210 - Meteorites And Planets |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Geological processes operative on earth-like bodies and asteroids; evidence from current meteorite, lunar, Martian, and space research; quantitative and deductive exercises. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GEOL G1300 - Short Courses In Earth Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Five-week short courses on a variety of topics in the earth sciences. Examples of topics include lunar and planetary geology; geology of Indiana; geology of national parks; glaciers; water; gemstones; geology of art; earthquakes, volcanoes; dinosaurs. Each short course is one credit; no topic may be taken for credit more than once. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GEOL G1310 - Oceans And Our Global Environment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Oceans and Our Global Environment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOL G1320 - Environmental Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is offered via the Internet, and provides experience in addressing some of the kinds of problems that arise in studies of the environment. Particular attention is given to developing skills in evaluating scientific articles; specifically, the relevance of the information in an article, the credibility of the author, and the accuracy and usefulness of the quantitative information provided. The kinds of problems considered in this course will vary from semester to semester, but will be chosen from a list that includes global warming, tropical rain forests, acid rain, water pollution, solid waste disposal, appropriate use of land, and the ability of regulations to protect the environment. Three or four such topics will be covered each semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOL G1330 - Geology Of The United States |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Introduction to physical and historical geology with applications to the United Sates geology. Study of the geologic events (and their associated rocks and structures) that have shaped the continent including mountain building, earthquakes, volcanoes, continental rifting, intercontinental seaways, sedimentary environments, glacial geology and modern processes. Lab is required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GEOL G1350 - Indiana Geology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An in-depth investigation of Indiana's geology, including minerals and rocks, geologic time, mineral resources, fossils, topography, soil, water resources, and special geologic features such as the Falls of the Ohio River and Indiana Dunes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| GEOL G1360 - Indiana Geology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Application of geologic principles to the solution of geologic problems in field settings. Projects on geologic topics including sedimentary rocks and fossils, soils, mineral resources, hydrology, glacial history, and karst topography. Students undertake two projects per semester and must be available on two Saturdays for field work. Preparation for field days uses a combination of television, the Web, and e-mail. Each project requires a written report. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| GEOL G1380 - Geology Of State And National Parks Revealed |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces principles of historical, physical, and environmental geology by examining select state and national parklands that showcase the many dynamic Earth processes that help shape the Earth's surface. Additionally, emphasis is placed on the protection and degradation of natural resources within the parks. One field trip required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOL G1800 - Dinosaurs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the characteristics and evolution of dinosaurs. Topics include: the occurrence of dinosaur remains in the fossil record, basic anatomy, principles used in classification, types of predatory and plant-eating dinosaurs, environments occupied during life, behavior, extinction theories, dinosaurs in the media and the public eye. (Credit not given for both GEOL G1800 and GEOL G3010.). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GEOL G1990 - Service Learning in Geology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students participate in community service projects. Completion of the project includes a paper reflecting on how the service experience contributed to their application of the principles of general education. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOL G2050 - Reporting Skills In Geoscience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Techniques of presenting written and oral reports from the geoscience approach. The written report: mechanics of format and illustrations, proper citation of geoscience literature, the abstract, proofreading, and editing. The oral report: effective presentation and response to audience questions, simulating a professional science meeting. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOL G2060 - Advanced Physical Geology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The laboratory study of minerals, rocks, topographic maps and aerial photographs, landforms and landscapes, structural geology, and geologic maps. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOL G2090 - History Of The Earth |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Earth history emphasizing physical and biological evolution. Geologic time, stratigraphic correlation, plate tectonics, depositional environments, paleogeography, and evolution of life. Laboratory. Field trips. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOL G2100 - Oceanography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the study of the oceans and marine processes. Topics include morphology of the ocean floor, life in the ocean, oceanic circulation, and submarine geology. Three lectures or two lectures with occasional laboratory-demonstration per week. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GEOL G2110 - Introduction To Paleobiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Processes of fossilization; techniques of fossil preparation and methods of taxonomic description; principles of evolution and distribution of life forms; principles of paleoecology and biostratigraphy. One two-hour laboratory per week; one weekend field trip required for geology majors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GEOL G2130 - Elementary Geophysics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Historical development of geophysical studies; description of physical processes operating in the solid earth; introduction to geomagnetism, gravity, seismology, and plate tectonics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GEOL G2190 - Meteorology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic concepts of atmospheric dynamics and meteorology, with emphasis on developing an understanding of weather, climate, and forecasting.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GEOL G2210 - Introductory Mineralogy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Crystallography, symmetry and the crystal classes of minerals. Structure and physical and chemical characteristics of selected mineral groups. Phase diagrams and interpretation of mineral assemblages. Identification of common and important minerals using physical properties and simple chemical tests. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| GEOL G2220 - Introduction To Petrology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Classification and identification of igneous, metamorphic, and sedimentary rocks. Genesis and tectonic significance of important igneous and metamorphic, and sedimentary rock suites. Introduction to the use of the petrographic microscope. Four-day field trip. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| GEOL G3000 - Environmental And Urban Geology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Significance of regional and local geologic features and processes in land use. Use of geologic factors to reduce conflict in utilization of mineral and water resources and damage from geologic hazards. Field trips. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GEOL G3020 - Development Of The Global Environment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Origin of the chemical elements, formation of the solar system and planets, development of the terrestrial atmosphere and rise of atmospheric oxygen, evolution of complex life, and prospects for the future of our planet. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOL G3030 - Geologic Mapping And Field Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Brunton-compass and GPS/GIS mapping. Measuring and describing stratigraphic sections of sedimentary rocks and surficial deposits. Mapping geologic structures. Field hydrology. Interpretation of maps, aerial photographs, and satellite imagery. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOL G3040 - Principles Of Paleontology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Biological principles applied to the fossil record. Examination of the quality of the fossil record, taxonomic principles and procedures, analytical techniques, evolutionary theory, evolution and paleoecology of species, populations and communities, diversification and extinction, paleogeography. Laboratories: systematics, stratigraphic distribution, and ecology of major fossilized invertebrate phyla. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOL G3050 - Geologic Fundamentals In Earth Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Introductory course for advanced students. Earth materials, earth processes, geological principles. Emphasis on relationships between geology and other physical sciences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GEOL G3060 - Earth Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Earth Materials. The physical and chemical properties of Earth materials, and the chemical processes that have altered them to cause Earth to evolve to its present state.This course covers properties of minerals and their identification, genesis of igneous, metamorphic and sedimentary rocks, interactions between solid Earth and the hydrosphere, and interactions between humans and the solid Earth. Prerequisite: G11000 and CHEM C1060. Typically offered Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOL G3190 - Elementary Field Geology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Geologic field methods. Section measurement, geologic mapping, construction of geologic cross-sections, and use of geologic surveying instruments. Class spends 10-14 days in Upper Peninsula of Michigan, near Marquette. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GEOL G3230 - Structural Geology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Physics, engineering, or mathematics majors admitted with G1000 or G1030 and PHYS 20100. Nature and origin of structural features of the earth's crust, with emphasis on mechanics of deformation, and graphic and mathematical solution of structural problems. Two lectures and one laboratory per week plus a 3-5 day field trip. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| GEOL G3310 - Principles Of Sedimentation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 4.00. Sediment-forming environments and the chemical and biological processes of sedimentation. Diagenetic processes of lithification. Emphasis on genetic interpretation of sediments and processes of carbonate sedimentation. Typically offered Spring
3.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GEOL G3340 - Principles Of Sedimentology And Stratigraphy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Interrelationship of sedimentation and stratigraphy. Processes and factors influencing genesis of sedimentary strata: provenance, depositional environment, sedimentary facies and paleoecology. Analytical techniques and application of principles of interpretation of stratigraphic record. Laboratory study of sediments, sedimentary rocks, and subsurface samples, logs, and seismic records. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| GEOL G3350 - Evolution Of The Earth And Life |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Evidence for evolution of the Earth and life in the rock record. Sequence of events, time of occurrence, rates of change. Interrelationships of principal themes: chemical evolution of the planet, evolution of the biosphere, plate tectonics, mountain building, and sea level changes. Bearing of evolution on human welfare. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOL G4010 - Optical Mineralogy |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Principles of optics applied to identification of minerals. Identification of minerals in fragments and thin sections. Chemical relationship to common rock-forming minerals. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GEOL G4030 - Optical Mineralogy And Petrography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Identification of rock-forming minerals in fragments and thin sections using principles of optical crystallography and the petrographic microscope. Description of common igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic rocks and interpretation of their genesis using hand specimens and thin sections. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOL G4060 - Introduction To Geochemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Applications of solution chemistry, phase diagrams, trace elements, radioactive isotopes, and stable isotopes to the study of the earth. The chemical evolution of earth and the origin of important igneous rocks, chemical sediments, and ore deposits. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| GEOL G4100 - Undergraduate Research In Geology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Field, laboratory, or theoretical research in selected problems in geology. This course (1 Cr.) may be taken in conjunction with a 300- or 400-level geology course, for honors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| GEOL G4110 - Invertebrate Paleontology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Structure, classification, habitats, and geological history and significance of the invertebrate phyla. Laboratory study of fossils. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GEOL G4120 - Introduction To Vertebrate Paleotology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fossil record, comparative morphology, phylogeny, biogeography, and paleoecology of the major vertebrate groups. Functional modifications of the vertebrate skeleton for existence in various aquatic and terrestrial environments. Laboratory study of recent and fossil osteological specimens. Field trip to a museum with a major vertebrate paleontology collection. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GEOL G4130 - Introduction To Geophysics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Physics or mathematics majors admitted with G100 or G103, or written consent of the instructor and PHYS 221 Study of the shape, gravity and magnetic field of the earth, seismology and internal structure of the earth. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GEOL G4150 - Geomorphology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Geomorphic processes, evolution and classfication of landforms. Laboratory: interpretation of topographic and geologic maps and aerial photographs. Field trips. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| GEOL G4200 - Regional Geology Field Trip |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Field investigation of selected regions of North America for study of mineralogic, lithologic, stratigraphic, structural, paleontologic, geomorphological, or other geological relationships. Six to fifteen days in the field. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| GEOL G4250 - Scanning Electron Microscopy And Energy Dispersive X-Ray Spectroscopy |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Theory and practice of scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDX). Some discussion of wavelength dispersive methods. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GEOL G4270 - Introduction To X-Ray Mineralogy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Theory and practice of X-ray powder diffraction. Film and diffractometer methods and their application to the identification and characterization of minerals. One lecture and a two-hour laboratory each week. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GEOL G4290 - Field Geology In The Rocky Mountains |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 8.00. Six weeks, including five weeks at geologic field station in Montana. Geologic reconnaissance, measurement of stratigraphic sections, mapping on aerial photographs, construction of structure sections. Regional geomorphology, stratigraphy, and structure through South Dakota, the Black Hills, Wyoming, Montana, Yellowstone Park, and Glacier Park. Student must apply through Bloomington geology department. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GEOL G4300 - Principles Of Hydrology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the hydrologic cycle reviewing processes such as precipitation, evaporation and transpiration, infiltration, runoff, streamflow and watersheds, and ground water. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOL G4310 - Wetland Ecosystems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Wetland Ecosystems will explore wetlands and their role in ecosystem function. Topics will encompass wetland definitions, geomrphic setting, functions and values, hydrology, vegetation, and soils, wetland biogeochemistry, and wetland mitigation and the regulatory framework within which wetlands are treated. This course evaluates the status and trends of Indiana wetlands and types of wetlands common in Indiana.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOL G4360 - Geological Remote Sensing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Spectroscopic analysis of rocks, and minerals from terrestrial and extraterrestrial environments, and geologic application of remotely sensed spectral information. Topics include mapping rock-forming minerals, assessing and monitoring geologic hazards, and exploration for mineral deposits. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOL G4470 - Planetary Geology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Origin and evolution of planets. The roles of impacts and volcanism in surface dynamics, and the role of water in planetary climates. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOL G4510 - Principles Of Hydrogeology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Water resources: occurrence, regulation, and management of water; hydrologic cycle, water movement, well hydraulics; water quality and pollution; surface and subsurface investigations; basin- wide development of water resources; legal aspects; relationship of hydrogeology to engineering geology. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GEOL G4600 - Internship In Geology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Industrial or similar experiences in geologically oriented employment. Projects jointly arranged, coordinated, and evaluated by faculty and industrial/governmental supervisors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOL G4860 - Soil Biogeochemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Biological and geochemical processes controlling the cycling of elements in soils and freshwater sediments with emphasis on the cycles of carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOL G4900 - Undergraduate Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Reading and discussion of selected topics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 4 credits
|
| GEOL G4950 - Senior Thesis In Geology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Capstone experience involving a research project. Written report required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOL G4990 - Honors Research In Geology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 12.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 12 credits
|
| GEOL G5270 - Geological Oceanography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Geological features and processes operating in the oceans; continental shelf, slope and ocean-basin geomorphology, sedimentology, structure, and composition; origin and geologic history of seawater and ocean basins.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOL G5460 - Planetary Remote Sensing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of multi-special data for exploration and mapping of planetary surfaces. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOL G5850 - Environmental Geochemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Aquatic and environmental geochemistry, including freshwater and marine systems, natural and human-induced changes to geochemical systems, and the geochemical record of paleoceanographic and paleoclimatic variations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOL G5950 - Data Analysis Techniques In Geoscience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of statistical and numerical analysis techniques to geoscience data, including sampling methods, confidence intervals, least squares methods, correlation, time series analysis, and multivariate techniques. Emphasis on using a computer to solve geoscience problems.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GEOL G6900 - Advanced Geology Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Advanced Geology Seminar. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GEOL G7000 - Geologic Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Consideration of special geologic problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GEOL L1000 - General Geology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Laboratory studies to accompany G1000, G2100, GEOG G1070, or AST A1000. Study of crystals, minerals, rocks, fossils and earth structures from hand specimens and models. Interpretation of landforms and earth history from topographic and geologic maps. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GEOL N1900 - The Natural World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces students to the methods and logic of science, and helps them
understand the importance of science to the development of civilization and the contemporary world. Provides a context within which to evaluate the important scientific and technological issues of modern society. Interdisciplinary elements. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| GEOL S1000 - General Geology Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Survey of physical geology and introduction to historical geology. Similar to G100 except students also participate in a 10-14 day field exploration of some region in North America. (Field trip in May after classes end.) Credit given for only one of the following: G100, S100, or G103. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GEOL S1040 - Hon Evolution Of Earth |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Equivalent of G104 for honor students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GEOL S2220 - Hon Intro To Petrology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Equivalent of G222 for honor students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GEOL S3050 - Honors Fundamental In Earth Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Equivalent of G305 for honor students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GEP 10000 - Global Design Team I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Global Design Team (GDT) brings together undergraduate and graduate students from different disciplines inside and outside of the College of Engineering, to design solutions to solve real-world problems over the course of one academic semester. Depending on the size and scope of the project, teams may range from one to twenty students under the advisement of a faculty member. GDTs partner student teams with non-governmental organizations, businesses, and/or other research institutions in international development projects. Approval for registration is granted based on an application process that takes into consideration previous design experience, level of interest in the topic, and GPA. Department approval required. Typically Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study 1, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Global Engineering Program
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Real-world, full-cycle design experience in the context of a different culture and geographical region.
2. Increased global awareness and competence.
3. Global humanitarian impact.
|
| GEP 20000 - Global Design Team II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Global Design Team (GDT) brings together undergraduate and graduate students from different disciplines inside and outside of the College of Engineering, to design solutions to solve real-world problems over the course of one academic semester. Depending on the size and scope of the project, teams may range from one to twenty students under the advisement of a faculty member. GDTs partner student teams with non-governmental organizations, businesses, and/or other research institutions in international development projects. Approval for registration is granted based on an application process that takes into consideration previous design experience, level of interest in the topic, and GPA. Department approval required. Typically Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study 1, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Global Engineering Program
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Real-world, full-cycle design experience in the context of a different culture and geographical region.
2. Increased global awareness and competence.
3. Global humanitarian impact.
|
| GEP 30000 - Global Design Team III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Global Design Team (GDT) brings together undergraduate and graduate students from different disciplines inside and outside of the College of Engineering, to design solutions to solve real-world problems over the course of one academic semester. Depending on the size and scope of the project, teams may range from one to twenty students under the advisement of a faculty member. GDTs partner student teams with non-governmental organizations, businesses, and/or other research institutions in international development projects. Approval for registration is granted based on an application process that takes into consideration previous design experience, level of interest in the topic, and GPA. Department approval required. Typically Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study 1, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Global Engineering Program
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Real-world, full-cycle design experience in the context of a different culture and geographical region.
2. Increased global awareness and competence.
3. Global humanitarian impact.
|
| GEP 40000 - Global Design Team IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00-3.00. Global design Team (GDT) brings together undergraduate and graduate students from different disciplines inside and outside of the College of Engineering, to design solutions to solve real-world problems over the course of one academic semester. Depending on the size and scope of the project, teams may range from one to twenty students under the advisement of a faculty member. GDTs partner student teams with non-governmental organizations, businesses, and/or other research institutions in international development projects. Approval for registration is granted based on an application process that takes into consideration previous design experience, level of interest in the topic, and GPA. Department approval required. Typically Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study 1, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Engineering
Department: Global Engineering Program
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Real-world, full-cycle design experience in the context of a different culture and geographical region.
2. Increased global awareness and competence.
3. Global humanitarian impact.
|
| GER 10100 - German Level I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A beginning course in German reserved exclusively for students who have had less than two years of German at the ninth-grade level or above. Students with two years or more of previous German study may not take this course for credit. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:IWL 1920 German Level I
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lab 1, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| GER 10200 - German Level II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of GER 10100. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
CTL:IWL 1921 German Level II
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture 1, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| GER 10300 - Review Of German Levels I And II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Required beginning course for students with at least two years of high school German who fail to place into GER 201 or higher. Students passing GER 103 also earn three additional hours of departmental credit (without grade) for GER 101. Two or more years of high school German, grades 9 through 12. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GER 11200 - Elementary German Conversation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Development of oral skills for self-expression. Guided practice in conversation to enhance communicative competence. Small group; discussions in German on various topics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 2 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop listening skills and improve oral German proficiency.
2. Acquire new vocabulary and grammar through discovery in various media and conversation.
3. Read, view, listen to and discuss relevant texts in the target language.
|
| GER 20100 - German Level III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Readings from the works of nineteenth-century and contemporary German writers; practice in speaking and writing German. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:IWL 1922 German Level III
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| GER 20200 - German Level IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of GER 20100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:IWL 1923 German Level IV
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| GER 21100 - Elementary German Conversation II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Continuation of GER 11200. May be taken concurrently with GER 20100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GER 21200 - Intermediate German Conversation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Development of oral skills for self-expression. Guided practice in German conversation to enhance communicative competence. Small group discussions in German on various topics. Not open to students enrolled in or having credit for GER 30100 or above. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 2 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop intermediate listening skills and improve oral German proficiency.
2. Acquire new vocabulary and grammar through discovery in various media and conversation.
3. Read, view, listen, and discuss relevant intermediate texts in the target language.
|
| GER 22300 - German Level IV: Scientific |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Practical reading, writing, speaking, and listening comprehension skills, directed toward use of German in science and technology. Work on grammar as needed. Use of materials from recent publications in science and technology. Introduction to general and technical vocabulary. Conducted primarily in German. Credit will not be given for both GER 20200 and 22300. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GER 22400 - German Level IV: Business German |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Practical reading, writing, speaking, and listening comprehension skills directed toward use of German for business purposes. Work on grammar as needed. Course materials cover daily business dealings as well as national and international trade, living conditions, environmental and social problems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GER 23000 - German Literature In Translation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading and analysis of selected German writers and their works, with particular emphasis on the social, political, and intellectual climate of the times. The course content will change from semester to semester. Knowledge of German not required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GER 24100 - Introduction To The Study Of German Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the study of German literature based on an overview of the formal elements of poetry, fiction, and drama as well as basic concepts of literary theory. Texts in German; conducted primarily in German. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GER 26100 - German Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The essentials of German grammar as applied in composition. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| GER 28000 - German Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected topics on the civilization and culture of German speaking countries. Lectures and readings all in English. No knowledge of German necessary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will explore in depth a particular aspect of life in German-speaking countries, leading to their increased understanding not only of those cultures, but also, by comparison, of their own culture.
|
| GER 30100 - German Level V |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continued development of German speaking, listening, reading, and writing abilities, using materials dealing primarily with everyday life and civilization in Germany from a variety of sources (e.g., newspapers, magazines, TV, recent literature, etc.). Conducted primarily in German. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GER 30200 - German Level VI |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Further work to develop speaking, listening, reading, and writing abilities in German on the basis of materials dealing with the ideas and events that have shaped present-day Germany. Conducted primarily in German. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GER 30700 - Commercial German |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will provide students with the fundamentals of effective expression and communication as these apply to German business situations in particular. It will concentrate on commercial vocabulary, reading, writing, and speaking as related to international business. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| GER 31200 - Advanced German Conversation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. One credit hour advanced German conversation course focused on the development of oral and aural skills for self-expression. Course provides students with guided practice in conversation to enhance communicative competence. Discussions in German on various topics. Course may be taken concurrently with GER 30100, 30200, 40100 or 40200. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 2 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop intermediate listening skills and improve oral German proficiency.
2. Acquire advanced vocabulary and grammar through discovery in various media and conversation.
3. Read, view, listen, and discuss relevant intermediate texts in the target language.
|
| GER 32300 - German Level VI: Science And Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continued development of German speaking, listening, reading, and writing abilities, using materials from recent publications in science and technology. Building of general and technical vocabulary. Conducted in German. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GER 33000 - German Cinema |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Viewing and analysis of major German contributions to the cinema from the earliest period to the present. Emphasis on relevant aesthetic theories and on the schools of literature and painting that served as sources. Evaluation of the German film on the basis of social, artistic, and political criteria. Knowledge of German not required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| GER 34100 - German Literature I: From The Middle Ages To The 18th Century |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading and discussion of selected texts (poetry, prose, dramatic texts, cultural documents, and artworks) in German from the Middle Ages to the Eighteenth Century. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GER 34200 - German Literature II: From The 18th Century To The 21st Century |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading and discussion of selected texts in German with the dual context of literary movements and historical developments between the 18th and 21st centuries. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GER 36500 - German Conversation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive practice in German conversation. Pattern practice, preparation and delivery of dialogues and topical talks. Introduction to basic phonetics and practice in pronunciation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| GER 39900 - Special Study Abroad Credit In German |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. This course number is for assignment after the fact of credits in German earned while enrolled at a foreign university on a Study Abroad program which cannot be appropriately accommodated under an established Purdue course number. It is not for use for courses offered at or conducted by Purdue. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
|
| GER 40100 - German Level VII |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced work on development of German speaking, listening, reading, and writing abilities, focusing on materials dealing primarily with culture and the arts in Germany. Conducted in German. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GER 40200 - German Level VIII |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Further advanced work on speaking, listening, reading, and writing abilities in German. Course materials will cover a variety of topics illustrated by film and other media, both print and nonprint. Conducted in German. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GER 40500 - Introduction To German Literature I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of German literature from the beginning through the eighteenth century. Reading and discussion of representative works and the fundamentals of literary criticism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| GER 40600 - Introduction To German Literature II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of GER 405 covering the basic German literature survey from the eighteenth century to the present time. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| GER 40800 - Language Practicum In Business |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course will consist of actual on-the-job experience in international corporations, industry, commerce or government where German is used. The course is designed to expose students to their chosen vocational field. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| GER 42400 - Business German |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the terminology and techniques used in commercial transactions, including the interpretation and writing of business materials. Development of the four language skills, with emphasis on writing and speaking. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GER 45000 - German Civilization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of modern German life with emphasis on the customs and daily life of the people. Lectures in the language. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| GER 46100 - Intermediate German Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of GER 261. In this course, stress is given to the development of more complex grammar and its application in the written language. Emphasis is placed on the structure of composition and basic refinement and precision brought about by grammar and vocabulary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| GER 46500 - Intermediate German Conversation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continued and more advanced practice in German conversation and the study of phonetics for accuracy in pronunciation and intonation. Students are encouraged to study contemporary German culture as a basis for their conversations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| GER 48000 - German Civilization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of modern German life, with special emphasis on the daily life and customs of the people. Lectures in German. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GER 49000 - Topics In German |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| GER 49800 - Advanced Topics In German |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Special topics on literature, linguistics and culture of contemporary German-speaking countries. Conducted in German. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| GER 51900 - Teaching College German |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course designed to provide a forum for ideas connecting theory and research to teaching practice. Explores issues related to how learning and teaching can be enhanced and presents practical ideas that can be implemented in the classroom. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GER 52400 - German For International Trade |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A broad spectrum of business and cultural materials to prepare students for work in international firms. Intensive study of technical terminology used in business transactions; stylistics in business correspondence and report writing; training for accurate oral expression in business negotiations. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GER 54200 - German Classicism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of the classical period in German literature as revealed in the works of Goethe and Schiller. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| GER 54300 - The Age Of Enlightenment And The Storm And Stress Movement |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the literature of the Age of Enlightenment, the cult of feeling, and the Storm and Stress works of Goethe and Schiller. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| GER 54400 - German Romanticism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the rise and degeneration of the romantic ideal in German literature. Particular attention is paid to aesthetics, literary criticism, and the revival of a national heritage. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| GER 54500 - German Prose From Naturalism To The Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of the novel and short story of the period, with special emphasis on the major authors. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| GER 54600 - German Literature Since 1945 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Major literary movements and tendencies in East and West Germany, Austria, and Switzerland since 1945. Involves the close reading of literary texts, investigation of major problems addressed by literary criticism, and discussion of historical context. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| GER 55100 - Lyric Poetry From Romanticism To The Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the German lyric from Romanticism to the present. The study of motif, form, and style as reflections of the aesthetic ideals of their age. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GER 55400 - German Drama Before Naturalism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. German drama from its beginnings up to the advent of Naturalism. A study of the most significant German dramatists of the first part of the nineteenth century and earlier periods. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be familiarized with drama theory, including the Aristotelian approach and the 18th century dramas that were created in response to it.
2. Students will learn about aesthetics and ethics in cultural history, explore the differences between such movements as Storm and Stress and Weimar Classicism, the Bourgeois play and the Brechtian drama and variations in between.
3. This course will enhance reading, writing, and speaking skills in the target language of German and will provide cultural knowledge and improve students’ global competency.
|
| GER 55500 - German Drama From Naturalism To The Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Developments of the drama through the various literary movements of the period, including consideration of the underlying social and ideological forces. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| GER 56100 - The Structure Of German I: Phonology And Derivational Morphology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Linguistic analysis of German, focusing on phonetics, phonology, and word structure. The course will treat various problems of pronunciation, structural sound patterns, and word derivation. One weekly class is devoted to theoretical issues affecting German phonology and morphology. Credit will not be given for both GER 36100 and 56100. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GER 56200 - The Structure Of German II: Inflectional Morphology And Syntax |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Linguistic analysis of German, focusing on inflectional morphology, syntax, and semantics. The course will present the grammatical structure of German, dealing with word-level phenomena (inflectional morphology), and phrase- and sentence-level phenomena (constituents, word order, syntactic structure, etc. ). Credit will not be given for both GER 36200 and 56200. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GER 56300 - History Of The German Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the development of the German language, with emphasis on the factors and events that brought about the ultimate unification of the major German dialects into the standard form of the present. The German language of today as a reflection of past cultural and sociopolitical conditions. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GER 57500 - Theories Of German Language Acquisition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced course designed to provide an overview of major theoretical issues in German language acquisition research. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GER 58100 - German Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The development of the cultural life in German-speaking lands as reflected in architecture, art, history, literature, music, and philosophy. Lectures in German. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| GER 59000 - Directed Reading In German |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Directed readings in German. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GER 59400 - Special Topics In German Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GER 59600 - Special Topics In German Linguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GER 60100 - First Course To Establish Reading Knowledge |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. First Course To Establish Reading Knowledge. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GER 60300 - Second Course To Establish Reading Knowledge |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Second Course To Establish Reading Knowledge. For those in the physical sciences, mathematics, and engineering. Prerequisite: GER 60100. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GER 60500 - Second Course To Establish Reading Knowledge |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Second Course To Establish Reading Knowledge. For those in the humanities and social sciences. Prerequisite: GER 60100. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GER 63000 - Bibliography And Literary Criticism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The use of general and specific reference materials and bibliographical aids in literary research; the basic concepts and terminology of literary criticism. Required of all MA candidates in German. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GER 64400 - Seminar In German Expressionism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The prose, drama, and poetry from 1910-1925. Will also examine selected political-literary essays as they relate to this artistic avant-garde generation. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GER 65900 - Seminar In German Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study of special subjects. Topics to be announced in advance. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GER 67900 - Seminar In German Linguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study and research on a significant topic in German linguistics. Topic to be announced in advance. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GER 69800 - Research MA Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MA Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GER 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GER G0950 - German for Reading Proficiency |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. These courses stress mastery of passive vocabulary and recognition of grammatical forms needed for reading skills. Designed for students of science, technology, the professional schools and for those desiring sufficient proficiency in reading and translating German to enable them to work with German materials in their fields. These courses do not fulfill the foreign language requirement of the School of Liberal Arts.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GER G1000 - Beginning German I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to present-day German and to selected aspects of the cultures of German-speaking countries. Introduction to German grammatical forms and their functions. Development of listening comprehension, simple speaking proficiency, controlled reading skills and simple written compositions. Active oral participation required. Credit given for only one of the following: G1000-G1500 or G1050. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GER G1010 - Beginning German I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Introduction to contemporary German language and culture. Emphasis on interaction and communication.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GER G1020 - Beginning German II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Introduction to contemporary German language and culture. Emphasis on interaction and communication.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GER G1110 - Elementary German I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to German language as well as to cultures of German-speaking countries. Emphasis on development of communicative competency in speaking, listening, reading and writing. Typically offered Fall.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GER G1120 - Elementary German II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to German language as well as to cultures of German-speaking countries. Emphasis on development of communicative competence in speaking, listening, reading and writing. Typically offered Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GER G1130 - 1st-Year Advanced Placement German |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Required beginning course for students with at least two years of high school German who did not place into G203 or higher. Review of selected material from G111 before proceeding to G112 material. Typically offered Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GER G1170 - Beginning German I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory courses for students who have not had prior training in German or who desire to study German at a pace slower than GER G1310- GER G1320. Three semesters are required to fulfill the 10-credit hour foreign language requirement. Credit is given only for the sequence GER G1170- GER G1180- GER G1190 or the sequence GER G1310- GER G1320. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| GER G1180 - Beginning German II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory courses for students who have not had prior training in German or who desire to study German at a pace slower than GER G1310- GER G1320. Three semesters are required to fulfill the 10-credit hour foreign language requirement. Credit is given only for the sequence GER G1170- GER G1180- GER G1190 or the sequence GER G1310- GER G1320. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| GER G1190 - Beginning German III |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introductory courses for students who have not had prior training in German or who desire to study German at a pace slower than GER G1310- GER G1320. Three semesters are required to fulfill the 10-credit hour foreign language requirement. Credit is given only for the sequence GER G1170- GER G1180- GER G1190 or the sequence GER G1310- GER G1320. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| GER G1310 - First-Year German I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Introductory German language course. Emphasis on developing basic speaking, writing, listening and reading skills as well as awareness of German-speaking countries and cultures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GER G1320 - First-Year German II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Continuation of introductory German language course. Emphasis on developing basic speaking, writing, listening and reading skills as well as awareness of German-speaking countries and cultures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GER G1500 - Beginning German II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to present-day German and to selected aspects of the cultures of German-speaking countries. Introduction to German grammatical forms and their functions. Development of listening comprehension, simple speaking proficiency, controlled reading skills and simple written compositions. Active oral participation required. Credit given for only one of the following: G1000-G1500 or G1050. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GER G2000 - Oral Practice - Writing and Reading |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Further development of oral and written command of language structures. Reading of literary and nonliterary texts. Attendance in the language lab may be required.
. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GER G2030 - 2nd-Year German I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Intensive review of important structural problems and vocabulary primarily through the reading and discussion of modern German fiction and nonfiction. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GER G2040 - 2nd-Year German II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Intensive review of important structural problems and vocabulary primarily through the reading and discussion of modern German fiction and nonfiction. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-South Bend
|
| GER G2250 - Intermediate German I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Intensive review of grammar. Further development of oral and written use of the language. Selections from contemporary German readings and media. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GER G2300 - Intermediate German II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Review of grammar. Readings of modern German with stress on discussion in German. Writing of descriptive and expository prose. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| GER G2500 - Oral Practice, Writing, And Reading |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of selected grammatical items. Reading of modern German prose and plays with stress on discussion in German. Writing of descriptive and expository prose based on the reading material. Attendance in the language lab may be required.
. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GER G2900 - Colloquium on German Literature and Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics selected from the literature and culture of the German-speaking areas of Europe. Emphasis on the period before 1945. Taught in English. No credit in German. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| GER G2990 - German For Advanced Credit |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 6.00. Nonnative speakers of German may receive a maximum of 6 hours of advanced credit with the grade of “S” upon completion of G300 or higher with a grade of C or higher. Native speakers of German may receive a maximum of 6 advanced credits upon completion of two German courses at the 300-400 level with the grade of C or higher. A student who skips a sequential course (e.g., G225 or G230) may receive 3 advanced credits upon successful completion of a higher-level course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| GER G3000 - Deutsch: Mittelstufe I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Comprehensive review of grammatical points introduced in G117 through G230. Reading proficiency, systematic vocabulary building, composition, and discussion through the assignments of literary and nonliterary texts. Conducted in German. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| GER G3030 - Deutsch: Mittelstufe I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Comprehensive review of grammatical points introduced in G117 through G230. Reading proficiency, systematic vocabulary building, composition, and discussion through the assignments of literary and nonliterary texts. Conducted in German. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GER G3040 - Deutsch: Mittelstufe II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Third year language and communication. Selected themes and grammatical topics. Systematic vocabulary building and composition. Reading of primarily non-literary texts. Development of advanced oral and written communicative skills. Conducted in German. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GER G3050 - Introduction To German Literature Types |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of literary types (narrative, dramatic, lyric), with examples of each selected from two or more periods. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
|
| GER G3060 - Introduction To German Literature: Themes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of major themes in German literature as represented in two or more periods. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Kokomo
|
| GER G3070 - Selected Contemporary German Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Works of such authors as Grass, Boll, Weiss, Frisch, and Bobrowski plus selected poems are read and discussed in German. Does not duplicate G305 or G306. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GER G3090 - Von Mythe Zum Marchen: Die Germanischen Quellen |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an exploration of the Germanic people and cultures. The readings (articles, tales, sagas, and poems) mainly deal with :Germanic languages, societies, and cultures. We will trace the development of certain cultural elements from their origin in Germanic mythology to their reappearance in literature of the twentieth century. This class requires 4 semester of German. Some of the readings, all homework assignments and essays will be done in German. Credit not given for both GER G309 and INTL I209. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GER G3110 - Composition And Conversation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Composition And Conversation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
|
| GER G3140 - Writing German II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis on composition and review of grammar through analysis of texts in a variety of genres. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| GER G3150 - Business German |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Improvement of speaking, writing, listening, and reading skills. Concentration on the language of the German business world. Discussion, grammar, exercises, letter writing. Conducted in German. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GER G3180 - German Language Skills I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Composition, conversation, and diction; advanced grammar. Conducted in German. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GER G3190 - German Language Skills II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive work in conversation and composition based on readings in areas of current or topical interest with emphasis on contemporary Germany. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GER G3200 - Special Topics In German |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Special Topics In German. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GER G3250 - German For Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Intensive practice in conversation and diction, with individual corrective work. Use of the audio laboratory. Intended primarily for teachers but open to students who hae completed G318 and preferably also G319. May be taken twice for maximum of 6 credits. Does not count toward master's degree. Required for teaching certification. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GER G3300 - Deutsch: Mittelstufe II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced oral and written communication. Study of selected advanced grammatical topics. Reading of primarily nonliterary texts. Conducted in German. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GER G3310 - Business German I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis on acquisition and use of business vocabulary, idiom, and style. Translating, reading, and writing skills are developed using constructions common to business German, as well as current materials (reports, journals) in the field. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GER G3330 - German Translation Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the theory and practice of translation. Discussion of techniques and stylistic approaches. Emphasis on German/English translation using a variety of texts, including technical texts, business communication, and texts on current topics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GER G3400 - German Language And Society: Past And Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course is an introduction to German sociolinguistics. We examine the differences between Standard German and German dialects, dialectics vs. colloquial speech, urban and rural colloquial speech, colloquial speech in East and West Germany, and the manners in which German dialects differ from one another. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GER G3500 - Vikings And Sagas |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Vikings And Sagas
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GER G3550 - Theater Spielen |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This combined reading, discussion, pronunciation, and performance course provides an applied introduction to contemporary German theater and drama, along with intensive practice of oral language skills. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GER G3620 - Introduction To Contemporary Germany |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of contemporary German civilization, with attention to the other German-speaking countries. Political, economic, and social organization. Conducted in German. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-New Albany
|
| GER G3630 - Deutsche Kulturgeschichte |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the cultural history of German-speaking countries, as well as contemporary civilization, with an emphasis on individual aspects of culture traced through several epochs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
|
| GER G3650 - Deutsche Kultur Heute |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A critical investigation of contemporary culture in the German-speaking countries, including institutions and major personalities, customs, traditions, changing mentalities, and lifestyles as they compare with contemporary U.S. culture. Taught in German. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GER G3700 - German Cinema |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. No knowledge of German required. Survey of German cinema from the films of expressionism and the Weimar Republic through the Nazi period to the present. Emphasis on film as a form of narrative art and on the social and historical conditions of German film production. No credit given towards German major.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GER G3710 - Der Deutsche Film |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of German cinema from the films of expressionism and the Weimar Republic through the Nazi period to the present. Emphasis on film as a form of narrative art and on the social and historical conditions of German film production. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| GER G3910 - German Colloquium in English Translation II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. No knowledge of German required. May be taken as an elective by other students. Emphasis on one topic, author, or genre in German literature, or other aspect of German culture. No credit given toward German major. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GER G4010 - Deutsche Kultur In Amerika |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced undergraduate course. Its purposes are to provide an overview of the cultural heritage of German-Americans and to assist students in researching German heritage with a view toward developing research skills with original materials. The course will basically be in a seminar format with students actively participating in discussions and presentations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GER G4030 - Mittelalter-Romantik |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Mittelalter-Romantik. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-New Albany
|
| GER G4040 - Deutsche Literatur: Seit Der Romantik |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Historical survey of major literary developments from young Germany to recent writing in German-speaking Europe. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GER G4050 - Goethe-Life And Works |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Extensive readings in Goethe's poetry, drama and narrative fiction, including analysis of Faust. Special emphasis is placed on the relationship between the author's life and his works. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GER G4080 - Deutsche Klassik Und Romantik |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the cultural capital of courtly Germany, Weimar, and its relationship to German Romanticism, including readings and discussions of works by Goethe, Schiller, Kleist, Tieck, and the Grimm brothers. Literary examples are accompanied by pictorial, filmic, and musical illustrations. Taught in German. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| GER G4090 - German Myths, Fair Tales And Social Transformation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of literary representations of nineteenth-century German life at a time of change from rural to urban transformation. Text selection includes a variety of shorter forms: fairy tales, short stories, novella, satire and drama. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GER G4100 - 20. Jahrhundert: Kultur Und Literatur |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of cultural and intellectual life of the German-speaking countries of the 20th century, through the reading of exemplary literary works. Discussion of literary movements from the turn of the century until the present. Texts will be analyzed within the context of other cultural phenomena, including film and music. Conducted in German. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GER G4110 - Advanced German Grammar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey and practice of complex grammatical structures; systematic expansion of vocabulary. Discussion and writing based on current materials, such as newspapers, films, and radio programs. Eligible for graduate credit; but not toward M.A. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GER G4120 - Advanced German Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Systematic development of writing and speaking skills, proceeding from exercises to specific forms such as Brief, Aufsatz, Referat, Vortrag. Focus on usage and style.Conducted in German. Eligible for graduate credit, but not toward M.A. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GER G4150 - Perspective On German Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of one aspect of German literature: formal, historical, political, psychological, etc. Relation to wider concerns in and outside of literature. Topic announced in the online Schedule of Classes. May be repeated with a different topic for a maximum of 6 credit hours. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| GER G4160 - Studies In German Authors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Life and works of a major author or a group of authors. Topic announced in the online Schedule of Classes. May be repeated with a different topic for a maximum of 6 six credit hours. Conducted in German. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| GER G4180 - German Film And Popular Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of German film and/or other manifestations of German popular culture (television, music, cabaret, Trivialliteratur of the twentieth century). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-New Albany
|
| GER G4220 - Contemporary Germany: Special Topics In German Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics dealing with language, literature, and culture of any of the German-speaking countries, generally in the more recent historical periods. May be repeated with different topics for a maximum of 12 credit hours. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
|
| GER G4230 - The Craft Of Translation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced course in German-English translation providing intensive translation practice in many text categories: commercial and economic translations, scientific, technical, political, and legal texts. Applied work combined with study of theory and methodology of translation, comparative structural and stylistical analysis, and evaluation of sample translations. Use of computer-assisted translation management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GER G4250 - 20th Century German Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of major developments in the literature of the German-speaking countries since 1890. Moments of historical and cultural interest will be discussed as they are reflected in the literature. Writing of Hofmannsthal, Rilke, Thomas Mann, Kafka, Hesse, Brecht, and others. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GER G4310 - Advanced Business German |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focus is on the contemporary business idiom and current economic issues facing Germany. Active practice of specialized business language, both for oral and written communication. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GER G4450 - Fortgeschrittenes Deutsch: Grammatik |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey and practice of complex grammatical structures; systematic expansion of vocabulary. Discussion and writing based on current materials, such as newspapers, films, and radio programs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GER G4480 - Sounds Of Modern German |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Sounds Of Modern German. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GER G4510 - Structure Of Modern German |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Structure Of Modern German. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GER G4520 - Senior Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected topics in German literature, language, and culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| GER G4560 - Women In German Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Women In German Literature. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GER G4630 - German Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Taught in German. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GER G4640 - Kultur Und Gesellschaft |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The interaction of social, intellectual, and artistic forces in German life in the last one to two centuries, stressing interdisciplinary aspects. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GER G4650 - Structure Of German |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course introduces students to the core disciplines of linguistics: phonetics, phonology, syntax, morphology, and semantics. While the approach is generally a cross-linguistic one, special emphasis is placed on examples from German. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| GER G4700 - German Folklore |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of folklore studies in German. Methods of "Volkskunde.Marchen, Sage, Volkslied, Schwanke. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GER G4900 - Das deutsche Kolloquium |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Concentration on a specific topic, genre, or author in German literature, film, or other aspect of culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GER G4930 - Internship In German |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. A field experience in the applied use of German in a professional work place environment. Previous course work and language knowledge are integrated in professional application locally and/or in a German-speaking country. Directed journal, report, final investigative project. Minimal length of internship linked to weekly work schedule. (May be taken twice, once locally and once overseas)
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GER G4950 - Individual Readings In German Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GER G4960 - Advanced German Language Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Credit for advanced German language study in a German-speaking country when no specific equivalent is available among departmental offerings. May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credit hours. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| GER G4980 - Individual Studies In German |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| GER G5750 - Historical Study Of German Literature III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Historical treatment of a literary topic involving substantial developments between 1800 and 1900. Topics range from individual genres, types, or movements, to themes or ideas; to sociopolitical contexts of literature or its relationships to other art forms. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GER G5770 - Historical Study Of German Literature IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Historical treatment of a literary topic involving substantial developments within the time period from 1900 to the present. Topics range from individual genres, types or movements; to themes or ideas; to sociopolitical contexts of literature or its relationships to other art forms. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GER V4150 - Individual Readings In German Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. May be repeated. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GER W3990 - Internship In Modern Foreign Languages |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Practical application of German language skills. Credit may be counted toward the major with the approval of the department chair. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GERN G2310 - Introduction To Gerontology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a survey of the field of gerontology, including basic theoretical, methodological, and factual content drawn from a variety of disciplinary perspectives. Background material on the demographic, health, physiological, psychological, and social aspects of aging are provided. Structured opportunities for practical field observation and experience with the aged are included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GERN G3990 - Independent Study In Gerontology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an opportunity for students to independently pursue a gerontological problem or issue. With guidance from an instructor, students identify a topic they would like to study in-depth. This course is especially appropriate for gerontological interests that span more than on discipline. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GERN G4940 - Gerontology Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Field experience in a setting involving adults 60 years or older, according to the interests and objectives of each student. Work will be supervised by the instructor and setting personnel. Provides an opportunity to apply gerontological theory and findings in a practical context. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| GERN G4990 - Topics In Gerontology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Specific topics announced each semester the course is offered. Examples of course content include legal and economic aspects of aging; health issues in aging; and business and marketing issues and older adults. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GNC 06400 - Introductory Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Does not count toward graduation. Introduction to algebra concepts and skills, including real-number and variable operations, linear equations, graphing, and systems of linear equations. Emphasis on applications as well as structure. Mastery learning approach. Pocket calculators used.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GNC 06500 - Fundamentals of Geometry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Does not count toward graduation. Introduction to fundamental concepts of geometry, including angles, polygons, and circles, with emphasis on problem solving. Pocket calculators used. This course satisfies the one unit of geometry required for admission, but does not count toward graduation.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GNS 10300 - Introduction To Higher Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to assist and guide students in maximizing their potential for success at the university by promoting academic growth. This course will emphasize utilization of campus resources, goal setting, values exploration, the relationship of academic planning to life goals, career exploration, career exploration, and critical thinking strategies. This course is required of all students in the Developmental Studies Program, except those with credit in GNS 29000 or EDPS 10300. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| GNS 29000 - Topics For Study |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A variable credit, variable title course for either group or individual study. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GRAD 59000 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Hours and credits to be arranged. For the use of interdisciplinary programs and in other situations when appropriate departmental courses are not available or general Graduate School identification is desirable. To be used only with the consent of the dean of the Graduate School. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: Graduate School
Department: Graduate School Administration
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GRAD 60100 - PULSe Scientific Communications |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. To begin to create an atmosphere in which students learn to communicate across disciplinary lines by providing the opportunity to develop skills in presenting and evaluating research results. Students will develop short scientific presentations, an abstract, and a poster and learn to present their findings to others and to ask and answer questions from their peers. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: Graduate School
Department: Graduate School Administration
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. To improve your ability to organize and present research presentation.
2. To gain experience with the skills required to prepare material for presentation.
3. To learn more about the faculty and students in PULSe.
|
| GRAD 60200 - Peer To Peer Mentoring For ESE IGP Students |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This Peer-to Peer (P2P) mentor experience is geared to enhance the professional development of our ESE students and foster enhanced success and professional development for our first year students. The P2P mentors meet once a week with Independent of GRAD 59000 and also meet with GRAD 59000. P2P mentors have to shape the syllabus for each semester including identifying readings; develop, lead, and facilitate classroom activities through both traditional and innovative and creative strategies; and provide verbal and written input on weekly student critiques. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Graduate School
Department: Graduate School Administration
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 5 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Learning to develop creative and innovative teaching strategies.
2. Develop skills for fostering student written and oral communication.
3. Develop skills for fostering an inclusive and safe environment.
4. Develops skills for selecting course materials, planning course activities, and grading student performance.
|
| GRAD 61200 - Responsible Conduct Of Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Overview of values, professional standards, and regulations that define responsible conduct in research. Students learn the values and standards of responsible research through readings and lecture/discussion and practice application of these values and standards to research situations through class discussion of case studies from life sciences research. Students must be registered for M.S. or Ph.D. thesis research in their home department. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Graduate School
Department: Graduate School Administration
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GRAD 68900 - Special Seminars |
|
Arrange Hours and Credit. Hours and credits to be arranged. For use in interdisciplinary seminars and in other cases where general Graduate School identification is desirable. To be used only with the consent of the dean of the Graduate School. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Graduate School
Department: Graduate School Administration
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GRAD 69300 - Interdisciplinary Internship/Practicum |
|
Arrange Hours and Credit. For the use of interdisciplinary programs and in other situations when appropriate departmental courses are not available or general Graduate School identification is desirable. To be used only with the consent of the dean of the Graduate School. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Graduate School
Department: Graduate School Administration
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GRAD 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: Graduate School
Department: Graduate School Administration
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GRAD G5040 - Introduction To Resrch Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Introduction to the basic concepts of research ethics. The course will cover the historical development of concern with ethics in science as well as practical information needed by students working in science today. Format will be lecture and discussion.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GRAD G5990 - Thesis Research |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Master's students who have enrolled in 30 or more hours of graduate course work applicable to the degree and who have completed all other requirements of the degree except the thesis of final project of performance may enroll in G599. Requires section authorization.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GRAD G6510 - Introduction To Biostatistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory course in Biostatistics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GRAD G6520 - Introduction To Biostatistics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to Biostatistics II. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GRAD G6600 - Clincal Research Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to core topics in clinical research, including various types of study design, principles of measurement, and health services and database research. The course is required for the M.S. in Clinical Research degree and is intended primarily for health care professionals desiring a career in clinical research. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GRAD G6610 - Clinical Trials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Clinical Trials. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GRAD G7150 - Biomedical Science I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. One of three biomedical science courses intended for incoming doctoral graduate students in the School of Medicine or other graduate students. Covers molecular and metabolic aspects of cellular function. The course will explore topics in the biochemical basis of biological systems, including biological macromolecules, protein ligand interactions, cell-signaling, and metabolic processes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GRAD G7160 - Biomedical Science II - Molecular Biology And Genetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Second of three biomedical science courses intended for incoming doctoral graduate students in the School on Medicine or other graduate students. Topics covered include DNA structure and replication, recombination and repair, genomics and processes of inheritance, gene expression, eukaryotic systems, and molecular genetics and diseases. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GRAD G7240 - Molecular Cancer Genetics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An introduction to cancer focusing on genetics. Topics include causes and effects of chromosome instability (including centromere/telomere failures and chromosomal translocations), epigenetic changes and genetic risk factors during cancer progression. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GRAD G7330 - Introduction To Biological Microscopy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduces key concepts and capabilities of modern biological microscopy, covering basic concepts that carry through all microscope imaging modalities, and providing examples of how these concepts apply in the real world at the level of cellular and molecular imaging using transmitted light and fluorescence, and in EM. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GRAD G7340 - Advanced Molecular Imaging |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduces imaging methods and concepts used in molecular structure as dynamics analysis. The course emphasizes general principles of macromolecular structure and dynamics applied to ensemble and single molecules. Methodologies use visible light, electrons and atomic force mapping. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GRAD G7480 - Principles Of Toxicology I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will present the fundamental concepts of toxicology necessary to understand the effects of chemicals on human health. Cellular and molecular mechanisms involved in toxic responses elicited by pharmaceutical and environmental agents, activation and detoxification of drugs and chemicals, and the principles of carcinogenesis and mutagenesis will be presented. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GRAD G7490 - Introduction To Structural Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An introduction to structural biology including the fundamentals of macromolecular structure and interactions, methods used to determine three-dimensional structures, the relationship between protein sequence and structure, and prediction and analysis of macromolecular structure. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GRAD G7540 - Principles Of Toxicology II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Xenobiotic-induced target organ toxicity will be discussed with respect to the biological and/or chemical factors that influence toxicity at a tissue site, the modes of action for producing damage, and the methodology used to measure injury. This course is designed to provide a foundation for understanding the complex interactions between toxicants and biological systems from a basic science approach. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GRAD G7550 - Principles Of Toxicology III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The effects associated with specific classes of chemicals, including chemical agents that either demonstrate a great chance for injury and/or pose significant potential for human exposure will be presented. The chemical classes covered will include selective metals, solvents and alcohols, pesticides, plastics and gases. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GRAD G8040 - Cellular And Molecular Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Cellular and molecular biology that emphasizes the structural organization, biochemistry and molecular biology
of cells. Includes cellular processes, development and differentiation and their relationship to medicine.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GRAD G8070 - Structural And Chemical Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Fundamentals of structural and chemical biology focused on state-of-the-art approaches to inhibitor discovery, use of inhibitors in elucidating biological function, and computational and structural approaches to rational inhibitor design. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GRAD G8170 - Molecular Basis Of Cell Structure And Function |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Organization and function of sub cellular structures. Intracellular coordination of cell activities including protein and RNA processing/trafficking/quality control, chromatin dynamics, and cell division.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GRAD G8190 - Basic Bone Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to basic bone biology, including bone morphology, composition, and physiology; cell biology of bone cells; measurement techniques; adaption to the mechanical and metabolic environments; regulatory factors and mineral homeostasis; and growth and evelopment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GRAD G8280 - Concepts In Biotechnology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Concepts in Biotechnology
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GRAD G8480 - Bioinform, Genomic, Protemics And Systems Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Biology has been transformed by various high-throughput technologies (genomics, proteomics, metabolomics, etc.), which is turn have led to a large number of massive databases and software analysis packages. This course focuses on the "omics" technologies, on the resulting databases, and on the computational tools used to analyze the data. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GRAD G8520 - Concepts Of Cancer Biology: Signaling Gone Awry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of cancer biology; the signaling of events that regulate cell growth, survival and differentiation; how mutation/dysregulation of signaling molecules leads to cancer and might be exploited for treatment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GRAD G8550 - Experimental Design And Research Biostatistics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is an introduction to proper experimental design and appropriate statistical analysis of data in biological studies, and will equip students to recognize errors that are common in biological experiments and to discern situations in which they should seek help for these issues in their own work. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GRAD G8650 - Fundamental Molecular Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of molecular biology, emphasizing the structure, replication, repair and recombination of the genetic
material and the molecular mechanisms of gene expression. Both prokaryotic and eukaryotic systems are covered. (Joint program with Medical and Molecular Genetics, and Microbiology and Immunology)
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GRAD G8900 - Methods in Molecular Biology and Pathology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic principles and techniques in molecular biology and pathology. Particular emphasis will be on molecular techniques that can be used to study problems related to biochemistry and pathology.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GRAD G9010 - Advanced Research |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Advanced Research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Research
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GRAD N8020 - Techniques Of Effective Grant Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Techniques Of Effective Grant Writing
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| GREK 10100 - Greek Level I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the grammar of Attic Greek of the Classical period, and first forays into the reading of connected prose. Emphasis on accidence, syntax, and vocabulary building. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| GREK 10200 - Greek Level II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of the study of Attic Greek grammar and reading of connected prose of the Classical period. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| GREK 20100 - Classical Greek Level III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A reading course in Ancient Greek, with emphasis on the New Testament, designed to strengthen students' grasp of grammar and syntax, broaden their vocabulary, and develop facility in reading and translation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GREK 20200 - Classical Greek Level IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A second reading course in Ancient Greek, designed to refine skills in reading and translation and to introduce students to representative texts (Plato, Euripides) of the Classical period. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GREK 34300 - Greek Oratory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of ancient Greek (Attic) orators from textual, historical, and social perspectives. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GREK 34400 - Greek Epic |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Readings and discussion of the Greek epic, including selected passages from Homer and Hesiod. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GREK 35300 - Greek Tragedy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading and discussion of selected Greek tragedies of the 5th century BCE. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GREK 35400 - Greek Comedy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Readings and discussion of selected Greek comedies of the 4th and 5th centuries BCE. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GREK 44200 - Greek Lyric |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading and discussion of Greek lyric poetry, both monodic and choral. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GREK 44600 - Greek Historians |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the writings of the classical historians in the original Greek. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GREK 49000 - Directed Reading In Classical Greek |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Directs the reading of students with special interests. Guides students in profitable reading in subjects of their own choice. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GREK 59000 - Directed Reading In Classical Greek |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Directed Reading In Classical Greek. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| GS 09000 - Problem Solving Strategies For Successful Reentry |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Developing Problem-Solving Strategies for Successful Reentry provides inmates with a process for change. The program utilizes the problem-solving method to provide the framework for developing plans of action around those issues needed for successful and positive reentry. The program addresses the six major areas necessary for positive reentry: Physical Well-being; Mental Well-being; Personal Well-being; Family Well-being; and Employment and Community Functioning. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| GS 11500 - Introduction To Career Decisions |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is designed to guide the student through self-exploration and an investigation of the world of work. The class format will be short lectures followed by class discussions and activities. Not open to students who have completed G S 119. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: General Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GS 11900 - Introduction To Academic Programs At Purdue |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. To provide a comprehensive program describing each of the baccalaureate degree-granting schools at Purdue. The course is designed to assist students in the clarification of their degree objectives. Not open to students who have completed G S 115. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Presentation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: General Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GS 12100 - Introduction to Women's Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to a women's studies perspective in various academic disciplines. Emphasis on the socialization process of women, the history and literature of women, the politics and theory of the women's rights movement, and the changing role of women in society. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| GS 15000 - Personal Growth and Develop |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A multilevel approach to the promotion of personal growth and development through a modified human relations laboratory experience. Designed also to increase learning efficiency and skills through application of basic psychological principles. Two types of activities will be employed: (1) skilled training activities and exercises; and (2) small group discussions of feelings, ideas, and relationships common to all participants. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| GS 17500 - Information Strategies |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 or 1.00. Designed to build and sharpen students' information-gathering skills. Guides students in developing systematic methods for finding, evaluating, and presenting information. Organization and use of electronic and print tools will be explained through discussion, hands-on exercises, and homework assignments. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: General Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GS 19100 - First-Year Experience I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a course on broad questions facing in the twenty-first century, approached from a variety of disciplinary perspectives. It serves as the foundation of PNC's general education curriculum. In addition, the practicalities of succeeding in college are addressed: academic expectations, resources available on campus and career planning. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
By the end of the course, students will gain experience in:
1. Writing and speaking in an academic setting.
2. Choosing problem-solving and critical thinking methods.
3. Comparing modes of inquiry as applied to diverse problems.
4. Recognizing patterns and processes of the natural world.
5. Considering the uses and limitations of technologies and their applications.
6. Identifying relations between local and global communities.
7. Clarifying personal and societal values in making decisions.
|
| GS 19700 - Purdue Promise First-Year Experience Course |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A combined lecture and experiential seminar course for new Purdue Opportunity Awards scholars. The course will focus on the transition issues for these first-year students. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: General Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GS 19900 - Strategies For A Successful First Year |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on student adjustment to university life and development skills. Content includes testing to determine skills, attitudes, and interests; group activities to foster student adjustment; and training in computer usage, time management, and University policies. Open to Horizons students only. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: General Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| GS 20000 - Preparing Tomorrow's Leaders: Purpose And Connection |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A one-credit course designed to provide Purdue Promise students with skills and connections to be successful at Purdue and post graduation. This course will provide Purdue Promise students in their second year with a foundation in leadership and career development skills. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: General Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Research/write and implement an academic and career plan.
2. Learn about emotional intelligence; thus taking greater responsibility for their own behaviors and learning.
3. Be exposed to and encouraged to Purdue avenues of leadership with the university.
4. Learn about work and internship opportunities.
5. Refine job search skills (resume, cover letters) and register with CCO Express.
6. Continue to explore and make connections with campus multicultural and diversity programs.
|
| GS 21000 - Leadership Development Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A one-credit course designed to provide Student Access, Transition and Success programs students with skills and connections to be successful student leaders at Purdue. This course will provide students a foundation I leadership skills. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: General Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Research/write and implement an academic and career plan.
2. Learn about emotional intelligence; thus taking greater responsibility for their own behaviors and learning.
3. Be exposed to and encouraged to Purdue avenues of leadership within the university.
4. Learn about work and internship opportunities.
5. Refine job search skills (resume, cover letters) and register with CCO Express.
6. Continue to explore and make connections with campus multicultural and diversity programs.
|
| GS 25000 - College Reading Skills And Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Focus is on three areas: analysis and study of word structure and context in improving vocabulary; comprehension of author's purpose and tone; and efficiency in reading skills. Materials include critical reading of contemporary writers from current publications. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: General Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 4 credits
|
| GS 26500 - By And About Women: A Feminist Approach To Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected readings in important works of literature from a feminist perspective. Works will include several genres and be chosen from a wide range of time and places including Continental and Third World Literature. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| GS 29000 - Study Skills Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Designed to help students improve their college grades by learning to study more efficiently and effectively. Deals with improving study habits, such as time scheduling, attitudes, and specific study skills, such as note-taking, listening, test-taking, memory techniques, and reading skills. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: General Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 5 credits
|
| GS 29400 - Reading Efficiency |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. To enable each student to read with greater efficiency and flexibility. Rate and comprehension are measured in a variety of materials. Appropriate motor skill strategies are practiced in both the classroom and computer laboratory. Typically offered Spring Fall.
0.000 TO 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: General Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GS 29500 - Effective Study Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The primary learning skills areas are taught through audiovisual/audio modules designed for self-study in the Learning Study Laboratory. Credit may not be obtained for both G S 295 and 290. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: General Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GS 30000 - Liberal Arts Influentials |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. As a lecture/discussion course, Liberal Arts Influentials features speakers from a diverse range of Liberal Arts majors and introduces students to the myriad career opportunities available to Liberal Arts graduates. Speakers represent careers in the arts, media, industry, politics and more. Students are encouraged to initiate dialogue with working professionals. Only students enrolled in the College of Liberal Arts may register for GS 30000: LA Influentials. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: General Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be better prepared to identify how the liberal arts influence and contribute to society, globalization, and world issues and how the liberal arts prepare students for meaningful and satisfying career.
2. Students will develop a better understanding of how these influences and contributions can be applied to their professional and personal development. In addition, students will network with key Liberal Arts alumni.
|
| GS 31500 - Internship Strategies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course offers sophomore and junior students the opportunity to gain key skills to prepare for a professional internship. Topics range from "Why intern" to conducting searches, to resume writing and interview techniques to establishing a professional identity. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 TO 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: General Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GS 40500 - Advancing Tomorrow's Leaders: Preparing For Employment And Life After College |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A one-credit course designed to prepare Purdue Promise students for the next chapter of their professional journey through the reflection of past experiences and the acquisition of new knowledge, expectations, and skills necessary to be successful citizens and employees post-graduation. This course is only for students in the Purdue Promise program. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: General Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify expectations of post-graduation life.
2. Be informed of benefits, insurance, paycheck, and tax information.
3. Learn how to navigate their new positions and organizations-cultures, co-workers, supervisors, and workplace challenges.
4. Learn how to maintain marketability in the job market.
5. Learn the necessary life skills of living in a new town, with transitions, new financial obligations, and new responsibilities.
6. Reflect upon their college experience and how it has prepared them for their transition out of college.
|
| GS 41000 - Advancing Tomorow's Scholars: Graduate And Professional School Preparation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A one-credit course designed to prepare Purdue Promise students for a smooth transition into graduate or professional school. This course will inform Purdue Promise students of the necessary preparation, required paperwork, and skills needed to be successful in post-baccalaureate education. This course is only for students participating in the Purdue Promise program. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: General Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Be informed of graduate school timelines, checklists, and necessary steps to apply.
2. Learn how to select a good graduate program for themselves.
3. Write a personal statement.
4. Learn ways to finance graduate school prior to starting and once in graduate school.
5. Learn the necessary life skills of living in a new town, with new transitions, and new responsibilities.
6. Reflect upon their college experience and how it has prepared them for their transition out of college.
|
| GS 41500 - Senior Job Search Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is designed to get LA seniors actively started on their job search. Highly intensive assignments, in-class activities, presentations and projects are designed to better prepare students for all aspects of the job search process. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: General Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| GS 48000 - LAS Senior Honors Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A senior-level interdisciplinary colloquium for LAS honors students in which such student shall undertake individual research projects which shall be presented to the colloquium for critical evaluation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| GS 49000 - Directed Reading In General Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Reading to be done under the direction of the instructor in the particular field of specialization. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: General Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HDFS 10000 - Orientation To Current Issues In Human Development And Family Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to current issues in the fields of human development and family studies and professional responses to the needs of children and families. Required of all beginning freshmen with the exception of students entering FCSE; recommended for any other students beginning in HDFS majors. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate increased awareness of the impact on children and families that is made through the study of human development and relationships through learning about the work of faculty in Child Development & Family Studies and have knowledge of possible career options for graduates of HDFS by contact with professionals in social and behavioral sciences.
2. Identify the program options in HDFS and distinguish the requirements for his/her major by establishing a personal plan of study.
3. Investigate resources in the department and the university by using technology and/or personal contact with faculty or staff.
4. Establish relationships with HDFS peers and faculty through interactive class exercises or optional activities such as campus career exploration groups.
|
| HDFS 10100 - Working With Parents |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An indepth look at working with parents and families in Early Childhood programs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain knowledge on family theory.
2. Students will reflect on their own culture and its impact on their work with young children and families.
|
| HDFS 12500 - Children In Family Care |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to issues concerning the care of young children, the course will focus on practices appropriate for a wide range of children in family settings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. To explore the uses and purposes of family child care.
2. To develop understanding and techniques for a language development curriculum.
3. To begin to consider possible developmentally appropriate space arrangements within the context of a family home.
|
| HDFS 19000 - First Year Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A one-credit (each semester) first-year honors seminar consists of guest speakers and discussions of broad intellectual issues. Admitted high school students who have either a 1200 combined SAT score ( equivalent ACT score ) or graduate in top 10 percent of class and letter from invitation of the HHS Dean. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Presentation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| HDFS 19700 - First Year Honors Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A one-credit (each semester) first-year honors seminar consisting of guest speakers and discussions of broad issues within Consumer and Family Sciences. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
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| HDFS 20100 - Introduction To Family Processes |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the interpersonal processes that take place within family contexts. Emphasis is on family dynamics. Also considered are linkages between family processes and the broader social environment. Basic components of the research process will be introduced. Typically offered Fall, Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply family theories to the unique interactions and dynamics that occur within a family.
2. Understand the developmental pathways of family construction.
3. Identify within family interaction patterns.
4. Understand and identify the importance of family research.
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| HDFS 20200 - Infant And Toddler Supervised Experience |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Experiential learning in infant and toddler classrooms. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Gain hands on experience with infants and/or toddlers.
2. Demonstrate knowledge in writing and executing developmentally appropriate lesson plans while reflecting on their interactions.
3. Increase observation skills.
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| HDFS 20300 - Advanced Infant/Toddler Curriculum |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced look at infant-toddler development and theories while focusing on setting up an appropriate curriculum for the classroom. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Receive an in-depth knowledge of Early Childhood theories concerning infants and toddlers.
2. Ability to develop a curriculum for an entire infant and toddler classroom
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| HDFS 20500 - Introduction To Family Dynamics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the interpersonal processes that take place within family contexts. Emphasis is on family dynamics with an extended focus on family interaction, family relationships, intimacy, conflict management and stages of family development. Also considered are linkages between family processes and the modern social environment and basic components of the research process. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Introduce students to the interpersonal processes that take place within the family context, including exposure to primary research focused on family studies.
2. Introduce students to the framework of family communication, processes, and patterns including intimacy, power, conflict and development.
3. Familiarize the student with the family science literature composing a literature review and term paper from a family science perspective.
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| HDFS 21000 - Introduction To Human Development |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the development of individuals from conception through adulthood and aging. Physical growth, social and emotional behavior, cognitive and language development are covered. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply family theories to the unique interactions and dynamics that occur within a family.
2. Understand the developmental pathways of family construction.
3. Identify within family interaction patterns.
4. Understand and identify the importance of family research.
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| HDFS 21200 - Child Development Practicum For Youth Adult And Family Services Majors |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. This is a supervised practicum in a setting with young children. This course focuses on the development of observation skills and the understanding of children's behavior in group settings. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture 1, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division, Practicum
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 21300 - Practicum For Early Intervention And Early Childhood Education And Exceptional Needs |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a supervised practicum in a setting with young children. This course focuses on the development of observation skills and the understanding of children's behavior in group settings. In addition, students learn strategies for documenting individual children's development and learning, and writing observable and measurable learning objectives. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture 1, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Practicum
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 21600 - Introduction To Early Childhood Education |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of early education programs, including center based, infant/toddler, family child care, and kindergarten. Course will include consideration of the history & theory of early childhood programs; program routines and organization for the healthy intellectual, social & physical growth of young children; professional relationships with parents and staff. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. To learn about the history and theory of early childhood education and the child care movement in the United States.
2. To compare and contrast ECE curriculum models-philosophical, theoretical and practical.
3. To become familiar with the policies in developmentally appropriate practice in ECE programs.
4. To gain understanding of health and safety practices in programs for young children.
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| HDFS 21700 - Issues In Early Childhood Education |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Issues in Early Childhood Education Study promoting positive development of children in a group environment. Course will focus on the importance of language, child initiative and activity, and socio-emotional guidance. Issues will be discussed in the light of multicultural diversity and special needs of children. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. To become critically aware of the value and effects of one's own family and culture.
2.. To demonstrate awareness of children's enviromnents and activities, and the interactions between and among teachers and children.
3. To demonstrate a developing attitude of professionalism that supports good teaching.
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| HDFS 22800 - Developmental Infant And Toddler Care |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Developmental Infant and Toddler Care Discussion of frameworks, principles and techniques for infant toddler programs; focusing on the role of healthy environments and nurturing relationships with adults. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will receive knowledge in zero to three development including milestones, assessment and theories.
2. Students will explore different situations with culture, parents, guidance and attachment.
3. Infant/Toddler curriculum will be reviewed with lesson planning and room arrangement.
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| HDFS 23500 - CDA Portfolio And Experience |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. CDA Porfolio and Experience students must be regularly involved in an early care and education program. Students will prepare autobiograhical and goal statements, assemble resources and participate in discussion of issues in early care and education programs specifically geared to supporting the CDA program. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. To prepare a resource and goal statement portfolio for the CDA credential.
2. To enhance knowledge of appropriate practices in early care and education.
3. To demonstrate practice in an early childhood setting that meets CDA assessment standards.
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| HDFS 25500 - Introduction To Couple And Family Relationships |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides further understanding of family relations for those unmarried, those contemplating marriage, or for those married, and for prospective marriage counselors. A functional approach to the interpersonal relationships of courtship, marriage, and family. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 26000 - Young Children With Exceptional Needs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A broad overview of learner characteristics and service delivery models for young children (birth-8 years) who are at-risk or have identified disabilities. Students gain understanding of disabilities in young children, of laws relating to persons with disabilities, and roles of special and general educators in providing services to students with identified disabilities. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Travel Time
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The student will demonstrate knowledge of: (a) Philosophical, historical, and legal foundations of special education. (b) How principles of development, motivation, behavioral and cognitive learning theories are related to learner differences. (c) Characteristics of learners with exceptionalities, including individual and group diversity that may impact learning. (d) Issues related to environmental and personal barriers that hinder accessibility and acceptance of persons with disabilities and their families. (e) Applicable laws, rules and regulations, and procedural safeguards regarding the planning and implementation of early children special education interventions, including management of behaviors, of children with special learning needs. (f) Issues related to teacher professionalism and ethical practice.
2. The student will demonstrate skills to: (a) Articulate current issues in special education. (b) Define and describe and characteristics of learners with exceptionalities.
3. The student will demonstrate appropriate dispositions regarding: (a) The right of all children through the age of 21 to receive a free and appropriate public education. (b) Access to the natural environment and to the general curriculum as the starting point for special education and early intervention services.
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| HDFS 28000 - Diversity In Individual And Family Life |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students are introduced to aspects of individual and family life in diverse cultures, particularly racially and/or ethnically diverse families in the United States. The nature of relationships between dominant and minority cultures is considered. Implications of diversity for practice with diverse populations are emphasized throughout the course. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To understand why and how individuals and families are diverse.
2. To describe basic information about cultural values, family patterns, and historical experiences of major groups in the United States.
3. To demonstrate an understanding of the nature of relationships between dominant and minority cultures and issues of racism, prejudice, and discrimination.
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| HDFS 29000 - Scholarly Process In HDFS |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This course introduces students to the process of designing and implementing scholarly projects in HDFS. Emphasis is on both a conceptual understanding of and applied experience with this process. Admittance into the HDFS Honors program. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
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| HDFS 29700 - Introduction To Honors Research |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduces students to the design and implementation of an honors research project. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 30500 - Biosocial Foundations Of The Family |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Family ties and family processes in the promotion of individual health and management of disease across the life course are covered. Course reviews research on families and health from multiple disciplinary perspectives. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe evolutionary and biosocial theory as the basis of development.
2. Identify the key biological systems involved in behavior, and how they are measured in biosocial research.
3. Explain the direct implications for biological and environmental interactions for families, children, adolescents, and adults.
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| HDFS 30501 - Art, Music And Movement In Early Childhood |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Course will focus on the development of expression in children of diverse backgrounds and needs. Students will develop resources and explore techniques. Discussions will include appropriate documentaion and display of children's work. Experiences with music, movement, and art activities will enhance understanding of cognitive, social-emotional and phyiscal development through expressive actiivities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. To gain understanding of the value of creative expression in programs for young children.
2. To experiment and try out various art, music and movement activities appropriate for young children.
3. To build a file of creative resourse activities.
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| HDFS 30800 - Language And Literature In Early Childhood |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Course will focus on knowledge and teaching techniques for language arts and emergent literacy appropriate to children from ages 3-8. Students will develop resources and learn to plan for experiences with language and literature, including activities and materials such as: storytelling and story dictation, finger plays, flannel boards, and puppets. Students will consider the relation of language and literacy to cognitive, social, emotional and physical development for children from diverse background and with diverse needs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will receive an in depth knowledge of language arts curriculum, language development and diversity in language/culture.
2. Students will learn about different types of curriculum and how to begin to write developmentally appropriate lesson plans.
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| HDFS 31000 - Guidance In Early Childhood |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course presents a developmental, child-centered approach to the guidance and discipline of young children, including children with disabilities. Influential theories, relevant research, and effective guidance methods for the early childhood teachers and other professionals working with young children and families, including families from different cultural and economic backgrounds, are discussed. Admitted to Gate B. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Stating the purposes and importance of child guidance.
2. Identifying the basic terminology, concepts, theoretical viewpoints, and applications of developmentally appropriate practices related to early childhood guidance.
3. Becoming aware of child guidance issues and strategies.
4. Analyzing physical environments for young children.
5. Articulating your assumptions, goals, and practices as an early childhood professional.
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| HDFS 31001 - Math, Science, And Social Studies In Early Childhood |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Course will focus on planning and resources for young children's cognitive, social-emotional and physical development through exploration of and interaction with materials, people and places. Students will plan logico-mathematical, physical, and social knowledge activities which are appropriate for children with diverse backgrounds and needs. In addition, students will consider the relationships between experiences with materials such as manipulatives, wood, prop boxes, foods, and other sensory rich materials and with language and expressive activities. Overall planning, including curriculum webs, will be considred.. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will receive knowledge in curriculum for the content areas of blocks, cooking, math, science, sensory learning and social studies.
2. Students will gain knowledge in teaching lesson plans as well as reflecting on their teaching.
3. Students will learn how to set up a unit plan for an entire group.
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| HDFS 31100 - Child Development |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An in-depth study of developmental processes from infancy through adolescence. Includes processes of physical, cognitive, language, social, and emotional development. Processes are discussed within the framework of historical and contemporary theories and current research. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Define the concept of development and describe the differences between normative and individual development.
2. Identify the pioneers of the study of development and their contributions to the study of child development.
3. Describe the importance of developmental theories and the methodologies used to study child development.
4. Describe the most important theories of child development.
5. Describe important milestones of prenatal development.
6. Describe the motor, perceptual, cognitive, and socio-emotional developmental milestones during infancy, toddlerhood, and childhood.
7. Describe major contextual challenges to psychological development faced by the majority of children in the world.
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| HDFS 31200 - Adult Development |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An in-depth study of developmental processes from the transition to adulthood through old age. Particular emphasis is placed on understanding the influence of contexts on adult development. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify normative and non-normative changes from young to old age in the physical, cognitive, and emotional domains.
2. Develop skills for interviewing adults of varying ages.
3. Identify and apply how current issues in the field of adult development affect individuals’ lives.
4. Acquire a framework for assessing the connections between interpersonal development and the larger social context.
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| HDFS 31300 - Adolescent Development |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of the normative developmental issues and concerns of the adolescent, with some attention given to problem behavior. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Critically evaluate popular conceptions of adolescence and adolescents.
2. Compare and contrast theoretical perspectives on normative development during adolescence.
3. Identify the diversity in the developmental pathways during adolescence.
4. Acquire a framework for assessing the connections between interpersonal development and the larger social context.
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| HDFS 31600 - Introduction To Research In Human Development And Family Studies |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to develop basic skills for conducting research, the ability to understand and critically analyze research studies in human development and family studies, and to apply research findings to other situations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Student will recall and explain the basic concepts of HDFS research methods in completing exams and in-class assignments.
2. Students will recall and explain knowledge of research ethics by completing IRB training.
3. Students will recall and demonstrate knowledge of and operate SPSS in completing exams and in-class activities.
4. Students will demonstrate and analyze their knowledge by planning and determining research constructs compared in a research project and then presented in a paper.
5. Students will design a research project presented in a paper.
6. Students will write a research journal article submission in 6th Edition APA Style.
7. Students will evaluate the research literature relating to the research constructs of their research project and will write a literature review in the introduction section of their research paper.
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| HDFS 31800 - Developmental Assessment |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. This course provides an introduction to the variety and characteristics of developmental assessments for young children, birth to 8 years of age. Students learn strategies for documenting individual development and learning, observing and measuring children's learning, and linking assessment and instruction. Understanding outcomes from developmental assessments, communicating with families, and cultural and ethical issues in assessment are included. A supervised practicum with young children is part of this course. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 32500 - Health And Health Care For Children And Families |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines child and family reactions and adjustment to illness and disability. A developmental perspective on coping with health problems from early childhood through adolescence is presented. Psychosocial issues related to children's and family members' encounters with a variety of health care settings are addressed. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 33000 - Sexuality And Family Life |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides the student with a basic knowledge of human sexuality as it pertains to family relations. The course is designed to be helpful to students who will become family life educators as well as to be helpful to students as individuals, spouses, and parents. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Construct a basic knowledge of human sexuality as it pertains to family relations in the personal and professional settings.
2. Compare and describe social, cultural, historical, and technological trends and the interrelationships between these trends and their impact on sexuality, family relations, and personal values and attitudes.
3. Differentiate and examine the many different aspects of sexuality including biological, developmental, medical, cultural, historical, and interpersonal.
4. Demonstrate knowledge that helps to develop a better understanding of students’ own feelings and attitudes related to sexuality and how those attitudes and feelings influence their beliefs about individuals, couples, and families.
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| HDFS 33100 - Skills For Helping Professionals In Individual, Family And Group Settings |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to skills commonly used in helping professions, including beginning interviewing/counseling skills, case management skills, group process skills, and professional ethics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. State an awareness of the principles for helping interactions.
2. Demonstrate effective basic listening skills.
3. Understand the nature and function of various types of groups, and how individuals function within groups.
4. Delineate the various developmental stages of groups.
5. Actively practice the use of skills in working with individuals and groups.
6. Compare how contextual factors influence helping relationships in working with individuals and groups.
7. Identify ethical principles relevant to helping professionals; evaluated through requirements.
8. Build self-awareness dexterity applicable.
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| HDFS 33200 - Stress Points In Contemporary Families |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines theoretical perspectives related to family stress and resilience and connects these perspectives to empirical work on family dynamics and dysfunction across the lifespan. Problems associated with family formation, parent-child relations, family care giving, and families in remarriage as well as contemporary family relations thought to be challenges themselves such as divorce, incest, and family violence are explored. Typically offered Fall Spring
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe theory and research concerning family stress, coping and social support.
2. Describe theory and research concerning internal family functioning and interaction.
3. Apply theories of family stress and family processes to shifts in family structure and functioning in diverse contexts.
4. Describe professional applications and issues relating to crises or special issues in family life.
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| HDFS 33201 - Child Care Administration |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles and practices of administering early childhood programs, including philosophical foundations, licensing requirements, administrative and operational decisions, home-school communication and staff support. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. To develop the framework for the program of an early childhood center.
2. To explore and identify community resources for as far as programs and services for young children.
3. To demonstrate knowledge of the complexities of initiating and maintaining a child care center.
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| HDFS 33400 - Aging And The Family |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Aging in the family context: roles, relationships, and conditions of life in the family during later stages; intergenerational relations; policy and practice issues. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe family ties and family processes in middle and late adulthood.
2. Recognize diversity in family ties across the life course.
3. Identify reciprocal exchanges between older and younger family members.
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| HDFS 34000 - Teaching Very Young Children With Special Needs |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course emphasizes integrative, inclusive approaches to teaching very young children with special needs, and working with their families. It provides strategies for supporting social-emotional, motor, cognitive and communicative development within the context of the early childhood setting. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain knowledge about working with young children with special needs along with the process of diagnosis, talking with families, different tools/equipment and set up of the enviromnent.
2. Students will expand their knowledge in development and increase their observational skills.
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| HDFS 34100 - Working With Parents |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on developing and maintaining effective relationships between parents and professionals working with children, within the context of family-centered practices. Issues related to cultural, linguistic, economic, and developmental differences that affect relations between families and professionals are examined. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe theory, research, and educational literature on parenting and working with parents of diverse backgrounds and circumstances.
2. Plan and deliver parenting education in a variety of contexts, communicate effectively with parents, and choose and assess parenting materials.
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| HDFS 34300 - Assessment And Case Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of theories of change and intervention in families and the development of foundational skills needed for professional work with families in intervention settings. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and be able to conceptually apply basic marriage and family assessment and intervention skills.
2. Have reviewed and practiced basic counseling skills as they relate to family assessment and intervention.
3. Have compared the impact of family systems on your life, and the lives of families with whom you work.
4. Have conducted practice assessment interviews with individuals, couples, and/or families, and have demonstrated the ability to write up case notes, assessments, and treatment plans.
5. Have compared and contrasted several models of family therapy and identified strategies from these approaches that can be used in family assessment and intervention.
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| HDFS 34600 - Research Design And Program Evaluation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to applied research methods as used in community programs for children and families including review and application of existing research literature, conducting program needs assessments, and evaluating processes and outcomes of existing programs. Designed to provide the skills necessary to use existing research and generate new data to benefit programs. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will demonstrate the knowledge and skills needed to conduct high-quality, useful needs assessments and program evaluations.
2. Students will demonstrate knowledge and skills needed to become critical consumers of research for use in programs.
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| HDFS 34800 - Administration Of Social Service Not-For-Profit Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces students to aspects of not-for-profit management identified as keys by leaders in existing agencies. Students will prepare themselves for specifically establishing, building, working in and leading not-for-profit organizations. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will demonstrate knowledge, comprehension, analysis and application supporting competence in the defining features of nonprofit management by interactively: developing a board of directors; designing a strategic plan; writing a corresponding operations plan; diagramming an evaluation logic model; preparing a budget; making a fund raising “ask”; writing a fund raising letter; writing a grant proposal; writing a press release; and making oral presentations.
2. Students will demonstrate knowledge, comprehension, application, analysis and synthesis by interactively solving an administrative problem in a nonprofit agency case study and presenting the solution.
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| HDFS 35001 - Internship In Early Childhood Settings |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A guided practical experience for students interested in working with young children. Students will spend 5 hours per week in any of a variety of settings serving children from ages 0-8. Under the guidance of the setting professional and the university supervisor, the student will decide on a topic for development, culminating in a student paper describing and documenting the experience. Note: This course must be taken in conjuction with one of the guided electives, associated with the Early Childhood Development minor. This course does not count for practicum credit. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. To gain direct experience in any of a variety of early childhood settings.
2. To participate directly in working with children in those settings.
3. To plan appropriate activities for children in the early childhood age range, according to specific site/program needs.
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| HDFS 35400 - Practicum In Early Childhood I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Directed teaching for early education settings with attention to developmentally appropriate guidance. Course will focus on interaction with individual children and small groups. Students will participate in classroom activity planning, documentation of children's work and assessment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. To work directly with children in a child setting, completing a total of 150 clock hours.
2. To learn to carry out policies and procedures of an early childhood center.
3. To carry out activity and circle time plans with children.
4. To develop a professional attitude toward children and staff.
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| HDFS 37500 - Physical Aging, Health, And Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide students with knowledge concerning the effects of the aging process on physical systems of older adults. These systems include circulatory, respiratory, neurological, sensory, musculoskeletal, reproductive, etc. Students will also learn about acute and chronic illnesses, common among the elderly. The impact of physical health on mental health, medical treatment, and long-term care will be discussed. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Examine the effects that biological aspects of aging and age-related health problems have on mental health and quality of life in the years beyond age 65.
2. Be prepared, based on good-quality research, how to prepare for a healthy old age.
3. Become a good judge of the quality of information from newspapers, magazines, television and the internet about aging and health.
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| HDFS 38000 - Disability And The Family Life Cycle |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides students with information related to working with the families of individuals with disabilities. It focuses on the bidirectional impact of individuals with disabilities and their families throughout the life cycle. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Provide students with a broad overview of topics related to disabilities in the family.
2. Explore disabilities from a variety of perspectives and learn about its multifaceted implications on the family system.
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| HDFS 38200 - Disability And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to introduce students to disability from progressive and contemporary diversity perspectives. Students are introduced to an overview of disability history, theory, and current thinking in the field of disability studies. Students in this course will examine and analyze the service, support, and community contexts in which people with disabilities live, work, and participate. Students will also be exposed to experiential learning activities that focus on understanding the challenges faced by individuals with disability related to inclusion across an array of educational, social, political, and health related systems. Students will gain knowledge related to the range of disability policy and how it relates to professional issues for those working with individuals with disability. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Analyzes the phenomenon of disability from a sociological frame of reference.
2. Focuses on the role of language and social roles, the effect of public policy upon individuals with disability, the portrayal of disability in popular culture, the role of technology on the lives of individuals with disability and the challenges confronting our society and its treatment of disability.
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| HDFS 39000 - Special Topics In HDFS |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Supervised readings, discussion, lectures and/or research on special topics in family and individual development. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Research
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
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| HDFS 39700 - Directed Honors Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Directed independent honors research for HHS Honors Program students. Students must select a faculty advisor for the course. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
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| HDFS 39800 - International Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Course taken during an international experience that is recognized by the University. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HDFS 40500 - Language, Literacy, And Social Studies In Preschool And Primary Grades |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course focuses on teaching language, literacy and social studies in preschool and primary grade classrooms. It covers the developmental foundations and curriculum applications of language, literacy and social studies teaching in pre-kindergarten and of social studies in primary grades and includes ways to plan, implement and evaluate developmentally appropriate instruction for children with and without disabilities and children who are learning English. A field experience in preschool or primary grade classrooms is included. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the purposes and importance of reading and writing in early childhood classrooms and homes, including the importance of supporting children’s vocabulary, language comprehension, alphabet knowledge, phonemic awareness, and concept and functional use of print.
2. Understand the purposes and importance of social studies in early childhood, including supporting children’s understanding of themselves and their communities, history, economics, and civics and government.
3. Understand strategies for facilitating children’s development of language, literacy, and social studies skills.
4. Assess individual children's needs and progress in language, literacy, and social studies.
5. Plan, implement, and evaluate developmentally appropriate instruction in language, literacy, and social studies, including responding to the needs of diverse learners.
6. Demonstrate an understanding of Indiana State Standards for literacy and social studies for children from birth-3rd grade (www.doe.in.gov/primetime/foundations and http://dc.doe.in.gov/Standards/AcademicStandards/index.shtml).
7. Demonstrate the dispositions and skills of a developing early childhood teachers, as described in this syllabus and in the practicum evaluation.
Note: A 3 hour/week field experiences provides students the opportunity to apply knowledge to practice as reflected objectives 3-6 above.
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| HDFS 40600 - Mathematics In Preschool And Primary Grades |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course focuses on teaching mathematics in preschool and primary grade classrooms. It covers the developmental foundations and curriculum applications of mathematics teaching and includes ways to plan, implement and evaluate developmentally appropriate mathematics instructions for children with and without disabilities and children who are learning English. Field-based experiences in preschool or primary grade classrooms are included. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Travel Time
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe principles of developmentally appropriate early childhood education and intervention as they relate to teaching mathematics.
2. Demonstrate an understanding of how children think about mathematical concepts.
3. Identify key mathematics knowledge that children need to learn during the early childhood and primary years. This includes knowledge of a) number and operations, b) algebra, c) geometry, d)measurement, e) data analysis and probability, f) problem solving, g) communication, h) integration/connections, and i) representation.
4. Plan, implement, and evaluate developmentally appropriate instruction in mathematics, including responding to the needs of diverse learners.
5. Demonstrate an understanding of Indiana State Standards for Mathematics for children from birth-3rd grade (www.in.doe.gov/primetime/foundations.html and http://dc.doe.in.gov/Standards/AcademicStandards/index.shtml).
6. Demonstrate the dispositions and skills of a developing early childhood teacher, as described in this syllabus and in the practicum evaluation.
7. Assess individual children's mathematical knowledge, skills, and dispositions and use assessment data to plan and evaluate educational activities.
8. Describe the appropriate use of standardized and non-standardized approaches to assessment with young children.
9. Be able to explain and utilize Response to Intervention with mathematics.
10.Write a parent friendly explanation of assessment results and recommendations for enhancing the home mathematics environment.
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| HDFS 40800 - Curriculum Applications Of Atypical Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to early childhood special education and early intervention including its rationale, service delivery options and program models. Student will learn specialized teaching strategies including the use of structured prompting (e.g., mand-model), functional behavior assessment and positive behavior support. Development of Individualized Education Programs and Individualized Family Service Plans will be addressed. Strategies for and practice in meeting children's needs in inclusive and natural settings are addressed. For Early Childhood Education and Exceptional Needs majors only, Gate B retained. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe various models of early childhood programs for children with special needs (including the concept of inclusion) and the laws governing their operation.
2. Explain the Individualized Family Service Plan and Individualized Education Plan and their relationship to planning activities and instruction for young children with special needs.
3. Implement multiple strategies of assessing children's learning needs and intervening to promote learning and development.
4. Collaborate with families and other professionals in assessing your children's and family's needs and working to support progress toward IEP or IFSP objectives.
5. Apply the Building Blocks model to intervention with infants, toddlers, or young children with disabilities or who are at-risk for disability.
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| HDFS 40900 - Science In Preschool And Primary Grades |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on teaching science in preschool and primary grade classrooms. It covers the developmental foundations and curriculum applications of science teaching and includes ways to plan, implement and evaluate developmentally appropriate science instruction for children with and without disabilities and children who are learning English. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe principles of developmentally appropriate early childhood education and intervention as they relate to teaching science.
2. Demonstrate an understanding of how children think about science concepts at developmental levels between birth and 8 years and an understanding of critical approaches to scientific thinking.
3. Understand key science knowledge and skills that children need to learn during the early childhood and primary years, identified by the National Science Education Standards, including knowledge of a) science as inquiry, b) physical science, c) life science, d) earth and space science, e) science and technology, f) science in personal and social perspectives, and g) the history and nature of science.
4. Assess individual children's science knowledge, skills, and dispositions and use the assessment data to plan science educational activities.
5. Plan, implement, and evaluate developmentally appropriate instruction in science, including responding to the needs of diverse learners.
6. Demonstrate an understanding of Indiana State Standards for Science for children from birth – 3rd grade (www.doe.in.gov/primetime/foundations and http://dc.doe.in.gov/Standards/AcademicStandards/index.shtml).
7. Demonstrate positive dispositions and skills of a developing early childhood teacher, as described in this syllabus and in the practicum evaluation.
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| HDFS 41200 - Music And Movement In Preschool And Primary Grades |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on art, music and movement in preschool and primary grade classrooms. It covers the developmental foundation and curriculum applications of art, music and movement activities and includes ways to plan, implement and evaluate developmentally appropriate art, music, and movement instruction for children with and without disabilities and children who are learning English. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe principles of developmentally appropriate early childhood education and intervention as they relate to music and movement in early childhood and primary grades.
2. Demonstrate an understanding of children’s development of creative expression through music and movement.
3. Plan, implement, and evaluate developmentally appropriate visual music and movement instruction, including responding to the needs of diverse learners.
4. Demonstrate an understanding of Indiana State Standards for Physical Education and Health and Music for children from birth-3rd grade.
(www.doe.in.gov/primetime/foundations.html and http://dc.doe.in.gov/Standards/AcademicStandards/index.shtml)
5. Demonstrate the dispositions and skills of a developing early childhood teacher, as described in this syllabus and in the practicum evaluation.
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| HDFS 41500 - Approaches To Early Childhood Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The historical and theoretical basis for early childhood education and early intervention is emphasized. Relations between theory and practice are examined and illustrated with model early childhood education and early childhood special education/early intervention programs. Addresses cultural/developmental diversity and issues in early childhood education and intervention. Gate B retained. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 42000 - Developmental Foundations Of Infant And Toddler Curriculum |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of typical and atypical development in infants and toddlers as well as the implications of development for practice. Focuses on designing and implementing learning activities in all developmental areas and enhancing parent/professional relationships in programs for infants and toddlers. Includes a practicum experience with infants and toddlers. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Knowledge of the needs, normal development patterns, and important variations in development (including disabilities) of children from prenatal/birth to 3 years.
2. Skills in designing, maintaining, and evaluating safe, supportive, stimulating environments for infants and toddlers.
3. Developmentally-appropriate and culturally-appropriate assessment and programming for infants and toddlers.
4. Skills in providing basic care, education and guidance that may be applied in child care, family homes, or health care settings.
5. Evidence of skills in developing supportive caregiving relationships with infants and toddlers.
6. Evidence of skills in collaborating with key adults in infants' and toddlers' lives, including parents, other family members, and allied professionals.
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| HDFS 42100 - Children's Social Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced theoretical course focused on issues related to children's social development. The topics of attachment, autonomy, inititive, play, and developmentally appropriate child guidance will be explored within the context of social development. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. To explore Play, Attachment, Social/Moral Development and Behavior Guidance as modes of Social Development in young children.
2. To articulate relationships between and among the course topics.
3. To begin to establish relationships between theory and children's actual experience in school and home situations.
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| HDFS 42400 - Children And Stress |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines a variety of stressors that children may experience. Factors that influence children's coping with stress are emphasized. Focus is placed on techniques used in working with children who have encountered stressful experience (e.g., play). Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 43101 - Techniques Of Human Assessment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced study of the young child in the classroom. Course will include an in-depth case study of an individual child with a focus on observing and documenting children's work. Developmental assessment instruments and basic measurement theory will be discussed as it relates to teachers' observational information. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. To understand the value of observational assessment to supporting children's development.
2. To develop observation and documentation skills with appropriate techniques and tools.
3. To develop an extensive child case study that reports and analyzes children's progress effectively, efficiently and appreciatively.
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| HDFS 43600 - Administration Of Programs For Young Children |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Administration of inclusive programs for young children, including federal and state requirements and accreditation guidelines. Focuses on working with interdisciplinary staff, children, and parents; budgeting, planning for space and equipment needs; staff development; and program evaluation. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HDFS 44200 - Family Life Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed especially for students preparing to be youth and family specialists and family life educators. Discussion of courtship, marriage, and family relationships. Special attention to methods and materials used in family education programs in classrooms and agencies. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HDFS 44400 - Working With Families In Early Childhood Programs |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course focuses on relationships between teachers and families in early childhood settings. Included in this course are issues related to cultural, linguistic, economic, and developmental differences that may affect relations between families and teachers, and practices aimed at strengthening the role of parents and families in relations with early childhood programs. Students have the opportunity to design practices aimed at developing and maintaining effective partnerships with families. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HDFS 44500 - Strategies For Individual And Group Interventions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course has been developed especially for students interested in designing prevention and intervention strategies for children, adults, and/or families. It focuses on understanding how to plan developmentally appropriate activities for individuals, families, and small groups. Emphases include the leader's role in facilitating healthy development through the design, coordination, and implementation of activities; and understanding and application of principles of group dynamics and processes. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 45000 - Supervised Teaching In Inclusive Programs For Young Children |
|
Credit Hours: 16.00. Observation of and teaching in inclusive programs for young children, under the supervision of the Department of Child Development and Family Studies faculty, the classroom teacher, and the special education teacher. Monthly seminars focus on issues pertinent to professional development. Sixteen weeks of full time teaching or the equivalent are required for 16 credits. Admittance to Gate C at least two semesters prior to enrollment. Admittance to Gate D. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 16.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 45400 - Career Assessment And Professional Development |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Emphasis on professional development, self-evaluation, exploration of field experience and/or career opportunities, career search skills, and an overview of the human service profession. Students willl complete arrangements for their field placement. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Write a professional cover letter and resume in order to facilitate the internship placement process as well as job networking tools for graduating students.
2. Construct and complete the student profile (registration) for the Purdue University Center for Career Opportunities Employment Database.
3. Write a one to two page paper after viewing the interviewing video from CCO Express to identify the information presented and how it can be utilized in your job/internship search.
4. Complete “The Perfect Interview” from the Center for Career Opportunities website (CCO Express) and type out the answers.
5. Identify three human services organizations that are professionally interesting to you.
6. Conduct an interview with a management level employee at each of the three organizations.
7. Write a professional thank you letter to each interviewer.
8. Write a one to two page report on each of the three organizations.
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| HDFS 45500 - Field Experience In Human Development And Family Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Supervised full-time or .50 time internship in the Youth, Adult and Family Services option is provided so individual students can have active participation in a field placement in the chosen emphasis areas. Field placement sites include: government or community agencies serving children, youth, and/or families; hospitals; and recreational settings. Permission of department required. Must be a student in good academic standing during the internship semester. Typically offered Fall Spring.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will acquire knowledge about individual development, family processes, and the broader social context.
2. Students will become skilled in supporting children, adults and/or families in creating the striving for goals that are pertinent to their desires and needs, as well as consistent with the internship site’s program goals.
3. Students will exhibit professional work attitudes and behavior.
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| HDFS 45501 - Practicum In Early Childhood II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Open only to Early Childhood Development majors. Course will include all aspects of classroom planning, work with larger groups, documentation and observational assessment, and portfolio development. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. To work directly with children in a child setting, completing a total of 150 clock hours.
2. To carry out activity and circle time plans for small/large groups of children.
3. To consider and demonstrate ability to lead and maintain overall functioning and climate of a classroom.
4. To complete a demonstration portfolio documenting lead teacher days.
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| HDFS 45600 - Child Health Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 12.00. A supervised internship during which the student works full time for one semester in the child life department of a hospital. Includes exposure to methods of administering child life programs. Must be completed away from the Lafayette area. Application acceptance for Child Health field placements. Typically offered Fall Spring.
6.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 45601 - Practicum With Infants And Toddlers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Open only to Early Childhood Development majors. Directed in service teaching for infant and toddler settings. Course will focus on all aspects of planning and guidance for infants and toddlers, addressing overall curriculum development and observational assessment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain hands on knowledge in working with infants and toddlers.
2. Studetns will gain experience writing and implementing developmentally appropriate lesson plans for infants/toddlers while reflecting on their teaching.
3. Students will increase observational skills.
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| HDFS 46000 - Practicum In Kindergarten Education |
|
Credit Hours: 10.00. Observation of, and teaching in, the kindergarten under the supervision of the Department of Human Development and Family Studies faculty and the classroom teacher. Admission to teacher education two semesters prior to taking this course. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 10.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 46001 - Guided Self Study For Experienced Early Childhood Development Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Status as the responsible teacher in an early childhood setting for at least 5 years, with recommendation from supervisory staff. This course will be an alternative to BHS 35500, Practicum II. It is designed for students who already have substantial experience leading early childhood classrooms. Students will consider issues that arise in their own classroom practice. They will propose and implement changes and reflect on the results. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. To articulate the current state of student's own classroom.
2. To identify one particular area for exploration or development.
3. To document and reflect on the process of curricular change over the course of the semester.
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| HDFS 47000 - Supervised Experience In Early Childhood Programs |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Opportunity for students who already have bachelor degrees to consolidate foundational knowledge of early childhood development, and to obtain a guided practical experience. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. To document current classroom practices with assistance of instructor, identifying areas of strength and challenge.
2. To develop a plan for addressing difficulties.
3. To record and document the plan inplementaion.
4. To describe changes in approach and effect.
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| HDFS 48400 - Genetic And Physiological Factors Underlying Developmental Disabilities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will explore the genetic and physiological factors that contribute to the expression of some common developmental disabilities. The course will begin with a 2-week unit that explores the process by which genes influence human development, including health and behavior. A second 2-week unit will cover pre-natal development, including: sensitive periods of development, teratogenic effects, genetic counseling, prenatal diagnostic tests, difficult births and the pre-term and small-for-date baby. The third unit (2-3 weeks) will focus on the physiology of the developing human nervous system during the prenatal period, infancy and early childhood. Development of the sensory systems will be given special attention. Approximately 9-10 weeks will be devoted to discussing the etiology, diagnosis (including differential diagnoses), treatment and prognosis of some of the major developmental disabilities. Discussion will include, but not be limited to: autism spectrum disorders, attention deficit disorders, delayed development, cerebral palsy, hearing loss, impaired vision, common Mendelian genetic disorders, neuromuscular disorders and various types of mental retardation. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Exploration of the process by which genes influence human development and behavior.
2. Discussion of genetic counseling and prenatal counseling.
3. Focus on the physiology of the developing human brain and nervous system during the prenatal period, infancy and early childhood.
4. Discussion of the development of the sensory systems will be given special attention.
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| HDFS 49000 - Independent Study |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Independent study. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Research
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 12 credits
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| HDFS 49100 - Mentored Research In Human Development And Family Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Independent study in which student engages in research under the supervision of a faculty member. Involves developing a research project plan, relating objectives of the project to the research literature, executing the project plan, and communicating the results of the project clearly. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Research
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Synthesize knowledge and skills gained as a DVFS major, using them in a research project of the student's interest.
2. Explore an interest in the HDFS field in depth.
3. Observe and participate in the research process.
4. Work collaboratively with a research mentor and/or research team.
5. Make decisions using the logic of the scientific method.
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| HDFS 49700 - Honors Research Project |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. The completion of the independent honors research project for HHS Honors Program students. Must have an approved Honors Project Proposal. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 59000 - Special Problems |
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Credit Hours: 0.00 to 5.00. Special subjects for investigation and experiment according to the individual student's interest and need. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HDFS 59500 - Professional Seminar In Family Therapy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An examination of ethical, legal, and professional issues in marriage and family therapy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HDFS 60000 - Family Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study of selected aspects of family and interpersonal dynamics associated with intimate relationships. Theory and research representative of the study of intimate relationships are reviewed and critically analyzed. Special emphasis is given to intergenerational as well as intragenerational relationship dynamics in the context of family life. Prerequisite: HDFS 60200. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 60100 - Advanced Child Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an overview of foundational and current developmental research on changes that occur within the individual throughout infancy, childhood, and early adolescence. Emphasis is given to processes and mechanisms that have been proposed to explain developmental changes. This course includes attention to social and cultural contexts within which individuals develop. Prerequisite: Graduate level course work in Child Development or Psychology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 60200 - Advanced Family Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Integrative and comprehensive assessment of both classic and recent contributions in the field of family studies. Other topics include major theory and research, historical, current, and future critical issues in family studies. Prerequisite: 12 hours of social sciences including six hours of advanced undergraduate courses preparing student for the study of the family. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 60300 - Theories Of Family Therapy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the history of family therapy, major family therapy theorists, and therapy treatment modalities. Prerequisite: Graduate level course work in Child Development. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 60500 - Seminar In Family And The Life Course |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive critical analysis of research and theory regarding family development and life course analysis. Prerequisite: HDFS 60200. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HDFS 61200 - Families In Social Context |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study of the reciprocal effects of families and their social environments. Theory and research are reviewed and critically analyzed. Readings consider the mutual effects of families and their diverse contexts. Links between families and other social institutions are explored. Particular attention is given on how social contexts shape micro-level family interaction and organization. Prerequisite: HDFS 60200. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 61300 - Statistical Approaches For Developmental And Family Researchers |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course provides a basic understanding of foundational concepts and tools used in statistical analysis in the behavioral sciences, with a focus on analysis of experimental data. Emphasis is placed on the conceptual and interpretive understanding of statistical methods, including the General Linear Model (GLM) approach to ANOVA and ANCOVA. Prerequisite: Undergraduate coursework in Statistics. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop a basic understanding of probability, sampling, and inferential theory underlying statistical methods.
2. Formulate testable hypotheses.
3. Apply proper statistical tests to evaluate hypotheses.
4. Properly interpret the statistical estimates and tests that we cover in the course.
5. Run data analysis using SPSS and SAS statistical software.
6. Improve analytic and critical thinking skills.
7. Improve written and verbal communication of analytic results.
8. Understand ANOVA modeling methods.
9. Understand ANOVA and simple regression in the context of the GLM.
10. Use statistical methods to test research questions using real data and statistical software.
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| HDFS 61500 - Research Methods In Child And Family Study |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Basic research methods employed in the study of children and families are examined, including quantitative and qualitative designs, data collection, analysis, and interpretation. In the laboratory component, students are afforded supervised practice in the application of various methods using selected statistical analysis programs. Prerequisite: Graduate course in Statistics. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 61600 - Theory In Child And Family Study |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of theoretical approaches to the study of children and families. An examination of the relationship of theory to research and practice and an introduction to theory construction. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 61700 - Advanced Research Methods In Child And Family Study |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Focuses on measurement issues relevant to research with children and families. Perspectives on quantitative and qualitative research are provided through relations among theory, research design, and data analysis. The laboratory component provides practice in quantitative and qualitative data analysis with an emphasis on interpreting and reporting results of analyses. Prerequisites: STAT 50100 and STAT 50200 or HDFS 61300 and PSY 63100. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Select the appropriate methods of data analysis, given multivariate data and study objectives.
2. Employ statistical software to carry out statistical analyses.
3. Interpret and explain the results of statistical analyses.
4. Write concise and effective summaries of results using APA style.
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| HDFS 61900 - Adolescent Development In Context |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a graduate level seminar of major issues concerning adolescents, with attention to a developmental perspective. The social ecology of adolescent development and an understanding of adolescents in their social contexts is emphasized. Prerequisite: Human Development & Family Studies majors only. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain broad and accurate knowledge of the basic features of physical, cognitive, social, and psychological development during the middle and high school years.
2. Students will gain an understanding of how personal characteristics such as gender, socioeconomic status, and racial or ethnic background, as well as social contexts such as the family, peer group, school, and neighborhood, interact to affect adolescent development.
3. Students will develop the capacity to critically evaluate research or writings on adolescent development and behavior, based on social scientific theory and research on adolescence.
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| HDFS 62000 - Current Issues In Early Childhood Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis on current issues in early childhood education as they are affected by contemporary social change with observation and analysis of a variety of programs for young children. Prerequisite: HDFS 60100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 62100 - Children's Development In Child Care And School Settings |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis on children's emerging cognitive and social competence as related to their experiences in child care or school settings through middle childhood. Attention is given to diverse program settings, practices, and populations. Examines relations between theory, research, and practice. Prerequisite: HDFS 60100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 62200 - Children's Development In The Context Of Family Relationships |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study of child development in the context of family relationships. Included are a discussion of theoretical approaches to family influences on individual development and a review of research concerning sources of variation in children's relationships and interactions with parents, siblings, and other family members. Family influences on children's functioning in other contexts also are examined. Prerequisite: HDFS 60100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 62300 - The Infant In The Family |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of developing infant within context of the family. Focus on effects of family interaction on the infant and effect of infants on adult behavior and parent and marital roles. Prerequisite: HDFS 52000 and HDFS 60100 and PSY 65100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 62400 - Children's Social Relationships |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A critical examination of research and theoretical knowledge in the domain of social relationships from childhood through adolescence. Specific attention is devoted to developmental transitions in the characteristics and functions of children's relations with peers and adults, and to implications of these relationships for understanding children's psychosocial adjustment in family and educational settings. Prerequisite: HDFS 60100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 62500 - Child And Family Social Policy |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of selected issues related to child and family policy relevant to scholars of CDFS. These issues include: (1) influences of research on children and families on the policy process; (2) the role of child and family specialists as advocates and analysts; (3) policy formulation, enactment, and evaluation; and (4) child and family policy in cross-national perspective. Prerequisite: HDFS 60100 and HDFS 60200. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 62600 - Research On Parenting Interventions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Critical examination of research on interventions aimed at improving child outcomes by promoting parenting competence. Emphasis on experimental research designs for assessing outcomes of diverse types of programs targeted to families with young children. Attention to uses of empirical data to inform decisions about the design and implementation of interventions. Prerequisite: HDFS 60100 and HDFS 61300
. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe empirical and theoretical foundations of parenting interventions, including theories of change and features of intervention design.
2. Describe research designs for examining the effectiveness of parenting interventions, particularly randomized controlled trials.
3. Describe and evaluate approaches to assessing intervention fidelity and implementation.
4. Describe ethical and practical issues in uses of research to inform intervention policies and content, particularly interventions targeted to vulnerable populations.
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| HDFS 62700 - Multilevel Modeling In Developmental And Family Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course gives students a basic grounding in the class of statistical techniques known as multilevel modeling (MLM), also known as hierarchical linear modeling (HLM), mixed models, or random coefficient models. Primary discussions will be on applications of these models to the study of marriages, relationships, families, aging, and child and adult development, but also will touch on biomedical, educational, and economic examples. The focus is on three types of multilevel models: growth-curve models, organizational models, and daily experience models. Students will also learn how to use SAS Proc Mixed for conducting MLM analyses. Students are assumed to have taken at least two graduate statistics courses and have a solid understanding of regression analysis. Prerequisites: STAT 50100 and STAT 50200 or HDFS 61300 and PSY 63100. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Acquire a basic-to-intermediate understanding of the logic of multi-level modeling, grasp the underpinning statistics of MLM, and develop a sense as to when (and when not) to use the model.
2. Apply MLM to relevant questions in their area of research interest.
3. Critically read and evaluate empirical journal articles that use MLM.
4. Acquire basic programming skills for conducting MLM.
5. Select the appropriate methods of data analysis, given multivariate data and study objectives.
6. Employ statistical software to carry out statistical analyses,
7. Interpret and explain the results of statistical analyses, and
8. Write concise and effective summaries of results using APA style.
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| HDFS 62800 - Structural Equation Modeling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to classic structural equation models with latent variables (SEM). The primary steps of implementing SEMs will be covered to include: model specification, model identification, parameter estimation, and model evaluation (model fit). Background training in statistical regression is required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop a basic understanding of structural equation models including proper application, interpretation, and evaluation of the models.
2. Develop an understanding of the underlying statistics including parameter identification and estimation as well as model fit measures.
3. Learn the benefits of SEMs including when it is advantageous to use this modeling approach.
4. Learn the limitations of the model and the most common mistakes in using SEMs.
5. Be able to apply the method to a topic relevant to your own research.
6. Be able to analyze SEM models using a SEM software package.
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| HDFS 62900 - Family And Couple Interventions In Health Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will concentrate on family and contextual interventions in the management of chronic illness across the lifespan. Prerequisite: HDFS 68500. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to read and critique the literature on family and health theories and interventions.
2. Students will be able to identify and critique measures to assess health and healthcare outcomes.
3. Students will be able to read and critique Wagner et al.’s Chronic Care Model, models of patient-centered care, models of adherence.
4. Students will be able to read, critique, and apply randomized clinical trial methodology.
5. Students will acquire skills to obtain external funding by practicing grant writing.
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| HDFS 63000 - Intervention Research In Early Childhood Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A critical examination of the design, implementation, and effects of interventions to promote young children's developmental competence, with a particular focus on children at risk due to poverty, disability, and language. There is attention to theoretical and empirical bases for intervention, to intervention type and context (home, center), and to evaluation of intervention effectiveness. Prerequisite: HDFS 60100 and HDFS 61300. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Evaluate empirical and theoretical foundations of interventions, including hypothesized mechanisms of change.
2. Describe critical issues in the design, implementation and evaluation of interventions.
3. Acquire research skills focused on critical evaluations of intervention research design and outcomes.
4. Describe appropriate conduct of developmental intervention research, particularly research with vulnerable populations.
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| HDFS 63300 - Adult Development And Relationships |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of reciprocal influences between adults' relationships and individual development. Consideration of how relationships with friends, families, and the broader social network contribute to the course of development across adulthood. Critical review of research that focuses on how close and distal social partners affect physical, cognitive, and emotional well being throughout adulthood. The effects of changes in social relationships on well being also will be discussed. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 64200 - Family Enrichment Programs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The various means society uses to improve marriage, parenthood, and family life will be examined with special emphasis on educational, therapeutic, governmental, and legislative programs. Prerequisite: 12 credit hours in Child Development. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 64400 - Biosocial Processes In Developmental And Family Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this course we discuss theoretical models and empirical research regarding the interplay between biology and context in development, focusing on the unique interactions that occur within families. Prerequisite: HDFS 60100 and HDFS 60200. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify basic genetic, neuroanatomical, and neuroendocrine processes involved in major aspects of physiological regulation (e.g. the stress response).
2. Describe the dynamic interaction between physiology and the environment.
3. Explain implications of normative and non-normative experiences for physiological regulation.
4. Critically evaluate biosocial research.
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| HDFS 64900 - Multidisciplinary Gerontology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A multidisciplinary overview of aging that provides a background for graduate studies on aging. An examination of sociological, psychological, and biological theory and research in the field of aging. The aging process from cells to social security will be covered. Guest lectures introduce students to experts in gerontology on Purdue's campus. Projects will assist students in developing appropriate professional skills in their field of study. Students are expected to have basic research and writing skills in their field of study. The course serves as a graduate-level introduction to the field of gerontology. There are several options for course projects. Prerequisite: HDFS 60100 and STAT 50100. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 65000 - Seminar In Family Gerontology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of recent research, theoretical developments and social issues relevant to aging and the family. Readings and discussions direct attention to major issues and topics in the field; opportunities are provided to specialize in a particular area of family gerontology. Prerequisite: PSY 53700 orHDFS 51500 and HDFS 60200. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 65800 - Attachment Relationships |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This graduate course studies child-parent relationships theory and research from the respective of Attachment Theory. Prerequisite: HDFS 60300 or CDFS 60300. Permission of instructor required. Prerequisite: HDFS 60100 and a basic graduate level statistic course. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify the history and the historic context in which attachment theory was proposed.
2. Identify and analyze the central characteristics and constructs of attachment theory, and the model of development (4 phases) that Bowlby proposed.
3. Describe and analyze the empirical evidence provided by Ainsworth in support of attachment theory.
4. Analyze and critique the literature on the context sensitivity of attachment relationships (e.g., influence of quality of care, infant/child temperament, family characteristics, socio-economic conditions, and culture).
5. Identify and critique the relations between infant security and later socialization outcomes.
6. Survey and analyze the research literature on child-parent attachment relationships during early and middle childhood, adolescence, and adulthood.
7. Critique the hypothesis concerning the intergenerational transmission of attachment patterns from parents to offspring.
8. Identify, analyze, and critique age appropriate methodologies in the study of offspring-parent attachment relationships.
9. Develop and present (orally and in writing) a 10-page research proposal on attachment relationships.
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| HDFS 65900 - Family Therapy Of Addictions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Presents family therapy approaches to the treatment of alcohol and drug abuse and addiction. Emphasis on exploring a systemic biopsychosocial view of addictions and on the techniques that family therapists employ to disrupt patterns within abusing and addictive family systems. Prerequisite: HDFS 60300. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HDFS 66100 - Contemporary Clinical Issues In Family Therapy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of clinical issues of key importance to family therapists. Possible issues include eating disorders, family violence, AIDS and the family, family systems medicine, and working with children. Prerequisite: HDFS 60300. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HDFS 66200 - Foundations Of Marriage And Family Therapy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the seminal documents upon which family systems theory is built. Areas to be covered include cybernetics, ecology, epistemology, communications theory, general systems theory, and the writing of Gregory Bateson. Prerequisite: 12 credit hours in Child Development, Psychology or Sociology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HDFS 66500 - Transgenerational And Specialized Family Therapies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigation of theory, research, and practice of transgenerational and specialized family therapies. Readings will include a wide range of original works of the major theorists. Prerequisite: HDFS 60300. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HDFS 66600 - Supervision Of Marriage And Family Therapy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An in-depth examination of supervision of marriage and family therapy. Appropriate literature will be reviewed, and students will observe and practice the skills of marriage and family therapy supervision. Prerequisite: (HDFS 66700) and (HDFS 66900).Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HDFS 66700 - Practicum In Marriage Counseling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Supervised counseling experience in working with premarital and marital problems. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HDFS 66900 - Practicum In Family Therapy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Supervised counseling experience in family therapy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HDFS 67000 - Human Sexuality |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the broad scope of human sexual development and expression. Particular attention devoted to literature on sexual behavior over the life cycle, alternate forms of sexual expression, law, ethics, and cross-cultural perspectives. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HDFS 67100 - Sex Therapy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of the literature, research, and theories related to therapeutic interventions for sexual concerns in relationships. Particular attention is given to systemic approaches and to the relationship between marital and sex therapy. Prerequisite: HDFS 67000. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HDFS 67200 - Outcome Research In Family Therapy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Critically evaluates the literature on outcome research in family therapy and enrichment programs. Emphasizes methodology and substantive findings. Prerequisite: HDFS 61500. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HDFS 67300 - Theories Of Family Therapy II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exposes students to the current issues in family therapy theory. Recent books and journal articles will be read and critiqued. Prerequisite: HDFS 60300. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HDFS 67400 - Seminar In Divorce Therapy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigates the theoretical and research literature on divorce from the perspective of the family professional interested in divorce therapy. The processes of divorce adjustment and related interventions are considered for adults and children, single parent families, remarriages, and reconstituted families. Prerequisite: HDFS 56000. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HDFS 67500 - Gender And Multicultural Perspectives In Marriage And Family Therapy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Increases students' sensitivity and understanding of how the social construction of gender and culture impact their professional development and the process of family therapy. Scholarly investigation and self-exploration will be integrated by studying the current literature and by analyzing videotapes of movie clips, television shows, and therapy sessions. Prerequisite: HDFS 60300. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HDFS 67600 - Professional Writing For Child And Family Specialists |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to demystify grant writing and writing for publication. Emphasis on skill development activities, such as writing various sections of a grant or publishable paper, and giving and receiving feedback on works in progress. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HDFS 67700 - Assessment In Marriage And Family Therapy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Trains students to administer marriage and family therapy assessment instruments. Also intended to familiarize marriage and family therapists with assessment instruments and clinical assessment procedures typically used in mental health settings. Prerequisite: HDFS 60300. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HDFS 67800 - Externship In Marriage And Family Therapy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00 (West Lafayette) 3.00 to 9.00 (Calumet) Supervised clinical experience in marriage and family therapy at an approved externship site. Depending on the number of credit hours for which one is registered, will require 8-24 clinic hours and 3-9 experiential hours per week. Prerequisite: (HDFS 66700 or CDFS 66900) and (HDFS 66900 or CDFS 66900). Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Experiential
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HDFS 67900 - Qualitative Research On Families |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides an introduction to qualitative research theory and methods and prepares graduate students to conduct and evaluate qualitative family research. Students conduct observations, interviews, and basic data analysis. Prerequisite: a course in research methods. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HDFS 68000 - Professional Issues For Child And Family Specialists |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Professional issues involved in working with children and families. Questions of ethics, legal relationships, and value problems may be pursued, as may such pragmatic inquiries as the role of professional organizations and labor unions in these fields. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HDFS 68500 - Current Research Topics In Child Development And Family Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Consideration of current subjects in child development and family studies research. Particular emphasis will be placed on one topic each semester according to the research interests of the instructor. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HDFS 68501 - Developmental Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Consideration of current subjects in child development and family studies research. Particular emphasis will be placed on one topic each semester according to the research interests of the instructor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HDFS 68800 - Internship For Marriage & Family Therapy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A nine-twelve month, full time clinical placement at an approved internship site. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HDFS 69000 - Directed Research In HDFS |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 6.00. Directed research and supervised research on a topic in student's area of specialization. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 27 credits
|
| HDFS 69700 - Colloquium |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Research presentations by faculty members and graduate students and invited speakers. Includes attention to Responsible Conduct of Research. Requires concurrent enrollment in graduate program in behavioral sciences. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 13 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe topics currently under investigation both at Purdue and beyond in the fields of developmental studies and family studies.
2. Further develop research skills related to the research process and ethical conduct of research.
|
| HDFS 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HDFS 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Human Dev and Family Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HEBR 10100 - Modern Hebrew Level I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to Modern Hebrew: the writing and sound systems, and systematic presentation of basic structures. All language skills - reading, writing, speaking, and comprehension - are emphasized. No previous knowledge of Hebrew required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HEBR 10200 - Modern Hebrew II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation and extension of the first semester. The course aims to develop fluency in reading, comprehension, and spoken language. Knowledge of grammar and vocabulary is expanded. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HEBR 12100 - Biblical Hebrew Level I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The first semester of biblical Hebrew will present the basic elements of the language, including alphabet, vocabulary, and grammar. No previous knowledge of Hebrew required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HEBR 12200 - Biblical Hebrew Level II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The second semester of biblical Hebrew will continue the study of reading, vocabulary and grammar, based on selections form the Hebrew Bible. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HEBR 20100 - Modern Hebrew Level III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Extensive practice in reading, speaking, and writing Hebrew, based on a variety of subjects from daily life and literature. Continued study of grammar and reading both in the modern language. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HEBR 20200 - Modern Hebrew Level IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Extensive practice in reading, speaking, and writing Hebrew, based on a variety of subjects from daily life and literature. Continued study of grammar and reading in the modern language. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HEBR 22100 - Biblical Hebrew Level III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The third semester of biblical Hebrew focuses on reading and translation of extended passages form the Pentateuch and the use of textual criticism. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HEBR 22200 - Biblical Hebrew Level IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The fourth semester of biblical Hebrew exposes the student to both narrative and poetic sections of the Bbile. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HEBR 28000 - Modern Israel: Cinema, Literature, Politics And History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Critical survey/exploration of major traits of Israeli culture through a variety of media: literature, film and music, in the larger context of Judaism, Zionism, as well as the creation of a new state and culture. Conducted in English; no knowledge of Hebrew is necessary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the depth of Modern Israel cultural, political and historical complexity.
2. Understand the richness of Israeli culture.
3. Understand Israeli political-social problems and its influence on world affairs.
4. Development of modern Israeli cinema and literature in reference to their historical and political groundings.
5. Mastery of major historical events, major films, major literary figures, and major social/political problems.
|
| HEBR 28400 - Ancient Near Eastern History And Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a survey of the development of the ancient Near East, from its pre-history to Alexander the Great. It emphasizes the evolutions of various Near Eastern cultures in their many manifestations; art, government, agriculture, economics, philosophy, religion, ethics, and science. Taught in English. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the difference between pre-history and history.
2. Understand various ancient and modern ideas of the purpose of writing history.
3. Understand how the invention of writing and the origins of cities were coordinate developments.
4. Understand something of the flow of empires that succeeded each other, eventually displaced by the empire of Alexander the Great, whose conquests shaped the contours of the world much as we know it.
5. Become aware how art reflects the development of thought and idealism; how ideas of human government evolved; how religion, science, agriculture, and much else developed as empires built onto those they displaced.
|
| HEBR 38500 - The Holocaust In Modern Hebrew Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course critically examines the Holocaust and the ways in which it has influenced modern Hebrew literature, the role it plays, and how it is represented in modern Hebrew literature. Conducted in English; no knowledge of Hebrew is necessary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HER A2020 - Visual Communication II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of Visual Communication I with emphasis on multifaceted projects. Projects explore combining type and conceptual image and continues to investigate problem solving processes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER A2040 - The Visual Book |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of the communicative possibilities of the book format through lecture, studio projects, and field trips. Introduction to letterpress, binding, and typographic concerns. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER A2610 - Introduction To Computer Imagery I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course providing hands, on learning experiences in using the Macintosh computer and Adobe Photoshop, a pixel-based paint and image-editing software package, to create, scan, and manipulate images. A studio elective open to all Herron degree-seeking students with little or no computer experience who have completed the foundation year. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER A2620 - Introduction To Computer Imagery II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuing introductory course in using the microcomputer to create and manipulate color images. Exploration of “paint” and image scanning software. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER A2720 - Computers In Visual Communicaiton II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of Computers in Visual Communication I. Students learn more advanced techniques in page layout and image-generation software. Course will introduce students to new media areas in interactive multi-media animation and web design. Required for all visual communication majors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER A2810 - Macintosh Computer Basics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to Macintosh computers. Basics include operation of the computer including save, store, retrieve, and print files; printer options at Herron; introduction to the Internet and e-mail; and introduction to four Macintosh software applications: Suitcase, QuarkXPress, Photoshop, and Illustrator. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER A3110 - Illustration I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students receive a broad exposure to basic techniques of pictorial communication common to all phases of illustration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER C1110 - Three Dimensional Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the three, dimensional creative process through the expressive use and exploration of a wide range of materials and techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER C1210 - Design Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to basic design and color theory through the manipulation of imagery in two, dimensional media. Equal emphasis on thought processes and manual skills. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER C2040 - Beginning Ceramics, Hand Building |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Beginning studio introduction to handbuilding, glazing, and firing of clay as an expressive studio medium applicable to contemporary and sculptural concepts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER C2060 - Beginning Ceramics, Wheel Throwing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focus on wheel throwing as an expressive tool within an overall ceramic experience. Clay vessels will be utilized to develop an understanding of glazing and firing techniques. Traditional forms will be used to expand sensitivity to material, history, and wheel throwing techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER C2080 - Intermediate Wheel Throwing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed for non, art majors who wish to pursue wheel throwing. Emphasis is on developing skill through an exploration of more complex forms and investigative advanced embellishment and firing techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER C3070 - Clay And Glaze Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an investigation into the chemistry that makes up clays and glazes. Students develop an understanding of these materials and their interactions by systematically testing a variety of glazes and clay bodies that are used by contemporary ceramic studio artists. Topics include low and high fire glazes, clay bodies, specialty glazes, and clays. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER C3080 - Wheel Throwing II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will develop well-crafted and personal contemporary vessels based on an investigation of historical design and form. Students will expand skills introduced in C2060 with a heavy emphasis on design and surface treatments. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER C3500 - Ceramic Workshop |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to offer specific focused topics of interest in the ceramic arts. Such topics may include kiln building, slip casting, mold making, making and using decalomania, and raku firing, to name a few. Typyically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER C4010 - Ceramics Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course will allow Ceramics students to develop their conceptual, technical, historical, and critical knowledge on a variety of rotating topics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture, Research, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HER D1010 - Drawing I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course serves as an introduction to the basic skills of drawing and the development of sound observational skills. Working from nature, manufactured objects and the human figure, students develop their draftsmanship with an emphasis on space, proportion and structure. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER D1020 - Drawing II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course serves as a continuation of issues addressed in the Drawing I with a greater emphasis on compositional aspects and spatial configurations. The human figure serves as a major point of investigation with an emphasis placed on anatomical understanding and accurate portrayals of form and proportion. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER D2010 - Drawing III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigation of nature and the human figure through drawing. Emphasis on structure, line, gesture, and movement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER D2020 - Drawing IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Investigation of nature and the human figure through drawing. Emphasis on structure, line, gesture, and movement. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER D2300 - Figure Drawing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students draw in a variety of media directly from the live model. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER D2510 - Anatomy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Anatomy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER D3000 - Drawing Seminar (Rotating Topics) |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course will allow Drawing students to develop their conceptual, technical, historical, and critical knowledge on a variety of rotating topics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Will do research and construct aesthetic problems utilizing creative process strategies and critical thinking to provide multiple solutions to the problems.
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| HER E1010 - Beginning Drawing I |
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Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Introduction to drawing, exploring a wide range of techniques. Study from nature and still, life objects and sketching from the model. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| HER E1020 - Beginning Drawing II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Introduction to drawing, exploring a wide range of techniques. Study from nature and still, life objects and sketching from the model. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| HER E1050 - Beginning Painting I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Introduction to the techniques of painting. Aspects of pictorial composition; wide range of media. Painting from still life and live model. Will not count toward a Herron B.F.A. degree. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
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| HER E1060 - Beginning Painting II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the techniques of painting. Aspects of pictorial composition; wide range of media. Painting from still life and live model. Will not count toward a Herron B.F.A. degree. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| HER E1090 - Color & Interior Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Aimed primarily at the person wishing to use color with an understanding of its effects in daily life. Survey of traditional meanings in various cultures. Concept of color as energy. Group and individual experiments included in an investigation of color, with regard to motivation and physical and emotional response factors.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| HER E1110 - Metalsmithing And Jewelry Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction of metalsmithing techniques used to create fine art jewelry and metal sculpture. Course will cover metalsmithing processes, materials, tools and equipment as well as historic and contemporary jewelry design. Topics include: sawing, cold connecting sheet metal, stone setting, craftsmanship and studio safety. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
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| HER E1130 - Introduction To Sculpture I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides an overview of basic skills to create three dimensional art to explore traditional and contemporary sculpture materials. Emphasis is on both additive and subtractive methods of working. Goals include acquiring technical skills, understanding the physical and expressive possibilities of sculpture and learning safe, appropriate use of tools and materials. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER E2010 - Photography I For Non, Art Majors |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Introduction to the basics of black, and, white fine art photography for non, art majors only. Students provide their own fully manual 35mm camera. Will not count toward a Herron B.F.A. degree. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER E2090 - Drawing For Interior Design |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Introduction of materials, technique, and use of nonstandard painting media and methods. Course will focus on one or more specified materials or approaches. Students will research philosophy and history and explore methods to integrate the process into contemporary practices. Demonstrations, lectures, and critiques support studio assignments and instruction.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER E2140 - Visual Learning |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed for the novice, this class facilitates viewers in interpreting powerful images from our contemporary world, starting with art and moving across popular culture and academic disciplines. Classes involve making and interpreting images. Essential questions help students examine how visual images impact their lives. Convenes at Herron with off-site visits to museums and public spaces.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER E2200 - Exploring Art |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Introduction to materials, techniques, and uses of a specific art media. Course will focus on a material or artistic approach to introduce students to art making. Demonstrations, lectures, and critiques support art assignments. Topics change to coordinate with current faculty expertise and interest in the community. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HER F1000 - Creative Process |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students experience multiple art concepts and processes working with two faculty members in half-semester workshops. The course provides reinforcement of design concepts with a focus on problem solving ideation and the stages of the creative process. Equal emphasis will be given to both two-dimensional and three-dimensional experiences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| HER F1010 - Foundation Studio I |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to art and design, fundamental and orientation session to Herron and the university. Students survey many art concepts and processes by working with two different faculty members over the course of the semester. Students are periodically introduced to Herron and university services such as e, mail, campus libraries, the Herron Gallery, and other opportunities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| HER F1020 - Foundation Studio Ii. |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to art and design, fundamental and orientation session to Herron and the university. Students survey many art concepts and processes by working with two different faculty members over the course of the semester. Students are periodically introduced to Herron and university services such as e, mail, campus libraries, the Herron Gallery, and other opportunities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER F1210 - Two-Dimensional Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Comprehensive study of design elements and principles through the investigation of two-dimensional space. Students explore basic two-dimensional concepts such as figure /ground, grouping principles. Permission required.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER F1220 - Color Concepts |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to basic design and color theory through the manipulation of imagery in two-dimensional and three-dimensional media. Equal emphasis on thought processes and manual skills. Admission to the Herron School of Art and Design. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER F1230 - Three Dimensional Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces basic concepts of three-dimensional art and design through a series of assignments dealing with the organization of space and form using a variety of materials, processes. Admission to the Herron School of Art and Design. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER G2030 - Silkscreen Printing I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design and drawing for silkscreen processes, construction of equipment, and methods of making stencils (including photo stencils). Printing in black and white and in color. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER G2060 - Bookbinding |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A beginning course in bookbinding dealing with traditional bookbinding and box-building techniques. Students are instructed on use of tools and materials. Projects are designed to encourage exploration and experimentation of book structure.
. Typically offered Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER G2080 - Letterpress Typesetting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Letterpress Typsetting. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER G2090 - Papermaking |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to western principles of making paper by hand. Skills in pulp techology, sheet formation, 2D and 3D applications will be developed, such as stenciling, pulp-spraying, casting, and integration into book structures. Goal is to apply skills to expressive, conceptual frameworks with attention to historic and contemporary context of papermaking. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER G2100 - Printmaking Seminar (Rotating Topics) |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course will allow Print students to develop their conceptual, technical, historical, and critical knowledge on a variety of rotating topics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Research and construct aesthetic problems utilizing creative process strategies and critical thinking to provide multiple solutions to the problems.
|
| HER G3000 - Printmaking Seminar (Rotating Topics) |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course will allow Print students to develop their conceptual, technical, historical, and critical knowledge on a variety of rotating topics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Research and construct aesthetic problems utilizing creative process strategies and critical thinking to provide multiple solutions to the problems.
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| HER G3090 - Monotype/Woodcut II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study of monotype techniques, both traditional and nontraditional. Emphasis is placed on students gaining control of monotype process in order to accurately express their artistic vision. Students are encouraged to explore their individual goals and research into the various mediums available.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER H1000 - Art Appreciation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An understanding and appreciation of outstanding works of art through analysis of artistic purposes and techniques, and knowledge of historical style and subject matter. Not counted as credit toward the B.F.A. or B.A.E. degree, nor toward the major or minor requirements in art history. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HER H1010 - History Of Art I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Visual analysis of selected works from the history of Western art. First semester defines historical terms, processes, and principles of architecture, painting, and sculpture, and covers the history of art from Prehistoric through Late Gothic. Second semester examines problems of style and subject matter from Early Renaissance to the twentieth century. Required of all Herron degree students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER H1020 - History Of Art II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Visual analysis of selected works from the history of Western art. First semester defines historical terms, processes, and principles of architecture, painting, and sculpture, and covers the history of art from Prehistoric through Late Gothic. Second semester examines problems of style and subject matter from Early Renaissance to the twentieth century. Required of all Herron degree students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER H1030 - Introduction To Contemporary Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the vocabulary of visual arts in the twentieth century. Major movements are briefly introduced with characteristic works. Painting, sculpture, photography, printmaking, computer graphics, video, and environmental and performance art in the past three decades are emphasized. Required of all Foundation Program students. Not counted toward the major or minor requirements in art history. May be counted under electives. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| HER H2000 - Understanding Contemporary Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to understanding contemporary art and the methods and issues within the discipline of art history. It offers a chronological overview of the history of cotemporary art begining with 1945 to the present. This course will look at artworks, the social contexts in which they are produced and presented, and the diffeent theoretical models through which they have been interpreted. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Recognize and understand the historical and cultural significance and aspects of selected works of art.
2. Learn to look, read and write critically about contemporary art.
3. Participate in class discussions about art's place in society and history, while developing an understanding of contemporary art.
|
| HER H2030 - Topics In Art History |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Design and drawing for silkscreen processes, construction of equipment, and methods of making stencils (including photo stencils). Printing in black and white and in color.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER H2100 - The Art Of Art History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to theories and methods of art history, with emphasis on developing skills of visual analysis, research, oral and written communication. Recommended for art history majors and minors who are preparing to take upper level classes, open to anyone interested in thinking and writing about art. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER H2210 - Art Past And Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the methods and issues within the discipline of Art History. Offers a chronological overview of the history of art. Students will learn to look critically at art, learn about its place in society and history, and develop an understanding of art. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER H3000 - Black Visual Artists |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the artistic traditions of Africans in the New World, from the period of slavery in North and South America through contemporary and expatriate African American artists. Equivalent to Afro, American Studies A352; students may not receive credit for both courses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER H3020 - Beginnings Of Twentieth-Century Art: 1886-1914 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. From the last impressionist group show of 1886 until the end of World War I, the foundation was laid for new visual expressions by both painters and sculptors. Course topics include postimpressionism, symbolism, art nouveau, fauvism, expressionism, orphism, cubism, and futurism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER H3030 - Contemporary African American Art And Artists: 1920, 80 |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This distance education telecourse targets the African American visual artist, but it also includes the political and social non-art-related elements that contributed to the period's activities. The course presents an introduction to, and the foundations of, the African American visual artist. It begins with the pre- and post-Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s and journeys to modern African American art and its relation to post-World War II contemporary European and Euro-American art. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER H3040 - Advanced Topics In Art History |
|
Credit Hour: 1.00-6.00. Advanced Topics In Art History. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HER H3100 - Classical Archaeology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the material remains of the classical lands from prehistoric through Roman times and a variety of approaches by which they are understood. Archaeological theory and methods are illustrated through select sites, monuments, works of art, and other remains of cultural, artistic, and historical significance. (Equivalent to Classical Studies A3010; students may receive credit for only one of these courses.) Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER H3250 - Islamic Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course surveys the art, architecture, and culture of key periods in Islamic history. Students become familiar with styles, contexts, and functions of the arts in the Islamic world. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER H3260 - Romanesque And Gothic Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Romanesque and Gothic art covers the period from about 1000 until 1550, from the artist-craftsman tradition of monasteries and cathedrals to the end of the Age of Faith in Europe. Painting, sculpture, and stained glass will be considered in their social and architectural context. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER H3310 - Italian Renaissance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the painting, architecture, sculpture and
graphic arts of Renaissance Italy with emphasis on the changing role of artists in society, major stylistic movements, the use and reception of art, the work of major artists, and their cultural context. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER H3340 - Baroque Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of the characteristics of Baroque art and its development in the seventeenth century. Special emphasis on selected Baroque artists such as Bernini, Rubens, Rembrandt, Velazquez, and Poussin, and on their personalities, styles, and positions in seventeenth-century society. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER H3400 - Women In Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Women In Art. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER H3410 - Nineteenth-Century Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focus is on the major movements and artists in European painting and sculpture from the French Revolution to post, impressionism. Topics include neoclassicism, romanticism, realism, and impressionism. Artists such as David, Ingres, Goya, Delacroix, Courbet, Manet, Monet, and Degas will be covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER H3420 - From Data To Abstract Expressionism: 1915-1950 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. International movements in painting and sculpture from World War I until the emergence of the New York School after World War II including Dada activities in Europe and New York, the Bauhaus, European surrealism, and American art. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER H3440 - Modern Architecture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis is given to European and American modern architecture since 1892 and to contemporary architecture in Indiana since 1942. Selected modern movements such as art nouveau, Chicago school, prairie, the Bauhaus, international style, and post-modernism will be studied. Special attention is directed to the American architects Henry Hobson Richardson, Louis Henri Sullivan, and Frank Lloyd Wright, and to their contemporaries in Europe: Walter Gropius, Le Corbusier, and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER H3450 - American Art To 1913 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A multicultural and interdisciplinary stylistic approach will be used to study selected examples of American architecture, painting, and sculpture from the seventeenth century to the Armory Show of 1913. Some consideration will be given to Indiana architecture and painting. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER H3480 - History Of Photography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a critical examination and in-depth study of photography from 1839 until the present. The general approach is from an artistic and cultural viewpoint, stressing the development of photography as a medium of personal artistic expression as well as its relationship to broader artistic ideas and sociocultural issues.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER H3510 - African Art I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER H3620 - Asian Art II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Major art forms from the Islamic cultures of western and central Asia, the Hindu cultures of India and southeast Asia, and the Buddhist, Tao, and Shinto cultures of east Asia are discussed.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER H4000 - Topics And Methods In Art History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Critical examination of important topics and methods from the history of art, using the seminar approach. Content may vary according to the specialty of the instructor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| HER H4040 - American Art Of The Past Two Decades |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A seminar focusing on directed research into the art, critical writing, and conceptual attributes of current art. Topics include postmodernism, appropriation, feminism, multiculturalism, deconstruction, and semiotics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER H4130 - Art And Archaeology Of Greece |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Art and archaeology of Greece from about 1000 B.C. through the Hellenistic period. Special attention given to the development of Greek architecture, sculpture, and vase painting. Equivalent to Classical Studies C413; students may receive credit for only one of these courses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER H4140 - Art And Archaeology Of Rome |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of Roman architecture, sculpture, and painting from the beginning through the fourth century A.D. Consideration given to the major archaeological sites. Continuation of H413, but H413 is not a prerequisite. Equivalent to Classical Studies C414; students may receive credit for only one of these courses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER H4180 - Myth And Reality In Greek Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to Greek iconography (the study of images) that explores contemporary approaches to narration and representation. The course examines the illustration of myth, history, and everyday life in relation to ancient society. Equivalent to Classical Studies A418; students may receive credit for only one of these courses.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER H4200 - The Art In The Renaissance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the changing role of artists in Renaissance cities, from anonymous craftsmen in the late Middle Ages to celebrity personalities in the sixteenth century. Workshop structure, relationships with patrons, and competition between artists provide contexts for interpreting Renaissance art and exploring questions central to Renaissance art history. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER H4600 - Visual Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of visual culture investigates how we see and make sense of images, emphasizing vision's social dimensions. Students will use an interdisciplinary lens to look at diverse visual events, such as advertising, architecture, painting, photography, public art, maps, craft objects, exhibitions, and graphics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER H4950 - Problems In Art History |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Directed study in art history for independent research and/or special external programs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 8 times
|
| HER H4970 - Educational Opportunities Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. A variable-credit course designed to allow credit for exceptional opportunities in art history study and travel outside the United States.
Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HER H5600 - Visual Culture: A Visual Studies Approach |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to visual studies, an interdisciplinary approach that emphasizes the social ramifications of visual culture. It is a critical approach that draws on art theory and criticism, gender studies, and other theories to analyze visual production and consumption. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER J4100 - A Critical Approach To Art: Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A capstone seminar-style class in which students define and refine their personal artistic philosophies through analytic comparisons to various historical and contemporary ideas from the realms of philosophy, art history, critical theory, etc. In short weekly papers and open discussions, students address large-scale questions whose answers should help them develop the confidence to chart their conceptual and professional development after graduation.
Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER K2010 - Photography I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Introduction to black-and-white photography with an emphasis on the development of creative, personal, and photographic vision. The student must have a camera (standard 35mm or larger format) with an adjustable shutter and diaphragm. Film, paper, and film developer are supplied by the student. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER K2120 - Topics In Photography |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER K3000 - Advanced Digital Imaging |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course will cover time-based digital media techniques as well as discussions about video artists and digital artists, critical thinking, language and aesthetics in relation to, and impact on personal creativity and expression. This investigation will be accomplished through a combination of producing work; using Adobe Photoshop, Illustrator, After Effects, Premiere, and Macromedia Director; discussing the work of other photographers who work with digital imaging; historical lectures. Prior knowledge of computer basics and Adobe Photoshop required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER K3010 - Photography III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of photography as an expressive visual medium and the relationship of photography to culture. Advanced controls over negative production and printing techniques are taught. Students learn to speak critically of their own work, as well as the work of their peers, and other artists. Alternative methods of presentation, beyond the window mat, are introduced. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER K3020 - Photography IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of photography as an expressive visual medium and the relationship of photography to culture. Advanced controls over negative production and printing techniques are taught. Students learn to speak critically of their own work, as well as the work of their peers, and other artists. Alternative methods of presentation, beyond the window mat, are introduced. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER K3030 - Color Photography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students are introduced to a theoretical basis for color theory and the psychology of color. On a technical level, color balancing and regional color correction are stressed. In individual color darkrooms, students produce their own color-coupler prints, as large as 16 x 20 inches, from our on-site Kreonite processor. As in the department’s other photo classes, there is an emphasis on developing good exposure and printing techniques. Students are encouraged to develop material conceptually, understand how work is produced, and speak about it. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER K4300 - Photo And Intermedia Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In Photography and Intermedia Seminar students will develop their conceptual, technical, historical, and critical knowledge on a variety of rotating topics. Topics can include: Performance, Image and Text, Critical Theory, Documentary Photography, Installation Art, Professional Photography Practices, Sound Art, and Advanced Digital Art. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER P2000 - Painting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will allow Painting students to develop their conceptual, technical, historical, and critical knowledge on a variety of rotating topics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HER P2010 - Painting I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigation of the figure and landscape in painting. Emphasis on composition, content, and the development of a working knowledge of painting processes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER P2020 - Painting II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigation of the figure and landscape in painting. Emphasis on composition, content, and the development of a working knowledge of painting processes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER P2050 - Portrait Painting I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Includes the study of features and basic construction of the head. Exploration of various media. Emphasis on rendering flesh tones, form, and color, with respect to the model. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER P2100 - Portrait Painting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Includes the study of features and basic construction of the head. Exploration of various media. Emphasis on rending flesh tones, form, and colors with respect to the model. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER P2200 - Watercolor Painting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigation of watercolor processes and techniques. Emphasis on individual creative objectives. Very intense study that will require exploration of watercolor to its fullest potential.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER P3010 - Painting III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of traditional and contemporary concepts in painting with emphasis on relationships between form and content. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER P3020 - Painting IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of traditional and contemporary concepts in painting with emphasis on relationships between form and content. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER P3030 - Concepts In Figuration I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This class will explore the discipline of figure and figurative paint in both traditional and conceptual approaches. Emphasis will be placed on sound painting techniques, composition, drawing, color, and concept. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER P3040 - Concepts In Figuration II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This class will explore the discipline of figure and figurative paint in both traditional and conceptual approaches. Emphasis will be placed on sound painting techniques, composition, drawing, color, and concept. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER P4010 - Painting V |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 6.00. Emphasis on personal solutions to form and content in painting. Classroom format features scheduled criticisms and seminars. Special counseling in areas of graduate study, fellowships, assistantships, grants, exhibitions, and professional potential following graduation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| HER P4020 - Painting VI |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 6.00. Emphasis on personal solutions to form and content in painting. Classroom format features scheduled criticisms and seminars. Special counseling in areas of graduate study, fellowships, assistantships, grants, exhibitions, and professional potential following graduation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| HER Q2410 - Beginning Furniture Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Beginning Furniture Design concentrates on the concept of art furniture through the design and building of functional objects. Furniture design focuses on both historical reference and contemporary theory. Works created in the courses range from utilitarian to non, utilitarian furniture forms. Students are introduced to wood as a material, its preparation, and furniture construction, including basic joinery, forming, shaping, and finishing techniques. Students learn to start from a working drawing, build a model, and construct a finished piece. Beginning projects generally focus on table and bench forms. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER Q2420 - Beginning Furniture Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Beginning Furniture Design concentrates on the concept of art furniture through the design and building of functional objects. Furniture design focuses on both historical reference and contemporary theory. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER Q3410 - Intermediate Furniture Design III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intermediate Furniture Design concentrates on furniture as an art form as well as applications for everyday use. Furniture is defined as a medium in how its formal concerns address conceptual motives. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER R2010 - Visual Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.0 to 3.00. Specially arranged instruction within specialized subject area. May take form of field experience, in which case there will be close collaboration between specialized faculty member and the work supervisor, who will jointly evaluate performance. May be taken with approval of dean, who will confer with appropriate faculty. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HER R2020 - Visual Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Specially arranged instruction within specialized subject area. May take form of field experience, in which case there will be close collaboration between specialized faculty member and the work supervisor, who will jointly evaluate performance. May be taken with approval of dean, who will confer with appropriate faculty. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HER R3110 - Visual Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Specially arranged instruction within specialized subject area. May take form of field experience, in which case there will be close collaboration between specialized faculty member and the work supervisor, who will jointly evaluate performance. May be taken with approval of dean, who will confer with appropriate faculty. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| HER R3120 - Visual Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Specially arranged instruction within specialized subject area. May take form of field experience, in which case there will be close collaboration between specialized faculty member and the work supervisor, who will jointly evaluate performance.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HER R4110 - Visual Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Specially arranged instruction within specialized subject area. May take form of field experience, in which case there will be close collaboration between specialized faculty member and the work supervisor, who will jointly evaluate performance. May be taken with approval of dean, who will confer with appropriate faculty. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER S2010 - Sculpture I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic consideration of three-dimensional form in sculptural concept. Exposure to various related materials, techniques, and processes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER S2020 - Sculpture II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic consideration of three-dimensional form in sculptural concept. Exposure to various related materials, techniques, and processes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER S3010 - Sculpture III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis on creative expression through sculpture. Covers wood and plastic materials, metal casting, and industrial fabricating techniques.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER T2000 - Introduction To Art Therapy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The purpose of this course is to introduce students to the profession of art therapy. Students will learn the definition of art therapy, how and where it is practiced, with whom, and why. Students will explore the interface between art and various theories of psychotherapy and will begin to understand the relationship between the creative process and the unconscious. Students will see how art therapy is used to visually communicate thoughts, feelings, emotions, and inner conflicts in the effort to understand self and others. Students will be exposed to firsthand experience of the creative process as both a form of visual expression and as a therapeutic tool. Didactic and experimental methods of teaching, along with field trips and guest lectures, will provide the teaching mechanisms for this course. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER V2110 - Typography I: Elements |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory skills development for visual communication majors. Typography as a medium of visual communication. Focusing on the formal properties of letterforms within the roman alphabet and the relationship between visual and verbal forms of language. Terminology, typographic history, and technical issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER V2200 - VC II: Design Methodology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Introductory course in Visual Communication. Assigned projects allow students to develop skills in concept generation and concept visualization. Students learn to make relevant, meaningful and appropriate visual form in response to contexts and communication problems. Class focus is on integrating visual and verbal messages intended to communicate to a clearly defined audience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER X1010 - Foundation Resources Workshop |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course serves to introduce students to the resources at Herron, IUPUI, and Indianapolis. This seminar, while teaching students how to develop study skills, time management, and utilization of resources needed for success in the university setting, will include content specific to Herron¿s curricular mission.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER X1020 - Foundation Capstone |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course serves to prepare students for sophomore advancement review, promote early career planning, develop skills in documenting and presenting their work. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HER Z2000 - The Artist Within: Art Making For Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Art making for the art novice/general educator, nurturing the artist within. Introspective, creative meaning making, exploring big ideas through introductory materials and processes in drawing, painting, collage, sculpture, and digital printing. Instruction in adaptations for general classroom use. Will not count for fine arts or art education majors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HHS 19700 - Health&Human Science First Year Honors Seminar-Global Challenges In Human Health And Quality Of Life |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Every day, members of the public are flooded with stories and statistics about human problems - medical problems, social problems, psychological problems, financial problems, and others. Developing good awareness of major human challenges around the world, and a good instinct for how to figure out what to believe are good survival skills for anyone. They are especially important for scientists who are obligated to seek accuracy and for individuals who are going to become leaders. In this course, we will deepen our understanding of global human challenges; develop our own personal detection systems for ‘dubious data;’ and learn about how scientists try to address common distortions in data related to their areas of study. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: College of Health & Human Sci
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe major global challenges in human health and quality of life.
2. Recognize instances of where data are being presented in ways that are intended to 'skew' or 'spin' readers' understanding of the issue.
3. Describe ways in which the data could be presented more accurately.
4. Locate, understand , and summarize other data that can aid with interpretation.
5. Generate ideas for ways in which data could be gathered to address gaps in knowledge.
6. Communicate effectively orally and in writing.
|
| HHS 90000 - HHS Makers Welcome Reception |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: College of Health & Human Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIA M1100 - Computer Concepts For Health Information |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an overview of applications for the health and medical professionals. Topics include: audit trails, generating, quantifying and analyzing medical reports, word processing, computer hardware, medical software,copyright and fair usage. Students retrieve and present medical data.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIA M2700 - Found/Principles Of Health Information Management |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Course focuses on the administration of foundational principles of management within a health information department. Students will gain an understanding of the language of quantitative methods as well as the processes that are required for health information managers to function in a healthcare environment which demands competency in the areas of profit margins, management of financial resources and complex reimbursement processes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIA M3000 - Database Design For Health Information Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to database design with an emphasis on managing data in the health information environment. Topics and concepts include creating data table relationships and normalization. Utilizing Microsoft Access to create user forms and reports. Students will be required to create a large group project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIA M3150 - Quantitative Methods and Research |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course outlines the procedures associated with vital statistics in health care.
Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIA M3160 - Cancer Registry Reqr/Standards |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will outline the management, organization and reporting requirements for cancer registries. ICD-0-3, Collaborative Stage, 2007 Multiple Primary Histology Rules and Indiana State reporting requirements will be introduced with an emphasis on ICD-0-3 coding. Statistical analysis of cancer data will be introduced. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIA M3220 - Hospital Organization And Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Orientation to hospital departments; hospital organization; inter- and intra-relationships of hospital and community agencies.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIA M3230 - Laboratory Enrichment For Hospital Organization/Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is an in-depth exploration of the entity of the hospital system. Topics to be discussed include hospital organization structure, medical staff and departmental organization. Operations will be reviewed and experienced. Format includes class discussions, learning assignments, guest lectures, and presentations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIA M3250 - Health Information Requirements And Standards I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course outlines the essential documents/data content required for maintaining legal health records using paper and electronic media. Federal, state and local law, accreditation standards and regulatory requirements for maintaining patient data examined. Documentation in acute care, psychiatric and other healthcare settings. Students begin to explore the health information management profession. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIA M3260 - Laboratory Enrichment For Healthcare Information Requirements And Standards |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course consists of exercises that reinforce the lectures in HIA-M 3250. Students explore up-to-date Web resources used in the healthcare field as well as perform database searches. Students engage in laboratory exercises that consist of evaluating health records for completeness, regulatory compliance and documentation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIA M3300 - Medical Terminology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Understanding and use of medical vocabulary; emphasis on speaking, reading, and writing skills.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIA M3500 - Medical Science for Health Information I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers pathophysiology and pharmacology associated with the body systems.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIA M3550 - ICD-9-CM Coding |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on International Classification of Diseases. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIA M3560 - Laboratory Enrichment For ICD-9-CM Coding |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is a laboratory for HIA-M 3550 that provides hands-on experience in assigning ICD-9-CM codes. Actual patient records are used for coding practice which focuses on correct code assignment and sequencing of codes to follow ethical coding guidelines. Students will also gain hands-on experience with electronic health records and coding software used in the HIM industry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIA M3700 - Health Information Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Images and animation converge to develop an animated sequence. Using text, graphics and sound students will create animation and visualizations. Other topics include video editing and sound design.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIA M3750 - Health Information Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to health information standards that have been developed for the electronic health record and information interoperability and standards in development. Emphasis on understanding healthcare organization networks, intranets, the role of the Internet in patient data access, differences between clinical and administrative information systems used in healthcare organizations and the management and maintenance of those systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIA M3800 - Seminar In Health Information Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Allows the student to refine their skills in planning health care seminars for the profession, hospitals, and within the classroom setting. Written summaries and oral presentations required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIA M4000 - Health Information Storage And Retrieval |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the creation of form design, including the retrieval, filing, and storage of health care information according to the guidelines established by federal and state regulations. Registries will be discussed with specific focus on the cancer registry and master patient index. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIA M4200 - Health Care Planning and Information Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will understand the design of systems, research various vendors, and present information so that a selection of information systems can be recommended. This course also addresses systems planning; systems selection process; clinical and business applications of computing in health care; and resolving organization information issues.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIA M4410 - Transitional Professional Practicum In Health Information Management I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Supervised laboratory practice with onsite observations of medical, technical, and administrative systems. Study in the function of health information management procedures in the clinical setting.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HIA M4420 - Transitional Professional Practicum In Health Information Management II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. This course is a continuation of M441. Supervised laboratory practice with onsite observations of medical, technical, and administrative systems. Study in the function of health information management procedures in the clinical setting. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HIA M4430 - Professional Practicum In Health Information Management I |
|
Credit Hours: 8.00. This course is designed to provide professional practice experience in an approved clinical site under the direction of an HIA faculty member and an onsite clinical instructor. Students also receive didactic and practicum experience in the classroom. Emphasis on clinical science, health information management, business administration and information systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HIA M4450 - Medicine And The Law |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Presentation of concepts of law in medical and/or health areas as applied to the physician, hospital, health institutions, health information, and individual health workers.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIA M4500 - Medical Science For Health Information II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a continuation of M350. Course covers pathophysiology and pharmacology associated with the body systems.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIA M4550 - Current Procedural Terminology Coding |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focus on Current Procedural Terminology coding. Sequence of procedures as they relate to correct coding guidelines. Study of Health Care Common Procedure Coding System. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIA M4560 - Laboratory Enrichment for CPT Coding |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is a laboratory for HIA-M 4550 that provides hands-on experience in assigning CPT codes. Actual patient records are used for coding practice which focuses on correct code assignment and sequencing of codes to follow ethical coding guidelines. Students will also gain hands-on experience with electronic health records and coding software used in the HIM industry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIA M4590 - Clinical Health Information Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Professionally supervised internship in an approved clinical site for management experiences in health information services. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIA M4600 - Long Term Care |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Discuss the scope of work and the role of long-term care. Understand the purpose of the Resident Assessment Instrument
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIA M4610 - Release Of Health Care Information |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course outlines the requirements associated with confidentiality and privacy of health information. This course focuses on Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act . Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIA M4620 - Health Care Quality Improvement |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course identifies quality/performance improvement methods and techniques for health care professionals. Interpretation of data appropriate to user needs and presentation of information are also covered.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIA M4700 - Health Care Reimbursement Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course presents data elements that apply to prospective payment systems. Students gain knowledge of correct reimbursement systems and identify issues and patient types in meeting medical necessity guidelines. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIA M4850 - Health Information Administration Enrichment |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Current trends, problems, best practices, and developments are discussed that affect the health care profession. Students pursue special interest and share information and experiences with the group. This course is an in-depth exploration of topics and issues in the forefront of health care. Format includes research papers, class discussions, and presentations.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIA M4900 - Directed Study |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course reinforces the concepts taught throughout the semester in an independent study approach as a review for the certification examination. Typcally offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIA M4990 - Capstone Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This final project allows the student to synthesize all of the information learned throughout the professional program. Written research projects and oral presentations will test the student's integrated knowledge and abilities across the field. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIST 10101 - Introduction To Historical Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces the student to the way in which historians pose questions, conduct research, and interpret their work into conclusions. Designed for non-majors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop skills in historical research methodology, critical thinking and reading of texts, effective written and oral communication.
2. Explore interpretive approaches of various historians and schools of historical thought.
3. Investigate in depth selected topics that will allow students to develop their own analytical and critical thinking skills, interpret primary sources, and organize and present materials and interpretations effectively.
|
| HIST 10200 - Introduction To The Ancient World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A history of the ancient world (Near East, Greece, and Rome) from its prehistoric origins to its dismemberment in the early Christian era. It is designed to meet the needs of the beginning student of European and world history. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| HIST 10300 - Introduction To The Medieval World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Barbarians, kings, queens, peasants, witches, saints, teachers, students, heretics, Moslems, Jews, Christians, love, death, monks, farm life, city life, ordinary men, women, and children as Europe develops from A.D. 500 to 1500. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 10400 - Introduction To The Modern World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Traces the expansion of Europe into the Americas, Africa, and Asia. The French Revolution, nationalism, and the development of western European states from the era of the Reformation to the present are studied. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST 10500 - Survey Of Global History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the interaction between the civilizations of Asia, Africa, Europe, and the Americas since 1500, with attention to cultural comparisons over time, and to the implications of global interdependence for the environment, health, economy, and geopolitics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 10600 - Introduction To History And Social Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed as both the introductory course for History Majors and Social Studies Education Majors and fulfills the general education requirement for the "freshman experience" class. It is designed to provide the basic tools of college-level reading and writing needed to become effective historians and social Studies teachers. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 11000 - The Pre-Modern World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the ancient and medieval periods from late prehistoric times to the 17th century. Major emphasis is placed on ancient civilizations, the development and flowering of medieval, political, religious, economic and cultural institutions in Western and non-Western societies; the impact of geographic and environmental factors in the historic, social, and cultural changes, and the dawn of modern times. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 15100 - American History To 1877 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the development of American political, economic, and social institutions from the early explorations and colonial settlements through Reconstruction. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:ISH 1010 American History I
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST 15200 - United States Since 1877 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the growth of the United States from 1877 to the present. The new industrialism, agrarian problems, depression, the New Deal, the two world wars, the cold war, and similar topics are analyzed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:ISH 1011 American History II
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST 19500 - The Historian's Craft: Historical Research And Film |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines various interpretative approaches and genres of history; students also critique a historical film based on their own research, learning to decipher fact from fiction and how bias and subjectivity enter into the history on screen. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Acquaint students with the historian's craft as well as with the efforts by historians and filmmakers to visual history through film.
2. Seeks to teach students to think, speak, and write critically.
|
| HIST 20100 - Special Topics In History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This variable title course deals with broad historical topics that transcend and telescope traditional analytical, chronological, and geographical boundaries. Content will vary with the instructors teaching the class. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division, S General Education, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| HIST 21000 - The Making Of Modern Africa |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides students with a comprehensive introduction to modern African history from 1800 to the present. Using a variety of films, novels and scholarly resources, we will examine the major historical forces that have shaped African lives over the last two centuries. Emphasis will be placed on African experiences of slavery, colonialism, liberation struggles, and post-independence national building. Students will also learn to analyze contemporary African issues within a larger historical context. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will have a better understanding of modern African history and the state of Africa today.
2. They will learn how to interpret historical texts from a number of different epistemic positions (i.e. paying attention to race, class, gender, sexuality, nation and other axes of "difference").
3. Students can also expect to develop stronger writing skills, as well as to improve on critical thinking and oral articulation.
|
| HIST 21500 - Sub Sahara Africa |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of Sub Sahara African history which traces the development of this part of Africa from prehistoric times to the present. Major emphasis is directed toward recognizing the importance of Africa and Africans in history and pre-history. A brief survey of the early history of Africa, the Middle Age of African history with Africa's rich cultural and artistic heritage, the nature of African political systems, the rise and decline of the powerful kingdoms and empires, the era of the Atlantic Slave Trade, the colonial period, nationalist movements, and the diverse economic and political systems that have developed in post independence Africa. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 22800 - English History To 1688 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to survey the growth and development of English society from its beginning through the seventeenth century. Emphasis is put upon those institutions and events that influenced the establishments of the English legal system. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 22900 - English History Since 1688 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of HIST 22800. Emphasis is placed upon Great Britain as a world and imperial power. Attention is given particularly to the industrial revolution, the growth and achievements of democratic institutions, and the role Britain has played in Western civilization in recent times. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 23100 - Introduction To United States Foreign Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to introduce students to the major themes and issues in the contemporary history of United States foreign policy. Lectures, discussions and readings will examine such areas as United States relationships with the major powers, the Third World and international organizations. Students with credit in Pol 231 may not receive credit for this class. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 24000 - East Asia And Its Historic Tradition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of the great historic traditions of China, Japan, and Korea from earliest times to approximately 1600, with special attention to state formation, society, intellectual, philosophical, and religious developments, and the visual, musical, and literary arts. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 24100 - East Asia In The Modern World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The response of China, Japan, and Korea to the coming of the West in modern times, with special stress on the effect of Western ideas and machines. Approximately 1600 to the present. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 24300 - South Asian History And Civilizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey history of India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh, from the origins of South Asian civilization to the present. Topics include ancient India, the Mughal Empire, the colonial experience, the independence movement, and conflict and popular culture. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 24500 - Introduction To The Middle East History And Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the civilization of the Middle East from the rise of Islam to the present. The political, social, and cultural institutions are examined along with the problem of adjusting these to the pressure of Western civilization in the last two centuries. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 24600 - Modern Middle East And North Africa |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the political, social, and cultural factors that have contributed to the formation of the modern Middle East. Course includes short stories and a selection of documentary films from the region. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 25000 - United States Relations With The Middle East And North Africa |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines US relations with the Middle East and North Africa since World War II. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Gained a deeper understanding of the patterns and processes shaping US relations with the Middle East and North Africa.
2. Thought historically and critically about approaches to the study of US relations with the Middle East and North Africa.
3. Used primary source evidence to analyze fundamental issues in US relations with the Middle East and North Africa.
4. Sharpened critical reading, thinking, writing, and discussion skills in order to defend an independent argument.
|
| HIST 27100 - Latin American History To 1824 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of Latin American history from its origins to the end of the major movements to independence, with emphasis on discovery, colonization, expansion, and the transfer of institutions from Spain and Portugal. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 27200 - Latin American History From 1824 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of Latin American history from independence to the present, with particular attention on political, economic, and social problems connected with modernization. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 29000 - Russia: Yesterday, Today, And Tomorrow |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comprehensive, interdisciplinary view of Russia, stressing those issues in the political, economic, technological, and cultural spheres that are most relevant to the current situation. This team-taught course is open to beginning undergraduates. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| HIST 29500 - Research And Writing In History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to train history majors in the fundamentals of historical research and writing. IT or HIST 58200 -The Art of History- is required of all History majors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 29501 - Introduction To Historiography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to historiography and methodology of being a historian. Examines various interpretative approaches available to historians and reviews the subjects and methods prevalent among social/cultural, labor, military, ethnic, political, and gender historians. Only open to majors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Students develop skills in historical research methodology, critical thinking and reading of texts, effective written or oral communication, and research and authoring technologies.
2. Students are exposed to interpretive approaches of various historians and schools of historical thought.
3. Students learn how to define hypothesis, conduct a literature review, interpret primary sources, and organize and present materials and interpretations effectively.
|
| HIST 30000 - Eve Of Destruction: Global Crises And World Organization In The 20th Century |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Using a variety of case studies, this course considers 20th-century turning points -- often violent and disastrous ones -- in an emerging global conversation about urgent world problems and their possible solutions. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 30100 - Episodes in American Religious History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces students to the study of religion in the United States by focusing on particular groups or movements. Each religious episode is placed in the appropriate historical context and in relation to other religious experiences and expressions. Subjects vary but could include Puritanism, Mormonism, and twentieth-century popular religion. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST 30200 - Historical Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This variable-title course deals with broad historical topics that transcend and collapse traditional analytical, chronological, and geographic boundaries. Content will vary with faculty member teaching the class. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will acquire a perspective on and basic understanding of the course content.
2. Students will engage in integrative learning as they examine the course content that transcends and collapses traditional analytical, chronological, and geographic boundaries.
3. Students will develop their creative and critical thinking skills.
4. Students will strengthen their information literacy and improve their writing skills.
|
| HIST 30301 - History Of Latin America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores Latin American history from its pre-Columbian origins to the early 21st century, with particular attention paid to indigenous societies, the Iberian conquest and colonial legacy, transculturation, republican government, foreign intervention, nationalism, revolution, neoliberalism and identity politics and culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand Latin America’s pre-colonial and colonial past and how its present has been shaped by that past.
2. Be able to identify the unique cultural, social and political development that has occurred in Latin America.
3. Be able to explain more fully concepts of race, ethnicity and ethnic relations as they relate to Latin America’s past and present.
4. Be able to evaluate critically historical documents, both primary and secondary.
|
| HIST 30400 - America In The 1960s |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Surveys the turbulent history of the 1960s America. Topics include: the Kennedy, Johnson, and Nixon presidencies; postwar liberalism and conservatism; insurgent political and social movements; the counterculture; the sexual revolution; rock 'n roll; and the Vietnam War. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 30501 - Latin American History Through Film |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected topics on Latin America's past as depicted through films from the US and Latin America. Lectures, readings and films in English or in Spanish with English subtitles. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| HIST 30505 - The United States In The World 1898-Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the central issues and themes of American foreign relations during the twentieth century with a primary focus on the expansion of American political military, economic, and cultural power. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand how and why the United States transformed from a relatively minor regional power in the nineteenth century into the global power we recognize today.
2. Understand innovative ways in which historians are expanding our understanding of Americans’ role in the world.
3. Understand the often competing and conflicting nature of historical interpretation and encourage assessment of various forms of primary source evidence to form conclusions about the United States’ place and experience in the world.
|
| HIST 30600 - The United States In 1960's |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A description and analysis of major domestic and foreign, social, political, military, and diplomatic issues confronting the United States in the 1960's and approaches and efforts to resolve these issues. The class will utilize the 1960's as a laboratory to provide students with both historical and political science skills and approaches to the issues and themes of a particular period. May be taken for history or political science credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 30800 - Britain And The Empire |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will examine Britain and her empire from the reign of Queen Victoria through the career of Margaret Thatcher. It will investigate the political, economic and social role of the imperial power and explore how various subject peoples reacted. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 30900 - The Middle East |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey beginning with the period of European involvement in the Ottoman Empire up to the present. The course includes the study of political Zionism and Arab nationalism, the role of the major powers between the two World Wars and that of the United States and the Soviet Union during the Cold War, and the developments in the Middle East in the post-Cold War era. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 30901 - History Of Iraq And Jordan |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will cover the history of Iraq and Jordan from the creation of the two Hashemite Monarchies after World War I through the beginning of the 21st century. The course will examine the relationship of both states with Britain, the United States, Israel and the Arab world. In addition, the course will focus attention on Arab leaders, including King Hussein and Saddam Hussein. Typically offered Fall, Spring, Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. This class will offer an additional class for students interested in the study of the Middle East.
|
| HIST 31000 - Historical Geography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of historical geography. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 31100 - WW II And Hollywood |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Hollywood films about World War II combined patriotism and the glories of the American way of life with anti-Nazi and anti-Japanese propaganda. By studying these films one can more clearly understand the American mind of the 1940's, something of the need of a common experience that became central to the lives of the American peoples. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 31200 - The Crusades |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the origins and transformation of the medieval crusading ideal as well as the development of western European civilization. Topics examined include warfare, heresy, religion, Islamic and Byzantine worlds, holy war theories, and economic and political history. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 31202 - The Crusades: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the origins and transformation of the medieval crusading ideal as well as the development of western European civilization. Topics examined include warfare, heresy, religion, Islamic and Byzantine worlds, holy war theories, and economic and political history. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 31200. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 31300 - Modern Germany |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Defines the nature of medieval Holy Roman Empire in the early modern era. Examines after 1806 the development of German nationalism and the unification movements; the position of the Germans of Austria; the period of German unity under the Hohenzollens, Wimar Republic, and Hitler; and the post-World War II division and reunification of Germany. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 31400 - Modern Russia |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analyzes the development of the modern Russian territorial state and its civilization from the pre-Petrine Era through the rise and eclipse of the Communist regime. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 31500 - Modern Nationalism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analyzes the nature and development of modern nationalism as a force of integration and disintegration in various major European and non-European states. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 31600 - History Of Architecture II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of Western architecture of the eighteenth, nineteenth and twentieth centuries with an emphasis on the related structural, technological, socioeconomic and cultural influences that contributed to the architectural expressions of these periods. (Not open to students with credit in ARET 31000). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 31700 - A History Of The Christian Church And The Expansion Of Christianity I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A history of the emergence of Christianity, the development of the Christian church, and the impact of Christian thought and institutions upon western Europe prior to the Reformation. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 31702 - History Of Christian Church I: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A history of the emergence of Christianity, the development of the Christian church, and the impact of Christian thought and institutions upon western Europe prior to the Reformation. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 31700. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 31800 - A History Of The Christian Church And The Expansion Of Christianity II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of HIST 31700. The Reformation, the major developments in Christianity, and the churches in the modern world. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 31802 - History Of Christian Church II: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of HIST 317. The Reformation, the major developments in Christianity, and the churches in the modern world. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 31800. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 31900 - The History Of Modern Israel |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will cover the history of political Zionism, the establishment of the state of Israel, and the economic, social, and political development of the country from 1948 until the present. It also will examine the Arab-Israeli conflict and the peace process, and the relationship between the United States and Israel. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 32000 - The World Of Charlemagne |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines Charlemagne's efforts to create a new European civilization (A.D. 768-814). The course incorporates the perspectives of Saxons, Vikings, Muslims, Byzantines, peasants, aristocrats, popes, bishops, abbots, and emphasizes the interplay between politics and art, culture, religion, and society. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 32100 - Europe In 19th Century |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analyzes major developments from the downfall of Napoleon to the out-break of World War I. Emphasis is placed on main currents in international relations, domestic affairs of major European States, the Revolution of 1848, and ideological, cultural, intellectual trends of the period. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 32200 - Monarchy: Its Rise And Fall |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Traces the rise and fall of Europe's great monarchs and monarchies from the Renaissance to the present and examines both the craft of kingship and the relevancy of the institution itself to society's changing needs and values. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 32300 - German History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of German history from the earliest times until the present. After a brief description of the medieval empire, we will turn to the Germany of Bismarck and Hitler and its successor states. A recurring theme will be the struggle between forces of liberalism and democracy and those of authoritarianism and militarism. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 32400 - Modern France |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of modern France since 1789, including political, social, industrial, and institutional development. Emphasis is also placed upon the colonial and international aspects of French history. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 32402 - Modern France: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of modern France since 1789, including political, social, industrial, and institutional development. Emphasis is also placed upon the colonial and international aspects of French history. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 32400. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 32500 - History Of Crime In America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the history of crime in America from the 19th century to the present. Emphasis will be placed on violent crime, the public's response to it, and the cultural expressions of crime through literature and the popular media. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 32501 - Twentieth Century Europe Through Autobiography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Merits and limitations of autobiographies as sources for 20th century European history. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 32502 - 20th Century Europe Through Autobiography: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Merits and limitations of autobiographies as sources for 20th century European history. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 32501. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 32600 - Popular Culture In Preindustrial Europe (1400-1800) |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of European history from the perspective of common people. How did they, when confronted with unprecedented economic expansion, population growth, urbanization, and Christianization, change the way they worked, played, worshipped, persecuted witches, and raised children?. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 32700 - The Habsburg Legacy: Central Europe, 1500-2000 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the emergence of modern east central Europe. Special focus will be given to the region's unique geopolitical, demographic, economic, and ethnic circumstances that explain its current problems. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand the evolution of central Europe from the perspective of the multinational Habsburg and Ottoman empires and the countries that replaced them in the twentieth century.
2. Students will think historically and critically about the role of geography, religion, ethnicity, state building, and war in the development of the region.
3. Students will develop their critical reading, thinking, writing, and discussion skills.
|
| HIST 32800 - History Of Women In Renaissance Europe |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course studies the history of women in early modern Europe (1500-1800), examining their roles, images, and experiences as wives, mothers, nuns, artisans, peasants, prostitutes, scholars, and sovereigns in the eras of Renaissance, Reformation, and Revolution. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand the history of women in early modern Europe (1500-1800) by examining changes and developments in the roles, images and experiences of women in the eras of Renaissance, Reformation, and Revolution.
2. They will think historically and critically about family formation and structures; love, marriage and sexuality; sanctity and religious life; political participation and power; literacy and women’s literature; the representations of women; and early feminism.
3. Students will develop their critical reading, thinking, writing, and discussion skills.
|
| HIST 32900 - History Of Women In Modern Europe |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines women's experiences and constructions of femininity in Europe from 1789 to the present, including women in revolutions, state intervention in the family, changing ideas of sexuality, women's movements, women in socialism and fascism, and women in war. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand the history of women in modern Europe from 1789 to the present by analyzing women’s experiences and the social and cultural constructions of femininity as well as the different contexts of class, ethnicity, and nationality in the history of European women.
2. They will think historically and critically about women’s participation in revolutions; state interventions in the family; working lives of women; ideals and practices of sexuality; the middle-class model of domesticity and women’s responses to it; the role of women and femininity in imperialism; women in socialism, under fascism, and in the transition from communism to capitalism; women’s experiences of two world wars; and the rise of feminist movements and contemporary feminisms in Europe.
3. Students will understand the difference between secondary and primary sources. They will read and interpret primary source materials, including fiction, autobiography, and other historical documents including those written by women.
4. Students will develop their critical reading, thinking, writing, and discussion skills.
|
| HIST 32902 - History Of Women In Modern Europe: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines women's experiences and constructions of femininity in Europe from 1789 to the present, including women in revolutions, state intervention in the family, changing ideas of sexuality, women's movements, women in socialism and fascism, and women in war. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 32900. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 33000 - History Of The British Empire And Commonwealth, 1783 To 1960 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the expansion and decline of British power overseas from the American war of independence to the mid-twentieth century. Emphasizing economic and military power, it focuses on British rule in Canada, Africa, India, Australia, and the West Indies. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 33100 - Great Figures In History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A series of autobiographical and biographical sketches of figures distinguished as well as lesser-known in all fields of activity. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will examine a series of autobiographical and biographical sketches of figures, distinguished as well as lesser-known, in all fields of activity.
2. They will think historically and critically about the role of individuals in the making of history.
3. Students will develop their critical reading, thinking, writing, and discussion skills.
|
| HIST 33300 - Science And Technology In Western Civilization I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of some of the main features of the historical development of science and technology, primarily in the Western world, from the dawn of civilization up to Isaac Newton. Emphasis is placed upon the interaction between science, technology, and the societies that encourage or abridge them. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 33400 - Science And Technology In Western Civilization II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of some of the main features of the historical development of science and technology in the Western world from Newton to the present. Emphasis is placed upon the relation between the achievements of individual investigators and the major aspects of the society and culture in which they lived. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 33501 - Religion, Magic And Witchcraft In Early Modern Europe |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of popular culture and world views in Europe from about 1400 to 1800. An exploration of how common people understood their world, practiced their religion, and sought to exert control over the natural world. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the major religious and magical beliefs found in Europe from 1400-1800.
2. Analyze the nature of religious and magical power.
3. Explain the different uses of religion, magic, and witchcraft in people's daily lives.
4. Evaluate arguments concerning the relationship between religion, music, and witchcraft.
|
| HIST 33505 - Nationalism And Socialism In East Central Europe |
|
Credit Hours: 3.0. This course examines how the peoples of East Central Europe engaged and coped with the most influential ideologies of the 20th century; with special attention to the weaknesses of the interwar and postwar regimes, strategies of modernization, survival, and dissent. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Gain a deeper understanding of the patterns and processes, ruptures and continuities which have shaped modern east central European society, culture, and politics.
2. Think historically and critically about approaches to the study of East Central European history, including the outcomes of ideological experimentation, and perspectives on how this region fits into a broader global context.
3. Use primary source evidence to analyze fundamental problems in modern East Central European history in individual writing and group work.
4. Sharpen critical reading, thinking, writing, and discussion skills.
|
| HIST 33600 - History Of Organized Crime In America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the evolutionary process leading to the complex social phenomenon of organized crime. Emphasis will be placed upon the rise of gangs, the Mafia mystique, the immigrant and crime, and the cultural expressions of organized crime through literature and the popular media. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 33700 - Europe In The Age Of The Cold War |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the power vacuum created in western and central Europe by the defeat of Nazi Germany and explores the influence of the superpowers' policy on the political, cultural, and economic development of European countries within their respective spheres of influence. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 33800 - Asia In The Modern Era |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The history of Modern China, Japan, India, and Indo-China. In addition to politics and government, emphasis is placed on institutional and cultural developments, religion and philosophy, social structure, and art. The interaction of Western and Oriental civilizations is stressed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 33900 - Traditional China |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Chinese civilization from its origins to the end of the Ming Dynasty. Attention is divided equally between political and cultural history, giving emphasis to the development of traditional institutions in Chinese society as well as to art, literature, religion, and philosophy. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 34000 - Modern China |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Chinese history from the Qing Dynasty (1644) to the present, with emphasis on the period since 1800. Attention given to internal developments and China's response to Western thought and material accomplishments. Nationalism and communism in the twentieth century are examined. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 34001 - Pre-Modern China |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course is an introduction to various aspects of Chinese civilization from its origin to 1900. While offering a comprehensive overview of the 4000 years of Chinese history, this course focuses on the changes and continuities of Chinese economy, culture, politics, and society. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. This course is designed to provide students with a global perspective and basic understanding of the Chinese civilization, develop students’ critical thinking, and improve their writing skills.
|
| HIST 34002 - History Of Modern China |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to various aspects of the Chinese civilization from 1900 to the present. While offering a comprehensive overview of the 110 years of Chinese history, this course focuses on the changes and continuities of Chinese economy, culture, politics, and society. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Provide students with a global perspective and basic understanding of the Chinese civilization, develop students' critical thinking, and improve their writing skills.
|
| HIST 34100 - History Of Africa South Of The Sahara |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory survey of major movements and problems in the development of the people of sub-Saharan Africa from the dawn of history to the mid-twentieth century. Attention is directed to the response of Africans to their environment and to various external challenges - Islam, European colonization, and the industrial revolution. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 34200 - Africa And The West |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of Africa's relations with Europe and the Americas, emphasizing economic and cultural crosscurrents from the period of the Atlantic slave trade to the rise of modern nationalism. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 34300 - Traditional Japan |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course considers Japanese civilization from its origins to the establishment of the Tokugawa Shogun (1603). Divided between political and cultural history, it will emphasize the development of traditional institutions in Japanese society, religion, philosophy, art, and literature. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 34302 - Traditional Japan: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course considers Japanese civilization from its origins to the establishment of the Tokugawa Shogun (1603). Divided between political and cultural history, it will emphasize the development of traditional institutions in Japanese society, religion, philosophy, art, and literature. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 34300. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 34400 - History Of Modern Japan |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of Japanese history from the nineteenth century to the present, including Japan's response to Western expansionism, the formation of the modern state, political parties, industrialization, the Pacific War, the American Occupation, the postwar "economic miracle," and Japan today. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 34402 - History Of Modern Japan: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of Japanese history from the nineteenth century to the present, including Japan's response to Western expansionism, the formation of the modern state, political parties, industrialization, the Pacific War, the American Occupation, the postwar "economic miracle," and Japan today. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 34400. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 34600 - The Era Of World Wars I And II, 1914-1945 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analyzes the causes, major campaigns, and legacy of the two major conflicts of the twentieth century. Examines the rise of totalitarian dictatorships, in particular Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union. Emphasis is placed on the geo-political context of both world wars, including the ideological challenges to the Western liberal democracies, the advent of the United States as the critical great power, and the role of democratic, imperial and dictatorial leadership in both conflicts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 34700 - The Roaring Twenties |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An assessment and analysis of the nature of political, social, religious, economic, cultural, intellectual, and diplomatic change and the response to that change in the United States of the 1920's. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 34800 - Depression Decade |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The Great Depression of the 1930's had a profound and often tragic impact on American life and society. This course will attempt to analyze that impact and its social, political, economic, cultural, diplomatic, and institutional consequences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 34900 - Introduction To Jewish Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (IDIS 33000 and POL 34900) An interdisciplinary seminar touching on many aspects of the Jewish experience, from biblical times to the present. The course introduces students to aspects of the rich and multi-faceted history, literature, theology, and culture of Jews and Judaism from antiquity to the present: from the ancient Near East to Europe, America and back to the modern Near East. The course begins with an examination of basic concepts of Judaism, such as God, Torah, People, Land and Identity. It involves concepts from Jewish historical, theological, and literary roots from the formation of ancient Israel to contemporary Israel and Jewish-American Culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 34901 - The First World War |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to explore the origins, course, meaning, and lasting legacy of World War I. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students are expected to understand the origins, course, and results of World War I.
2. Students are expected to understand the consequences that the war had on today’s world.
|
| HIST 35000 - Science And Technology In The Twentieth Century World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory survey, emphasizing cultural contexts, relationships with other institutions, and occasional forays into the biographies of major figures. Covering selected major achievements as well as the problems these generate. Neither science nor engineering background is required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Lafayette
|
| HIST 35001 - Gettysburg: Three Days That Changed America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An in depth study of one of the turning points of American history. Explores political, social and military aspects of the Gettysburg Campaign, the Gettysburg Address and the continuing role of Gettysburg in popular culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Study the political, economic and military strategies of the Civil War and its progress prior to June 1863.
2. Understand the strategic objectives that shaped the Confederate invasion of the North in 1863.
3. Examine the decisions made during the Gettysburg campaign and the resultant controversies.
4. Explore the significance of the Gettysburg campaign to the subsequent course of the Civil War.
5. Analyze the Gettysburg Address and its importance to the Civil War era and subsequent generations.
6. Investigate role of Gettysburg in American popular culture since 1863.
|
| HIST 35100 - The Second World War |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the diplomacy, economic mobilization, and military operations of World War II, 1939-1945. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 35201 - Revolution And Revolutionaries In 20th And 21st Century Latin America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A critical comparative analysis of twentieth and twenty-first century revolutionary theories and movements in Latin America. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
Students who complete this course will have:
1. Increased their general knowledge of issues relating to the causes of revolution in contemporary Latin America;
2. Developed a more nuanced understanding of specific revolutions based on their research;
3. Strengthened their research, writing and presentation skills; and
4. Improved their familiarity with Latin American historiography.
|
| HIST 35400 - Women In America To 1870 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the history of women in America from the colonial period to 1870. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 35500 - History Of American Military Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Surveys American military policy from the colonial militia to the atomic age. Covers major wars and limited wars. The course also investigates the peacetime military functions, i.e., the Navy's role in diplomacy and the Army's involvement in Indian affairs. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 35600 - America In Vietnam |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course examines the economic, political, ideological, and military aspects of America's involvement in Vietnam, between 1945 and 1975. Course will include lectures, film, and discussions. Each student will be assigned to a discussion section after the first day of class.
. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 35700 - History Of Southern Africa Since 1400 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course explores the diversity and resilience of the peoples of southern Africa in the face of internal and external challenges, including migrations, state-building, European colonization, industrialization, and apartheid. African liberation movements and the independence revolution are focal points of attention. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 35900 - Gender In East Asian History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of the construction of tradition and modernity in East Asia through the lens of gender. Topics include the influence of "Confucian" ethics; gender and imperialism, nationalism and revolution; and social change in the aftermath of war and decolonization. Typically offered Fall Summer Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 35902 - Gender In East Asian History: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of the construction of tradition and modernity in East Asia through the lens of gender. Topics include the influence of "Confucian" ethics; gender and imperialism, nationalism and revolution; and social change in the aftermath of war and decolonization. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 35900. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 36000 - Gender In Middle East History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the gendered history, politics, and culture of the Middle East and North Africa, the relationship between Islam and patriarchy, representations of women in medieval texts, and late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century struggles for women's rights in the region. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 36101 - Violence, War, And Militarism In Modern Africa |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Why do African countries always seem to be at war? Is this because Africans are inherently more violent than the rest of the world? Or might there be another set of explanations? This course seeks answers to these troubling questions by examining some of the myths and realities about violence, war, and militarism in Africa. Although these issues are not in any way ¿new¿ or ¿modern¿, our historical gaze will be focused primarily on the last 125 years. Studies can expect to engage with a variety of primary sources including films, novels, memoirs, music, and speeches as well as an array of scholarly literature from various academic disciplines. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 36110 - Environmental History Of Latin America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to introduce students to the history of Latin American ecological and biological environments. Environmental history of Latin America is closely intertwined with agricultural development, socio-economics, land tenure regulation and identify formation. As such, this course examines the fundamental role that changes in the land have had on migration patterns, legislation formation, activism, subsistence, state building and indigenous movements. Some of the vital historical intersections we will explore in this course are: disease epidemics and tropical environments, work conditions and export economies, eco-tourism and community activism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an understanding of Latin American geography, ecology, sociology and history as they come together in the field of Latin American
Environmental Studies.
2. Use the knowledge and skills acquired in this course to examine ecological issues in other parts of the world, including the United States.
|
| HIST 36300 - Europe Since 1945 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will cover the restoration of western Europe after World War II and the division of Europe into two mutually hostile camps, one communist, the other capitalist. The course will review the history of the Cold War and explore the political, social and economic factors that led to the end of the Soviet Empire. The course will, also, attempt to discuss the aftermath of the demise of the Soviet Union, ethnic violence, social disintegration, and economic decline. It will, also, look at the beginning of democratic institutions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 36400 - England in the 20th Century |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasizing political and social history this course will investigate the British role in both world wars. The course will also explore how the British adapted to their changing circumstances. Readings and lectures will cover a variety of issues, including the role of British women, establishment of the welfare state and Britain's reluctance fully to embrace the European community. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 36500 - Women In America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the history of women in America from Colonial times to the present. Emphasis is on the changing status of women, social and cultural influences, movements for women's rights, and women's contributions to American society. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Lafayette
|
| HIST 36600 - Hispanic Heritage Of The United States |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Despite their numerical prominence, Hispanics have received relatively little attention in traditional U.S. history. Focusing primarily on Mexican-Americans, Cuban-Americans, and Puerto Ricans, this course offers a historical perspective on the Hispanic experience from colonial times to the present. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 36700 - 20th Century American History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of 20th century American history, covering major political and economic developments and related intellectual movements. A parallel consideration of foreign affairs traces the emergence of America as a world power and the effects of her new status on the Western Hemisphere, Europe, and Asia.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| HIST 36800 - Episodes In American Religious History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces students to the study of religion in the United States by examining various religious groups and movements in their proper historical context. The course may focus on such groups as Puritans in colonial New England, Mormons in the nineteenth century, and twentieth-century popular revivalists. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| HIST 36900 - Research In History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A research writing, and oral presentation course organized around semester-long topics or themes, selected by the instructor to reflect his/her area of knowledge and interest. Readings and course bibliographical materials will change with each offering. The class will focus primarily on undergraduate research and writing. This course will be mandated for all majors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HIST 37000 - The Holocaust |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the Holocaust form 1933 to 1945. The course includes analysis and historical descriptions of such topics as the background and nature of Nazi racism, Nazi persecution from 1933 to 1941, the Final Solution from 1941 to 1945, the concentration camp experience, resistence, the apathy and indifference of bystanders, rescue efforts, assessment of the significance of the Holocaust, and historical interpretation of the Holocaust. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 37100 - Society, Culture, And Rock And Roll |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Surveys American society and culture through the prism of rock and roll music. Looks at politics, gender, race, and class in the postwar era to examine and explain the social, economic, and technological forces that shaped rock and roll. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 37200 - History Of The American West |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the American frontier. Characteristics and problems of pioneer life; causes and effects of the westward movement of our people. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 37300 - The Caribbean |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Will explore various topics and issues unique to the Caribbean. Emphasis will be placed on European and African influence on the complex nature of Caribbean history, languages and literature, societies and cultures. Students may take the course for credit in either Latin American Studies or History, but not both. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 37400 - United States Economic History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ECON 37500) A study of the growth of the American economy from colonial times to the late 19th century. Emphasis is placed on the application of the tools of economic analysis to historical questions concerning the sources and rate of growth, the relationships between growth and structural and institutional change, and the impact of industrialization on the quality of life in the American economy. Not open to students with credit in ECON 37500. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 37500 - Women In America Since 1870 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the history of women in the United States from 1870 to the present. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 37600 - History Of Indiana |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Economic, political, and social history of Indiana from the state's earliest beginnings as a part of the old Northwest Territory to the present. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Lafayette
|
| HIST 37700 - History And Culture Of Native America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the societies of Native North America in a historical context, from pre-historic times to the present, examining Native world views and belief systems to understand their historical relations with each other, and with Europeans and their descendents. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 37800 - Early National America: 1787-1850 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of major developments from the framing of the Constitution to the enactment of the Compromise of 1850. Political, constitutional, economic, diplomatic, and social aspects are studied in the context of continuing tensions between the forces of nationalism and sectionalism in the young republic. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| HIST 37900 - Gandhi: Myth Reality And Perspective |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course charts Gandhi's career against the back-ground of events in London, South Africa and India. It examines the evolution and practical application of his ideas and techniques of non-violent resistance, and his attitudes toward the economy, society and state.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 38000 - American Environmental History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This class will focus on how and why Americans living at particular times and places used and transformed their environment. Examining such familiar topics as colonization, the frontier, the industrial revolution, slavery, the Civil War, and the emergence of modern-day consumer culture, the class will show how the interaction of Americans with the natural world has influenced the development of a distinctive society. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 38001 - History Of United States Agriculture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.0. This course surveys the main development in North American agricultural history, emphasizing the continental United States. Topics include early American agriculture, the plantation system, land policy, scientific and technological change, agrarian politics, water rights, migrant labor, and agricultural policy. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Humanities, UC-Science, Tech & Society, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Gain a broad understanding of the major economic, social, political, scientific and technological development in the history of American agriculture.
2. Analyze the causes, consequences, and significance of the major events and issues that have influenced the agricultural history of the United States.
|
| HIST 38100 - American Historical Biography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Biographical studies of leaders in American life. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HIST 38200 - American Constitutional History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of the fundamental principles of American constitutionalism and dominant trends in judicial interpretation, from the creation of the Constitution to the period of the New Deal. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 38300 - Recent American Constitutional History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive study of constitutional questions and Supreme Court answers from the period of the Warren Court to present. Particularly emphasized are the areas of segregation, civil rights, and civil liberties and guarantees for personal rights. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 38400 - History Of Aviation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comparative history of human flight and air power (in Europe, the Americas, and Asia) from its origin in the early inventors and pilots, through its reflection in the popular media, to the global development of civil and military aviation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 38600 - History Of American Foreign Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The history of American foreign relations from the late colonial period to the present. The development of traditional policies, territorial expansion, and reaction to great-power status and the Cold War are some of the topics discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 38700 - History Of The Space Age |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The historical interaction between human values and space exploration in the contemporary age, focusing on issues of global interdependence. Topics include the international competition in rocketry, the Cold War in space, the moon missions, space disasters, and satellite technology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 38800 - The World Of Ideas I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The first half of a two-semester chronological sequence based on reading and discussing source materials and documents drawn from Political Science, Economics, History, Sociology, Psychology, and philosophy. This course is designed to familiarize students with the major ideas and ideals which have shaped world civilization. Not open to students with credit in POL 38800 or PHIL 38900. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 38900 - The World Of Ideas II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The second half of a two-semester chronological sequence based on reading and discussing primary source materials and documents drawn from Political Science, Economics, History, Sociology, Psychology, and philosophy. This course is designed to familiarize students with the major ideas and ideals which have shaped world civilization. Major themes of this course are Liberty, Human Nature, and The Individual and Society. Not open to students with credit in POL 38800 or PHIL 38900. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 39000 - Topics In History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HIST 39001 - Jews In The Modern World: A Survey Of Modern Jewish Society, Culture, And Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This survey of modern Jewish society, culture, and politics from the expulsion from Spain in 1492 until the collapse of the Interwar state system in 1938 examines Jewish responses to modernity with special attention to the Jewish relationship to the state and with the surrounding non-Jewish cultures, and the diversity of the modern Jewish experience. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Gained a deeper understanding of the patterns and processes, ruptures and continuities which have shaped modern Jewish society, culture, and politics.
2. Thought historically and critically about approaches to the study of Jewish history; for example, concerning the historiographical context and ideological content of answers to the question of when the modern period in Jewish history begins.
3. Used primary source evidence to analyze fundamental issues, including but not limited to: responses to catastrophe, Jewish/non-Jewish relations, the development of the spectrum of modern Jewish religious practice and political affiliations, Jewish migration, and modern anti-Semitism.
4. Used primary source evidence to construct and defend a position individually and as part of a team through the "Council on Jewish Affairs" project.
5. Sharpened critical reading, thinking, writing, and discussion skills in a welcoming forum.
|
| HIST 39100 - History Of Russian Popular Entertainment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The history of modern mass entertainment and revolutionary experimentation in popular film, the public arts, and daily life in Russia and the Soviet Union (including Central Asia and Siberia) from 1900 to the present. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 39200 - Caribbean History And Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (AAS 39200) This survey of Caribbean history highlights the British, Danish, Dutch, French, and Spanish islands. It addresses slavery, colonialism, independence, nationalism and gender relations. It will attract students interested in Latin America, African Diaspora studies, immigration, and cultural studies. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 39300 - Historical Geography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This class addresses general topics in the discipline of geography. It seeks to educate students so that they can consider the spatial dimensions of historical, political, economic, and social themes and problems. In addition, the course seeks to develop the general skills of the discipline, especially those related to cartography. Students receiving credit for this as a Geography class may not also receive credit as a History class and vice versa. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 39400 - Environmental History Of The United States |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a mid-level survey designed to provide students of environmental science with historical background and students of history with the unique perspective of environmental history. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 39500 - Junior Research Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Variable title seminar for history majors in their junior year intended to teach historical skills, including research in primary sources, analytical skills, and forming historical arguments. It is a writing intensive course and counts as one of the major requirements. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. History majors will learn historical skills such as primary source research and analysis and how to form historical arguments.
2. Acquire analytical skills sufficient to distinguish between primary and secondary sources, to analyze arguments and interpretations, and to recognize interpretive conflicts.
3. Engage in integrative learning.
4. Develop the ability to recognize, analyze and incorporate primary source material into scholarly investigations and analyses.
5. Improve their information literacy and enhance their creative thinking.
6. Strengthen skills in critical thinking and oral communication.
7. Improve their writing skills.
|
| HIST 39600 - The Afro-American To 1865 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The history of Afro-Americans in America from their African origins to 1865. Emphasis is focused upon early African society, American slavery, and the development of black institutions and culture in the United States. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 39700 - The Afro-American |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the history of the Afro-Americans in the United States from their African background to the present. Emphasis is placed upon the changing economic, social, and political status of Afro-Americans in the United States, and upon their contributions to American society. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 39800 - The Afro-American Since 1865 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The history of Afro-Americans from 1865 to the present. Their struggles to overcome social, economic, and political oppression and to win basic civil and human rights while making valuable contributions to American society are emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 40100 - Indigenous Traditions Of Latin America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course will provide students with a deeper understanding of Latin America¿s native peoples through a historical perspective. This course will meet the Other Cultures/Global Awareness requirement in the BLS degree and be included as an elective in the proposed Latin America Studies Minor and Ethnic Studies Minor. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| HIST 40202 - Europe In The Renaissance: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Primarily a survey of Renaissance Italy, 1300 to 1530. Attention is focused on Italian humanism as an intellectual and social movement, on the struggle of republicanism against despotism in Italian city life, and finally on the impact of humanism north of the Alps in the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 40200. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 40300 - Europe In The Reformation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of decay and renewal in European society, 1300 to 1650. Concentrates on the Protestant and Catholic Reformation and religious wars, but also covers the Northern Renaissance, the New Monarchies, and the discovery and exploration of the New World. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 40302 - Europe In The Reformation: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of decay and renewal in European society, 1300 to 1650. Concentrates on the Protestant and Catholic Reformation and religious wars, but also covers the Northern Renaissance, the New Monarchies, and the discovery and exploration of the New World. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 40300. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 40400 - Kings And Philosophers: Europe 1618-1789 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of great European monarchies and transformation of modern thought by the scientific revolution and Enlightenment. Emphasis on key rulers (Louis XIV, Peter and Catherine the Great, Frederick the Great) and great thinkers (Voltaire, Montesquieu, Rousseau). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 40402 - Kings And Philosophers: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of great European monarchies and transformation of modern thought by the scientific revolution and Enlightenment. Emphasis on key rulers (Louis XIV, Peter and Catherine the Great, Frederick the Great) and great thinkers (Voltaire, Montesquieu, Rousseau). This is the writing intensive version of HIST 40400. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 40500 - The French Revolution And Napoleon |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of revolutionary France from the fall of the ancien regime to the Congress of Vienna. Divided in emphasis between the period of the revolution and the era of Napoleon, the course stresses social, political, ideological, and institutional developments. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 40502 - French Revolution And Napoleon: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of revolutionary France from the fall of the ancien regime to the Congress of Vienna. Divided in emphasis between the period of the revolution and the era of Napoleon, the course stresses social, political, ideological, and institutional developments. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 40500. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 40600 - Rebels And Romantics: Europe 1815-1870 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the dramatic social, cultural, and political developments in Europe following the defeat of Napolean through various rebellious and romantic personalities, as well as figures who supported conservative or reformist solutions to the upheavals of industrialization, revolution, and nationalism. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 40602 - Rebels And Romantics: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the dramatic social, cultural, and political developments in Europe following the defeat of Napolean through various rebellious and romantic personalities, as well as figures who supported conservative or reformist solutions to the upheavals of industrialization, revolution, and nationalism. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 40600. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 40700 - Road To World War I: Europe 1870-1919 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Studies the increase in Europe's wealth and power through conquest, industrialization, and nation-state rivalries, along with the social stress and cultural anxiety that culminated in World War I; examines the war from the perspectives of both combatants and civilians. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 40702 - Road To World War I: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Studies the increase in Europe's wealth and power through conquest, industrialization, and nation-state rivalries, along with the social stress and cultural anxiety that culminated in World War I; examines the war from the perspectives of both combatants and civilians. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 40700. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 40800 - Dictatorship And Democracy: Europe 1919-1945 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the fleeting triumph of democracy across Europe. Followed by the rise of fascism, communism, and Nazism. Emphasis will be placed on broad economic, social, and cultural transformations as well as individual choices to resist or conform. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 40802 - Dictatorship And Democracy: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the fleeting triumph of democracy across Europe. Followed by the rise of fascism, communism, and Nazism. Emphasis will be placed on broad economic, social, and cultural transformations as well as individual choices to resist or conform. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 40800. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 41000 - Community Preservation Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will gain a broad understanding of the field of historic preservation. We will examine different types of historically significant resources, methods of documentation and interpretation, and the process of historic designation. This course requires 30 hours of field work. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 41100 - The Four Horsemen Ride: Crisis And Change In Europe 1300-1648 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Upper-division history course on the history of various crises in late medieval and early modern Europe and the changes those crises wrought upon society. Topics include: famine, The Black Death and demographic upheavals, the Hundred Years' War, religious schism, prophecy and divination, apocalyptic expectations, the fracturing of Christendom, new technologies and social change, conflict between Catholics and Protestants, The Thirty Year's War. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 41102 - The Four Horsemen Ride: Crisis And Change In Europe: 1300-1648: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Upper-division history course on the history of various crises in late medieval and early modern Europe and the changes those crises wrought upon society. Topics include: famine, The Black Death and demographic upheavals, the Hundred Years' War, religious schism, prophecy and divination, apocalyptic expectations, the fracturing of Christendom, new technologies and social change, conflict between Catholics and Protestants, The Thirty Year's War. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 41100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 41200 - The Cultural History Of The Middle Ages |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The development of new patterns of thought and their manifestation in literature (religious and secular), education, and art from the decline of the ancient world to the fourteenth century inclusive. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 41202 - Cultural History Of Middle Ages: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The development of new patterns of thought and their manifestation in literature (religious and secular), education, and art from the decline of the ancient world to the fourteenth century inclusive. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 41200. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HIST 41300 - Europe In The Age Of Empires |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This upper-level course will examine the history of modern European imperialism, beginning with the transformation and expansion of empires in the 19th century and ending with the collapse of these systems in more recent years. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To provide students with broad knowledge of events and their implications for the world community, while exposing them to the most important works-both historiographical and theoretical-concerning imperialism and decolonization.
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| HIST 41302 - Europe In The Age Of Empires: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This upper-level course will examine the history of modern European imperialism, beginning with the transformation and expansion of empires in the 19th century and ending with the collapse of these systems in more recent years. Students in this writing-intensive course will be expected to write a series of short response papers, including a book review and a primary source analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. By exploring relevant primary sources and crafting original analyses, students will improve their own information literacy.
2. Students in this writing intensive course will also become familiar with multi-draft writing and the revision process.
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| HIST 41800 - European Society And Culture 1450-1800 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will examine European society and culture from 1450-1800. We will explore marriage and the family, sexuality, social status and civility, gender relations, witchcraft, poverty, violence, work and the everyday economy, and resistance and accommodation to political authority. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HIST 42100 - Honors Historical Methods |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed as a prequel to Honors Thesis; this course introduces the Honors students to various advanced interpretative approaches to history and methods of historical research. Students also choose their topic for their Honors Thesis and begin research. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Honors, S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HIST 42200 - Honors Thesis In Historical Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed as a sequel to History 421 (Honors Historical Methods); this course is intended as the culminating academic experience for students in the Department of History Honors Program. It will require the completion of an undergraduate thesis in history. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Honors, S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HIST 42300 - Advanced Topics In Modern Germany |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course offers a reading-intensive study of a specific period or theme in modern German history. Semester-long topics might include Imperial Germany; Weimar Germany; Divided Germany (1945-1990); or thematic studies on culture, religion, or military affairs. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Convey an understanding of the course material.
2. Designed to improve students' ability to communicate their ideas in a small classroom setting.
3. Enhance students' ability to analyze historical monographs critically.
4. Teach students to synthesize a semester's worth of reading in thematic essay questions.
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| HIST 42400 - Latin American Societies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course gives students an opportunity to learn the history of Latin American societies, speaking with Latin Americans from various segments of society, and integrating traditional studies with cultural immersion. The course may be offered at least once each year, each time addressing a different topic related to the history of Latin American societies, and including a trip to a different country in Latin America. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will demonstrate knowledge of historical development of Latin America and specific country designated for course offering.
2. Students will demonstrate knowledge of connections between historical development and cultural, social, economic and political conditions in the region today.
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| HIST 42500 - Social And Ecological History Of The Andes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines topics relating to antiquity, geography, ecology, national histories, ethnic identities and politics of Andean republics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
Upon completion of the course, students will be able to:
1. Identify visually different Andean landscapes, geographies and ecologies;
2. Distinguish how select Andean countries have evolved politically, socially, culturally; and
3. Compare and contrast these experiences with those from their own backgrounds.
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| HIST 42600 - History Of United States-China Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the history of US-Chinese relations since 1784. While mapping the changing American strategies from containment to engagement with China, the course focuses on political, economic, social, and cultural aspects between the two nations. The course also addresses US-Chinese diplomatic relations and the involvement of other major players, such as Russia, Japan, and Europe. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. This course will present a unique learning opportunity for students in history, political science, international relations, and the proposed Asian interpretation, and research methodology regarding US-China relations.
2. Students are exposed to professional practice setting and evidence-based research through empirical observations, participations, and presentations.
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| HIST 42700 - History Of Spain And Portugal |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the evolving social and institutional history of the Iberian peoples, from the Roman colony to the twentieth century. Some emphasis is placed upon the transfer of institutions to the lands of the Spanish and Portuguese empires. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HIST 42702 - History Of Spain And Portugal: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the evolving social and institutional history of the Iberian peoples, from the Roman colony to the twentieth century. Some emphasis is placed upon the transfer of institutions to the lands of the Spanish and Portuguese empires. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 42700. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HIST 43000 - Women In African History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (WGSS 43000) African women's history is rich and deeply layered. In this course, we will examine the social, political, economic, religious, and cultural experiences of women living in Africa. Although we look at women in the pre-colonial and slave trade eras, the focus will be on women during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Much of our reading and discussion will consider not only women, but also gender as we think about women's interactions with men and children. This course is concerned with the historical forces shaping African women's lives, as well as with ways in which women have been active agents in the making of their own histories. Students can expect to engage with a number of different types of texts (e.g. firms, novels, scholarly analyses, and primary sources.) Typically offered Fall, Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HIST 43002 - Women In Africa History: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This writing-intensive seminar examines the social, political, economic, religious, and cultural experiences of women living in Africa. Although we will look at women in the pre-colonial and slave trade eras, the focus will be on women during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Much of our reading and discussion will consider not only women, but also gender as we think about women’s interactions with men and children. Topics include sexuality, power, politics, violence, and resistance, among others. Students can expect to engage with a number of different types of texts (e.g. films, novels, scholarly analyses, and primary sources). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Knowledge of African history with a particular focus on women and gender.
2. Develop skills in critical thinking and oral articulation.
3. Improve their writing skills.
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| HIST 43800 - History Of Russia From Medieval Times To 1861 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the main characteristics of early Russian society, culture and politics. Topics include: the Kievan principalities, Orthodox Christianity, the Mongols, the rise of Moscow, the Petrine reforms, peasant and national rebellions, revolutionary movements, and the Tsarist empire to the Crimean War. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HIST 43802 - History Of Russia From Medieval Times to 1861: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the main characteristics of early Russian society, culture and politics. Topics include: the Kievan principalities, Orthodox Christianity, the Mongols, the rise of Moscow, the Petrine reforms, peasant and national rebellions, revolutionary movements, and the Tsarist empire to the Crimean War. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 43800. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HIST 43900 - Communist China |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The evolution of the Communist movement (1921-1949) and the development of the Communist government (since 1949) in China. Attention is given to political, economic, social, and cultural changes. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HIST 43902 - Communist China: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The evolution of the Communist movement (1921-1949) and the development of the Communist government (since 1949) in China. Attention is given to political, economic, social, and cultural changes. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 43900. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HIST 44000 - History Of Russia From 1861 To The Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course surveys the paths of the Russian empire through economic modernization, social transformation, and World War I; the revolutionary regimes of Bolshevism, Leninism, and Stalinism; World War II and the Cold War; the collapse of the USSR; and the new Eurasian states. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HIST 44002 - History Of Russia From 1861-Present: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course surveys the paths of the Russian empire through economic modernization, social transformation, and World War I; the revolutionary regimes of Bolshevism, Leninism, and Stalinism; World War II and the Cold War; the collapse of the USSR; and the new Eurasian states. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 44000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HIST 44100 - Africa In The Twentieth Century |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A problem-oriented course in the modern history of Africa from 1880 to 1975. It analyzes origins of African nationalism, European colonialism, racial conflict, and war leading to the independence revolution of the 1960s and 1970s. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HIST 44102 - Africa In The Twentieth Century: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A problem-oriented course in the modern history of Africa from 1880 to 1975. It analyzes origins of African nationalism, European colonialism, racial conflict, and war leading to the independence revolution of the 1960s and 1970s. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 44100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HIST 45000 - The English Landscape:Integrating History, Horticulture & Landscape Architect |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive four-weeks in residence in Corsham,UK with visits to significant sites to examine the intersections between human culture and the natural environment that results in the developed landscape. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HIST 45500 - Modern Iraq |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on Iraq's formation as a modern state, and it addresses the following periods: Ottoman Mesopotomia (1908-1920), Colonial Iraq (1915-1932), the Monarchy (1932-1958), Revolutionary Iraq (1958-1968), and Baathist Iraq (1968-2003), the Iraq War (2003-2008). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn to read and analyze primary sources. In doing so, they will come up with independent arguments in regard to the themes being studied in class.
2. They will need to discuss their understandings of primary and secondary sources in class, which means that their ability to engage in intellectual discussions will increase. This class will also require students to write extended essays that synthesize and engages both primary and secondary source material. Given the class topic, students will also be able to apply their new-found historical knowledge to contemporary events.
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| HIST 45502 - Modern Iraq: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on Iraq's formation as a state from Ottoman times until the present day. In doing so, it historicizes the Iraq War, encouraging students to draw their own conclusions about it. This class requires that students engage primary sources and write a research paper of twenty-five pages. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn to read and analyze primary sources. In doing so, they will come up with independent arguments in regard to the themes being studied in class.
2. They will need to discuss their understandings of primary and secondary sources in class, which means that their ability to engage in intellectual discussions will increase.
3. This class will also require students to write extended essays that synthesize and engages both primary and secondary source material. Given the class topic, students will also be able to apply their new-found historical knowledge to contemporary events.
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| HIST 46000 - American Colonial History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An investigation of the foundation of the American colonies, their place in the British imperial structure, and the eventual conflict of imperial exigencies with colonial self-interest and national feeling. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| HIST 46002 - American Colonial History: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An investigation of the foundation of the American colonies, their place in the British imperial structure, and the eventual conflict of imperial exigencies with colonial self-interest and national feeling. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 46000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HIST 46100 - The Revolutionary Era, 1763 To 1800 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of the origins, nature, and consequences of the American Revolution; of the achievements and difficulties of the new nation under the Articles of Confederation; of the drafting and adoption of the Constitution; and of the initial political, economic, and social progress of the United States under the Federalists. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| HIST 46102 - Revolutionary Era 1763-1800: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of the origins, nature, and consequences of the American Revolution; of the achievements and difficulties of the new nation under the Articles of Confederation; of the drafting and adoption of the Constitution; and of the initial political, economic, and social progress of the United States under the Federalists. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 46100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HIST 46300 - Creation Of American Legal Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The "Founding Fathers" wrote a Constitution riddled with compromise language, maddeningly brief, and often imprecise. How did early Americans erect a working civil society, with courts and policemen, laws and procedures, on the foundation of that constitutional framework?. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
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| HIST 46302 - Creation Of American Legal Culture: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The "Founding Fathers" wrote a Constitution riddled with compromise language, maddeningly brief, and often imprecise. How did early Americans erect a working civil society, with courts and policemen, laws and procedures, on the foundation of that constitutional framework?. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 46300. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HIST 46400 - Jacksonian America 1815-1850 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Surveys Era of the Early American Republic. Topics include "Market Revolution" democratizations of American politics and society, Reform movements, territorial expansion, and Mexican-American War. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| HIST 46500 - The Civil War And Reconstruction, 1850 To 1877 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the American Civil War and Reconstruction, covering the intense sectional conflict of the 1850s; the military, social, economic, and political aspects of the war; and the political and economic reconstruction that followed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| HIST 46502 - Civil War And Reconstruction 1850-1877: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the American Civil War and Reconstruction, covering the intense sectional conflict of the 1850s; the military, social, economic, and political aspects of the war; and the political and economic reconstruction that followed. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 46500. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HIST 46601 - Immigration And Ethnicity In U S History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigates the nature of immigration to the United States, the reaction of immigrants and those already in America to the succeeding waves of immigration, the changing nature of immigration and naturalization legislation, the development of ethnic communities and their strategies for interaction with one another and the larger society, and the influence of immigration and ethnicity on American history. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| HIST 46700 - The Emergence Of Modern America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the changes in American society between 1877 and 1932. The course covers such issues as the rise of industry, the growth of consumerism, the shift to a multi-ethnic society, imperialism, Populism, Progressivism, World War I, and the 1920s. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| HIST 46702 - Emergence Of Modern America: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the changes in American society between 1877 and 1932. The course covers such issues as the rise of industry, the growth of consumerism, the shift to a multi-ethnic society, imperialism, Populism, Progressivism, World War I, and the 1920s. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 46700. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 46800 - Recent American History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the issues that shaped American society, politics, foreign policy, and culture from 1932 to the present. Covers the Great Depression, World War II, the Cold War, and the Vietnam War as well as the social, cultural, and economic impact of those events. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 46802 - Recent American History: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the issues that shaped American society, politics, foreign policy, and culture from 1932 to the present. Covers the Great Depression, World War II, the Cold War, and the Vietnam War as well as the social, cultural, and economic impact of those events. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 46800. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 46900 - Black Civil Rights Movement |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will examine the origins, dynamics, and consequences of the modern black civil rights movement by exploring how struggles for racial equality and full citizenship worked to dismantle entrenched systems of segregation, repression, and discrimination within American society and culture. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 46902 - Black Civil Rights Movement: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will examine the origins, dynamics, and consequences of the modern black civil rights movement by exploring how struggles for racial equality and full citizenship worked to dismantle entrenched systems of segregation, repression, and discrimination within American society and culture. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 46900. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 47100 - History Of The Great Plains Indians |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the tribal history, culture, and social institutions of the Plains Indians. Relations with Euro-Americans, warfare, trade, major ceremonials, and lifestyles before, during, and after the reservation period will be studied. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 47102 - History Of Great Plains Indians: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the tribal history, culture, and social institutions of the Plains Indians. Relations with Euro-Americans, warfare, trade, major ceremonials, and lifestyles before, during, and after the reservation period will be studied. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 47100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 47200 - History Of Mexico |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A history of the Mexican people from the pre-Columbian period to present. Special emphasis is placed on the successful social revolutions that led to the development of today's dynamic nation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 47202 - History Of Mexico: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A history of the Mexican people from the pre-Columbian period to present. Special emphasis is placed on the successful social revolutions that led to the development of today's dynamic nation. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 47200. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 47300 - History Of The South |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Geographic, economic, cultural, social, and political aspects of the South. The significance of such figures as Jefferson, Jackson, Calhoun, Jefferson Davis, and Woodrow Wilson. The emphasis is on the evolution of the intellectual climate. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 47302 - History Of The South: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Geographic, economic, cultural, social, and political aspects of the South. The significance of such figures as Jefferson, Jackson, Calhoun, Jefferson Davis, and Woodrow Wilson. The emphasis is on the evolution of the intellectual climate. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 47300. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 47500 - Spanish Frontier In North America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines both the chronological history and institutions of the expansion of Spain in the colonial period in northern Mexico, the southwestern United States, and Florida and the Southeast. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 47502 - Spanish Frontier In North America: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines both the chronological history and institutions of the expansion of Spain in the colonial period in northern Mexico, the southwestern United States, and Florida and the Southeast. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 47500. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 47600 - The Civil War In Myth And Memory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This seminar will explore how the Civil War has been celebrated and/or remembered from 1865-present. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 47700 - Native American Women's History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course studies the history of indigenous women in North America from pre-contact to the present era, examining their roles through the experience of colonization and decolonization underscoring issues of sovereignty, identity, activism, kinship, public images, and stereotypes. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 47702 - Native American Women's History: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course thematically explores the history of Native American women in North America. The course is grounded in the particular theoretical and methodological concerns of indigenous history and is a reading and writing intensive course. During the semester, students are required to write two book reviews, two cultural event essays, and a research paper that includes the following components: research proposal, preliminary annotated bibliography, detailed outline and complete annotated bibliography, first draft, final submitted essay (10-15 pages in length). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Knowledge of the main topics in the political, social, cultural, and economic histories of Native American Women including contested knowledge, controversial issues and indigenous knowledge.
2. Analytical skills sufficient to distinguish between primary and secondary sources, to analyze arguments and interpretations, and to recognize interpretive conflicts.
3. The ability to recognize, analyze and incorporate nonwestern primary source material into scholarly investigations and analyses.
4. A familiarity with the ethical issues related to indigenous research: intellectual property, cooperative agreements and unique diplomatic issues.
|
| HIST 47900 - American Representations Of The Middle East And North Africa |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores Arab-American relations over the past 300 years, using American writings on the Middle East and North Africa as a prism for viewing evolving conceptions of national identity and global power in the United States. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. This course will improve students' ability to communicate their ideas in a small classroom setting.
2. The assigned course materials will encourage them to think more broadly in terms of primary sources, for students will be required to analyze classic works of literature, films and art.
3. Their writing skills will improve, because students will be required to synthesize and analyze assigned course materials in thematic essay questions designed to improve their ability to define a thesis statement and also to defend it.
|
| HIST 47902 - American Representations Of Mid East Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores Arab-American relations, using American writings on the Middle East and North Africa as a prism for viewing evolving conceptions of national identity and global power in the United States. Students produce three polished pieces of writing that address specific themes in the readings for this course. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. This course will improve students' ability to communicate their ideas in a small classroom setting.
2. The assigned course materials will encourage them to think more broadly in terms of primary sources, for students will be required to analyze classic works of literature, films and art.
3. Their writing skills will improve, because students will be required to synthesize and analyze assigned course materials in thematic essay questions designed to improve their ability to define a thesis statement and also to defend it.
|
| HIST 48500 - Topics In American Political History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course deals with broad thematic and chronologically defined topics in American political history from the Revolutionary Era to the late twentieth century. Content will vary with the faculty member teaching the class. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| HIST 48502 - Topics In American Political History: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course deals with broad thematic and chronologically defined topics in American political history from the Revolutionary Era to the late twentieth century. Content will vary with the faculty member teaching the class. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 48500. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| HIST 48800 - History Of Sexual Regulation In The United States |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will illuminate broad themes in the historical regulation of sexual violence, consensual sex, and homosexuality. Student will understand and analyze how cultural, social, religious, and moral ideologies have influenced conceptions of deviant and normative sexuality in the United States. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to articulate verbally and in writing what they have learned about the nineteenth and twentieth century history of sexual regulation.
2. Students will be able to identify and analyze the cultural and religious values which informed sexual regulation.
3. Students will develop a deeper understanding of how regulations and reform worked by conducting primary source research and synthesizing it into written arguments.
|
| HIST 49000 - Topics In History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HIST 49200 - Seminar In Historical Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course description will vary according to specific topic proposed to study. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will acquire a perspective on and advanced understanding of the course content.
2. Students will develop the ability to distinguish between primary and secondary sources.
3. Students will analyze arguments and interpretations, and recognize interpretive conflicts.
4. Students will strengthen skills in oral communication.
5. Students will improve their information literacy and engage in creative and critical thinking.
6. Students will become familiar with multi-draft writing and the revision process.
|
| HIST 49202 - Seminar In Historical Topics: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course description will vary according to specific topic proposed to study. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 49200. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| HIST 49300 - Interdisciplinary Undergraduate Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An undergraduate seminar devoted to an interdisciplinary examination of social, economic, political, and intellectual movements, using the faculty resources of the participating departments. Subject matter will vary. Each offering of the seminar will be approved by a committee of department heads from the sponsoring departments. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
|
| HIST 49400 - Science And Technology In American Civilization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey chiefly of technological developments, with particular attention paid to the reasons underlying the American tradition of using natural resources lavishly. The technological theme features mass production, while pure science themes include such items as the natural history tradition. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 49402 - Science And Technology In America: Writing Intensive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey chiefly of technological developments, with particular attention paid to the reasons underlying the American tradition of using natural resources lavishly. The technological theme features mass production, while pure science themes include such items as the natural history tradition. This is the writing intensive version of HIST 49400. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 49500 - Research Seminar In Historical Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to train history majors in the fundamentals of historical research and writing. Course descriptions vary according to specific topics proposed for study by instructors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will acquire a perspective on and advanced understanding of the course content.
2. Students will learn historical skills such as primary source research and analysis and how to form historical arguments.
3. Students will advance their information literacy and creative and critical thinking, acquire analytical skills sufficient to distinguish between primary and secondary sources.
4. Students will learn to analyze argumnet and interpretations and recognize interpretive conflicts.
5. Students will become familiar with multi-draft writing and the revision process.
|
| HIST 49800 - Individual Studies In History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HIST 49900 - History Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course allows students to earn credit for internships. Examples of qualified internships would include work with museums, historical societies, and various units of government. Credit and course requirements arranged with the instructor. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HIST 50000 - Studies In Medieval History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The first semester concentrates on selected major developments in the early Middle Ages (A.D. 400-1050). The second semester does the same for the High and Late Middle Ages (A.D. 1050-1500). Topics of interest and broad significance. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HIST 50500 - Haunted Pasts: Ghosts, Ghouls And Monsters In Global Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This reading and writing intensive course will be a survey of ghost-lore across cultures. It will study ghost-stories and theologies about the after-life, along with practices such as funerals, in order to understand the changing nature of fear in society. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 51200 - England Under The Stuarts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This intensive study of seventeenth-century England focuses on the political, religious, and economic tensions under the early Stuarts; the Civil War; Cromwell's Protectorate; and The Glorious Revolution. Topics discussed include parliament, puritanism, radicalism, the Restoration, and the Whig Oligarchy. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 51400 - A History Of Western Thought I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intellectual and cultural development of the western world to the end of the Middle Ages. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 51500 - A History Of Western Thought II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intellectual and cultural development of the western world from the Renaissance to the present. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 52500 - Hitler And Twentieth-Century Germany |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A reading and discussion course concentrating on four major periods of German history: pre-1914, the Weimar Republic, the Third Reich, and the post-1945 period. Emphasis is placed on the transformations occurring in German society as a result of these upheavals. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 54800 - Conflict In East Asia: Twentieth Century |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the participation of China, Japan, and Korea in the shifting alliances and the diplomatic and military crises of the twentieth century. The policies of these countries are considered in the light of the major international problems that confronted them. Particular attention is given to the Communist challenge in East Asia. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 55300 - Colonial America, 1600-1776 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the expansion of Europe, the age of exploration and discovery, and the establishment of colonies in the New World. Particular attention will be paid to the emergence of an American culture during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the nature of the British Empire, and the emergence of dissent and revolution. This course is the first part of a five-part upper-level overview of American history. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 55500 - The Emergence Of Modern America, 1865-1916 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the nation that emerged emotionally exhausted from a civil war to become, by the eve of World War I, a land seemingly destined to achieve a degree of perfection not previously attained by the human community. The interaction of a flourishing industrial establishment, floods of immigrants, rapid urbanization, and smoldering racism combined to transform antebellum America into a complex and relatively sophisticated society during those years. Emphasis will be placed upon an analysis of these forces and the men who tried to control them. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 57500 - The American Frontier |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will involve study of the nature and importance of the westward movement in American history from the Revolution to the twentieth century. The westward movement will be treated in its varied aspects. Emphasis will be placed upon social and economic aspects as well as upon the spread of government. Efforts will be made to view this national expansion from the viewpoint of Americans exploiting a great land, offering vast resources, and the effects these resources had upon American development. Although the Turner thesis will be discussed, no attempt will be made to pursue a thesis. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 57600 - Problems In Latin American History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A detailed examination of specific topics in Latin American history. Topics offered vary between colonial and national periods. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| HIST 57700 - Contemporary Latin America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A topical and regional approach to recent political, social, and economic movements in Latin America. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 58400 - Social History Of The United States |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Social and cultural development of the American people since the late eighteenth century. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HIST 58500 - American Labor History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A chronological survey of American working class society, the growth of worker organizations and the movement toward massive labor organization as a distinctive national development. Changing philosophies are examined, and the resulting pattern of relationships between management, the federal government, and the labor movement is emphasized. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 58600 - United States Foreign Affairs To World War I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the economic, political, and ideological factors which shaped American foreign policy from the colonial era until WWI. Course emphasizes the drive for territorial and commercial expansion which propelled the United States to a position of world power. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 58700 - United States Foreign Affairs: World War I To Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the economic, political, and ideological factors which shaped American foreign policy from WWI until present. Course emphasizes the intimate relation between domestic conditions and the growing involvement of the United States in world affairs. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 58900 - History Of Religion In America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A historical examination, from colonial beginnings to the present, of American religions and their role in the social, political, and economic life of the nation, including a survey of the speculative theories, the institutional forms, and the artistic and emotional expressions of religion which have developed in the United States. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 59000 - Directed Reading In History |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A reading course directed by the instructor in whose field of specialization the content of the reading falls. Approval of each reading project must be secured from the department. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HIST 59200 - Early American Intellectual History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of American political, economic, philosophical, and religious thought beginning with the European backgrounds of American puritanism and concluding with the rise of Darwinian naturalism. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 59300 - Twentieth-Century American Intellectual History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Origins and developments of modern American thought. Early American religious and philosophical traditions; Darwinian evolution and evolutionary naturalism; pragmatism, and the main currents of the 1920s and 1930s. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 59400 - Afro-American Thought And Ideology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of ideas, programs, strategies of nineteenth and twentieth century black leaders and activists. Course concentrates on Pan-Africanism, as-similationism, black nationalism (territorial and cultural), racial awareness as developed against background of slavery, urban migration, economic oppression, and black political powerlessness. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 59500 - The Holocaust And Genocide |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (POL 59500) History and analysis of the Nazi attempt to destroy the European Jews, with comparisons to other instances of genocide. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 59600 - The American City |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of urban development in the United States from the early colonial towns to the twentieth-century megalopolis. Emphasis is placed on the city as a particular geographic, economic, political, social, and cultural entity, and on its expanding role in American life. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HIST 60100 - Reading Seminar In European History |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Bibliography and historiography of selected fields of topics in European history; may vary in subject matter from semester to semester. Prerequisite: Master's student standing. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HIST 60200 - Seminar In European History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Individual and group study of topics in European history from the medieval period to the modern era. Topics reflect the research, teaching, or historiographical specialties of the faculty offering the course. Subtitles indicate the focus of the research seminar. Prerequisite: Master's student standing. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HIST 61000 - History: Theory And Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is the first part of an introductory two-course sequence for new graduate students intended to acquaint them with some important issues regarding the modern professional practice of history. This semester concentrates on historiography, theoretical questions, and methodological debates that today's working historians inevitably encounter. Students read about the practice of historical scholarship and read several important example texts representing different approaches to the discipline over the past 200 years. Students write several short book reviews, position papers, and a mock grant proposal during this semester. The course is required of incoming graduate students in history. It usually will be followed by HIST 61100, Research Practicum. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Our primary objective in this course is to familiarize new graduate students with current trends in historical writing and argumentation. This involves mastering a certain amount of knowledge about the evolution of the historical profession (historiography) but more importantly the recognition of problems inherent in asking and answering historical questions using documentary evidence and other sources available to scholars. Successful students will be able to formulate a research question and situate it within a context of existing historical scholarship, arguing for its significance to the community of scholars to whom it is addressed. Reading and discussion of seminar texts will develop critical thinking and communication skills. Questions of ethical research conduct and the appropriate use of historical investigation will be explored in the course of the seminar.
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| HIST 61100 - History: Research Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The second half of a two-semester sequence for new graduate students intended to acquaint them with important issues regarding the modern practice of historical scholarship. This course is a research seminar in which students shape and execute their own research projects resulting in original article-length historical essays. In addition, matters relating to ethical conduct of research and problems of historical writing and argumentation are discussed. Prerequisites: HIST 61000 or 59800. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Our primary objective in this course is to walk each student through the process of shaping and executing a historical research project. The ultimate objective is the production of an original article-length historical essay. Along the way students will be asked to articulate their research question, propose strategies for finding appropriate evidence and sources, and discuss ways of constructing arguments to most effectively communicate the answers they find to their questions.
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| HIST 64100 - Reading Seminar In Global History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Individual and group study of topics in global history. Topics reflect the research, teaching, or historiographic specialties of the faculty offering the course. Subtitles indicate the focus of the research seminar. Prerequisite: Master's student standing. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HIST 64200 - Seminar In Global History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Individual and group study of topics in global history. Topics reflect the research, teaching, or historiographic specialties of the faculty offering the course. Subtitles indicate the focus of the research seminar. Prerequisite: Master's student standing. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HIST 65000 - Teaching The History Survey Course |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to the literature on teaching history at the college level, especially the literature on pedagogy, theory, and conceptualization needed for the undergraduate survey course. Students will become familiar with the professional literature, develop their own syllabus for the survey course, and produce an extensive historiographical essay supporting and justifying the contents of the syllabus. Class discussions will expose students to a number of teaching strategies, concepts, and exercises. Prerequisite: Master's student standing. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HIST 65100 - Reading Seminar In American History |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Bibliography and historiography of selected fields or topics in American history; may vary in subject matter from semester to semester. Prerequisite: Master's student standing. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HIST 65200 - Seminar In American History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Individual and group study of topics in American history from the colonial period to the present. Topics reflect the research, teaching, or historiographical specialties of the faculty offering the course. Subtitles indicate the focus of the research seminar. Prerequisite: Master's student standing. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HIST 66500 - Seminar On American Indian History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Individual research and group study of selected topics dealing with American Indian history from the pre-Columbian period to the present. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HIST 69800 - Research MA Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MA Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HIST 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: History
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HIST A1000 - Issues In United States History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study and analysis of selected historical issues and problems of general import. Topics will vary from semester to semester but will usually be broad subjects that cut across fields, regions, and periods. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
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| HIST A2600 - Early North American Women's History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the economic, family, religious, and political roles of the diverse women in early North American history. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
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| HIST A2610 - Modern American Women's History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Surveys the diversity of women’s experiences in modern United States history. An examination of women’s changing roles in working class and middle class families, the effects of industrialization on women’s economic activities and status, and women’s involvement in political and social struggles including those for women’s rights, birth control and civil rights. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-New Albany
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| HIST A3000 - Issues In United State |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study and analysis of selected historical issues and problems of limited scope. Topics will vary, but usually cut across fields, regions, and periods.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| HIST A3010 - Colonial America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Social, cultural, economic, political, and religious developments in colonial America from first contacts between Native Americans and Europeans through the early eighteenth century. Special topics include colonization, migration, slavery, Atlantic trade, and representative government. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-South Bend
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| HIST A3020 - Revolutionary America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Political, economic, religious, social, and cultural history of the American Revolution and the birth of the nation. Special topics cover the nature of the revolution, the experience and effects of the crisis on different members of society, including women, native peoples, and African-Americans, and the meanings of the American Revolution for contemporaries and their descendents. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| HIST A3030 - United States, 1789-1865 I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The young Republic from Washington's presidency through the Civil War. Political, economic, and social conditions and changes. Hamiltonian Federalists and Jeffersonian Republicans, the Jacksonian era, the slavery conflict, and the crisis of the Union. I., 1789-1829. II., 1829-1865.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| HIST A3040 - The United States From 1789 To 1865 I-II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. I. 1789-1840. Growth of national political institutions from Washington to Jackson; international conflicts, War of 1812, territorial expansion; political, economic, intellectual, social foundations of age of common man; antebellum reform. II. 1840-1865. Slavery, antislavery movement, Mexican War, sectional crises of 1850's, Civil War. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-New Albany
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| HIST A3060 - Sex Roles And Society In America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. What has it meant to be female or male in America? Examination of sex/gender roles, stereotypes, family life, sexual mores, work patterns, and popular culture. Reading in original sources and scholarly interpretations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST A3080 - American Business History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines organized profit-making activity in America since 1607. Topics include colonial business, merchant-agrarian capitalism, the business of slavery, government aid to business, industrialization, railroads and regulation, inventing and marketing, big business and anti-trust, managerial capitalism, modern entrepreneurs, environmental and consumer regulation, merger movements, information capitalism, and globalization. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| HIST A3090 - The South Before The Civil War |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Social, intellectual and cultural features of the American South, from English settlement to secession. Emphasis on the development of a distinctive southern regional culture and how it helped shape the buildup to the Civil War. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST A3100 - Survey Of American Indians I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The Native American experience from pre-Columbian period through American Civil War. Lectures and readings will focus upon Native American cultural patterns, and the Native American response to French, British, and American Indian policies. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the Cultural Studies (Non-Western) requirements. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| HIST A3110 - Survey Of American Indians II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Native American-White relations from Civil War through 1980s. Focus on Native American attempts to defend their homelands in American West, establishment of Indian reservations in late nineteenth century. Impact of the Sawes & Wheeler-Howard Acts, emergence of Native American church, urbanization of Native Americans in twentieth century. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the Cultural Studies (Non-Western) requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| HIST A3120 - North And South At Peace And War |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the social, economic, and political landscapes of two communities-one in the North and one in the South-before, during, and after the American Civil War. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
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| HIST A3130 - The United States From 1865 To 1919 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reconstruction, industrialism, immigration, urbanism, culture, foreign policy, progressivism, World War I. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| HIST A3140 - United States 1919-1945 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The Twenties, the Depression, New Deal, with interpretive readings in politics, diplomacy, economics, society, thought and literature of the period, World War II. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| HIST A3150 - Recent United States History II: 1945 To Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. World War II, Cold War, problems of contemporary America; economic, social, political, and diplomatic. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| HIST A3170 - American Social History, 1865 To Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of modern American intellectual and social patterns since the Civil War. Social thought, literature, science, the arts, religion, morals, education. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST A3180 - The American West |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Western expansion and development 1763-1900: economic, political, and social. Special attention to natural resources, Native American-Anglo American relations, and the role of the West in American myth and symbol. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST A3210 - History Of American Thought I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Major themes in American intellectual history. 1607-1865: Puritanism, American Enlightenment, and the rise of democratic ideology. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST A3220 - History Of American Thought II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Major themes in American intellectual history. 1865-1976: Social Darwinism, pragmatism, anti-intellectualism, 20th-century myths, and the new science. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST A3250 - American Constitutional History I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Changing constitutional system from seventeenth-century colonies to contemporary nations. Structure of government: federalism, division of powers, political institutions. Relationship of government to society and economy. Civil liberties and democracy. Constitutional law and politics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIST A3260 - American Constitutional History II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Changing constitutional system from seventeenth-century colonies to contemporary nations. Structure of government: federalism, division of powers, political institutions. Relationship of government to society and economy. Civil liberties and democracy. Constitutional law and politics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIST A3280 - The History Of Work In America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The History of Work in America examines the major transformations in the lives of American working people from the colonial era to modern times. This course explores shifting patterns of work, working class life and community, organized labor movements, and the relationship of workers and unions to the state. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIST A3290 - American Dissent |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will examine popular movements for social, economic, and political change in U.S. history. Emphasis will be on: evaluating different approaches to the study of collective action; understanding the social, political, and cultural contexts from which protest developed; and uncovering what protest movements reveal about the nature of American society and politics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIST A3330 - History Of Indiana I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course deals with the development of a midwestern state, with emphasis on the French and British periods; the West in the American Revolution; the transition from territory to state, political, economic and cultural patterns; and the sectional crisis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST A3340 - History of Indiana II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The period since 1865, tracing the development of a modern industrial commonwealth - agriculture, industry, politics, society, education, and the arts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST A3370 - American Frontier I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Spanish penetration into Greater Southwest; developments in Louisiana Territory and Oregon Country prior to 1850. II. Economic, political, and social developments in trans-Mississippi West, 1850 to present. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIST A3380 - American Frontier II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. I. Spanish penetration into Greater Southwest; developments in Louisiana Territory and Oregon Country prior to 1850. II. Economic, political, and social developments in trans-Mississippi West, 1850 to present.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIST A3410 - United States Women's History I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The social, economic, cultural, intellectual, political, and demographic history of women in the United States from the period before European settlement to the present. Topics include the variety in women’s experiences; the worlds in which women lived; the relationship between the private and public realms; and changes and continuities over time. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIST A3430 - Lincoln: The Man And The Myth |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will analyze and debate the moral, ethical, and political dilemmas faced by Lincoln during the Civil War, understand the role of slavery in Lincoln’s personal life and political life, analyze the myths of his life to see how, when, and why they were created, look at primary sources and create historical narrative, examine the public representations of Lincoln in art and popular culture to see how we have integrated Lincoln into our current society, and write papers on a Lincoln topic of their choice. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIST A3440 - The Gilded Age |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will study the response of the American people and their institutions to the opportunities and problems of the late nineteenth century. Special attention will be paid to: the rise of Big Business; labor organization; immigration; regular, reform, and radical politics; disappearance of the frontier; the farm crisis; and the rise of imperialism. An important feature of this course will be the introduction to the class of important issues in the historical interpretation of the late nineteenth century. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Enhance communication skills both orally in class room discussions and in writing on quizzes, tests, and assignments.
2. Enhance critical thinking skills through exercises designed to analyze complex historical issues and make informed judgments.
3. Enhance skills at integrating and applying knowledge through an interdisciplinary approach to historical analysis.
4. Recognize cultural traditions and appreciate the diversity of the human experience by frequent comparisons of the historical experiences of Americans with that of other people in our readings, lectures, and class discussions.
5. Apply ethical and moral judgments to the study of the personal and public choices made by historical figures in various written assignment.
|
| HIST A3450 - American Diplomatic History I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. American diplomacy from 1775 to 1823; diplomacy of American continental expansion to 1898. America as a world power. Involvement in Far Eastern affairs after 1898, diplomacy of World Wars I and II, development to present. Eligible for graduate credit. Credit not given for both A345 and A316. Credit not given for both A346 and A316. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| HIST A3460 - American Diplomatic History II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. American diplomacy from 1775 to 1823; diplomacy of American continental expansion to 1898. America as a world power. Involvement in Far Eastern affairs after 1898, diplomacy of World Wars I and II, development to present. Eligible for graduate credit. Credit not given for both A345 and A316. Credit not given for both A346 and A316. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| HIST A3470 - American Urban History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Evolution of cities and urban life in the United States from colonial times to the present. Rise of cities (New York, Chicago, Indianapolis, Los Angeles, Miami, and others). Creation of modern urban districts (ghettos, suburbia), city planning, political and economic power structures, ethnic and race relations, law and order (crime, police, prisons). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| HIST A3480 - Civil War And Reconstruction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The era of the Civil War and its aftermath. Military, political, economic, and social aspects of the coming of the war, the war years, and the "reconstruction" era following the conflict. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST A3490 - Afro-American History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of Blacks in American history from earliest colonial days to the present. The lectures will consider such questions as the impact of slavery on the Black person, the nature of racism in America, Black social and cultural institutions, and changing patterns of civil rights protests. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST A3510 - The United States In World War II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of U.S. effect on the outcome of World War II and change in America caused by the war. Major topics: the process of U.S. involvement, strategies of the major land and sea campaigns, relations within the Grand Alliance, development of the A-bomb, and the origins of the Cold War. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST A3520 - History of Latinos in the United States |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines twentieth-century history of immigration to the United States from Mexico, Puerto Rico, Cuba, and Central America. Compares causes of immigration and contrasts experiences of Latino immigrants in the United States.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIST A3550 - African-American History I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. History of Africans in the United States from the colonial era to the Emancipation Proclamation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST A3560 - African-American History II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. History of African Americans from the era of the Civil War to the present. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIST A3630 - Survey Of Indiana History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will answer provoking questions about place, experience, and historical methods. It will emphasize the points of convergence and divergence between Indiana and the national experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST A3640 - History Of Black Americans |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of black life in America: the Atlantic slave trade, slavery, Afro-American culture, racism, Civil War and Reconstruction, peonage, segregation, northern migration, urban ghettos, discrimination, Harlem Renaissance, black nationalism, civil rights, black revolt, contemporary setting. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| HIST A3730 - American History Through Film |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will analyze films about America since 1865. The movies will be representative of a particular historical period or they will provide a commentary on a specific issue. Both forms will provide a gateway to how Americans have come to think about their own history. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST A3770 - The History Of American Sports |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an exploration of the interplay of social, cultural, economic, and political forces in the formation of an American sporting culture from the colonial era to the present. It examines the ways in which social class, race, gender, ethnicity, and region have influenced sporting experiences and the place of sport in American society. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST A3780 - American Constitutional History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course surveys the process of framing, amending, and interpreting the United States Constitution from the 1780's until today. It features a detailed study of the history and context of the Constitutional Convention of 1787. It also examines the decisions and justices of the Supreme Court from it's origins to the present. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST A3820 - The Sixties |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intensive examination of the decade that tore apart post-World War II American society, beginning with the confident liberalism that believed the nation could "pay any price" and "bear any burden" in order to stop communism abroad and to promote reform at home. Focuses on the internal contradictions and external challenges that destroyed this liberal agenda: civil rights and black power, the New Left, the counterculture, second-wave feminism, the sexual revolution, the Vietnam War, and the globalization of the economy, and finishing with the more conservative order that emerged in the early 1970s to deal with the conflicting realities of limited national power and wealth on the one hand, and rising demands for rights and opportunities on the other. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Kokomo
|
| HIST A3900 - Representative Americans |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explorations of the lives and works of selected American men and women for the purpose of better understanding the ideological and social forces at work in American history. The course will serve as both an introduction to the biographical literature of American history and as an exercise in the relevance of biography to history. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIST A4000 - The Lewis And Clark Expedition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced undergraduate course that is cross-listed with a Liberal Studies D502 graduate course. A general overview course designed to explore the broadrange of historical, cultural and scientific topics that achieved a high degree of unity through the Lewis and Clark Expedition.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST A4100 - American Environmental History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the environmental context for American history by analyzing the diverse and changing interaction between Americans and the environment in which they have lived. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIST A4210 - Topics In United States History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive study and analysis of selected historical issues and/or problems in United States history. Topics will vary by semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST B1500 - The West in the World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the development of Western Civilization since its origins emphasizing key problems, turning points, and recurring themes, especially in the past two centuries. Focuses also on the way peoples around the globe helped to shape Western Civilization and felt its influence.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST B2010 - American History 1492-1876 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of the political, diplomatic, economic, cultural, and sociological forces and adjustments that have affected the history of the United States to 1876.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST B2020 - American History, 1877 to the Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of the political, diplomatic, economic, cultural, and sociological forces and adjustments that have affected the history of the United States since 1877.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST B2040 - American Environmental History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to give students knowledge of resource use in the United States. Government policies and private enterprise practices of exploitation and conservation from settlement to the present are treated in historical perspective. Emphasizes the way resource use has shaped society. Not open to students who have credit in NREM 204.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST B3000 - Issues In Western European History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study and analysis of selected historical issues and problems of limited scope. Topics will vary but usually cut across fields, region, and periods. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| HIST B3090 - Britain Before 1688 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Britain before 1688. Development of Britain and its institution from Roman times to the Glorious Revolution, with special emphasis on political and constitutional change. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| HIST B3100 - Britain Since 1688 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Britain since 1688. Examines important modern political, economic, social, and cultural developments including industrialization and imperialism and the emergence of ideologies like liberalism and socialism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST B3110 - Holocaust And Modern Genocides |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines genocide in the 20th century: first state-sponsored mass murder, systematic murder of Jews in Europe during World War II, regional differences in implementation of genocidal policies, memory and commemoration, the political uses and abuses of the Holocaust, Genocide Convention and the international community. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST B3230 - History Of The Holocaust |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Anti-Semitism in Imperial and Weimar Germany; the Nazi rise to power; the destruction of European Jewry behavior in crisis and extremity; the attitude of the Allied nations; mass murder in comparative historical perspective; theological, moral, and political implications. Credit given for only one of HIST B3230 or JSTU J3230. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Richmond
|
| HIST B3420 - Women In Medieval Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00.This course will provide an overview of the history of women in the medieval west. The situation of women will be addressed according to their position in society; be that of noblewoman, queen, peasant, saint or prostitute. Both primary and secondary sources will be examined. Attention will also be paid to medieval theories about women and prevailing attitudes towards women, as expressed in both learned and popular circles. Methodological and epistemological problems will be highlighted. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HIST B3510 - Western Europe In The Early Middle Ages |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Evolution of European civilization from the fall of Rome, development of Christianity and the Germanic invasions; through Charlemagne's Empire and the subsequent development of feudalism, manorialism, and papacy. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| HIST B3520 - Western Europe In The High And Later Middle Ages |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Expansion of European culture and institutions: chivalry, Crusades, rise of towns, universities, Gothic architecture, law, revival of central government. Changes in late medieval Europe: famine, plague, Hundred Years' War, peasant revolt, crime, inquisition, and heresy. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| HIST B3530 - The Renaissance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Italian Renaissance as a political and cultural phase in the history of western civilization. Its roots in antiquity and the middle ages; its characteristic expression in literature, art, learning; social transformations; manners and customs. Expansion of the Rennaissance into France, Germany, and England. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| HIST B3540 - The Reformation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Economic, political, social, and religious background of Protestant Reformation; Lutheran, Reformed, Anglican, and Anabaptist movements, with reference to their political and theological trends; Catholic Reformation.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| HIST B3550 - Europe: Louis XIV To French Revolution |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Absolutism to enlightened despotism; the European state and its authority in fiscal, judicial, and military affairs; sources, content, diffusion of the Enlightenment; agriculture, commerce, and industry in pre-industrial economies; Old Regime France. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| HIST B3560 - French Revolution And Napoleon |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Crisis of Old Regime; middle-class and popular revolt; from constitutional monarchy to Jacobin commonwealth; the terror and revolutionary government; expansion of revolution in Europe; rise and fall of Napoleonic Empire.
Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIST B3570 - Modern France |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A social, political, and cultural survey of France in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIST B3590 - Europe From Napoleon To The First World War |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Post-Napoleonic reaction; revitalized revolutionary forces, 1848; reform in England and Russia; bourgeois monarchy and Second Empire in France; unification movements in Italy and Germany; middle-class nationalism, romanticism, and realism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
|
| HIST B3600 - Europe From 1870 To World War I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Bismarckian and Wilhelmian Germany; Gladstone, Disraeli, and modern Britain; the French Third Republic and the last days of Tsarist Russia; disintegration of Ottoman Empire; the Austro-Hungarian Empire in decline; European society and culture on the eve of World War I.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST B3610 - Europe in the 20th Century I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Diplomatic, economic, intellectual, military, political, and social developments within Europe from World War I to World War II. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST B3620 - 20th Century Europe 1933-Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Diplomatic, economic, intellectual, military, political, and social developments within Europe from World War I to present; changing relationships between Europe and other parts of the world. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| HIST B3780 - Germany: 1815-Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Impact of French Revolution and Treaty of Vienna (1815); struggle between reaction and liberalism; unification; industrialization; imperialism; international friction; internal political conflicts; World War I; Weimar Republic; Hitler regime; problems since 1945. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST B3840 - European Intellectual History II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Critical examination and analysis of the historical, psychological, social, and scientific roots of the thought of leading European thinkers from the sixteenth to the twentieth centuries. Thematic developments, as well as individual thinkers and particular problems, are emphasized. I. Sixteenth through eighteenth centuries. II. Nineteenth through twentieth centuries. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIST B3930 - German History: From Bismarck To Hitler |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course seeks to acquaint the student with the social, political, and cultural developments in Germany from the middle nineteenth through the middle twentieth century. Its basic theme is the tragic efforts made by liberalism and democracy to assert themselves against the opposing forces of militarism and nationalism. Not open to students who have had B377-B378. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Richmond
|
| HIST B4210 - Topics In European History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive study and analysis of selected historical themes and/or problems in European history. Topics will vary from semester to semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| HIST B4250 - The Second World War |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The Second World War. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIST B4910 - Topics In Middle Eastern History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected issues and problems in the Middle Eastern world since Muhammed. Topics may include the expansion of Islam, slavery in the Middle East, the economic and social history and the Ottoman empire, the Arab/Israeli dispute, and recent national and international crises.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HIST B4920 - History Of China To 1600 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Descriptive and analytical survey of China's history from earliest times to roughly A.D. 1600, with emphasis on the development of the dynastic tradition, Confucian-based society and culture, and China's focal point status in the pre-1600 world order.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST B4950 - Modern China 1600 To The Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Descriptive and analytical survey with emphasis on China's changing role as a member of the world community, its response to increased Western contacts, disintegration of traditional order, revolutionary changes through the Republic of China and the People's Republic, and significant elements of contemporary Chinese society and culture.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST C3860 - Greek History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Political, social, and economic developments in the Greek world from the age of Mycenae and Troy until the Roman conquest 167 B.C.. Greek colonial world, Athens and Sparta, career and legend of Alexander the Great, the Hellenistic age. Archaeology as a source of political and social history.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| HIST C3880 - Roman History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of the history of the Roman people from legendary origins through the regal period, the Republic, the Early Empire, and the Late Empire. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST C3920 - History Of Modern Near East |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. 1774 to World War I; Ottoman Empire; the Eastern Question; supression of rebellious elements; reform and reorganization of empire; Crimean War; spread of doctrinaire nationalism; Young Turk movement; World War I. Iran: relations with Russia, Britain, Turkey, and Afghanistan; Babism; tobacco monopoly; constitutional revolution: World War I. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST C3930 - Ottoman History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Political, social, and economic developments in the Ottoman Empire from the rise of its power in Anatolia (1299) to the end of the classical period (1826). Evolution of Ottoman institutions and relations with major European powers. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the nonwestern culture studies requirement. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST D3100 - Russian Revolutions And Soviet Regime |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Causes and development of Russian revolutions and civil war; Lenin, Trotsky, and Stalin; purges, terror, economic development, society, and arts under Stalin; struggle against Hitler; scope and limits of de-Stalinization under Khrushchev; minorities, dissent, and life in the Soviet Union. Credit given for only one of D4100 or D3100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST D3140 - Soviet Social And Cultural History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the history and dynamics of Soviet society and culture, their interaction, and their influence on Soviet politics. Among the specific topics covered will be the Party, women, dissidents, the Jews and other minorities, literature, and art. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIST D3300 - Eastern Europe In The Second Half Of The Twentieth Century |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines origins of communism in Eastern Europe, brutal take-over and Stalinization, attempts to reform communism, the fall of communism and ensuing battles for privatization, democratization, and the Wars in Yugoslavia. Looks at political institutions that shaped communist and post-communist Eastern Europe, and important social and cultural developments. Credit given for only one of D4280, D3280, or D3300. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| HIST D4020 - Byzantine History And Civilization II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. History of the Byzantine Empire from 867 to 1453; survey of cultural, demographic, and political developments prior to 867; Orthodoxy and the conceptual foundations of state organization; civil and military aristocracy; social and economic conditions; foreign policy; rival states and war, Latin invasion, imperial restoration, and Ottoman conquest; the Byzantine cultural legacy in the East. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST D4100 - Russian Revolution And The Soviet Regime |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Russia on the eve of World War I; impact of World War I on Russian society; the revolutions of 1917; civil war and allied intervention in Russia; New Economic Policy and Five-Year Plans; the Stalin and Post-Stalinist eras. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the nonwestern culture studies requirement. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST D4260 - History Of Balkans: 1914-Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. First World War in the Balkans; politics, economics, and societies in the Balkan countries during the 20th century; Balkan unity movements; international events and World War II; rise of socialism in the region; era of cold war; and detente; revolutions of '80s and '90s. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST D4280 - Eastern Europe: 1914-Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. World War I; the peace settlements in Poland, Czechoslovakia, Austria, Hungary, Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, Albania, Greece, Romania, and Turkey. Parliamentary democracy vs. military dictatorship; irredentism; economic transformation; Nazi domination; Munich; Soviet seizure of power. National communism of Tito, Gromulka, Kadar, Ceausescu, Dubcek, and Hoxha. Soviet and Western rivalry in Eastern Europe.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST E1000 - Issues In African History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study and analysis of selected historical issues and problems of general import. Topics will vary from semester to semester but will usually be broad subjects that cut across fields, regions, and periods. May be repeated with different topics for a maximum of 9 credit hours. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| HIST E3150 - Europe Discovers Africa |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (HFA) Comparative Methodology; case studies of African geography and cultures before the nineteenth century partition. European exploration and impressions of Africa. African reactions to European incursions, including adaptation, resistance, and rebellion. European competition for informal and formal control. Impact of European Expansion on Europe and Africa.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST E3310 - African History From Ancient Times To Empires And City States |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Origins and groupings of peoples of Africa; political, social, and economic evolution to 1750; Africa's contacts with ancient world, trans-Sahara and Indian Ocean trades, growth of states and empires, spread of Islam. Credit not given for both E331 and E431. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the nonwestern culturale studies requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST E3320 - African History From Colonial Rule To Independence |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. 1750 to present. Slave trade, European imperialism, impact of Islam and Christianity, new state formations, reassertion of African culture and identity. Credit not given for both E332 and E432. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST E3360 - History Of East Africa |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Developments over the past two millennia in Ethiopia, Somalia, Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Malawi, and northern Mozambique. Topics include the environment and peoples; the emergence of hierarchical societies; nineteenth-century economic and political changes; European imperialism; transformations in the colonial era; African independence. Credit given for only one of E436 or E336. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST E4310 - History Of Africa I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course HIST E431 description unavailable online at this time. Please contact appropriate department. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST F1000 - Issues In Latin American History: Introduction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The coming together of the three races in the New World; the construction of a social, political, and economic order; the resilience and/or fragility of the social, political, and economic order in modern times.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST F1010 - Issues In Latin American History: Introduction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The coming together of the three races in the New World; the construction of a social, political, and economic order; the resilience and/or fragility of the social, political, and economic order in modern times.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST F2160 - History Of Slavery In The Americas |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Slavery in the New World is explored by comparing its forms in North America and in the Caribbean and South America. Special attention is paid to the mechanisms by which slaves were held in slavery and the adaptation and accommodations that were made by both masters and slaves. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
|
| HIST F3410 - Latin America: Conquest And Empire |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Geographical, Indian, Spanish, Portuguese, and African backgrounds; discovery and conquest; settlement and expansion; political, economic, social, cultural, and religious institutions; trans-European struggle for hemispheric dominance; wars of independence; 1492-1825. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the nonwestern culture studies requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-New Albany
|
| HIST F3420 - Latin America: Evolution And Revolution |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Hispanic America since independence, with emphasis on common problems of nation building in multi-racial former colonial societies; latifundia; dependency relationships; impact of industrialization; the conservative and revolutionary responses; 1810-present. Approved by Arts and Science for the nonwestern culture studies requirement. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| HIST F3460 - Modern Mexico |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Places contemporary Mexico in historical perspective, focusing on the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Topics include nineteenth-century social and political movements, the causes and consequences of the 1910 revolution, the formation of Mexico's political system, problems of economic growth, and the changing patterns of gender, class, and ethnicity in Mexican society. Approved by the Arts and Sciences for the nonwestern culutre studies requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| HIST F3470 - History Of The United States - Latin America Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the history of diplomatic, economic, and cultural relations between the United States and Latin America from the late 1700s
to the present.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIST F4160 - History Of Slavery In The Americas |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Slavery in the New World is explored by comparing its forms in North America and in the Caribbean and South America. Special attention is paid to the mechanisms by which slaves were held in slavery and the adaptation and accommodations that were made by both masters and slaves. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST F4310 - 19th Century Latin American Intellectual History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The intellectual and political foundations for independence; the creation of the nation-state; the continuing political and intellectual attempts to establish and safeguard liberty and order. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST F4320 - 20th Century Latin Amer Revolution |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Revolutions, revolutionary movements, rapid social change, and modernization from Battle through Menem. Particular attention to the Mexican, Cuban, Bolivian, Guatemalan, Costa Rican and Nicaraguan revolutions, to the Peron, Vargas, and Velasco Alvarado administrations and Cold War confrontations. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the nonwestern culture studies requirement. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST F4470 - United States-Latin American Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Diplomatic and economic relations of the United States with Latin America, from American independence to the present. Evolution of Monroe Doctrine, Mexican War, development of trade and investments, establishment and abandonment of protectorates, Good Neighbor Policy, increased hemispheric interaction in the World War II and Cold Waq eras. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST G1000 - Issues In Asian History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study and analysis of selected historical issues and problems in Asian societies; especially important are their political institutions, economic development, ideological and religious foundations, and social changes.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST G2000 - Issues In Asian History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study and analysis of selected historical issues and problems of general import. Topics will vary from semester to semester but will usually be broad subjects that cut across fields, regions, and periods. May be repeated with a different topic for a maximum of 6 credit hours. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| HIST G3580 - Early Modern Japan |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Samurai culture, expansion of Buddhism, and sectarian violence. High feudalism, unification, and the Tokugawa settlement after 1600. Encounter with European civilization, closed country. Urbanization, social and cultural change, rise of agrarian prosperity in the Edo period to about 1800. Credit given for only one of G4680 or G3580. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST G3850 - Modern China |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the final century of dynastic rule and the rise to power of the Nationalist and Communist parties, highlighting social and cultural developments, the impact of Western imperialism, and the evolution of revolutionary ideologies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST G4510 - The Far East I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course offers a brief survey of the early civilization of Asia, which includes China, Japan, Vietnam, Korea, and India, in the traditional period. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIST G4520 - The Far East |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course offers a brief survey of the civilization of Asia that includes selected topics related to China, Japan, Vietnam, Korea, and/or India in modern times. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIST G4610 - Imperial China |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course offers a brief survey if the civilization of traditional china. The emphasis of the lecture is on the development of the social structure, political system and Confucian culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIST G4850 - Modern China |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. China from the Ch'ing period to the present. Social, political, and economic change in a largely agrarian society. International and intercultural relations as well as rebellion, war, and revolution during the unstable nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Students may receive credit for only one of G485 and G385. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HIST H1010 - World in the 20th Century: to 1945 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This introductory course presumes no previous knowledge of world history. We shall examine some of the momentous changes that took place in the first half of the century and which affected people worldwide. Topics include: the expansion and contraction of the great powers; war and peace; nationalism; imperialism; industrialization; socialism; communism; and fascism. Selected readings from descriptive and analytical studies, biographies, and novels. Three exams and short assignments. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST H1030 - Europe: Renaissance To Napoleon |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Major developments in European thought during the Renaissance, the Reformation, the scientific revolution, and the Enlightenment; traditional politics, economy, and society and their transformation by enlightened despotism, the French Revolution, and Napoleon. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST H1040 - Europe From Napoleon To The Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores the political and cultural legacies of the French Revolution, the transition to industrial society and economy, the spread of democracy, the development of nationalism and imperialism, the causes and consequences of the two world wars, the Holocaust, and the rise and fall of communism and fascism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST H1050 - American History I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Colonial period, revolution, Confederation and Constitution, National period to 1877. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST H1060 - American History II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. 1877 to present. Political history forms framework with economic, social, cultural, and intellectual history interwoven. Introductions to historical literature, source material, and criticism. HIST H1050 is not a prerequisite for HIST H1060. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST H1080 - Perspectives On The World To 1800 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emergence of civilizations in the Near East, Sub-Saharan Africa, pre-Columbian America. Role of revolutions, i.e., geographic, scientific, industrial, social, and political (American and French) in establishment of European hegemony in Asia and the Western Hemisphere. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST H1090 - Perspectives On The World Since 1800 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Rise and fall of European imperial rule in Asia, the Middle East, and Africa. Special focus on impact of World War I, Chinese, Mexican, Russian revolutions. Independence movement in India, World War II, Cold War, new nations in Asia and Africa, struggle for solidarity in Latin America. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST H1130 - Western Civilization To 1500 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Ancient civilization, Germanic Europe, feudalism, medieval church, national monarchies, Renaissance. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the western tradition culture studies requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST H1140 - Western Civilization Since 1500 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reformation, Age of Louis XIV, French Revolution, Napoleonic Era, Revolutions of 1848, liberalism, socialism, nationalism, international rivalries, World War I, Russian revolutions, Nazi Germany, World War II, Cold War. HIST H1130 is not a prerequisite for HIST H1140. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the western tradition culture studies requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST H1250 - Great Debates: Introduction To Historical Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Understanding effective oral communication is a vital part of the historian’s job. This course uses great debates from history as a starting point for teaching students about the best oral communication practices. Students will deliver informational and argumentative speeches, and will consider the best means of receiving and interpreting oral messages. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Course designed to meet General Education Area A.2 Speaking and Listening Outcomes.
|
| HIST H2010 - History Of Russia I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. From earliest times to the present era. Political, economic, social, and cultural topics, as well as Russia's relations with other countries. Mongol conquest, Westernization, industrialization, Russian revolutions, and Stalin's purges: literature and art in historical context. Both approved by Arts and Sciences for the nonwestern culture studies requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST H2020 - History Of Russia II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. From earliest times to the present era. Political, economic, social, and cultural topics, as well as Russia's relations with other countries. Mongol conquest, Westernization, industrialization, Russian revolutions, and Stalin's purges; literature and art in historical context. Both approved by Arts and Sciences for the nonwestern culture studies requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST H2050 - Ancient Civilization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this course, we will explore all that is familiar about the ancient world as well as many of the features that make it different. Our focus will be on Classical Greece and Rome. In addition to describing the important historical events of this era, we will consider how ancient societies understood their history, the importance of slavery in ancient economies, and the different roles played by women in the ancient world. The course will teach students to read an ancient text critically and discuss the relationship between ancient literary and archeological evidence. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST H2060 - Medieval Civilization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. European institutions, social and intellectual history from late Roman Empire to the Renaissance: Greco-Roman legacy, Christian institutions, Byzantine and Islamic influences, town revival and trade, rise of universities, emergence of national states and literatures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST H2070 - Modern EAst Asian Civilization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Contrasting patterns of indigenous change and response to Western imperialism in East Asia during the 19th and 20th centuries. China and Japan receive primary consideration; Korea and Vietnam, secondary. Emphasis on the rise of nationalism and other movements directed toward revolutionary change. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST H2110 - Latin American Culture And Civilization I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. 1492-1850. Geography. African, Indian, Spanish, Portuguese heritage. Discover and Conquest. Clash of Cultures. Spanish empire. Society, culture, economics, politics. Bourbon reform, independence, new republics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST H2120 - Latin American Culture And Civilization II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. 1850-present, Nineteenth century. Cultural and national identities. Diplomacy, dictators, social progress. National cultures. Mexican revolution: Latin American in a world community. Revolution and counterrevolution. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST H2160 - The Wild West And American Identity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.0. This course examines conceptions of the "American West" and the complicated ways it informed the creation of a persistent American identity. From the Log Cabin political campaigns of the antebellum nineteenth century to modern simulations of the past like Disney's Frontierland, the iconography of western expansion and its tentative connection to democratic individualism has enthralled and perplexed artists, writers, filmmakers, and historians for generations. Using historical monographs and popular culture artifacts like paintings, comics, films, short stories, and songs, we will interrogate and deconstruct "the American West" with an eye towards larger themes of place/process, environmental concern, multi-ethnic inclusion/exclusions, and United States governmental and capitalist development. By the end of the course the students will be tasked to use the conventions of "the western," apply them a historical event or individual, and create their own "western" narratives through the use of fumetti, or photographic comic-strips. Typically Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Richmond
|
| HIST H2170 - The Nature Of History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory examination of (1) what history is, (2) types of historical interpretation, (3) common problems of historians, and (4) the uses of history. Approved by Arts and Sciences for use in fulfilling the sophomore writing requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST H2190 - Origins and History of the Second World War |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Nazi and fascist aggression, collective security, appeasement and outbreak of war in Europe. German blitzkrieg, Russian front, North African, Italian and Normandy campaigns, Hitler's racial policies. Japanese-American hostility, Pearl Harbor, island-hopping, the atomic bomb. Roosevelt, Stalin, and Churchill at Teheran, Yalta, and Potsdam. War crimes trials.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST H2200 - American Military History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. From settlement of colonies to present. European background, colonial militia. Principal foreign wars and their strategic objectives. Technological changes and effect of military on American society. Army is emphasized with some attention to other armed forces. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST H2220 - Renaissance And Reformation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Society and civilization in the 15th and 16th centuries. Transition from medieval to modern life in political and economic behavior, culture, theology, and religion, discoveries and expansion. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST H2250 - Special Topics In History |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Study and analysis of selected historical issues and problems of general import. Topics will vary from semester to semester but will usually be broad subjects which cut across fields, regions, and periods. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| HIST H2280 - The Vietnam War |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Indochina; French colonialism; French-Indochina War; Cold War dynamics; U.S. entry; military-political actions 1961-1975; domestic U.S. politics; U.S. disengagement; Indochinese and American legacies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST H2320 - World In The 20th Century |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Shaping of the contemporary world, with an emphasis on the reaction of nonwestern peoples to Western imperialism. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the nonwestern culture studies requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST H2360 - The Historian's Craft |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the skills and methodology of analysis, research, writing, and oral communication within the discipline of history. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST H2410 - Nationalsm In The Modern World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Nationalsm In The Modern World. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST H2600 - History Of Women In United States |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. How have women's lives changed from the colonial period to the 20th century? This introductory survey focuses on women's historical roles in the workplace, the family and politics. Material will be drawn from legal, constitutional, political, social, demographic, economic, and religious history. Credit not given for both H216 and H260. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST H3050 - The Cold War |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The Cold War is an upper division course that will examine one of the most critical eras in modern history. A time period that spanned roughly from 1945 to 1989, the Cold War was hailed as an epic battle between communism and capitalism. In reality, the Cold War was a more complex struggle over a broad range of issues-ideological, cultural, economic, and strategic. As each side tried to protect its own national interests and way of life, a cycle of distrust and animosity quickly formed that would shape U.S-Soviet relations for the next four decades. Some of the questions we will be examining: Why was there a Cold War? To what extent was it inevitable? How did the Cold War become “hot” (Korea, Vietnam, Afghanistan, for example)? Who “won” the Cold War? What were the consequences of the Cold War? Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST H3150 - United States History since World War II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Political, demographic, economic, and intellectual transformations of 1945-present: Cold War, problems of contemporary America. (Course offered every two years at IUPUC). Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST H3600 - Atlantic World 1400-1900 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will examine the political, cultural, economic, and biological history of the Atlantic World from 1400 to 1900. There will be an emphasis on how the development of Europe impacted the peoples and cultures of Africa and the Americas, and how these societies likewise shaped Europe’s development. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST H3640 - History Of Medicine And Public Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. History of medicine and public health in Europe and America, including ancient and medieval background, with focus on the development of modern health sciences since 1800. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| HIST H3730 - History Of Science And Technology I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course HIST H373 description unavailable online at this time. Please contact appropriate department. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST H4090 - Women In History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Women in their historical and contemporary situation in Western culture; survey of prehistoric and historic myths about women; status of women during the major eras of Western civilization; exceptional women and their influence; demands for the achievement of women's rights in modern times.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST H4180 - History Of International Humanitarian Assistance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the history of international humanitarian assistance during the 19th and 20th centuries. Its focus is on the movements and activities that developed in wealthier countries (Europe and the U.S.) which attempted to help those in other lands in need of assistance (e.g., food, shelter, medical care), as a result of a variety of causes, both natural and man-made, such as famine, flood, epidemics, earthquakes and volcanoes as well as wars and government oppression. The responses took many forms, governmental and non-governmental, in a world that underwent very dramatic changes during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Examine the main elements of the history of international humanitarian assistance, as well as its usefulness in understanding the current situation and future developments.
|
| HIST H4210 - Topics In African, Asian, Or Latin American History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive study and analysis of selected historical issues and/or problems in African, Asian, or Latin American history. Topics will vary from semester to semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| HIST H4250 - Topics In History |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Intensive study and analysis of selected historical issues and problems of limited scope. Topics will vary but will ordinarily cut across fields, regions, and periods. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
|
| HIST H4770 - British Imperialism, 1485-Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comparative course on the various geographical regions absorbed into the British Empire between 1485 and the present. It analyzes the experience of empire in the Americas, the Pacific, India, Africa and the Middle East through a variety of primary and secondary materials. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| HIST H4960 - Internship In History |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Faculty- supervised experience in museum work, historical preservation, historical societies or libraries, or other history-related fields in public or private institutions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| HIST H5110 - Special Topics In United States History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive study and analysis of selected topics in United States History. Topics will vary from semester to semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| HIST H5210 - Special Topics In African, Asian, Or Latin American History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive study and analysis of selected topics in African, Asian, or Latin American history. Topics will vary from semester to semester, e.g., Traditional Asia, Modern Asia. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HIST H5750 - Graduate Readings in History |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HIST J4950 - Proseminar For History Majors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected topics of history. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| HIST K4950 - Readings In History |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. By arrangement with instructor. Permission of departmental chairperson required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HIST K4990 - Senior Honors Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Senior-level course for honors students only. Training in research and writing, culminating in Honors thesis to be written under direction of faculty member. Oral examination over thesis conducted by three faculty members. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Research
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| HIST P4950 - Modern China 1600 To Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Descriptive and analytical survey with emphasis on China's changing role as a member of the world community, its response to increased Western contacts, disintegration of traditional order, revolutionary changes through the Republic of China and the People's Republic, and significant elements of contemporary Chinese society and culture.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST S1050 - American History Honors To 1877 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Equivalent of HIST H105 for Honors students. Colonial period to 1877. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST S1060 - American History Honors Survey II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Equivalent of HIST H106 for Honors students. 1877 to present. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST S1130 - Honors History of West Europe I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Equivalent of HIST H113 for honors students. Ancient Greece to 1500. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST S1140 - Honors HIstory Of West Europe II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Equivalent of HIST H114 for honors students. 1500 to present. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST S2320 - The World In The 20th Century -Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Equivalent of HIST H2320 for Honors students. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HIST T1900 - Literary And Intellectual Traditions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores, in an interdisciplinary way, one of the great humanistic traditions of inquiry regarding one of the following themes: ideas of self, ideas of truth, ideas of beauty, ideas of community, ideas of nature, ideas of conflict. Writing intensive, discussion-focused. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST T3250 - Topics In History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study and analysis of selected historical issues and problems of limited scope from the perspective of the arts and humanities. Topics will vary but will usually cut across fields, regions, and periods. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| HIST T3350 - Topics In Non-Western History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study and analysis of selected historical issues and problems in non-Western, Russian, and Latin American history from the perspective of the arts and humanities. Topics will vary. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the Cultural Studies (Non-Western Culture) requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| HIST T3900 - Literary And Intellectual Traditions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Interdisciplinary exploration of a humanistic tradition of inquiry regarding one of the following themes: ideas of self, truth, beauty, community, nature, and conflict. Course is writing intensive and discussion focused with attention paid to primary texts and research materials. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| HIST T4250 - Topics In History |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Intensive study and analysis of selected historical issues and problems of limited scope from the perspective of arts and humanities. Topics will vary but will ordinarily cut across fields, regions, and periods. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
|
| HIST T4950 - Undergraduate Readings In History |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 12.00. Reading course in history. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
|
| HIST V1250 - History Of American Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will examine the technological development of the modern world and especially emphasizes the United States. Emphasis will be given not only to the inventions themselves but the reasons why such technology was needed and what influence the technology has had on our society. Major topics examined will include power sources, railroads, the automobile, ships, aviation, communications and the development of military technology and tactics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| HIST V1390 - American History I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The colonial period; causes and results of the American Revolution; the development of the federal system of government; the growth of democracy; early popular American culture; territorial expansion; slavery and its effects; sectionalism; causes and effects of the Civil War; Reconstruction, political and economic. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| HK 10100 - Clinical Practice in Athletic Training - Orientation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Under supervision of the certified athletic trainer, students will undertake observation of training room operations and duties of the athletic trainer. Acquisition of basic skills and knowledge is expected. Typically offered Spring Fall.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| HK 10300 - Creative Rhythms And Dance |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Designed for students to experience creative movement, elementary folk dance, and activity involving small apparatus, with emphasis placed on structured rhythms. For majors and minors only. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 10400 - Educational Gymnastics And Adventure Education |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Development and analysis of performance skills used in educational gymnastics and adventure education. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate competent performance in educational gymnastics and adventure education activities.
2. Demonstrate a developmental understanding of a wide variety of cooperative/adventure education activities (e.g., geocaching, orienteering, ropes courses and climbing walls, trust building activities, etc.)
3. Accurately conduct performance analyses for educational gymnastics and adventure education activities.
4. Demonstrate the ability to detect and correct errors in a skill performance.
5. Exhibit a basic understanding of the appropriate progression of skills from simple to complex as related to educational gymnastics and adventure education activities.
6. Develop and use a wide variety of assessment tools to assess learning in the psychomotor, cognitive and affective domains, as it relates to educational gymnastics and adventure education activities.
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| HK 10500 - Development And Analysis Of Invasion Games |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Development and analysis of performance skills used in invasion games. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate competent game performance skills in invasion games.
2. Demonstrate an understanding of the tactical similarities between games through experiences in a variety of invasion games (e.g., basketball, flag football, soccer, floor hockey, team handball, ultimate Frisbee, lacrosse, rugby).
3. Demonstrate a tactical understanding of games by selecting and performing the necessary skills and/or movements required to solve tactical problems that occur during game play.
4. Accurately conduct game performance analyses for invasion games.
5. Demonstrate the ability to detect and correct errors in skill performance.
6. Exhibit a basic understanding of the appropriate progression of skills and tactics from simple to complex as related to invasion games.
7. Demonstrate an understanding of the rules and procedures used in games by applying them during game play and within a more abstract setting (discussions, exams, worksheets, portfolios, etc.).
8. Utilize video equipment for the purposes of skill and game play analysis.
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| HK 10600 - Development And Analysis Of Net/Wall Games |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Development and analysis of performance skills used in net/wall games. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate competent game performance skills in net/wall games.
2. Demonstrate an understanding of the tactical similarities between games through experiences in a variety of net/wall games (e.g., volleyball, tennis, badminton, pickle ball, racquetball).
3. Demonstrate a tactical understanding of games by selecting and performing the necessary skills and/or movements required to solve tactical problems that occur during game play.
4. Accurately conduct game performance analyses for net/wall games.
5. Demonstrate the ability to detect and correct errors in skill performance.
6. Exhibit a basic understanding of the appropriate progression of skills and tactics from simple to complex as related to net/wall games.
7. Demonstrate an understanding of the rules and procedures used in games by applying them during game play and within a more abstract setting (discussions, exams, worksheets, portfolios, etc.).
8. Utilize video equipment for the purposes of skill and game play analysis.
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| HK 10700 - Development And Analysis Of Target And Field Games |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Development and analysis of performance skills used in target and field/run/score games. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate competent game performance skills in (a) target games and (b) field/run/score games.
2. Demonstrate an understanding of the tactical similarities among games through experiences in a variety of (a) target games (e.g., golf, bowling, archery, bocce, croquet, shuffleboard, corn hole) and (b) field/run/score games (e.g., softball, rounders, cricket, kickball).
3. Demonstrate a tactical understanding of games by selecting and performing the necessary skills and/or movements required to solve tactical problems that occur during game play.
4. Accurately conduct game performance analyses for target and field/run/score games.
5. Demonstrate the ability to detect and correct errors in skill performance.
6. Exhibit a basic understanding of the appropriate progression of skills and tactics from simple to complex as related to target and field/run/score games.
7. Demonstrate an understanding of the rules and procedures used in games by applying them during game play and within a more abstract setting (discussions, exams, worksheets, portfolios, etc.).
8. Utilize video equipment for the purposes of skill and game play analysis.
|
| HK 10900 - Physical Education Curricular Activities |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Instruction and practice in selected team individual sports and recreational games. Students will develop fitness models for K-12 physical education classes. For majors and minors only. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HK 11100 - Clinical Practice In Personal Training - Orientation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Under the supervision of program coordinator, students will undertake observation of fitness facilities operations and duties of the personal fitness trainer. Acquisition of basic skills and knowledge is expected. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic 1, Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HK 11101 - Practical Applications Of Health/Fitness Concepts I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course will provide students with the essential foundation of basic and advanced exercise techniques. Students will be taken through a variety of exercise routines, analyzing various principles of resistance training, cardiovascular training, flexibility training, and balance. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Upon completion of this course, students will be able to:
1. Define the role of the fitness professional and the evolution of the fitness industry.
2. Ability to determine training heart rates using two methods: percent of age-predicted maximum heart rate and heart rate reserve (Karvonen).
3. Ability to identify and apply methods used to monitor exercise intensity, including heart rate and rating of perceived exertion.
4. Demonstrate the ability to analyze posture and body alignment and identify corrective exercises for various case scenarios.
5. Identify the 5 points of posture in resistance training exercise.
6. Articulate the interrelationships among center of gravity, base of support, balance, stability, and proper spinal alignment during exercise.
7. Demonstrate exercises for major muscle groups designed to enhance muscular strength and endurance, flexibility, balance, and posture.
8. Identify and demonstrate the ability to correctly perform the ¿Core 5¿ in resistance training exercise.
9. Identify the 7 characteristics to exercise progression.
10. Develop a complete strength training progression for various muscle groups.
11. Identify 5 techniques to evaluation of proper resistance training and cardiovascular training exercise using various means of equipment including: HR monitors, stability balls, weights, bands, etc.
12. Identify proper and improper technique to flexibility exercises for all major muscle groups.
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| HK 11200 - Aquatics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Provides prospective physical education teachers knowledge and skills related to the performance, analysis, and teaching of aquatic movement forms. For majors and minors only. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HK 11300 - Practical Applications Of Health/Fitness Concepts II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course will provide Health/Fitness students with the essential foundations of basic and advanced exercise techniques, looking at safety in exercise of specific muscle groups and various forms of exercise training. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify situations of myth vs. fact that are commonly known relative to exercise training.
2. Identify the 5 points of exercise instruction and evaluation for resistance training exercise.
3. Identify essential components to safety in exercise training for training specific muscle groups.
4. Participate in weekly activities reflecting lect content for training major muscle groups, use of various methodologies in training,& relative safety considerations.
5. Participate and lead various exercises in training major muscle groups
6. Participate in an introduction to various formats of exercise including relative to the following: low back pain, pregnant/postnatal, water, yoga, pilates, and dance that represent special considerations and some of the top trends (forms) of exercise in the industry.
7. Demonstrate appropriate modifications in specific exercises for the following groups: older adults, pregnant and postnatal women, obese persons, and persons with low back pain.
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| HK 11400 - Teaching Fitness In Physical Education |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduces the field of youth exercise and physical fitness. It emphasizes the importance of exercise for youth, physiological responses to structured exercise programs, exercise prescription for individualized and team sports, and physical fitness assessment. For majors only. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HK 11500 - Individual And Dual Movement Forms I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Provides prospective physical education teachers knowledge and skills related to the performance, analysis, and teaching of individual and dual movement forms in an indoor setting. These movement forms include gymnastics, golf, and bowling. Special fee required. For majors and minors only. Typically offered Spring Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HK 11600 - Individual And Dual Movement Forms II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Provides prospective physical education teachers knowledge and skills related to the performance, analysis, and teaching of individual and dual movement forms in an outdoor setting. These movement forms include badminton, tennis, and track and field. For majors and minors only. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HK 11700 - Team Movement Forms |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Provides prospective physical education teachers knowledge and skills related to the performance, analysis, and teaching of team movement forms. These movement forms include soccer, softball, volleyball, and basketball. For majors and minors only. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HK 11800 - Analysis Of Sport Performance |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduces factors that affect sport training movements, options and methods of sports performance testing, strategies for performance training, and practical application of sport assessment/training drills specific to identified sports. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify factors that affect sport performance/athletic movement and understand the difference in sport-specific demands for various sports.
2. Identify and explain reasons for performing sport performance testing.
3. Identify testing terminology used in communication with athletes and colleagues.
4. Identify basic testing protocol for sport performance testing.
5. Identify key strategies and key elements of sports performance training in relation to specific sports.
|
| HK 11900 - Instructional Techniques Of Group Exercise |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students will learn to create the lead effective group fitness classes. This course serves as a preparatory course for HK 31100 and HK 41100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the evolution of group exercise and its importance in group cohesion and social engagement.
2. Identify effective communication strategies in teaching and the relationship of a group instructor and personal trainer.
3. Demonstrate the ability to read and move to music.
4. Identify the importance of various elements in group instructional that affect performance and behavior: lever variation, plane variation, directional variation, rhythm variation, intensity variation, and exercise progression.
5. Demonstrate the ability to create basic combinations/movement patterns for various styles of classes including: hi/lo, kickboxing, strength, water, etc.
6. Demonstrate the ability to teach and demonstrate the components of an exercise session (i.e., warm-up, aerobic stimulus phase, cool-down, muscular strength/endurance, flexibility).
7. Demonstrate the ability to teach appropriate exercises for improving range of motion for specific major muscle groups.
8. Demonstrate the ability to teach a progression of exercises for all major muscle groups to improve muscular strength and endurance.
9. Identify the various styles/methods of classes that can be taught in a group setting.
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| HK 12000 - Analysis Of Sport Performance Training II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is designed to introduce and practically apply/analyze testing measures related to sport performance training. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Evaluate performance test validity and reliability.
2. Demonstrate the ability to measure selected parameters related to athletic performance.
3. Identify health and safety considerations for athletes during sport performance testing.
4. Identify concepts relative to sport season, load, and exercise type.
5. Identify and evaluate requirements and characteristics of a sport and assess athletes for purpose of designing a training program.
|
| HK 13000 - Strength And Conditioning Roundtable |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is designed to analyze research relative to sport performance training. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify field related research organizations relative to sport.
2. Demonstrate the ability to analyze and compare research emphasizing sport performance training.
|
| HK 13500 - Introduction To Health And Kinesiology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Overviews the disciplines of health and kinesiology. Students explore skills and academic interests in theses areas. Describes career opportunities and options for graduate study. Provides strategies for professional and portfolio development. Students complete five hours of community service per semester. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HK 20000 - Healthy Lifestyles |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students are provided an opportunity to assess personal behavior patterns related to preventive health services, health protection activities concerning environmental issues, and promotion of a healthful lifestyle. Personal strategies for adopting and maintaining potential health-enhancing behaviors are explored. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HK 20100 - Clinical Practice In Athletic Training - Assist |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Under supervision of the certified athletic trainer, students will be provided the opportunity to practice those skills required of the athletic trainer. The student will assist the staff and upperclass students. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| HK 20300 - Adult Health And Development Program |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and practice in gerontological health by working with older adults to positively influence health and well-being. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HK 20500 - Foundations Of Athletic Training |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to provide the physical education teacher, coach, and athletic training student with an introduction to the prevention, recognition, and treatment of common athletic injuries. Experience will be gained in basic taping skills. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HK 20800 - Prevention And Treatment Of Athletic Injuries |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides the physical educator, coach, and athletic training student with an introduction to the prevention, recognition, and treatment of common athletic injuries, and response to common emergency situations. American Red Cross Community First Aid and CPR certification is included. PE teaching majors and minors, athletic training majors, and coaching endorsement students only. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HK 20900 - Elementary School Physical Education Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides physical education majors with methods and field experiences for teaching physical education in elementary schools. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HK 21000 - History And Philosophy Of Physical Education |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to the history and philosophy of physical education to prospective teachers. Emphasis is placed on the impact of societal history on physical education and the role of philosophic thinking in curricular activities. For majors and minors only. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HK 21100 - Clinical Applications Of Health/Fitness Concepts I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The course is designed to allow students to establish foundational skills that they will apply professionally within the field of Exercise and Health emphasizing communication skills, instruction, evaluation, and performance of various exercise modalities. Clinical experiences are developed in interest of helping students identify individual strengths and weaknesses in application and performance requiring students to take a professional role in assurance of completion of duties and responsibilities. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will identify foundational concepts in design and application of movement for improvement in dynamic mobility, flexibility, posture, strength and cardiovascular conditioning.
2. Students will demonstrate the ability to perform, instruct, and evaluate exercise routines to the general population in an assigned clinical including designed to improve dynamic mobility and flexibility, posture, strength, and cardiovascular conditioning.
3. Students will evaluate practical and professional standards of a personal trainer and discuss individual views of performance and presentation.
4. Students will identify the strengths and weaknesses in practical application of clinical responsibilities.
|
| HK 21500 - Basic Public Health Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of basic scientific concepts as applied to the problems and issues in selected areas of human health behavior with particular attention to their influence on population and individual health. Restricted to students enrolled in major degree programs for which this course is a requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Discuss the nature of public health promotion and disease prevention in the US.
2. List the leading causes of death and describe leading theories of health behavior.
3. Define the components of psychological health and describe the basic traits shared by psychologically healthy people.
4. Describe the nature of stress, the physiology of the stress response, and the relationship of stress to health/disease; identify the major sources of stress in contemporary society and discuss interventions for stress management.
5. Discuss categories of drugs, routes of administration and drug interactions.
6. Describe the relationship of alcohol, tobacco and caffeine to health and disease.
7. Describe the general concepts of nutrition, list and explain the recommendations made to the public by various health agencies to decrease risk of chronic disease.
8. Describe various theories of obesity, discuss concepts of weight management, define/describe body image and the disordered eating continuum, define anorexia and bulimia nervosa, and list symptomatology and risk factors.
9. Discuss the relationship of physical activity and physical fitness to health and/or disease and provide rationale (based on evidence from exercise epidemiology) for the recommendations made to the public concerning activity/exercise participation.
10. Describe the anatomy and basic functions of the cardiovascular system and the prevalence/incidence of heart disease, identify risk factors and describe the features of atherogenesis and other diseases of the heart and vascular system.
11. Describe the prevalence and incidence of the various types of cancer and identify cancer risk factors.
12. Describe the prevalence and incidence of diabetes and list risk factors for diabetes.
|
| HK 21900 - Personal And Community Health |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Application of health science to selected health problems and issues, with particular reference to health promotion and disease prevention among children, adolescents, and young adults. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Define terms related to health and health education.
2. Conduct self-assessments of personal health behaviors and health status.
3. Develop a personal health plan based upon a self-assessment of influence on health and health behavior and apply decision making, goal setting, and self-monitoring skills.
4. Use communication skills to discuss topics and issues related to personal and community health.
5. Identify and describe concepts related to the multiple dimensions of health, e.g. mental, physical, social, emotional, and environmental health. A broad range of topics will be covered including chronic and infectious disease, stress, personal relationships, nutrition, physical activity, alcohol and psychoactive drugs, tobacco, sexual health, injury prevention, health care consumption, and environmental health.
|
| HK 22000 - Death, Dying, And Human Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory analysis of the death experience as related to human health. Emphasis on attitudes and practices of death in contemporary America; processes of dying; care of the dying person; grief and bereavement; legal, medical, and consumer aspects; and death education. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HK 22500 - Sexuality And Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Deals with various aspects of human sexuality and sexual behavior and their impact upon individual health. Health concerns related to sexual behavior. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HK 22600 - Contemporary Women's Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines behavioral, psychological, and sociocultural aspects of women's experience in healthcare systems. Includes the influence of factors such as age, social class, and ethnicity on women's roles as recipients and providers of health care. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HK 23100 - Substance Abuse And Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of drug abuse and drug education, including stimulants, depressants, psychedelics, and other drugs and harmful substances; beverage alcohol usage and health effects of tobacco smoking. Education materials and techniques are examined. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
|
| HK 23300 - Stress And Human Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course is designed to provide an understanding of stress and stress management, including the physiology of the stress response, the relationship between stress and disease, potential sources of stress, and methods of intervening to prevent and/or relieve stress. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HK 23500 - Teacher Education Sophomore Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course provides sophomore students in health and physical education teaching with an ongoing review in seminar format of practical instructional and professional issues necessary for effective public school and community-based practice in health, physical education, and sport. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Use technology to gather information about various types of health and kinesiology professionals.
2. Develop and write their current philosophy of teaching.
3. Create a resume.
4. Be able to describe: an effective teacher, an expert teacher, professionalism, value of teacher education, good curricula in health and physical education, the national health and physical education standards, useful technology in teaching, the role of colleagues in teaching, and the importance of professional organizations.
|
| HK 25000 - Clinical Applications Of Sport I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students will have a unique opportunity to experience strength and conditioning first hand. In this course, students will spend approximately 6 hours a week observing a certified strength and conditioning specialist identifying the essential foundations of sport performance training. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will complete required hours for experiential requirements to expected curse standards.
2. Students will demonstrate the ability to analyze experiences in a sport related setting.
3. Students will identify the likes, dislikes, and weaknesses in practical application of strength and conditioning in sport.
4. Students will demonstrate the ability to instruct and perform 6 essential Olympic lifts.
|
| HK 25300 - Principles Of Motor Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to motor development from a life-span perspective. Students will learn how infants develop from mainly reflexive beings into children and adults that are capable of interacting with the world in a goal-directed manner. This course specifically examines how changes in physical growth, aging, and maturation of the central nervous system influence motor performance. Finally, the decline of motor skills associated with advanced age is discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to describe how motor skills develop in children and decline in older adults.
2. Students will be able to apply the principles of motor development to clinical, education, and sport sciences settings.
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| HK 25400 - Principles Of Motor Learning And Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course surveys the fundamental processes and variables related to motor development and learning. Students will be exposed to research techniques and critical issues in motor development and learning. For majors and minors only. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 25800 - Foundations Of Motor Skill Learning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Concepts and principles of motor skill learning, with emphasis on the acquisition and retention of gross movement and sport skills. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 26100 - Applied Anatomy And Kinesiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of how muscles, bones, and joint structure produce human motion. Kinesiological analysis of full body, upper and lower extremity skills. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 26300 - Biomechanical Foundations Of Motor Skills |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental anatomical and mechanical concepts and procedures for analyzing motor skills, with particular reference to sport, dance, and aquatic activities. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 26400 - Principles Of Motor Learning, Development, And Biomechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course surveys the fundamental processes and variables related to motor development, motor learning, and biomechanics. Students will be exposed to concepts relevant to teaching motor skills and critical issues to increase knowledge of human movement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe motion with mechanical and anatomical terminology.
2. Describe the linear and angular characteristics of motion.
3. Describe the relationship between force and motion.
4. Define terms of motor control.
5. Define the optimal conditions for learning new skills.
6. Describe how factors related to the individual, task, and environment affect the learning of skills movement.
7. Define terms of development, growth, and maturation.
8. Describe reflexes and motor milestones.
9. Describe the development of body control, reaching and locomotion.
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| HK 26600 - Introduction To Health/Fitness Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces rationale, application, and nature of health promotion as applied to various professional settings, providing students with a conceptual framework of the health/fitness and health promotion discipline. Students will be introduced to various professional opportunities in the field. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 26900 - Career Development And Preparation For The Health And Fitness Fields |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Provides students with basic professional skills and materials for subsequent practicum experience and future employment search. Students will have secured a viable practicum site, complete with written job description/responsibilities, at the completion of the course. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 27200 - Health, Safety And Nutrition For Young Children |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores the health and safety needs of young children as incorporated in early childhood settings. Examines the connection between proper nutrition, health and child development. Introduction to the community resources available for promoting healthy development. Presents methods and materials for sharing health, safety and nutrition information with children and families. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| HK 28000 - Basic First Aid And CPR |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. First aid principles, procedures, and skills, including first aid emergency care and cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). Emphasis is placed on practical application by the average person in everyday living. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:IHP 1401 First Aid
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 29100 - Cooperative And Professional Work Experience I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practical experience in professional employment. Programs must be preplanned and conducted under the direction of the departmental coordinator with the cooperation of an employer. Students must submit comprehensive written reports of the experience. For Cooperative Education Program students only. Prerequisite: approval of departmental professional experience coordinator required for enrollment. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HK 29200 - Cooperative And Professional Work Experience II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practical experience in professional employment. Programs must be preplanned and conducted under the direction of the departmental coordinator with the cooperation of an employer. Students must submit comprehensive written reports of the experience. Approval of departmental professional experience coordinator required for enrollment. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HK 30100 - Clinical Practice In Athletic Training - Associate |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Under the supervision of a certified athletic trainer, students will be provided the opportunity to practice those skills required of an athletic trainer. Independent practice as an athletic trainer. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
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| HK 30200 - Applied Clinical Anatomy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the regional anatomical study of the human body for undergraduate allied health students. Lectures will be supplemented by observation and demonstration of prosected cadaver material, radiographs, osteology, and surface anatomy. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 30300 - Athletic Training Modalities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and practice in the use of physical agents used in the management and promotion of healing of athletic injuries. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 30400 - Therapeutic Exercise |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will introduce the athletic training student to the planning and implementation of a comprehensive reconditioning program for injuries sustained by athletes. Techniques of therapeutic exercise as they apply to athletic training will be examined. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 30500 - Injury Assessment I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A guided lecture and demonstration experience designed to expose the student to the techniques normally required of an athletic trainer. Topics include splinting and transportation, equipment fitting and fabrication, lower extremity injury evaluation, taping and bracing. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 30600 - Injury Assessment II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of HK 30500. A guided lecture and demonstration experience designed to expose the student to the techniques of the upper extremity, head, neck, abdomen, and thorax, along with associated taping, padding, and bracing. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 31100 - Clinical Applications Of Health/Fitness Concepts II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Under the supervision of the program coordinator, students will demonstrate the ability to apply skills, competencies, and applications of basic/advanced exercise principles in a professional setting. Required to be taken fall and spring. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
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| HK 31200 - Exercise Testing And Prescription For Sport |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will learn how to assess, analyze, and develop exercise practices for athletes based on sport performance development while introduced to various training styles and theories of program design for sports performance training. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Evaluate performance test validity and reliability.
Demonstrate the ability to measure selected parameters related to athletic performance.
Identify health and safety considerations for athletes during sport performance testing.
Demonstrate the ability to select appropriate tests for performance analysis.
Demonstrate the ability to administer appropriate field tests properly and safely.
Demonstrate the ability to evaluate and analyze test data and normative comparisons.
Evaluate the requirements and characteristics of a sport and assess athletes for purpose of designing a performance enhancement training program.
Identify exercises based on type, sport specificity, technique, experience, equipment availability, and time used in sport.
Determine training frequency based on training status, sports season, load, and exercise type.
Identify the value, rose, and application of periodization in strength and conditioning programs for sport performance.
Demonstrate the ability to apply program design variables to create a periodized training program.
Identify the benefits and components of stretching in sport.
Identify purpose and use of plyometric training in sport.
Demonstrate the ability to apply principles of speed, agility, and endurance training for specific movement tasks/development that will maximize athletic performance in sport.
Develop a training session for various sports that includes all major components of an exercise session (cardio, strength, flexibility).
Identify the role of the strength and conditioning specialist during injury rehabilitation and reconditioning.
Identify nutritional/hydration recommendations for athletes.
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| HK 31900 - Teaching Health And Safety In Middle/Junior High Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to school health practice, including the teacher's role and functions in the school health program. Focuses on planning, implementing, and evaluating health instruction. Special emphasis placed on methods for teaching middle and junior high school students. No undergraduate students may be enrolled in this course until they have been admitted to teacher education and a copy of this acceptance is on file. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 32000 - Health Education In Elementary Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The problems of physical health, mental health, and safety of the school-aged child are considered, with emphasis on ways in which the elementary teacher meets his or her responsibilities and opportunities for promoting pupil health. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| HK 32200 - Physical Education In The Elementary School |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Current conceptions of elementary school physical education, with a particular emphasis on curriculum implementation. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lab 1, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| HK 32600 - Foundations Of Adapted Physical Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Lecture and physical education practicum in teaching children with disabilities. An introduction to the basic concepts and techniques of adapted physical education. Laboratory experience in carrying out adapted physical education programs for children is provided. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 32900 - Curriculum In Physical Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to curriculum theory, contemporary curriculum issues, dominant curriculum models, and related lesson planning and assessment techniques for school and community-based physical education programming. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 33000 - Teaching Physical Education In Secondary Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide prospective teachers of physical education with theoretical and practical foundations of curriculum design, instructional strategies, and assessment techniques. Admission to Gate A. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 33500 - Teacher Education Junior Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course provides junior students in health and physical education teaching with an ongoing review in seminar format of practical instructional and professional issues necessary for effective public school and community-based practice in health, physical education, and sport. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Review and discuss readings related to a variety of pedagogical and educational topics that directly relate to the future role of pre-service teachers.
2. Provide verbal and written reflection on topics such as a non-teaching colleague, student rebellion, lack of principal support, marginalization of health/physical education, etc.
3. Develop skills necessary to respond to challenges the student will encounter in his/her own teaching environment (e.g., refusal skills, negotiation, and collegiality)
4. Explore an issue in health/physical education by writing a case study.
5. Conduct peer reviews of student-written case studies.
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| HK 34500 - The Coaching Of Interscholastic Sports |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Discussion and practical experience in organizing, training, and coaching interscholastic athletes in a selected sport. A partial list of sports that may be selected: baseball, basketball, football, gymnastics, soccer, swimming, track/field/cross country, volleyball, and wrestling. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HK 34600 - Field Experience In Coaching |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Students will be assigned to assist in coaching a team in a public-, parochial-, or selected university-sponsored program. A partial list of sports available: baseball, basketball, football, gymnastics, soccer, swimming, track/field/cross country, volleyball, and wrestling. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HK 35000 - Clinical Applications Of Sport II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Students will spend approximately 15 hours a week with a certified strength and conditioning specialist utilizing skills in previous clinical experiences and coursework to assist with athletes in lifting and conditioning workouts. Students will also have an opportunity to see variations in training practices between various sport teams and analyze workouts related to specific sports. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will complete required hours for expected course standards.
2. Students will demonstrate the ability to analyze experiences in sport related setting.
3. Students will identify the likes, dislikes, and weaknesses in practical application of strength and conditioning in sport.
4. Students will demonstrate the ability to analyze variations in training practices between various sports.
5. Students will assist the strength and conditioning staff in lifting and conditioning workouts.
6. Students will demonstrate, instruct, and evaluate basic barbell, dumbbell, and kettlebell exercises used in sport.
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| HK 36500 - Principles Of Community Health Promotion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides an overview of community health promotion. Includes such topics as organization, financing, and delivery of personal health requirements for comprehensive health promotion. These include health care, health education, and health policy. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 36600 - Health Behavior And Health Promotion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces health behavior theory and practice in the context of health promotion and education. Examines individual, interpersonal, and community approaches to explaining and predicting health behavior and emphasizes their application to interventions in health promotion and education. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 36800 - Exercise Physiology I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Physiological concepts and principles underlying human responses and adaptations to exercise stress. Included are selected methods and techniques of assessing physiological function in the laboratory setting. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 37200 - Sport And Exercise Psychology I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on social and psychological factors related to participation in sport, exercise, and physical activity. The class explores both (a) how social and psychological factors influence participation and performance in physical activity, and (b) how sport, exercise, and physical activity participation affects psychological well-being. Topics include personality, socialization, learning and feedback, stress and coping, self-perceptions, motivation, and psychological methods for enhancing personal development and physical performance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop an understanding of social and psychological processes that operate in physical activity.
2. Acquire the knowledge to successfully apply social psychological principles within a variety of physical activity settings.
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| HK 37600 - History Of Sport |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A prior course in American or world history is recommended but not required. A survey of historical events that have shaped classical and modern sport, with a focus on recent history of American sport. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 38000 - The Psychology Of Teaching Physical Education |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Course focused on social and psychological factors related to teaching physical education. Topics include reinforcement, modeling, moral development, achievement goals, self-perception, attributions, interest and value, and physical activity enhancement. Typically offered Fall Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe and use reinforcement/modeling theories and guidelines.
2. Describe moral development theories and use strategies to enhance moral development in Physical Education.
3. Describe achievement goal theory and ways to establish task involvement in Physical Education.
4. Describe self-perception theories and ways to enhance student self-perception.
5. Describe the impact of students' attributions and teacher expectations on student performance and implement means of changing students' maladaptive attributions.
6. Describe how interest and value influence students' performance and motivation, and use strategies to enhance students' interest and value in Physical Education.
7. Describe self-determination theory and use strategies to positive influence student motivation in Physical Education.
8. Describe the youth physical activity promotion model and utilize means of enhancing student physical activity.
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| HK 38500 - Methods Of Health Promotion And Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Methods and materials of health promotion and education; preparation and use of content and materials related to health concerns of target populations. A variety of strategies and media are covered with theoretical and practical applications. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 39100 - Cooperative Work Experience III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practical experience in professional employment. Programs must be preplanned and conducted under the direction of the departmental coordinator with the cooperation of an employer. Students must submit comprehensive written reports of the experience. Approval of departmental professional experience coordinator required for enrollment. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HK 39200 - Cooperative Work Experience IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practical experience in professional employment. Programs must be preplanned and conducted under the direction of the departmental coordinator with the cooperation of an employer. Students must submit comprehensive written reports of the experience. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HK 40100 - Clinical Practice In Athletic Training - Lead |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Under the supervision of the certified athletic trainer, the student will be provided the opportunity to practice those skills acquired. The student is expected to take a leadership role in the clinical setting. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| HK 40200 - Pathophysiology For Allied Health Professions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of the etiology, pathogenesis, and clinical features of common illnesses and diseases that affect the human body's various organ systems. Emphasis is placed on cellular adaptation to disease and tissue response to damage. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 40400 - Administration Of Physical Education And Athletics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A course covering aspects of administration of physical education and intramurals. Curriculum development, budget, design of facilities, scheduling and class organization will be covered. Open to all students but designed for the physical education major. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 40500 - Administration Of Athletic Training Programs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced theory in the more complex injuries associated with athletics. Organization of athletic training programs, nontraumatic medical problems, pharmacology, and athletic nutrition also will be studied. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 40800 - Orientation And Observation In Physical Therapy |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Assigned observations of physical therapy in hospitals. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 40900 - Seminar In Sports Medicine |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A review of selected medical aspects of sports. Liberal use of guest medical professionals. A broad look at the field of sports medicine. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 41100 - Clinical Applications Of Health/Fitness Concepts III |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Under the supervision of the program coordinator, students will demonstrate the ability to apply specific skills, competencies, and applications of basic/advanced exercise principles in a professional setting. Required to be taken fall and spring. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
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| HK 42100 - Health Screening And Fitness Evaluation And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Health screening, fitness assessment and evaluation, and exercise prescription will be the primary focus of this course. The course will also qualify students to take the American College of Sports Medicine Health/Fitness Instructor exam. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 42200 - Basic Concepts In Exercise Program Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces basic program design concepts and rationale to design fitness programs for healthy adults emphasizing cardiovascular training, strength training, flexibility training, and balance. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 42400 - Health And Fitness Program Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overviews major principles, competencies, and challenges involved in managing health, fitness, and sports organizations. Students will develop an understanding of the key considerations and skills needed to organize and manage human resources and facilities in health, fitness, and sport settings. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 43500 - Student Teaching Seminar |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Development and implementation of selected teaching units and plans for a specified student teaching setting. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 44000 - Human Diseases And Disorders |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The major communicable and noncommunicable diseases and disorders that afflict modern man, with particular emphasis upon the etiology, epidemiology, and ecology of these diseases and disorders. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 44300 - Neuroscience Of Movement |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this course students will learn about the neuroscience behind the control, sensation and perception of human movement. The course is divided into five sections. In the first section, students learn about the sensory systems with human movement. In the second section, students learn about the basic CNS building blocks underlying movement control and perception. In the third section, the control of balance and locomotion is the central topic. In the fourth section students learn about the higher brain functions involved in cognition. The final section of the class examines issues regarding learning, development, and brain plasticity. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Able to describe basic principles of the neuroscience behind the control of human movement.
2. Able to apply principles of the neuroscience of movement to clinical, educational, research, and sports science setting using specialized laboratory equipment.
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| HK 44400 - Motor Function In Older Adults |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this course, students learn about the decline in motor function that occurs in older adults and techniques to improve motor function in an older population. Topics include decreased balance control, loss of muscle strength, and declines in adaptive locomotion as a function of age. Students enrolled in this class also participate in an off-campus lab. In the lab, students are paired with an older adult and use the knowledge gained in lecture to improve the motor function of the older adult. This class provides students with a unique opportunity to gain hands-on experience working with an older population. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Travel Time
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to describe the declines in motor function that occur in older adults.
2. Students will be able to critically assess intervention research with aims to improve motor function in older adults.
3. Students will be able to describe and evaluate types of interventions and their effectiveness.
4. Students will be able to use quantitative equipment to assess balance and mobility of younger and older adults.
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| HK 44500 - Principles Of Epidemiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of the distribution of diseases in human populations and factors that influence these distributions. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1 . Interpret results of statistical analyses found in public health studies.
2. Develop written and oral presentations based on statistical analyses for both public health professionals and educated lay audiences.
3. Identify key sources of data for epidemiological purposes.
4. Identify the principles and limitations of public health screening programs.
5. Describe a public health problem in terms of magnitude, person, place, and time.
6. Explain the importance of epidemiology for informing scientific, ethical, economic, and political discussions of health issues.
7. Comprehend basic, ethical, and legal principles pertaining to the collection, use, and dissemination of epidemiological data.
8. Apply the basic terminology and definitions of epidemiology.
9. Calculate basic epidemiology measures.
10. Communicate epidemiologic information to lay and professional audiences.
11. Draw appropriate inferences from epidemiologic data.
12. Evaluate the strengths and limitations of epidemiologic reports.
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| HK 45000 - Clinical Applications Of Sport III |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Students will spend approximately 15 hours a week with a certified strength and conditioning specialist utilizing skills in previous clinical experiences and coursework to help lead athletes in lifting, conditioning and drill sets. Students will be assigned to observe and assist with various sport teams exposing them to a variety of training practices in sport and performance. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will complete required hours for expected course standards.
2. Students will demonstrate the ability to analyze experiences in a sport related setting.
3. Students will demonstrate the ability to lead athletes in lifting, conditioning, and drill sets with assigned supervision.
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| HK 45300 - Motor Coordination And Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced undergraduate motor development course that examines the processes and coordination principles related to motor behavior development across the life span. Material and concepts are concentrated around specific skills areas and SPAN a broad range of ages and theoretical approaches. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 45800 - Principles Of Motor Control And Learning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discussion of the principles of motor learning and control. Relevant research literature will be surveyed with an historical perspective. Students will be expected to design and/or conduct a mini research project. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 46300 - Analysis Of Human Motion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analytic approach to the mechanical analysis of human motion, including modeling procedures and computer-generated display techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 46500 - Research Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will be conducted in a lecture/lab format. The lectures will introduce the basic knowledge necessary to understanding the entire research process as it is found in health and kinesiology. The laboratories will be designed to give students practice in discovering research questions, preparing research proposals, evaluating existing research, and applying research to practical problems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| HK 46800 - Advanced Exercise Physiology II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced undergraduate course in the area of exercise and human performance. Further examination of the physiological mechanisms and theories involved in the exercise response. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 46900 - Exercise Testing And Prescription In Special Populations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines responses to exercise testing and prescription in healthy adults compared to exercise responses and special considerations for individuals with chronic diseases and conditions and issues of concern to pregnant women, children, and older adults, among others. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 47200 - Sport And Exercise Psychology II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course presents topics not covered in PE 372 and emphasizes application of psychological principles in sport and exercise settings. Topics include group dynamics, psychological benefits of exercise; exercise addiction; body image; leadership and communication; and performance enhancement principles and techniques. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the basic principles of the psychological processes in sport and exercise contexts.
2. Synthesize and apply theoretical and empirical knowledge in sport and exercise psychology through active learning processes and interaction with fellow students.
3. Apply critical thinking, group interaction, public speaking, research, and writing skills.
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| HK 47400 - Youth Physical Activity Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course addresses developmental, psychological, social, and contextual factors associated with physical activity behavior and sedentary behavior of young people. Students will consider fundamental questions and assumptions that frame the study of youth physical behavior, be exposed to a breadth of empirical literature on youth physical activity and sedentary behavior, and learn how the existing knowledge base has been translated into physical activity promotion efforts. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the youth physical activity and sedentary behavior knowledge base.
2. Synthesize, in verbal and written form, information on youth physical activity and sedentary behavior.
3. Describe both the research process and how knowledge obtained from research is translated into efficacious physical activity promotion efforts.
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| HK 47500 - Practicum In Kinesiology |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Supervised field work in university, community, hospital, business, or clinical settings where structured exercise programs or rehabilitative services are conducted. Supervisory conferences and written reports are required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Practicum, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HK 47600 - Olympic Games: Ancient And Modern |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A historical study of the nature and significance of the ancient and modern Olympic Games. Topics include genesis of the games; evolution of events; the amateur ideal; social, economic, and commercial influences; politics; modern controversies; and various reform movements. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 49000 - Special Topics In Health And Kinesiology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individualized readings, topics, or projects in health and kinesiology appropriate for undergraduate students. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Travel Time
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HK 49200 - Professional Work Experience IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Practical experience in professional employment. Programs must be preplanned and conducted under direction of the departmental coordinator and agency supervisor. Students will submit documentaton of practical experiences. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HK 49600 - Independent Inquiry in Movement and Sport Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Students are engaged in a research project under the guidance of a faculty member in one of the areas of inquiry in the movement and sport sciences major. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HK 49800 - Directed Research For Undergraduates |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Student designs, conducts, and writes an individual research project under the guidance of a member of the faculty. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HK 51000 - Introduction To The Quantitative Methods Of Public Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Acquaints students with the basic concepts and methods of statistics, their applications, and their interpretation as used in public health. Students learn basic terminology and its meaning, how to calculate various statistical measures and indices, how to quantify health relationships, and how to compute and interpret inferential statistical techniques. Students will acquire the ability to utilize the statistical software package SAS as a tool to facilitate the processing, editing, storing, displaying, analysis, and interpretation of health research-related data. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Will acquaint students with the basic concepts and methods of statistics, their applications, and their interpretation as used in public health.
2. Students will learn basic terminology and its meaning, how to calculate various statistical measures and indices, how to quantify health relationships and how to compute and interpret inferential statistical techniques.
3. Students will also acquire the ability to utilize the statistical software package SAS as a tool to facilitate the processing, editing, storing, displaying, analysis and interpretation of health research related data.
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| HK 52400 - Managing Health, Fitness, And Sports Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of the major principles, considerations, and techniques involved in managing health, fitness, and sports (HFS) organizations. Emphasizes the skills and competencies involved in the planning, organization, and control of opportunities, resources, and facilities in HFS settings. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 52500 - Marketing And Promotion In Health, Fitness, And Sports Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of marketing and promotion in health, fitness, and sports organizations. Emphasizes the skills necessary to develop marketing and promotion plans and to develop materials and approaches for carrying out these plans in health, fitness, and sports settings. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 53700 - Analysis Of Teaching And Coaching In Physical Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study and practice of using data-based approaches for collecting information about and making changes in teacher's own teaching and coaching styles. Procedures for the establishment, assessment, and maintenance of techniques and skills in teaching will be covered and used. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 53900 - Pedagogical Studies In Physical Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines research on teacher education and research on teaching in physical education. The course will acquaint students with empirical and conceptual publications related to the professional training process as well as studies examining the role of teacher and the influence of the teaching process in physical education settings. Typically offered Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 56600 - Biomedical Principles Of Public Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Biological foundation underlying priority actions related to public health promotion and disease prevention. Review of current professional literature in preventive medicine/public health promotion. Development of critical thinking skills to distinguish health information based on scientific inquiry. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 56700 - Epidemiology For Public Health Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course presents the fundamental principles, methods, and applications of epidemiology, including the quantification of morbidity, mortality, and disease risk. Epidemiologic study designs and the use of public health vital statistics, disease transmission evidence, and risk assessment data are explored. Historically significant epidemiological cases provide a framework for the application of ethical principles to epidemiologic research. This course meets the epidemiology core competency requirement for the Master's in Public Health (MPH) degree. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 56800 - Advanced Exercise Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of selected concepts and principles of physiology as they relate to the exercising human. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 57000 - Gender Roles And Physical Activity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the influence of gender roles on the performance, participation, and persistence of males and females in physical activity. Emphasis will be placed on understanding the social, psychological, and biological factors that affect behavior in sport and exercise contexts throughout the lifespan. Typically offered Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 57200 - Sport In American Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey and critique of major sociological concepts, theoretical and methodological perspectives as they apply to dimensions of human play and sport. Class activity will include field experiments utilizing basic sociological methods. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 57400 - Advanced Sport And Exercise Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of current research and theoretical and methodological perspectives focused on the psychological aspects of sport and exercise behavior. Emphasis will be placed on the social psychological correlates (e. g., motivation, stress) of performance and adherence in physical activity settings. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 57500 - Introduction To Environmental Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (HSCI 57500) An introduction to chemical, physical, or biological factors in the environment that affect the health of the community. This course examines health issues, scientific understanding of causes, and approaches to the control of major environmental health problems in industrialized and developing countries. This is a core course for the Master's in Public Health (MPH). Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Upon completion of this course, students will be able to:
2. Define the major sources and types of environmental agents.
3. Discuss the transport and fate of these agents in the environment.
4. Identify the carriers or vectors that promote the transfer of these agents from the environment to the human.
5. Describe how these agents interact with biological systems, and the mechanisms by which they exert adverse health effects.
6. Explain and use models for prediction of the magnitude of adverse effects in biological systems.
7. Identify and define the steps in the risk-assessment and risk-management processes.
8. Describe the steps in the regulatory process in terms of risk assessment and risk management and identify current legislation and regulation regarding environmental issues.
9. Identify significant gaps in the current knowledge base concerning the health effects of environmental agents and identify areas of uncertainty in the risk-assessment process.
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| HK 57600 - Diversity And Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to examine the health status and the politics of representation of the U.S. ethnic minorities (e.g., African Americans, Latinos, Asian Americans, Native Americans, Alaskans, etc.). Emphasis is placed on factors that influence health and health-related behaviors. The course is intended to provide students with an overview of historical, political, social, and cultural factors related to the health behavior and status of minority groups in American society. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 58000 - Philosophy Of Sport And The Body |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course designed to introduce the past and recent philosophical literature on the nature and significance of sport and embodiment. Topics include: theories of play; meaning, knowledge, and morality in sport; the lived body; and aesthetics of human movement. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 58100 - International Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to public health priorities from an international perspective, recognizing the interdependent nature of health promotion and disease prevention issues across diverse regions and populations. Students analyze historical, epidemiological, environmental, ecological, and behavioral influences on population health status. Technological advances in communication, travel, medicine, and industry have dramatically shaped global health priorities. Using contemporary public health theories and analytic models, students examine population health determinants, contrasting industrialized and developing countries and how these influence health goals established by public health institutions, such as the World Health Organization, philanthropic foundations, and governmental agencies. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Address the question of globalization and its impact on health status, government policies, gender roles and spirituality in preventive health behavior across diverse regions and countries.
2. Critique theory and models used to inform health and development programs in developing countries, along with the implementation of humanitarian assistance programs.
3. Analyze health priorities such as diet, tobacco use, HIV/AIDS in global health programs.
4. Discuss issues related to human rights, population, hunger and disease in the world and examine their impact on population health.
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| HK 59000 - Special Topics In Health And Kinesiology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individualized readings, topics, or projects in health and kinesiology appropriate for graduate students. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HK 59200 - Public Health Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 9.00. This course integrates public health theory and practice in a professional setting. Students have the opportunity to apply concepts from core and concentration courses, conduct projects, and interact with a range of professionals in the designated setting. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
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| HK 60000 - Individual Research And Study |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Each student studies a problem of interest related to physical education, health, or recreation. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HK 60100 - HK PhD Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is the first of a required two-course sequence for first-year health and kinesiology doctoral students. The course is designed to socialize students into the worlds of science, graduate education, and health and kinesiology research and practice. Particular emphasis is placed on the responsible conduct of research, shared and unique expectations of graduate students and mentors across various health and kinesiology subdisciplines, professional development, and the nurturing of academic community. Prerequisite: Incoming health and kinesiology doctoral students qualify for and are required to complete this course. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop an appreciation for philosophical and scientific issues of relevance to all health and kinesiology scholars.
2. Develop an understanding of successful and less successful approaches to graduate education, department citizenship, pursuit of scholarly endeavors, and professional development.
3. Develop an understanding of how to obtain effective mentoring.
4. Become an active member of the HK intellectual and professional community.
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| HK 60200 - HK PhD Seminar II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is the second of a required two-course sequence for first-year health and kinesiology doctoral students. The course is designed to expose students to classic works in health and kinesiology subdisciplines, address professional development issues, and help students formulate a curricular and research program to structure the doctoral experience. Particular emphasis is placed on the interdisciplinary nature of health and kinesiology and becoming an active member of the research community. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop an appreciation for the scope of academic work in health and kinesiology.
2. Be exposed to a variety of perspectives on the evolution of health and kinesiology through reading of classic articles and visits from health and kinesiology faculty members.
3. Form an advisory committee and develop a working relationship with that group.
4. Become an active member of our intellectual and professional community.
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| HK 61000 - Research Methods In Health, Physical Education, And Recreation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of research methodology to problems in health, physical education, and recreation. Prerequisite: 3 credit hours in Statistics. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 61100 - Data Analysis In Health And Kinesiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This student-driven course addresses a variety of data analysis issues in health, kinesiology, and related fields (e.g., education, psychology). The course will overview the types of data prominent in health and kinesiology research, how these data are obtained and handled by researchers, measurement/evaluation issues, and ways to present and analyze data. Heavy emphasis is placed on matching research questions and conceptualization with data analysis techniques, obtaining familiarity with widely-used data analysis software, analyzing multivariate data sets, and constructing high-quality results sections in journal manuscript format. Prerequisites: STAT 50100, 50200 and access to a data set pertaining to one's area of research are expected. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 62100 - Seminar In Public Health |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Critical analysis of current issues in public health, with emphasis on reviewing current literature and research pertinent to community public health programs. Prerequisite: 6 credit hours in Health and Physical Education/Fitness. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HK 62500 - Physical Activity And Public Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this course students will be exposed to epidemiological, behavioral, and public health issues relevant to effective promotion of physical activity. The course is appropriate for students training to be practitioners or researchers from a range of disciplines including exercise science, nutrition, psychology, and public health. Major topic areas will include physical activity epidemiology, determinants of physical activity in youth and adults, and current evidence for physical activity interventions ranging from individual, behavioral strategies, to environmental or policy approaches. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Differentiate between various definitions of physical activity, exercise, and physical fitness.
2. Describe and identify strengths and weaknesses of different approaches used to measure physical activity, including surveys, and objective methods using pedometers and accelerometers.
3. Discuss epidemiological evidence on relationships between physical activity and all-cause mortality, cardiovascular disease, cancers, diabetes, obesity, and overweight.
4. Describe and critically evaluate the physical activity determinants literature in children, youth, and adults, and the current determinants research focus in these populations.
5. Describe and critically evaluate physical activity intervention literature, including currently recommended approaches for children, youth, and adults (e.g., based on the Community Guide to P{Preventive Services).
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| HK 63400 - Seminar In Physical Education Curriculum Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A critical analysis of concepts underlying curriculum theories with a focus on theoretical perspectives and principles used for curriculum planning and design in physical education. Typically offered Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 66800 - Seminar In Exercise Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of literature; design and conduct of research in an area of current interest in exercise physiology. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HK 67000 - Advanced Topics In Motor Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected topics in motor control. The subject matter will be data-based and drawn from research literature encompassing behavioral and physiological experimental paradigms. Students will critically evaluate and synthesize research to better understand the integration of individual systems in sensorimotor processing. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HK 67200 - Stress And Coping In Sport, Exercise And Physical Activity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines stress, coping, and emotional processes as they relate to sport, exercise, physical activity, and the physical self. We will explore theoretical perspectives on stress and coping processes, examine the empirical evidence related to sport/exercise/physical activity/rehabilitation/physical self, and discuss applications of this knowledge. Course readings will cover topics including the history and conceptual issues of psychosocial stress, conceptual and methodological issues of coping, individual differences in stress and coping, the influence of sociocultural and contextual factors, and vulnerability and resilience. Prerequisite: HK 57400. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Be able to understand and explain major theories of stress, coping, and emotional processes, and how individual and contextual factors influence these process as they related to physical activity and the physical self.
2. Be able to critically evaluate research articles on stress, coping and emotion related to physical activity and the physical self.
3. Propose applications based on theoretical and empirical knowledge of stress/coping/emotion in physical activity settings.
4. Develop and refine critical thinking, writing, oral communication, and group facilitation skills.
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| HK 67400 - Special Topics In Sport And Exercise Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An in-depth analysis of specific areas of theoretical and empirical work in sport or exercise psychology. Emphasis is placed on the critique, integration, and application of the literature reviewed. Rotating topics. Prerequisite: HK 57400. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HK 67500 - Design And Analysis Of Public Health Interventions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Professional competencies in design, implementation, evaluation and diffusion of health health interventions in community settings. Program planning paradigms, determinants of health behavior, and behavior change strategies serve as a basis for analyzing health interventions. Prerequisite: HS 56500. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 67600 - Theoretical Foundations Of Health Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the theoretical foundations of health behavior. Emphasizes the development of a conceptual framework for understanding and facilitating behavior enhancement, elimination, and/or maintenance in health promotion and education. Focuses on current theories regarding health-related behaviors. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 67800 - Motivational Processes In Sport And Exercise |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Seminar focused on motivation in sport and exercise settings. Antecedents and consequences of motivated behavior are examined from theoretical, research, and application perspectives. Topics include participation motivation in sport, intrinsic/extrinsic orientations, achievement goals, causal attributions, group processes, and exercise motivation. Prerequisite: HK 57400. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 68600 - Theories And Concepts Of Stress Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of a conceptual understanding of stress and stress management. A seminar focused on the review of literature regarding psychophysiology of stress, relationship between stress and disease, and methods of preventing/relieving stress, models of stress research, and issues surrounding stress research methodology. Prerequisite: BIOL 20300, 20400. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 68700 - Public Health Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the principals of management as applied to public health organizations, particularly local health departments. Topics include the organization of the U.S. public health system, legal and ethical obligations of public health administrators, the public health workforce and human resource issues, public health budgeting and finance, and leadership in the public health agency. The course is designed to introduce master's level students in public health to the management skills necessary to successfully implement a public health program. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 68800 - Health Policy In The United States |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the formation, implementation, and evaluation of health policies, with emphasis on the legislative and regulatory processes that are involved. Discusses legislation in areas specific to public health promotion. Students are encouraged to consider their role in future policy initiatives. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HK 69000 - Advanced Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Topic and credit to be arranged. Individual study for the doctoral student. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HK 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HK 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HON H1000 - Freshman Honors Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A discussion class with limited enrollment and an interdisciplinary foundation. Topics vary and are usually focused on contemporary topics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HON H1010 - Ideas and Human Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A discussion class with limited enrollment and an interdisciplinary foundation. Topics vary and are usually focused on personal growth and exploration. Students are encouraged to think for themselves and look in unusual places to find the answers to life's tough questions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HON H1020 - Ideas And Human Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A discussion class with limited enrollment and an interdisciplinary foundation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HON H1100 - Honors First Year Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Honors First Year Seminar
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| HON H1110 - Honors First Year Seminar II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Honors First Year Seminar II. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| HON H1500 - Honors H-Option Contract |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 6.00. A regularly scheduled course may be converted into an honors course through contracted changes to the course syllabus negotiated with a willing instructor. In addition to the contracted course, HON H1500, with a matching title adding the word "honors" will appear on the students' transcripts indicating the honors status of the course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HON H1980 - Honors Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Topics courses allow students to earn Honors credit for a variety of courses offered in different disciplines across campus. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HON H2000 - Honors Interdepartmental Colloquium |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Honors seminar focusing on issues in the humanities from an interdisciplinary perspective. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HON H2010 - Interdepartmental Colloquium-Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Honors seminar focusing on issues in the social and behavioral sciences from an interdisciplinary perspective. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the social and behavioral requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HON H2020 - Interdepartmental Colloquium-Natural and Math Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Honors seminar focusing on topics in the natural and mathematical sciences from an interdisciplinary perspective. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the science and mathematics requirement. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| HON H2500 - Honors H-Option Contract |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 6.00. A regularly scheduled course may be converted into an honors course through contracted changes to the course syllabus negotiated with a willing instructor. In addition to the contracted course, HON H1500, with a matching title adding the word "honors" will appear on the students' transcripts indicating the honors status of the course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HON H2980 - Honors Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 4.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| HON H2990 - Honors Tutorial |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Honors independent study. Hours, credit, and subject matter to be arranged with a faculty mentor and approved by Honors program director. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HON H3000 - Interdepartmental Colloquium |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Honors seminar focusing on issues in the humanities from an interdisciplinary perspective. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HON H3010 - Interdepmental Colloquium |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Honors seminar focusing on issues in the social and behavioral sciences from an interdisciplinary perspective. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the social and behavioral sciences requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HON H3020 - Interdeptmental Colloquium |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Honors seminar focusing on topics in the natural and mathematical sciences areas from an interdisciplinary perspective. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the natural and mathematical sciences requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HON H3500 - Honors H-Option Contract |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. A regularly scheduled course may be converted into an honors course through contracted changes to the course syllabus negotiated with a willing instructor. In addition to the contracted course, HON H3500, with a matching title adding the word "honors" will appear on the students' transcripts indicating the honors status of the course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HON H3980 - Honors Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Honors Topics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HON H3990 - Honors Independent Study |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. The Honors Program capstone course. The honors project provides opportunity for honors students to undertake research under the guidance of a faculty mentor. The format may vary, but each project encourages intellectual independence and introduces students to proper research methods in preparation for graduate work. Projects must have some written component and will be a product that is representative of professional work in the chosen field. The project must be presented and defended before a committee including representatives of the Honors Program Council. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HON H4500 - Honors H-Option Contract |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 6.00. A regularly scheduled course may be converted into an honors course through contracted changes to the course syllabus negotiated with a willing instructor. In addition to the contracted course, HON H1500, with a matching title adding the word "honors" will appear on the students' transcripts indicating the honors status of the course. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HON H4970 - Honors Colloquium |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Honors Colloquium. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HON H4980 - Honors Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Honors Topics courses allow students to earn Honors credit for a variety of courses offered in different disciplines across campus. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 40.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HONR 10000 - Freshman Honors Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A freshman experience course directed to honors students. This course provides an orientation to the honors program, the university environment and an introduction to research methods, covering library research, experimental design, survey design, statistical analysis, critical thinking, logic and ethics. Students will critically examine research topics by evaluating evidence and the conclusions that may be drawn. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HONR 19500 - University Honors Program Freshman Independent Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Honors research. Individual research projects undertaken with faculty supervision. Admission to University Honors Program. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Honors Program
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HONR 19900 - Interdisciplinary Honors - Special Topics Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. For first and second-year honors eligible students only, with priority given to University Honors Program (UHP) students. These interdisciplinary topic seminars are designed to open intellectual horizons and allow opportunities for learning by inquiry in a collaborative environment. Courses are limited to 20 participants or less, may be team taught, and emphasize close interaction between the professor(s) and the students. Students will participate in active learning exercises that may include field trips, creative research experiences, community collaboration, and/or service learning. Seminar topics will vary from semester to semester depending upon demand and/or instructor's availability. Previous seminar titles include: The Vampire in Folklore, Fiction, & Film; Should the History of Science be X-Rated; The City; and The Modern Corporation in Society. Requires SAT >= 1200 or ACT >= 26. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Honors Program
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HONR 19901 - The Sustainability Project I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is the first half of the required introductory series taken by all students entering the Honors College. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Honors Program
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. An understanding of the mutual influence between science and society.
2. The skill to differentiate among disciplines and discipline-based approaches.
3. The ability to articulate and evaluate their own position, values, and potential contributions vis-à-vis the course topic.
4. A sense of themselves as an engaged citizen of a multidisciplinary academic community and of the world.
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| HONR 19902 - The Sustainability Project II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is the second half of the required introductory series taken by all students entering the Honors College. HONR 19902 is the practicum follow-up to HONR 19901, in which students learn about a specific problem (e.g., sustainability). The students work on solutions to the problem under the supervision of undergraduate mentors and of faculty. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Honors Program
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The ability to turn theory into praxis.
2. The ability to collaborate.
3. A richer and more practical understanding of the issues raised in HONR 19901.
4. A sense of themselves as part of a community.
5. A commitment to service.
6. Confidence in what they can accomplish.
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| HONR 19903 - Interdisciplinary Approaches In Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a writing-intensive course in which students learn how to find, evaluate, and use credible information, how to express themselves well in a variety of different written genres, and how to write for different audiences. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Honors Program
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division, GTC-Written Communication, GTC-Information Literacy, UC-Written Communication, UC-Information Literacy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The ability to express themselves in writing clearly and concisely.
2. An understanding of different written genres and their characteristics.
3. An understanding of context and audience.
4. The ability to select and convey the appropriate content.
5. The ability to organize and format a written work.
6. An awareness and appreciation of writing style.
7. The ability to comment upon another’s writing in a productive way.
8. The skills to improve their own writing through revision.
9. The ability to locate and evaluate credible information.
10. The ability to use and document information successfully and ethically.
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| HONR 29000 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Restricted to honors program students, this course will involve an investigation of a specific problem or topic. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HONR 29500 - University Honors Program Sophomore Independent Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Honors research. Individual research projects undertaken with faculty supervision. Admission to University Honors Program. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Honors Program
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HONR 29900 - Interdisciplinary Honors - Special Topics Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. For second-year honors eligible students and above; with priority given to University Honors Program (UHP) students. These interdisciplinary topics seminars are designed to open intellectual horizons and allow opportunities for learning by inquiry in a collaborative environment. Courses are limited to 20 participates or less, may be team taught, and emphasize close interaction between the professor(s) and the students. Students will participate in active learning exercises that may include field trips, creative research experiences, community collaboration, and/or service learning. Seminar topics will vary from semester to semester depending upon demand and/or instructor's availability.
. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Honors Program
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HONR 39000 - Junior Level Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Restricted to honors program students, this course will involve an investigation of a specific problem or topic. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HONR 39500 - University Honors Program Junior Independent Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Honors research. Individual research projects undertaken with faculty supervision. Admission to University Honors Program. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Honors Program
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HONR 39900 - Interdisciplinary Honors - Special Topics Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. HONR 39900 is designated for a wide range of honors courses offered by various schools/departments as part of their respective curricula and by the University Honors Program. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture, Practice Study Observation, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Honors Program
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HONR 40000 - Honors Capstone Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Restricted to honors program students, this is an upper level honors course mandating a major supervised research effort or practicum resulting in a written report and public, oral dissemination. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HONR 49000 - Senior Level Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Restricted to honors program students, this course will involve an investigation or a specific problem or topic. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HONR 49900 - Interdisciplinary Honors - Special Topics Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. HONR 49900 is designated for a wide range of honors courses offered by various schools/departments as part of their respective curricula and by the University Honors Program. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: University Honors Program
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HORT 10100 - Fundamentals Of Horticulture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Biology and technology involved in the production, storage, processing, and marketing of horticultural plants and products. Laboratories include experiments demonstrating both the theoretical and practical aspects of horticultural plant growth and development. Requires class trips. Students will pay individual lodging or meal expenses when necessary. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 10200 - Fundamentals Of Horticulture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the biology and technology involved in the production, storage, processing and marketing of ornamentals, fruits, vegetables, and other horticultural plants. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
|
| HORT 11000 - Survey Of Horticulture |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A survey of the field of horticulture, with emphasis on horticultural information and career opportunities. This course will utilize a lecture format with a combination of presentations by the instructor and guest speakers with expertise and experience in specialized areas of horticulture. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HORT 20100 - Plant Propagation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theoretical and applied aspects of controlled plant reproduction by sexual and asexual techniques, including seeds, grafting and budding, layering, cuttings, micropropagation (in vitro culture), and specialized structures. Lectures emphasize morphological changes and physiological processes involved in plant propagation. Laboratory exercises illustrate the practical applications of propagation techniques. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 21700 - Woody Landscape Plants |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Recognition and identification of woody landscape plants; plant characteristics in terms of landscape function. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 21800 - Herbaceous Landscape Plants |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Covers important herbaceous ornamentals, with emphasis on annuals, perennials, bulbs, and ground covers; recognition; cultural requirements; and use in landscape plantings. Requires class trips. Students will pay individual lodging or meal expenses when necessary. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 22200 - DynaSCAPE Applications In Horticulture |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will teach students how to use DynaSCAPE software for horticultural landscape design applications. Offered during weeks 6-10. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 22300 - AutoCAD Applications In Horticulture |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will teach students how to use AutoCada software for horticultural landscape design and construction applications. Offered during weeks 11-15. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 22400 - Photoshop Applications In Horticulture |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will teach students how to use Adobe Photoshop software for horticultural applications. Offered during weeks 1-5. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 27500 - Honors Course - Lower Division |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Utilized to offer a new honors course for a maximum of three years. Variable title, credit, and instructional type. Course may be repeated for credit if content and titles are different. Offered primarily to first- and second-year students. Courses offered must be approved by departmental or program faculty and College of Agriculture Honors Committee. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 12 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Critical thinking.
2. Communication.
3. Cultural understanding.
4. Civic responsibilities.
5. Professional preparation.
6. Scientific principles.
7. Social science principles.
8. Teamwork.
|
| HORT 30100 - Plant Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Basic physiological processes of higher plants, particularly as related to the influence of environmental factors on growth, metabolism, and reproduction. Laboratory experiments involve hands-on experience with numerous aspects of plant physiology, including water relations, photosynthesis, growth, dormancy, hormones, and flowering. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 30600 - History Of Horticulture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The origins and development of agriculture, with specific emphasis on horticulture from prehistory to the present in relation to civilization and modern culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 31000 - Planting Design Basics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An introduction to the principles and methods of design and graphic communication as applied to the arrangement of plants in the landscape. The focus will be on small scale, ornamental and educational display plantings. Both herbaceous and woody planting design examples for public gardens, golf courses and other public sites will be presented. Offered during weeks 6-10. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 31500 - Landscape Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the landscape design process. The focus will be on smaller sites, constructed site systems and planting design. Graphic skills will emphasize techniques for drawing site plans and other illustrations. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 31600 - Landscape Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the primary elements and systems of the constructed landscape, including landform, edging, paving, retaining wall, decking, low-voltage lighting, irrigation, drainage and ornamental water systems. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 31700 - Landscape Contracting And Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles and practices applicable to the installation and management of landscape plants. Topics include site and project assessment, site modification and plant installation, the business practices of estimating and bidding, and plant management. Requires class trips. Students will pay individual lodging or meal expenses when necessary. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 36000 - Flower Arrangement And Indoor Plant Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of flower arrangements and displays. Identification, culture, propagation, and use of plants for indoor plantings. Laboratory materials fee required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 37000 - Professional Floral Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles and techniques of commercial-scale floral design for weddings, funerals, hospitals, personal, and parties. Design construction for fresh, dried, and silk materials. Survey of retail florist management. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 39000 - Cooperative Program In Horticulture |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Supervised work experience in horticultural industry. Programs must be preplanned and conducted under the direction of the departmental coordinator with the cooperation of an employer. Students must submit a summary report. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HORT 40000 - Horticulture Study Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. Utilized to record credits earned through participation in Purdue study abroad programs with cooperating foreign universities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 18 credits
|
| HORT 40300 - Tropical Horticulture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the agriculture of the tropics and subtropics, emphasizing horticultural crops. Offered in even-numbered years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 42000 - Ornamental Plant Production |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intensive study of specific production technologies used to commercially grow landscape and floriculture crops, including greenhouse and nursery management. The course will have an emphasis on the growth and development of major floral and nursery crops as influenced by the environment and cultural techniques. Students will pay individual lodging or meal expenses when necessary. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 42100 - Fruit Production |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will teach the science and practice of temperate fruit production with emphasis on pome fruit (apples, pears), stone fruit (peaches, plums, cherries), berry crops (strawberries, brambles, blueberries) and grapes. Principles and concepts will be an important part of the class integrating knowledge of plant physiology, biochemistry and post-harvest physiology. The course will emphasize sustainable production practices and prepare students to think critically to solve fruit production problems. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 42200 - Vegetable And Herb Production |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Sustainable principles, practices, establishment, projection, maintenance and harvesting of vegetable crops. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 42500 - Landscape Horticulture Capstone Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Individuals or teams of students will work with local governments, community service agencies or not-for-profit organizations on projects in which students address problems of landscape planting design, landscape installation, and/or landscape management. The supervising faculty advisory committee will identify projects. Under the mentorship of the advisory committee, students will work closely with the sponsoring client entity to define the problem and participate in creating and/or implementing solutions. At project completion, oral presentations will be made to clients to supplement a written project report. Open only to graduation candidates majoring in Landscape Hortculture and Design. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 43500 - Principles Of Marketing And Management For Horticultural Businesses |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Principles of marketing and business management in the horticultural industries; market organization, performance, and planning; financial planning, pricing, promotion, cost control, and legal aspects of retailing. Case studies in direct farm, floral, and garden center management. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 44000 - Public Garden Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Based on an approved internship at a public garden, arboretum, or other public horticulture-related institution, students will explore management strategies used by the host institution and then submit a comprehensive report. A computer-aided oral presentation based on specific aspects of the internship program will also be required. An approved internship is required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 44200 - Sustainability In The Managed Landscape |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Presents recent advances in the science and technology of sustainable practices for managed landscapes. This course will utilize a lecture format with the combination of presentations by the instructor, expert guest speakers, and students. Offered in even-numbered years. Course enrollment is capped at 14. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 44500 - Strategic Analysis Of Horticultural Production And Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Based on an approved work experience at a commercial horticultural enterprise, students will explore the management, operational and horticultural setting and strategies used by that enterprise and then submit a comprehensive Enterprise Analysis. A computer-aided oral presentation based on specific aspects of the enterprise and the student's work experience is also required. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 45000 - In The English Landscape:Integrating History, Horticulture, and Landscape Architecture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive four-weeks in residence in Corsham, UK with visits to significant sites to examine the intersections between human culture and the natural environment that results in the developed landscape. Offered in even-numbered years. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 47500 - Honors Course - Upper Division |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Utilized to offer a new honors course for a maximum of three years. Variable title, credit, and instructional type. Course may be repeated for credit if content and titles are different. Offered primarily to third- and fourth-year students. Courses offered must be approved by departmental or program faculty and College of Agriculture Honors Committee. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Critical thinking.
2. Communication.
3. Cultural understanding.
4. Civic responsibilities.
5. Professional preparation.
6. Scientific principles.
7. Social science principles.
8. Teamwork.
|
| HORT 49100 - Special Assignments In Horticulture |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Training in research techniques, statistical methods, and record procedures. Assigned research problems. A written report of work accomplished is required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Presentation
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HORT 49200 - Horticultural Science Capstone Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A seminar class combining career development activities with analysis and presentations centered around relevant problems in horticultural science. Students will draw on a variety of their experience such as undergraduate research (HORT 49100), internships, study abroad programs, and other pre-professional activities. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 49900 - Thesis Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. For students doing individualized research on horticultural problems; report required. Arrange with academic advisor and honors research advisor before registering. Admission to the honors program. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HORT 50100 - Scanning Electron Microscopy: Principles |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This 10-week course covers basic theory of Scanning Electron Microscopy and its use as a technique for scientific research. The intent of the course is to provide students with a basic foundation of SEM for evaluating literature and utilizing the technique for their research. Research justification (determined by the instructor and major professor /academic adviser) is required for admission into this course. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Teach basic theory of Scanning Electron Microscopy for those requiring knowledge of the technique to accomplish their research objectives.
|
| HORT 50200 - Scanning Electron Microscopy: Application |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This is a 10-week course covering application of Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) and its use as a tool for scientific research. The intent of the course is to train students to conduct independent research using this technology and the facilities of the Life Science Microscopy Facility (LSMF). Research justification (determined by the instructor and major professor/academic adviser) is required for admission into this course. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Teach practical application of Scanning Electron Microscopy for those requiring the technique to accomplish their research objectives.
|
| HORT 50300 - Transmission Electron Microscopy: Principles |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This 10-week course covers basic theory and application of Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) and its use as a tool for scientific research. The intent of the course is to provide students with a basic foundation of TEM for evaluating literature and utilizing the technique for their research. Research justification (determined by the instructor and major professor /academic adviser) is required for admission into this course. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Teach basic theory of Transmission Electron Microscopy for those requiring knowledge of the technique to accomplish their research objectives.
|
| HORT 50400 - Transmission Electron Microscopy: Application |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This 10-week course covers basic theory and application of Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) and its use as a tool for scientific research. The intent of the course is to provide students with a basic foundation of TEM for evaluating literature and utilizing the technique for their research. Research justification (determined by the instructor and major professor /academic adviser) is required for admission into this course. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 50600 - Commerical Grape And Wine Production |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (FS 50600) A study of professional grape growing and wine production with an emphasis on Midwestern climates, adapted varieties, and recommended wine styles. This course is especially intended for upper level undergraduate, or graduate students in the College of Agriculture that have completed basic course work in plant sciences, biology and chemistry. Students will learn the principles of viticulture and enology and the practices of commercial grape growing and wine making. Must be 21 years old. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Ability to solve a range of real-life production problems.
2. Ability to produce a batch of commercially acceptable wine from vineyard to bottle.
|
| HORT 51300 - Nutrition Of Horticulture Crops |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An integrated course about plant nutrition focused on horticultural crops. The unique features of nutrient availability in a soil-less horticultural media will be highlighted. An emphasis will be placed on understanding the physiological basis of plant responses to nutrient application. Weeks 1-5. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 54100 - Postharvest Technology Of Fruits And Vegetables |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. (FS 54100) Theoretical and applied aspects of methods being used for enhancing the quality and shelf life of harvested fruits and vegetables. Factors that affect the longevity of produce and technology used to control these factors and reduce deterioration of produce between harvest and consumption/processing will be emphasized. Weeks 11-15. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 54200 - Introduction To Agricultural Biotechnology For Educators |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (YDAE 54200) This course is offered, via distance education, to help formal and informal educators understand how transgenic organisms are produced, as well as to enable them to teach science and issues surrounding agricultural biotechnology. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 55100 - Cellular And Molecular Plant Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. THORT 55100 is a course in plant physiology that integrates physiological concepts with plant cell and molecular biology. The course places biophysical concepts of plant physiology such as water relations, energetics, source-sink relationships, chemiosmotic gradients, light responses, and stress physiology in the context of gene expression, cellular topology, protein structure, protein trafficking and membrane characteristics. The course material emphasizes both plant and comparative systems biology approaches, and places a particular emphasis on post transcriptional regulatory mechanisms. Another objective of the course is to acquaint students with primary scientific literature and help them learn to read, evaluate, and discuss scientific research papers. A combined lecture and seminar format is used to cover general topics and bring students into contact with primary literature. The format acquaints students with regular reading and analysis of primary research literature and improves their ability to produce written summaries and reviews. A subset of class sessions are devoted to onsite exposure to cutting edge technologies presented by experts. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an enhanced understanding of scientific principles.
2. Exhibit critical thinking.
3. Have a better understanding of the expectations of a professional scientist.
4. Increase the ability to evaluate and communicate scientific concepts.
5. Better understand scientific collaborative processes.
6. Understand some of the social and cultural interactions that come to play in scientific research.
7. Understand some of the ethical issues involved in the conduct of scientific research.
8. Understand the necessity for continuous learning that characterizes the scientific research process.
|
| HORT 55300 - Plant Growth And Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (BTNY 55300) Topics include seed dormancy, cell expansion and plant growth, pattern formation, phase transition, flowering, pollination and fertilization, seed development, fruit development, and senescence. This course is the second in a series of team-taught courses in the core curriculum of the Purdue Plant Biology Program. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 59000 - Special Studies In Horticulture |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Special studies in horticulture not covered in regular coursework. The field in which work is offered will be indicated in the student's record. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
|
| HORT 60100 - Planning And Presenting Plant Science Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The purpose of this course is to acquaint students with the culture of scientific research and the processes of scientific discovery and review. This course will: (1) acquaint students with techniques used in presenting short scientific talks, as e.g., at national meetings, (2) expose students to procedures used in preparing scientific papers, proposals, etc., (3) introduce students to the outcomes expected to be achieved by graduate education and the processes by which students are mentored and evaluated, (4) help students begin formulating their research project proposal, (5) acquaint students with guidelines for biosafety and responsible conduct of research and provide a forum for discussion of ethical issues confronting researchers, particularly those inherent in participating in extramurally-funded research, (6) acquaint students with intellectual property issues involved in scientific research, (7) acquaint students with core research facilities across campus, and (8) expose students to discussions regarding the importance of diversity and an atmosphere of mutual respect to research excellence. This course is taken for a letter grade and carries on hour of credit. Typically offered Fall Spring .
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 60200 - Horticulture Research Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Weekly attendance at the Horticulture and Landscape Architecture Departmental seminars to help graduate students develop an appreciation for attending seminars and learning appropriate and effective presentation skills. HORT 602 compliments HORT 601 and HORT 603 by extending the presentation and project development approaches learned, so that students are better ready to prepare and defend their project proposals in HORT 603. Prerequisite: BCHM 56100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| HORT 60300 - Grants And Grantsmanship |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Focuses on funding opportunities in agricultural research and techniques of writing successful scientific grant proposals. Students will write a proposal on a research topic of their choice during the course, and they will gain experience in the peer review process by preparing written reviews of proposals and participating in a panel meeting in which proposals are discussed and ranked. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 64000 - Metabolic Plant Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (AGRY 64000, BIOL 64000, BTNY 64000) Topics include photosynthesis, respiration, carbohydrate and lipid metabolism, and nitrogen, sulfur, and secondary metabolism. This course is the third in a series of core courses in the Purdue Plant Biology Program graduate curriculum. Prerequisite: BCHM 56100, 56200; BTNY 55300 or HORT 55300, Prerequisite: BIOL 55100 or HORT 55100. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 69500 - Horticulture Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Topics of current interest to staff and students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HORT 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HORT 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HPER A2820 - Strap/Bandaging Of Physical Active |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced course in the recognition of injuries and of the need for support and bandaging. Lecture and demonstration of emergency procedures will be covered, as well as general strapping and bandaging. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER A3610 - Coaching Of Football |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 2.00. Fundamentals of offensive and defensive line and backfield play; technique of forward passing; outstanding rules; offensive plays, most frequent used defenses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER A3620 - Coaching Of Basketball |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 2.00. Fundamentals of basket shooting, passing, ball handling, and footwork; patterns against man-to-man defense, zone defense, and zone pressure defense, full court and half court. Strategy of playing regular season and tournament play. Psychology of coaching. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-New Albany
|
| HPER A3630 - Coaching Of Baseball |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Fundamentals of pitching, catching, batting, base running, infield and outfield play; offensive and defensive strategy; organization and management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| HPER A3640 - Coaching Of Track And Field |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. Fundamental procedures in conditioning and training for cross country, track, and field. Gives basic understanding of each event's coaching strategy and coaching psychology. Home-meet organization and management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HPER A3680 - Coaching Of Tennis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 2.00. Theory and methods of coaching tennis covering technical, administrative, and organizational aspects involved in the process. Emphasis placed on fundamentals, tactics, conditioning, and conduct of practice sessions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER A3700 - Coaching Of Soccer |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. Theory and methods of coaching soccer covering technical, administrative, and organizational aspects involved in the process. Emphasis on execution of advanced skills and team offense and defense patterns, conditioning the player, and organizing practice sessions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HPER A3710 - Coaching Of Volleyball |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50 or 2.00. Theory and methods of coaching volleyball covering technical, administrative, and organizational aspects involved in the process. Emphasis on execution of advanced skills and team offense and defense patterns, conditioning the player, and organizing practice sessions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HPER A3720 - Coaching Of Softball |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. Theory of coaching competitive softball, both fast- and slow-pitch. Emphasis on individual and team play. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER A3810 - Lab Practice Athletic Training I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Laboratory hours are assigned so that students have an opportunity to practice athletic training skills during all sports seasons. Direct supervision and guidance provided by the athletic team physician and the athletic training staff.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER A3820 - Laboratory Practice In Athletic Training II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Laboratory hours are assigned so that students have an opportunity to practice athletic training skills during all sports seasons. Direct supervision and guidance provided by the athletic team physician and the athletic training staff. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER A3830 - Therapeutic Management of Sports Injuries |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to therapeutic techniques used on ill or injured athletes to facilitate enhanced recovery and safe return to competitive conditions. Lecture and demonstration involving method of application of therapeutic equipment and exercise protocols will be covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| HPER A3840 - Principles And Tech Of Therapeutics Exercise |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles in the use of therapeutic exercise techniques for treating the injured physically active person to facilitate enhanced recovery and safe return to activity. Lecture, demonstration, and laboratory experience in the principles of therapeutic exercise. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER A4800 - Care And Prevention Of Athletic Injuries |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Course designed to assist student in recognizing, understanding, and managing athletic injuries. Methods of taping and bandaging are emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HPER A4830 - Principles Of Sports Officiating |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Topics include such sports as football, baseball, basketball, volleyball, and gymnastics. Ethics of sports officiating; mastery, interpretation, and application of sports rules. Laboratory and classroom experiences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HPER A4840 - Interscholastic Athletic Programs |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An overview of the operation of athletic programs in the schools for men and women. Administrative structure on national and state levels. Policies and procedures as they pertain to budget, facilities, eligibility, contest regulations, safety and current trends. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| HPER C3660 - Community Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to community health within the public health context. Students will develop an understanding of historical and theoretical foundations of community health and major societal health concerns, explore community health models and programs used to address these concerns, and examine racial/ethnic, cultural, socioeconomic and related determinants of community health. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-New Albany
|
| HPER D1010 - Beginning Ballet I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is designed for the adult learner in ballet technique. It includes barre work and center combinations that promote strength, flexibility, balance, and coordination. Ballet serves as a foundation for other forms of dance and enhances body posture and carriage. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER D1100 - Beginning Modern Jazz Dance |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is designed for the adult beginner in modern jazz dance and will be concerned with rigorously training the body in the styles of leading jazz educators. Warm-up exercises and jazz combinations will be performed, and historical, social, and ethnic dance contributions will be examined. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER D2010 - Modern Dance Workshop |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Collaboration of dance faculty in providing a wide variety of movement experiences in the areas of technique, composition, and improvisation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HPER D2020 - Intermediate Ballet |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is a continuation of HPER D101 or is for the adult beginner with previous experience in ballet technique. It will cover a technical vocabulary of barre and center work to stimulate both the mind and the body. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER D2110 - Advanced Technique I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Designed to allow the student to develop a higher level of technical proficiency, with an emphasis on the application and analysis of various movement principles as they relate to dance and performance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER D2180 - Modern Jazz Dance Technique |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction in jazz dance technique derived from the styles of Luigi and Gus Giordano; special emphasis on centering, precision and clarity of movement, and coordination and performance skills such as style and visual focus. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER D2210 - Dance Composition I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Through problem-solving assignments and appropriate dance composition, tools for discovering movement will be developed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER D3320 - Dance And The Allied Arts II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Historical development of dance and related art forms, Renaissance through contemporary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER D4410 - Dance Production II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Basic orientation to technical theatre, specifically for dance. Production methods for publicity, audio-visual materials, and make-up design. Includes presentation of an original lecture-demonstration. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER E1000 - Experiences In Physical Activity |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Any of a series of courses in new and developing fitness and activity areas. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HPER E1020 - Group Exercise |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Course is a total fitness class that emphasizes cardiorespiratory conditioning, flexibility, muscular endurance, and coordination through rhythmical body movement. Only Satisfactory (S) and Fail (F) grades are given. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HPER E1050 - Badminton |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Beginning instruction in basic skills and techniques of badminton for singles, doubles, and mixed doubles play. Emphasis on basic skill development, rules, and strategy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| HPER E1090 - Ballroom And Social Dance |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction in the techniques of ballroom dance including fox trot, waltz, cha-cha, tango, rhumba, samba, and fad dances. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER E1110 - Basketball |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction in fundamental skills of shooting, passing, ball handling, footwork, basic strategies of offensive and defensive play, and interpretation of rules. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER E1120 - Bicycling |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Beginning instruction in the principles of fitness through a cycling program. Fitness testing will be done and cardiovascular training will be emphasized. Proper riding technique, safety, and other features of competitive and recreational cycyling will be discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER E1130 - Billiards |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction in basic skills, including bridge forming, stroke techniques, bank shots, and cue ball spin. Fee charged. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HPER E1170 - Bowling |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Beginning instruction in the fundamentals of approach, release, arm swing, methods of scoring, rules, and etiquette on the lanes. Explanation of lane construction, lane condition, and automatic machines. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
|
| HPER E1180 - Softball |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Softball. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER E1190 - Personal Fitness |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Designed to help students understand the basics of physical fitness and how being physically fit relates to healthy living. Emphasis is on developing a personalized program of exercise for a lifetime of beneficial physical activity. Geared to all students including those not having had previous athletic or physical education. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER E1210 - Conditioning And Weight Training |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction in basic principles of conditioning and weight training. Emphasis on muscular strength, muscular endurance, flexibility, and cardiorespiratory endurance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HPER E1230 - Diving |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction in fundamental dives including approach, takeoff, execution of the dive, and entry into the water. Emphasis on basic forward, backward, reverse, and twisting somersaults. Course designed for all levels regardless of past diving experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER E1270 - Fencing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction in guard position, footwork, and basic defensive and offensive skills. Emphasis on fencing with foil and an overview of the sabre and epee. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER E1300 - Army Physical Fitness |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The path to total fitness requires a combination of physical conditioning, mental conditioning, and commonsense dietary considerations. Army Physical Fitness is for those willing to accept a disciplined regimen proven to lead to total fitness. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER E1330 - Fitness And Jogging I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Beginning instruction in the basic principles of fitness as they apply to a jogging program. Emphasis on cardio respiratory endurance and flexibility. Basic concepts underlying Dr. Kenneth Cooper's aerobic program. For students without prior experience in jogging programs, aerobics levels I through III. Graded S/U only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER E1350 - Golf |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Beginning instruction in techniques for putting, chipping, pitching, iron swing, and wood strokes. Course includes rules and etiquette of golf. Students play on par 3 course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER E1370 - Gymnastics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Beginning instruction in basic skills and incorporation of basic routines in trampoline, tumbling, and vaulting. Emphasis on events performed by both men and women. All events will be included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER E1390 - Handball |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction in basic skills for beginning players. Includes both four-wall singles and doubles games. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HPER E1480 - T'ai Chi Ch'Uan |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to the slow movements of T'ai Chi Ch'uan. Course provides instruction in William C. C. Chen's 60 movement form, physics of body leverage, history, philosophy, and cultural context. One of the most popular forms of exercise in China. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| HPER E1500 - Karate |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Beginning instruction in techniques of blocking, kicking, striking, and punching, limited free fighting and self- defense. Students should achieve technical level of yellow belt. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER E1510 - Self Defense |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction in techniques for practical common-sense self-defense skills and situation. No uniform required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER E1540 - Beginning Tap Dance |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Beginning Tap Dance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER E1550 - Modern Dance |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Beginning instruction in modern dance technique, stressing knowledge and application of movement principles essential to dance training. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| HPER E1590 - Racquetball |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction in basic skills for beginning players. Includes both four-wall singles and doubles games. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER E1650 - Soccer |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction in fundamental techniques, rules, basic team tactics, and strategies. Emphasis on competitive games scrimmages and functional drills. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HPER E1680 - Swimming For Non-Swimmers |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Beginning instruction in self-rescue, remedial swimming skills, and several basic strokes. For students with no swimming skills. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| HPER E1810 - Tennis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Beginning instruction in the fundamental skills of forehand and backhand strokes and serves. Competitive play in women's, men's, and mixed doubles. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER E1850 - Volleyball |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction in fundamental skills of power volleyball. Emphasis on overhand serve, bump, set, dig, and spike. Team offensive and defensive strategies included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER E1860 - Wall Volleyball |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction in fundamental skills of wall volleyball, including the serve, set (with and without wall), bump, dig, and spike; team offensive and defensive strategies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HPER E1870 - Weight Training |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction in basic principles and techniques of conditioning through use of free weights. Emphasis on personalized conditioning programs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER E1900 - Yoga I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Hatha yoga postures for flexibility, toning, suppleness, stamina. Deep-complete breathing for vitality and in-depth relaxation. Introduction to basic yogic philosophy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HPER E1960 - Skiing-Alpine Downhill |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Graduated Length Method - GLM; Learn and practice modern parallel skiing method through utilization of short skis in graduated lengths - starting from very short skis and progressing to standard-length skis.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER E2000 - Military Science-Leadership Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Conducted at Fort Knox, Kentucky, for six weeks, course will cover basic military skills and leadership. Students earn 1-6 credits, based on military science basic courses previously taken. Students should not have completed military basic training or Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) basic course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER E2110 - Advanced Basketball |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction in advanced skills and team play in basketball. Extension of basic skills with emphasis on improvement of techniques. Also more involved instruction in team offenses and defenses, while developing an understanding of why and when to perform certain team concepts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HPER E2170 - Bowling-Intermediate |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Emphasis on improving hook ball delivery and an understanding of angles needed for spare bowling. Interclass competition with and without handicaps. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HPER E2190 - Weight Loss And Exercise |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Designed for overweight students, this class will stress the importance of diet and exercise in permanent weight control. Uses dietary behavior modification techniques and an exercise program to achieve a gradual reduction to and maintenance of ideal weight. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER E2270 - Intermediate Fencing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Intermediate Fencing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER E2300 - Advanced Army Physical Fitness |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Continuing along the path to total fitness begun in HPER E1300, this course emphasizes the leadership aspect of army physical fitness. Students will lead physical training sessions, participate in and lead formation runs, and continue the discipline regimen begun in HPER E1300. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER E2330 - Fitness & Jogging II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A continuation of Fitness and Jogging I (E133). Course designed to take student from Aerobics Level III up to Level V. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER E2480 - Intermediate T'ai Chi |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Intermediate T'ai Chi. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER E2500 - Karate-Intermediate |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction in advanced applications of basic techniques and free fighting. Students should achieve technical level of green belt. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
|
| HPER E2550 - Modern Dance-Intermediate |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Intermediate modern dance technique, stressing knowledge and application of movement principles essential to dance training. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HPER E2590 - Racquetball -Intermediate |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Extension of basic skills. Improvement of techniques and strategy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HPER E2600 - Intermediate Karate |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Intermediate Karate. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER E2680 - Swimming-Intermediate |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction designed to help the less-skilled swimmer master the five basic strokes, be proficient in self-rescue and basic rescue skills. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HPER E2700 - Introduction To Scientific Scuba |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to scuba diving. Emphasis on safety and avoidance of potential dangers. A noncertification course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER E2750 - Aquatic Conditioning |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Course designed for highly skilled swimmers interested in training methods that may be used by noncompetitive swimmers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER E2810 - Tennis-Intermediate |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction in spin service, volley,lob, and advanced drive placement. Emphasis on singles and doubles playing strategies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| HPER E2850 - Advanced Volleyball |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction in advanced skills of power volleyball. Emphasis on execution of advanced techniques; applying team offense and defense strategies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HPER E2900 - Yoga II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Intensive Hatha yoga postures, additional breathing techniques, extensive relaxation, and continuation of yoga philosophy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| HPER E3550 - Modern Dance I-Advanced |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Advanced techniques in modern dance with emphasis on performance of movement patterns and individual creative work. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER E3710 - Advanced Scuba |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Course provides students with practical knowledge in advanced scuba. Topics include natural and compass navigation, search and recovery, night or limited visibility, and specialty and deep-diving knowledge. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER E4700 - Diver Safety & Rescue |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Diver Safety and Rescue. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER E4770 - Water Safety Instructor |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction prepares students to teach American Red Cross swimming and water safety courses to infants/parents, preschoolers/parents, youths, and adults. Includes safety course for swim coaches. Students meeting written and skill criteria earn American Red Cross Water Safety Instructor certificate. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| HPER F2550 - Human Sexuality |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of the dynamics of human sexuality; identification and examination of basic issues in human sexuality as they relate to the larger society. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER F2580 - Marriage And Family Interaction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic personal and social factors that influence the achievement of satisfying marriage and family experiences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| HPER F4570 - Stress And The Family |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is intended to acquaint students with major concepts from research, theoretical and clinical work in the area of family stress. In addition to several theoretical models of the process through which families move in their experience and resolution of stressful events, the course will address stress as an experience of individual family members. Important aspects of the family's experience of stress are social support and coping in a family context, and these concepts will receive special consideration.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER H1600 - First Aid And Emergency Care |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Lecture and demonstration of first-aid measures for wounds, hemorrhage, burns, exposure, sprains, dislocation, fractures, unconscious conditions, suffocation, drowning, and poisons, with skill training in all procedures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER H1630 - Topics in Health |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Issues of mental, emotional, and physical health discussed. Possible topics are adjusting to college life, understanding and preventing violence in American, among others. May be repeated for credit if topics differ. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HPER H1700 - Health And Surviving The College Years |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the health and wellness issues related to a student’s transition from high school to college. It focuses on education and prevention issues and includes the following topics: stress, sexuality, safety, substance use and abuse, fitness, nutrition, budgeting, and emotional health. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER H1740 - Prevention Of Violence In American Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers various contributors to violence in America with an emphasis on community health issues. Personal and environmental factors related to violence are considered within a context of public health. Personal & community violence prevention and reduction approaches are presented. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER H1800 - Stress Prevention and Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Comprehensive course on stress management. Intended for college students from all fields of study. Applies several stress management techniques including time management, deep breathing,progressive muscular relaxation, yoga, and study skills. To benefit most from class, students must practice stress reduction techniques outside of class. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| HPER H1950 - Principles And Applications Of Lifestyle Wellness |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will increase an awareness of and provide instruction pertaining to lifestyle wellness. The student with be challenged to make healthy lifestyle choices. The course incorporates all dimensions of wellness including: physical, emotional, environmental, intellectual, occupational, social, and spiritual wellness. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER H2630 - Personal Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This survey course provides a theoretical and practical treatment of the concepts of disease prevention and health promotion. Covers such topics as emotional health; aging and death; alcohol, tobacco, and drug abuse; physical fitness; nutrition and dieting; consumer health; chronic and communicable diseases; safety; and environmental health. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| HPER H3050 - Women's Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the relationship of women to health and health care. Five dimensions of health: physical, mental, emotional, social, and spiritual provide a framework for comparison and contrast of health concerns unique to women and common to both sexes at all ages. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER H3150 - Consumer Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides students with (1) a model for making informed consumer health related decisions; (2) current information involving informed decisions; (3) mechanisms for
continued consumer awareness and protection, i.e., sources of accurate consumer information and lists of consumer information and protection agencies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER H3170 - Topical Seminar In Health Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. The topical seminars will relate to current issues in the field of health education. May be repeated for credit if topic differs. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HPER H3180 - Drug Use In American Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An interdisciplinary approach to the study of drug use in American society. The course will examine the effects of alcohol, tobacco, and illicit drugs on the physical, mental, and social health of the individual. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| HPER H3500 - Complementary And Alternate Applications To Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Complementary and Alternate Applications to Health. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER H3520 - Secoondary School Health Curriculum And Strategies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Professional competencies for planning and implementing secondary school curricula based on assessed needs. Effective curriculum characteristics, content standards, instructional strategies, curriculum analysis, lesson and unit structures. Preparation of lesson and unit plans. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER H3630 - Personal Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Acquaints prospective teachers with basic personal health information; provides motivation for intelligent self-direction of health behavior with emphasis on responsibilities as citizens and as teachers. Study of physiological and psychological bases for health; drugs and other critical issues; and family health. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER H3660 - Health Problems In The Community |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Health Problems In The Community. This class will meet the 2nd 8 weeks. Students will be required to do additional time in service learning projects. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER H5170 - Workshop In Health Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Workshop In Health Education. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER H5180 - Alcohol and Drug Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Alcohol and drug abuse in American society are probed in a comprehensive yet practical manner. Physiological, psychological, sociological, theological, and legal dimensions of the issue are explored through lectures, group discussions, guest speakers, and audiovisual presentations. Principles of teaching and counseling in drug education programs are discussed.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HPER H5190 - Problems and Issues in Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Health aspects and health-education implications of current problems and issues, including smoking, alcohol and drugs, venereal disease, and other critical health problems. Lectures by leading authorities in cooperation with state, voluntary, and official health agencies.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HPER H5280 - Issues in Substance Abuse |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Various drugs including alcohol, sedative-hypnotics, narcotic analgesics, cocaine, xanthines, cannabis, hallucinogens, over-the-counter, prescription, and other substances causing health problems in our culture are identified and discussed. Emphasis is placed upon history, symptoms of use and abuse, and the role of the health educator in prevention and referral.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HPER H6170 - Seminar in Health Education (Alcoholism, Alcohol Education, and Drug Misuse) |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Workshop planned especially for teachers, social workers, and clergy; program includes lectures and discussion of physiology of alcohol; sociological, medical, and psychiatric aspects; theological and legal problems; drug use and misuse; educational principles related to teaching and counseling in these problem areas.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HPER H6400 - Independent Study and Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Independent Study and Research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HPER K5250 - Psychological Foundations Of Exercise And Sport |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Addresses theoretical and empirical aspects of topics including exercise and mental health, anxiety and sport performance, "personology" and sport, overtraining, exercise adherence, and perceived exertion. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER K5300 - Mechanical Analysis of Human Performance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Newtonian mechanics applied to human movement. Analysis of sports techniques.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER L1350 - Learn Comm: Phys Educ-Exer Sci |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Learn Comm: Phys Educ-Exer Sci. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER N2200 - Nutrition for Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic principles of nutrition, with emphasis on identification, functions, and food sources of nutrients required by individuals for optimum health and development. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER N3200 - Food Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study of the chemical and physical properties of food as related to use, quality, and preparation. New food products, composition, and technologies. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER P1560 - Teaching Team Activities |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The course is designed to teach students how to teach activities in grades K-12, in a school setting, utilizing current physical education practices. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER P1950 - History And Principles Of Physical Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Understanding and interpretation of principles of modern physical education programs. Contributions of historical programs related to development of present-day programs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER P2000 - Microcomputer Applications In Kinesiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A hands-on introduction to the use of microcomputers as problem-solving tools in physical education. Course content includes an introduction to microcomputers and DOS functions; word processing, spreadsheets, and database skills; and experience with graphic and sport-specific application programs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| HPER P2040 - Motor Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Motor learning and development principles throughout the life span. Emphasis on observing and analyzing characteristic movement behavior, motor learning, and motor performance, with application to developmentally appropriate movement experiences.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER P2050 - Structural Kinesiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of basic human body structures and functions appropriate for beginning students in physical education. Fundamental concepts concerning the interaction of biological and mechanical aspects of the musculoskeletal and neuromuscular structures. Emphasis on practical application to study and teaching of skilled human movement. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER P2110 - Introduction To Sport Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the broad spectrum of career opportunities available in the sport management profession. Special emphasis will be given to career planning, sport management terminology, and an overview of specific skills and courses required for professional preparation in sport management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| HPER P2120 - Introduction To Exercise Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the science of exercise and human movement. Special topics in exercise physiology, sport biomechanics, sports medicine, and motor integration.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
|
| HPER P2150 - Principles And Practice Of Exercise Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the scientific principles related to physical fitness and the practical application of principles to directing fitness programming in school, recreational, and corporate settings. Students will be involved in setting up, participating in, and evaluating personal fitness activities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| HPER P2240 - Teaching Of Dance Activities |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Methods and materials of folk, square, social, and modern dance. Terminology, fundamental skills, selection, and presentation of dances. Emphasis on planning dance units and teaching of dances. Fundamentals of locomotor and nonlocomotor skills as well as experiences in creative movement activities. Instruction in rhythmic movement progressions and development of materials for unit plans. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER P2440 - Performance and Teaching of Cardiovascular Fitness |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. This course will focus on teaching cardiovascular fitness activities in physical education settings. These concepts will be covered: aerobic fitness, fitness prescription, training principles, fitness infusion into traditional activities, lifetime fitness activities (youth through older adults), and safety. Emphasis on lesson planning and pedagogy.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER P2450 - Performance and Teaching of Resistance Training |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. This course will focus on teaching resistance training in physical education settings. These concepts will be covered: basic muscle anatomy, equipment and facility safety, proper applications and techniques, etiquette, equipment options, considerations for youth through older adults. Emphasis on lesson planning and pedagogy.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER P2460 - Performance And Teaching Of Cardiovascular And Resistance Training |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will focus on teaching cardiovascular fitness and resistance training activities in health and fitness settings. These concepts will be covered: basic muscle anatomy; safety and etiquette; proper techniques; equipment options; aerobic fitness; exercised prescription; basic training principles; and lifetime fitness activities (youth through older adults). Emphasis on design, planning and teaching of these activities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER P2580 - Performance and Teaching of Activities for Persons with Disabilities |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Theory, activity modifications, and practice teaching of activities for persons with disabilities K-12. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER P2800 - Basic Prevention And Care Of Athletic Injuries |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An introduction to the principles of injury prevention. Lecture and demonstration of emergency measures to treat, for example, fractures, sprains, dislocations, and spinal injuries. Skill training in bandaging, strapping, splinting techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER P2900 - Movement Experiences For Preschool And Elementary Children |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides the student with knowledge of potential outcomes of preschool and elementary school motor development programs, of how to implement such programs, and of appropriate movement experiences for young children. Also provides the student with opportunities for observing and teaching young children in a structured gymnasium setting. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER P3240 - Recreational Sports Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course provides an overview of the programmatic elements and techniques that currently exist in recreational sports. Specific topics include informal, intramural, club, and extramural programming; value of recreational sports; programming techniques; publicity and promotion; facility utilization; equipment concerns; safety; liability; and program observation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER P3310 - Planning And Operation Of Sport Facilities |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An in-depth study of a selected topic from the many areas that have contributed to the development of physical education in today's world. Topics will vary. Directed to upper-level students with a special interest in the topic presented. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HPER P3330 - Sport In America/Historical Perspectives |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the evolution of sport in the United States within the larger context of historical developments in society; women's sport experiences in relation to the development of sport; and examination of sport as a reflection of American culture from the founding of the colonies to the present. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER P3730 - Progressive Resistance Exercise And Sports Conditioning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on progressive resistance exercise and its application in physical conditioning for the competitive athlete, the fitness enthusiast, and various special populations. Topics covered include basic muscle physiology, kinesiology, musculoskeletal adaptation to resistance exercise, modes of training, muscle-specific exercises, and exercise technique. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| HPER P3740 - Basic Electrocardiography For The Exercise Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to the basic concepts, theory, and interpretation of electrocardiograms (ECG/EKG), and their uses in fitness programs that deal with healthy people and with cardiac rehabilitation patients. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER P3910 - Biomechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the mechanics of human motion. Includes linear and angular kinematics and kinetics in the context of human motion; mechanics of fluids; mechanics of muscles; and analysis of selected sports activities. Typically offered Fall, Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER P3920 - Sport In American Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to sport sociology, in which students critically examine American sport from a social context and analyze the interrelationship between sport and American culture. Lectures, discussions, videos, guest speakers, and investigative analyses.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER P3970 - Kinesiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of facts and principles of anatomy, physiology, and mechanics to problems of teaching physical education skills and activities of daily living. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HPER P4020 - Ethics In Sport |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the nature of ethics in sport with an emphasis on current application of moral principles and values. The relationship of ethics to social issues in sport will be explored, including philosophical and historical perspectives. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER P4030 - Theory And Practice Of Cardiovascular Exercise |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on principles and processes of designing, organizing, and teaching a variety of rhythmic aerobic training forms. Topics covered include a review of basic exercise and rhythmic movement principles and how they are used to create modes of rhythmic aerobic training used in group and individual exercise programs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER P4050 - Introduction To Sport Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and practical application of psychology to learning, teaching, and coaching of movement and sport skills. Students are expected to have completed an introductory psychology course prior to enrolling. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER P4090 - Physiology Of Exercise |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of human physiology parameters as related to physical exercise and work and the development of physiological fitness factors. Physiological foundations will be considered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HPER P4110 - Legal Issues In Sport Settings |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to legal principles involved in sport. Tort liability including intentional tort, negligence, and product liability. Covers constitutional law issues, particularly as they relate to athletic eligibility, athletes' rights, sex discrimination, and drug testing. Discussion of sport contracts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
|
| HPER P4160 - Fitness Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course brings business management principles and operational guidelines to the fitness practioner. Topics include facility management, organizational program operation, member service, health and safety facility standards, finance maintenance, evaluation and planning processes, strategic planning and facility design. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| HPER P4170 - Physical Activity And Disease: Prevention And Treatment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides an overview of the role of physical activity in the prevention of disease and disability. The causes of common diseases, physiological impact, and treatment side effects of common diseases will be discussed to enable effective exercise prescription within special populations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER P4180 - Sports Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of the elements of the marketing mix as they pertain to the sport enterprise. Also includes the coverage of decision making and planning from the sport manager's perspective and the impact of corporate sponsorship on the delivery of sport. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER P4190 - Fitness Testing And Interpretation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides a knowledge base and practical experiences in fitness testing, assessment, and exercise programming. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER P4210 - Special Topics In Physical Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An in-depth study of a selected topic from the many areas that have contributed to the development of physical education in today's world. Topics will vary. Directed to upper-level students with a special interest in the topic presented. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HPER P4230 - Financial Principles In Sport |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the basic financial and managerial accounting concepts necessary to be financially literate in the sport business industry. Examination of the various means for financing sport organizations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER P4430 - Internship In Physical Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The penultimate capstone activity for the refinement of knowledge, skills, and program development for exercise science students. Typically offering Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HPER P4440 - Issues In Physical Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A senior seminar. Major arguments pro and con on a number of controversial ideas in the field of physical education are considered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HPER P4450 - Special Topics In Kinesiology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00: Workshops, institutes, clinics, or seminars in kinesiology. Credit will depend on the nature of the project undertaken and the length of time involved. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HPER P4500 - Principles And Psychology Of Coaching |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the many psychological aspects pertaining to coaching competitive athletics, including motivation, player-coach relationships, team selection, team morale, and strategy. Emphasis on underlying sociological determinants of environment as contributing factors in competition. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HPER P4520 - Motor Learning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of factors that affect the acquisition and performance of motor skills. Topics include perception, psychomotor learning, practice methods, and theories of neuromuscular integration. Typically offering Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER P4930 - Tests And Measurements In Physical Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Theory of measurement in physical education, along with selection and administration of appropriate tests, and interpretation of their results by fundamental statistical procedures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER P4980 - Practicum Physical Education And Athletics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A practical learning experience in teaching and/or coaching under the guidance of faculty and supervisor. Only Satisfactory (S) or Fail (F) grades given. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER P4990 - Research In Physical Education And Athletics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. This course is open to junior majors or minors in physical education. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HPER P5350 - Physical Education in the Elementary School, |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Games, rhythms, self-testing activities appropriate to physiological, psychological, and emotional development. Organization of the program, scheduling of classes, allocation of facilities and equipment. For specialists in physical education, classroom teachers, elementaryschool administrators.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HPER P5440 - Administration of Physical Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles, problems, procedures for administering a city physical-education program from viewpoint of city director or school administrator.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HPER P5450 - The Physical Education Curriculum |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles, problems, procedures in development of physical-education curriculum; developing a course of study in physical education for a chosen situation. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HPER P6470 - Seminar in Physical Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Problems in physical education.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HPER R1000 - Recreation Leadership Skills |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is designed to be practical in nature allowing students to study and learn about leadership skills through involvement in a student organization on the Bloomington campus. This course offers students the potential to enhance their personal and professional life by developing self leadership skills. Through such opportunities, students learn how their leadership capacity impacts their performance as well as others with whom they come in contact. The key to this experience is the student’s recognition and willingness to couple leisure activities to a learning model that will enhance the individual’s awareness and appreciation of self leadership skills. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HPER R1600 - Foundations Of Recreation And Leisure |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of historical development of leisure, attitudes taken toward it, and theories as to its cause. An opportunity to develop a personal philosophy of leisure and recreation and an understanding of professional preparation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
|
| HPER R1800 - Recreation Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. History, theory, and philosophy of recreation. Significance of recreation in age of leisure and evolution of recreation movement. Practical leadership techniques for low organized recreation activities, especially helpful in elementary education. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
|
| HPER R2100 - Introduction To Outdoor Recreation, Parks, And Human Ecology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to outdoor recreation and parks within a human ecological framework, defined as the study of the complex and varied systems of interactions between people and the environment. Examination of societal, recreation applications, and emerging recreation and leisure trends that have direct application to human ecology. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER R2710 - Introduction To Outdoor Recreation, Parks, And Human Ecology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to outdoor recreation and parks within a human ecological framework, defined as the study of the complex and varied systems of interactions between people and the environment. Examination of societal, recreation applications, and emerging recreation and leisure trends that have direct application to human ecology. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| HPER R2720 - Recreation Activities And Leadership Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of recreation program activities, objectives, determinants, and group dynamics involved in the leadership process. Identification and evaluation of equipment, supplies, and leadership techniques are included.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER R2750 - Dynamics Of Camp Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Role of counselors in relation to objectives, organization, guidance, leadership skills, and program resources in organized camps. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER R3240 - Recreational Sports Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of programmatic elements and techniques in recreational sports. Topics include informal, intramural, club, extramural, and instructional sports programming; values of recreational sports; terminology and career opportunities in various recreational sport settings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
|
| HPER R3990 - Readings In Recreation, Park, And Tourism Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Practical field experience under faculty supervision and with seminar discussions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HPER S1010 - Introduction To Safety Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Surveys the safety profession and examines occupational safety from a management perspective. Provides a conceptual overview of public, industrial, traffic, and recreational safety. Discusses roles, functions, and opportunities in the safety field. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER S1510 - Legal Aspects Of Safety |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discusses legal requirements for safety, health, and environmental compliance. Emphasis is given to OSHA, EPA, and consensus standards, as well as other applicable federal regulations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| HPER S1550 - Driver Education |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Covers classroom components of teaching driver education. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER S2010 - Introduction to Industrial Hygiene |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The concepts, principles and techniques in the practice of industrial hygiene are presented. The identification, evaluation and control of occupational health hazards is discussed. An orientation to selected instrumentation to assess the workplace is provided. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER S2140 - OSHA Construction Standards |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to and application of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) and Indiana OSHA (IOSHA) construction standards as they apply to both the private and public sectors. Course includes an inspection practicum. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| HPER S2310 - Safety And Health Concepts In Business And Industry II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to and review of various administrative programs developed by companies at the basic, intermediate and corporate levels to enhance the total safety program and to minimize loss. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER S2550 - Threats, Violence, And Workplace Safety |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis on personal safety and survival through prevention, protection, and effective countermeasures for individuals and groups in the workplace. Examines potential methods for delivery and perpetuation of violence.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER S3170 - Topical Seminar In Safety Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. The Topical Seminars will relate to current issues in the field of Safety Education. Possible topics for this seminar might be: new requirement for controlling hazardous material, the changing legal environment of the safety professional, new technique in accident investigation, system safety and the safety manager, human factors, and workplace design. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HPER S3450 - Safety Program Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles, theories, and concepts of safety and health program management with comparisons of past, present, and future practices. Review of managing behavior of individuals, groups, and organizations. Focuses on managing a total safety program.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER S3520 - System Safety Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines common tools and techniques for evaluation and injury prevention. Analysis of factors leading to unintended catastrophes in the nuclear, marine, airline, mining, chemical, and petroleum industries. System analysis tools covered include risk management, PHA, FTA, FMEA, MORT, PSM, and JSA
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER S4150 - Safety Education and Training |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of procedures to develop, operate, and evaluate safety programs for management and employees. Covers all aspects of safety training (e.g., explosives, occupational safety and health, hazardous materials, and fire). Discusses how a company's safety training plan can meet federal and state guidelines.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER S4300 - Exploring Safety Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines approaches to the development of a proactive safety culture in the workplace. Topics explore issues of sound business principles and management practices for the development of an effective safety culture.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HPER S4410 - Readings In Safety Education |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. In-depth readings related to a specific safety education topic.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER S4560 - Traffic Safety Education For Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Materials and methods for high school classroom and practice driving instruction. Psychophysical limitations of drivers, driving procedures, car procurement, scheduling, public relations, maintenance, pedestrian protection, skill exercises, road training. Students teach beginning drivers. Driver's license required.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER S4580 - Driver Education Multiple Instruction Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. 2 Multimedia techniques, methods, and materials of instruction including multimedia systems and driving simulators. Multiple-car methods of instruction, including the design and operation of off-street driving ranges. Open only to juniors, seniors, and graduate students who will be completing certification in the field of driver education.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPER S5590 - Administration and Supervision of Safety Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic principles of safety education with emphasis on administrative and supervisory practices. Organization of specific accident-prevention and injury-control methods applicable to elementary and secondary-school pupils. Human factors analyzed in accident causation related to the school and community, including hazard-control technology in school management.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HPER S6550 - Problems in Driver Education and Highway Safety |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Administrative problems in high school driver-education and highway-safety program; advanced driving skills, road testing, traffic surveys; evaluation of research studies, need for additional research, review of adult driver-education needs.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| HPSC X1020 - Revolutions In Science: Plato To NATO |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Revolutions in Science: Plato to NATO. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPSC X2070 - The Occult In Western Civilization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Critical and historical evaluation of a wide range of occult topics: superstitions, magic, witchcraft, astrology, the Cabala, physic phenomena (mesmerism, spiritualism, ESP), and UFOs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HPSC X3030 - Introduction To The Philosophy Of Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Problems and concepts of philosophy of science. Role of logic, explanation, prediction, observation, theory, and other concepts involved in understanding the scientific enterprise.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HSC B1600 - Fundamentals Of Human Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasizes life-style behaviors contributing to health promotion and disease prevention. General areas affecting health status are identified and suggestions made as to how health-related behaviors, self-care, and individual decisions contribute to wellness and influence dimensions of health. No regularly scheduled laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HSCI 10100 - Introduction to the Health Sciences Professions |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course will present an overview of the fields in both the preventive, Public Health, as well as the clinical, Private Health, sides of the Allied Health Science Professions as it presents the holistic nature of health maintenance. Students will have the opportunity to hear from health professionals practicing in the allied health and preprofessional concentrations as well as from School of Health Sciences faculty in their areas of expertise in the fields of industrial hygiene, ergonomics, radiological sciences, toxicology and environmental health science. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 10500 - Facts Of Life |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of the human body in health and disease. Topics include basic stucture and function of the human body and an overview of human biology related to genetics, evolution, impact on the environment, and human wellness issues. Career opportunities will be discussed. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HSCI 13000 - Introduction To Medical Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An introduction to career opportunities in medical technology. Preprofessional and professional requirements. A survey of the major clinical laboratory departments and their applications to patient care and management. Discussion and interpretation of some of the major diagnostic tests, i.e., for cardiac enzymes, cholesterol, blood cells, diabetes, and drug monitoring. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 13100 - Introduction To Medical Terminology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This self-paced learning course is designed to familiarize the student with terms used in medicine. Each body system will be studied individually. Word roots, prefixes, and suffixes will be used to build words relating to the system. Diagnostic and symptomatic terms will be introduced. Typically offered Fall Spring.
CTL:IPO 1820 Medical Terminology
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study 1, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Offer a comprehensive vocabulary that can be used in the medical field.
2. Become proficient in the medical language.
3. Build confidence with this vocabulary that will open new doors to each student.
|
| HSCI 19000 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Special topics, projects, or readings in selected areas of health sciences at a level appropriate for freshmen students. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HSCI 19500 - Freshman Scholars Project Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Designed for Health Sciences Freshman Scholars. Class format is a one-hour weekly seminar that provides academic support and enrichment. Scholars complete semester-long projects with assigned professors or professionals in the area of their major. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| HSCI 19501 - School Of Health Sciences Freshman Honors Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is for Freshman students in the School of Health Sciences Honors Program. This course consists of a 50 minute weekly seminar meeting designed to orient and familiarize Freshman HSCI Honors students with the School of Health Sciences including research areas and current topics in public health and biomedical research. Students will interact with guest speakers and expand their knowledge base in health science research. In addition to the seminar, students will be matched to a faculty mentor in a research area of their interest during the fall semester. Students will develop and design a research project with their faculty mentor (to be conducted in HSCI 19601 during the spring semester). In the spring semester, students will enroll in the seminar series (HSCI 19501) and in the research project course (HSCI 19601) to complete their project. Each student will be responsible for presenting and reporting on their research project during the spring seminar series. Permission of departmental required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1.Gain an understanding of the current research areas in health sciences.
2.Learn basic research skills such as how to do a literature search and report research findings.
3.Learn how to give and evaluate a research presentation.
|
| HSCI 19601 - School Of Health Sciences Freshman Honors Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is for Freshman students in the School of Health Sciences Honors Program. In this course students will earn credit for work completed on their Honors Project under supervision of their faculty mentor. Students enroll in this course during the spring semester concurrently with HSCI 19501. During the fall semester in HSCI 19501, students will be matched to a faculty mentor in the research area of their choice and complete a Project Description Form based upon the work to be completed during this course. Course meeting times and frequency are to be set by the student and faculty mentor with an estimated commitment of 3-4 hours per week. Hours are to be arranged between the student and the faculty mentor, with at least weekly or biweekly meetings set aside for a one-on-one session between the student and faculty mentor. Some students may also be matched to professional mentors off campus depending on their interests and future goals. The regular meeting times should be set during the first week of class. Working hours must not conflict with other course obligations or consume too much of students’ study time. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Gain an understanding of the current research areas in health sciences.
2. Develop and design an honors research project specific to the student’s research interests.
3. Conduct and complete an individualized research project to gain further understanding of the student’s specific research area of interest.
|
| HSCI 20000 - Preceptorship In The Medical Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. The course is designed to provide a pre-professional school experience for students seeking careers in fields such as medicine, dentistry and physical therapy. Individual programs will be designed by the health professional advisor, the student and a practicing health professional. The student will spend one week in a clinical study under the direction of health professionals. Such units as hospital rotations, dental office experience, government health office experience, etc., will be included. A written report of the experience will be made to the advisor and cooperating health professionals. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HSCI 20100 - Principles of Public Health Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course begins with a definition of public health and a review of its history and its role in disease prevention. The basic tools of public health practice, vital statistics and epidemiology, are then presented. After gaining an understanding of how these tools are used in assessing the health status of a community, the etiology and control of infectious and non-infectious threats to our health will be examined. The course concludes with risk analysis as a basis for public health policy determination. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 20200 - Essentials Of Environmental, Occupational, And Radiological Health Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to introduce the essential concepts of Environmental, Occupational, and Radiological Health Science. The principles of these three fields including the environmental impacts on human health and disease, environmental toxicology, occupational health concerns, contemporary occupational health issues, radioactivity, and the human health effects of exposure to ionizing radiation will be discussed. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 22000 - Principles Of Central Services Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This is a correspondence course for central service personnel and operation room infection control and material management employees. Incorporates major issues related to central service such as infection control, instrumentation, packaging, chemical disinfection, ethylene oxide, steam and dry heat sterilization, and preparation of external solutions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 23000 - Introduction To Paramedicine |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course includes instruction in the roles and responsibility of the paramedic, orientation to the hospital and field settings, medical legal aspects of care, patient assessment, trauma management, management of stress and behavioral emergencies, pastoral care orientation, pre-hospital scene management, universal precautions, hazardous materials identification and response. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. The student learns to use, apply and integrate comprehensive knowledge of EMS systems, the safety and well-being of the EMS personnel and the medical legal and ethical issues which are intended to improve the health of EMS personnel, patients and the community.
2. The student puts in order an organized approach upon which they learn to use, apply and integrate scene and patient assessment findings with knowledge of pathophysiology to form a field impression by developing differential diagnoses through clinical reasoning by putting together a treatment plan for patient management and early intervention.
|
| HSCI 23100 - Pathophysiology of Disease States |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The pathophysiology, assessment and treatment of shock as well as review of fluid and electrolyte abnormalities in medical emergencies will be examined. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HSCI 23200 - Introduction To Anatomy And Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Review of topographical anatomy, cellular anatomy and physiology, and human organ systems. Emphasis on medical terminology will be stressed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HSCI 23300 - Emergency Pharmacology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Emphasis of this course is therapeutic effects, indications, contra-indications, route of administration, dosages, and side effects of medications used in the pre-hospital setting. Techniques of venipuncture, intravenous cannulation, percutaneous injection, arterial blood gas analysis, nasograstic intubation and urinary catheterization are taught. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HSCI 23400 - Cardiopulmonary Emergencies |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Pathophysiology, assessment, and treatment of cardiopulmonary emergencies are discussed. Fundamentals of air way management, electrocardiology, and interpretation of a normal and abnormal ECG patterns are studied. Effect of medications aon the cardiopulmonary system is emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HSCI 23500 - Medical and Environmental Emergencies |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Topics discussed include neurological, environmental, pediatric, obstetric, gynecological, endocrine and toxicological emergencies. Special emphasis on the needs of the geriatric, psychiatric, and communicable disease patient will be stressed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HSCI 23600 - Advanced Life Support |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. American Heart Association cardiopulmonary resuseitation standards, advanced cardiac life support lectures and practical skills stations will be taught. Advanced cardiac life support certification will be achieved. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HSCI 23700 - Prehospital Search and Rescue |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The course provides classroom and field experiences designed to expose the student to effective search and rescue operations. Concepts explored include incident command, disaster triage techniques, principles of extrication, water, high rise and confined space rescue. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HSCI 23800 - Clinical Experience I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course provides the clinical setting to correlate the knowledge objectives from introduction to paramedicine and pathophysiology of emergency disease states. Included are rotations in the emergency department, social services, behavioral treatment center, pastoral care and pathology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HSCI 23900 - Clinical Experience II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A continum of Clinical Experience I with an emphasis on invasive techniques in critical care units. Rotations in the emergency department, clinical laboratory (including morgue), surgery, anesthesiology, cardiovascular, and medical intensive care units are provided. Exposure to cardiac catherization and telemetry is included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HSCI 24000 - Clinical Experience III |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Students will be rotated through pediatrics, nursery, obstetrics, neuro surgical intensive care unit, physical medicine and rehabilitation. Geriatric extended care facility, a continuation of emergency department, critical care units and sampling of other hospital-based speciality care areas will be included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HSCI 24100 - Field Internship I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. In this course students are assigned to paramedics in the pre-hospital setting, performing assessment, treatment, documentation and pre-hospital field communications under direct supervision. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HSCI 24200 - Field Internship II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A continum of HSCI 241 with an emphasis on invasive techniques in the pre-hospital setting. Advanced cardiac and respiratory assessment and management including endotracheal intubation, intravaneous cannulation and medication administration will be performed with the guidance of the paramedic preceptor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Internship, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HSCI 24300 - Field Internship III |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A continum of HSCI 241-242. The emphasis of this course is to provide the student an opportunity to refine the proficiency of previously learned skills and to synthesize all knowledge as it relates to the patient with an emergent pre-hospital need. The student at this point should be able to assess and perform appropriate interventions and therapy for all patients and situations to which they are exposed. The student will be placed in the position of team leader and primary care paramedic with the direct supervision of the paramedic preceptor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Internship, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HSCI 24400 - Patient Assessment |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Techniques of the physical exam will be demonstrated and practiced in this course, with special emphasis on organ systems as they are being studied. Relating the physical exam to the clinical impression will also be emphasized. Students will be assigned to physician preceptors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HSCI 25200 - Clinical Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 10.00. Clinical Chemistry. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 10.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HSCI 25300 - Clinical Hematology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 10.00. Clinical Hematology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 10.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HSCI 25400 - Clinical Immunohematology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 10.00. Clinical Immunohematology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 10.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HSCI 25500 - Clinical Microbiology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 10.00. Clinical Microbiology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 10.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HSCI 25700 - Clinical Parasitology And Mycology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 10.00. Clinical Parasitology And Mycology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 10.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HSCI 25800 - Clinical Serology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 10.00. Clinical Serology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 10.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HSCI 26000 - Clinical Urinalysis And Body Fluid |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 10.00. Clinical Urinalysis And Body Fluid. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 10.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HSCI 29000 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Special topics, projects, or readings in selected areas of health sciences at a level appropriate for sophomore students. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
North Central
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HSCI 29500 - Introduction to Forensic Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intended for those students wishing to combine the clinical laboratory science curriculum with forensic science. Introduction to pathology, evidence, DNA recognition, blood chemistry, and techniques. Entry level, general chemistry/biology preferred. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 29501 - School Of Health Sciences Sophomore Honors Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is for sophomore students in the School of Health Sciences Honors Program. This course consists of a 50 minute weekly seminar meeting to discuss current topics in health science, public health, and biomedical research. Students will interact with guest speakers and expand their knowledge base in health sciences research. In addition, each student will be responsible for presenting and reporting on their ongoing honors research project. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Gain an understanding of the current research areas in health sciences.
2. Build on the skill to give and evaluate a research presentation.
|
| HSCI 29601 - School of Health Sciences Sophomore Honors Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is for Sophomore students in the School of Health Sciences Honors Program. In this course students will earn credit for work completed on their Honors Project under supervision of their faculty mentor. Students enroll in this course in both fall and spring semesters (concurrently with HSCI 29501 in the spring semester). An updated Project Description Form will be due at the beginning of each semester based on the progress and any changes to the research plan. Course meeting times and frequency are to be set by the student and faculty mentor with an estimated commitment of 3-4 hours per week. Hours are to be arranged between the student and the faculty mentor, with at least weekly or biweekly meetings set aside for a one-on-one session between the student and faculty mentor. Some students may also be matched to professional mentors off campus depending on their interests and future goals. The regular meeting times should be set during the first week of class. Working hours must not conflict with other course obligations or consume too much of students’ study time. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Gain an understanding of the current research areas in health sciences.
2. Develop and design an honors research project specific to the student's research interests.
3. Conduct and complete an individualized research project to gain further understanding of the student's specific research area of interest.
|
| HSCI 31200 - Radiation Science Fundamentals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces principles and concepts related to nuclear energetics, radioactive decay, the interactions of ionizing radiation with matter, and the human health effects of exposure to ionizing radiation. Fundamental concepts related to atomic and sub-atomic physical processes as well as relevant aspects of modern physics are briefly reviewed. Students gain practical experience and enhance their understanding of radiation protection by participating in a radiological emergency response exercise (RERE). Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 31300 - Principles Of Radiation Detection And Measurement |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Course presents an introduction to the principles of radiation detection and measurement, including statistical models, counting statistics, error analysis, detection limits, ionization chambers, proportional counters, GM counters, scintillation counters, gamma-ray spectroscopy, solid-state detectors, TLDs, track-etch and bubble detectors. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 32200 - Radiation Dosimetry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of radiation protection, with emphasis on monitoring principles, personnel dosimetry, internal dose calculations, bioassay, waste management, and practical aspects of the use of radionuclides and radiation-producing devices. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 32201 - Radiation Dosimetry Lab |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Practical aspects of radiation monitoring; sample analysis, personnel dosimetry, instrument calibration, radioactive waste management, record keeping, and germanium spectrometry. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 33000 - Aspects Of The Medical Technology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The role of the medical technologist in the clinical laboratory. Overview of the clinical departments, with an emphasis on disease states and on the procedures and instruments used to perform clinical tests. Special topics and case studies are presented. Provides students with an idea of what to expect during their clinical experiences. Instructors: medical technologists from the affiliated hospital programs. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 33200 - Introduction To Hematology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An introduction to hematology and coagulation. Clinical laboratory tests will be discussed. Lectures will cover maturation, morphology, and function of normal and abnormal blood cells. Information on coagulation diseases and disorders will be presented. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 33300 - Introduction To Immunology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An introduction to the various aspects of the immune system. Students will become familiar with components of the immune system and their interactions. Emphasis on clinical applications. Various diseases will be discussed as they relate to the immune system. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 34500 - Introduction To Occupational And Environmental Health Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of occupational health (industrial hygiene) and environmental health as related to anticipation, recognition, evaluation, and control of hazards in the workplace and the surrounding community. Emphasis is on hazards of chemicals and their role in occupationally and environmentally related diseases. Historical basis and current legislation are discussed. In addition, the principles of epidemiology, toxicology, exposure standards, and respiratory protection are addressed. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 34600 - Industrial Hygiene Engineering Control |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Study of the various techniques needed to control hazards in the workplace. Major emphasis is placed on developing a working understanding of industrial ventilation, including basic principles of fluid flow, hood and duct design, and system balancing. Effects and control of the physical hazards of noise, vibration, and heat stress are addressed. A field trip to a major industry summarizes the course material. Typically offered Fall.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 34700 - Industrial Hygiene Hazard Evaluation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of hazard measurements; critical analysis of field measuring equipment, instrument evaluation, and calibration, planning and sample strategy. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 34800 - Industrial Hygiene Instrumentation Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Sophisticated field and laboratory instrumentation and techniques, sampling methodology for organic vapors, dust, fibers, noise, and heat; calibration and validation techniques; emphasis on critical analysis of data. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 34900 - Health Sciences Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Applied work experience in industry, government laboratory, or educational and research institution, and oral/written reports of this practice. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
|
| HSCI 39000 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Special topics, projects, or readings in selected areas of health sciences at a level appropriate for junior students. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HSCI 39501 - School Of Health Sciences Junior Honors Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is for Junior students in the School of Health Sciences Honors Program. This course consists of a 50 minute weekly seminar meeting to discuss current topics in health science, public health, and biomedical research. Students will interact with guest speakers and expand their knowledge base in health sciences research. In addition, each student will be responsible for presenting and reporting on their ongoing honors research project. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Gain an understanding of the current research areas in health sciences.
2. Build on the skill to give and evaluate a research presentation.
|
| HSCI 39601 - School Of Health Sciences Junior Honors Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is for Junior students in the School of Health Sciences Honors Program. In this course students will earn credit for work completed on their Honors Project under supervision of their faculty mentor. Students enroll in this course in both the fall and spring semesters (and concurrently with HSCI 39501 in the spring semester). An updated Project Description Form will be due at the beginning of each semester based on the progress and any changes to the research plan. Course meeting times and frequency are to be set by the student and faculty mentor with an estimated commitment of 3-4 hours per week. Hours are to be arranged between the student and the faculty mentor, with at least biweekly meetings set aside for a one-on-one session between the student and faculty mentor. Some students may also be matched to professional mentors off campus depending on their interests and future goals. The regular meeting times should be set during the first week of class. Working hours must not conflict with other course obligations or consume too much of students’ study time. Permission of departmental required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Gain an understanding of the research areas in health sciences.
2. Develop and design an honors research project specific to the student’s research interests.
3. Conduct and complete an individualized research project to gain further understanding of the student’s specific research area of interest.
|
| HSCI 43800 - Reactor Health Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Concepts of health physics as related to nuclear power and research reactors, sources and prevention of exposure, design and operational criteria for meeting ALARA exposure limits, criticality dosimetry, reactor monitoring limits, design and operation of environmental surveillance programs around nuclear power stations, reactor site criteria, licensing and regulations, downwind dose assessment, credible accidents and risk analysis, and emergency planning. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 43801 - Reactor Health Physics Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Practical aspects of radiation dosimetry, monitoring, and surveying devices and procedures used by reactor health physicists. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 44500 - Industrial Hygiene Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Discussion class based on applied work experience as an industrial hygiene assistant or technician at an industrial, consulting, hospital, government, or education and research institution. Topics covered also include professional and ethical aspects derived from students' work experiences. Written and oral reports as well as other classroom assignments. Restricted to industrial hygiene majors who have completed an acceptable industrial hygiene work experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
|
| HSCI 44600 - Applied Industrial Hygiene |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course allows the student to synthesize his or her basic industrial hygiene fundamentals to understand how they apply in the real world. Issues faced by industrial hygienists will be addressed by a variety of guest speakers. Class projects add to the diversity of this senior capstone course. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 45100 - Clinical Biochemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 10.00. This course is designed to provide principles of biochemistry for clinical application for medical technologists. The course encompasses an introduction to carbohydrate, amino acid, and lipid metabolism. Also included are lectures on basic endocrinology, enzymes, and biosynthesis of steroid hormones. Physiological principles are stressed with respect to liver, lung, and kidney function. Special emphasis is placed on correlation of the theoretical and clinical areas. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 10.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 10 credits
|
| HSCI 45200 - Clinical Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 10.00. This course is designed to provide the medical technologist with the principles and application of clinical chemistry. Methods of instrumental analysis include a variety of automated procedures, electrophoresis, immunoelectrophoresis, immunodiffusion, radioisotopes, steroids, hormone assay, and toxicology. Quality control for clinical chemistry is included. Supervised clinical laboratory experience is offered, with students rotating through the various areas of clinical chemistry on a sequential rotational basis. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 10.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 10 credits
|
| HSCI 45201 - Clinical Chemistry Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Theory and practice of analytical biochemistry as applied to pathologic states, including related methodology and instrumentation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HSCI 45300 - Clinical Hematology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 10.00. Study of the functions, maturation, and morphology of blood cells. Blood cells, platelets, and reticulocyte counting procedure. Experiences in the study of cellular content of other body fluids are offered. Lectures and laboratory are designed to teach techniques of sedimentation rates, hematocrits, corpuscular indices, hemoglobin red cell fragility, and special staining procedures. Also, routine and special coagulation studies are taught. Supervised experience in clinical hematology offers opportunities for study in routine and special hematology and coagulation procedures. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 10.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 10 credits
|
| HSCI 45301 - Clinical Hematology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Study of the development, morphology and pathophysiology of the formed element of the blood and bone marrow. Includes hematologic methods and instrumentation used in blood, bone marrow and body fluids for disease diagnosis. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HSCI 45400 - Clinical Immunohematology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 10.00. A review of serologic principles and technical fundamentals of transfusion practice; a comprehensive consideration of all blood groups, with emphasis on ABO and Rh-Hr blood group systems. Extensive practice is gained in pre-transfusion techniques and antibody identification in the laboratory. Other blood types and antigen-antibody relationships are taught in laboratory and lectures. Also included are blood donor room procedures; preparation of blood components; correlation of blood component therapy with disease states; quality control of all reagents, procedures, and equipment used; and laboratory safety measures, all of which offer the best patient care and protection of laboratory personnel. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 10.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 10 credits
|
| HSCI 45401 - Clinical Immunohematology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Study of red cell antigen systems, antibody screening and identification, compatability testing and immunopathiologic conditions. Includes lab analysis, donor requirements, and current practices in component preparation and hematherapy. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HSCI 45500 - Clinical Microbiology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 10.00. Lectures and clinical laboratory experience in diagnostic procedures as aids to the diagnosis of human disease. Proper selection of techniques for the isolation and identification of medically important bacteria. Special emphasis is placed on newer methods for anaerobic bacteria identification. Also includes lectures and laboratory identification in the fields of mycology and microbacteriology, with emphasis on isolation and identification. Practical applications of fluorescent antibody tests are performed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 10.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 10 credits
|
| HSCI 45501 - Clinical Microbiology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Practice of the isolation and identification of pathogenic bacteria, rickettsia and mycobacteria in clinical specimen cultures using morphology, biochemical and serological reactions. Drug susceptibility and clinical significance are included. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HSCI 45600 - Clinical Nuclear Medicine And Radioisotopes |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 10.00. Lectures and clinical rotation designed to familiarize the medical technology student with the terminology, instrumentation, dosages, and "in vitro" and "in vivo" rationale and procedures pertinent to a nuclear medicine department. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 10.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 10 credits
|
| HSCI 45700 - Clinical Parasitology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 10.00. Techniques of specimen examination, identification of cysts and ova, life cycles of parasites. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 10.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 10 credits
|
| HSCI 45800 - Clinical Serology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 10.00. Lectures and a laboratory experience in serology, including the preparation of antigen, flocculation tests for syphilis, heterophile antibody tests, creative proteins, RA test, FTA, rubella testing. Also included are lectures in immunology that include classifications of immunoglobulins; mechanism of antibody formation; immune response; types of antigen-antibody reactions; and theories of radioimmunoassay. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 10.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 10 credits
|
| HSCI 45900 - Clinical Toxicology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 10.00. A basic orientation in the use of instrumentation, such as mass spectrophotometry, and liquid and gas chromatography that is used in the specialized toxicology laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 10.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 10 credits
|
| HSCI 46000 - Clinical Urinalysis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 10.00. Routine analysis, chemical tests, sediment identification, renal function tests, pregnancy tests. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 10.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 10 credits
|
| HSCI 46100 - Clinical Virology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 10.00. Techniques involved in the performance of virologic studies for rubella, influenza, mumps, Newcastle disease, herpes, polio, and hepatitis. Tissue cultures are maintained for primary virus isolation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 10.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 10 credits
|
| HSCI 46200 - Clinical Cytology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 10.00. Lectures and laboratory experience in examination of body fluids: e.g., spinal fluid, synovial fluid, and seminal fluid. Lectures on the use and application of various types of microscopy. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 10.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 10 credits
|
| HSCI 46300 - Clinical Histology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 10.00. Histologic technique (principles of dehydration, embedding, sectioning, routine staining, frozen sections, decalcification, exfoliative cytology). Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 10.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 10 credits
|
| HSCI 46400 - Clinical Anatomy And Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 10.00. Review of the structure and function of the systems most concerned with laboratory tests: heart, kidney, liver, hematopoietic system, etc. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 10.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 10 credits
|
| HSCI 46500 - Introduction To Laboratory Education And Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A study of the principles and techniques of clinical instruction, and inservice and continuing education as well as administration and supervision. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
|
| HSCI 46600 - Clinical Immunology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Review of the protective and adverse aspects of the cellular and humoral immune responses. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HSCI 46601 - Clinical Immunology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Performance of immunological procedures and clinical significance of test results. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HSCI 46700 - Clinical Correlation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Written case studies are utilized and designed to correlate laboratory test with disease states. Designed as a review for all areas in the clinical laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HSCI 46800 - Coagulation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Students study the theory and practice of testing coagulation mechanisms during lecture and clinical application. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HSCI 46900 - Clinical Instrumentation And Laboratory Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. A study of the principles of instrumental analysis used in clinical laboratories. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HSCI 48500 - Health Physics Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Applied work experience as a health physics assistant or technician at a nuclear power generating station, government laboratory, hospital, or education and research institution. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
|
| HSCI 49000 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Special topics, projects, or readings in selected areas of health sciences at a level appropriate for senior students. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HSCI 49501 - School Of Health Sciences Senior Honors Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is for Senior students in the School of Health Sciences Program. This course consists of a 50 minute weekly seminar meeting to discuss current topics in health science, public health, and biomedical research. Students will interact with guest speakers and expand their knowledge base in health sciences research. In addition, each student will be responsible for presenting and reporting on their ongoing honors research project. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Gain an understanding of the current research areas in health sciences.
2. Build on the skill to give and evaluate a research presentation.
|
| HSCI 49601 - School Of Health Sciences Senior Honors Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is for Senior students in the School of Health Sciences Honors Program. In this course students will earn credit for work completed on their Honors Project under supervision of their faculty mentor. Students will enroll in this course in both fall and spring semesters (and concurrently with HSCI 49501 in the spring semester). An updated Project Description Form will be at the beginning of each semester based on the progress and any changes to the research plan. Course meeting times and frequency are to be set by the student and faculty mentor with an estimated commitment of 3-4 hours per week. Hours are to be arranged between the student and the faculty mentor, with at least weekly or biweekly meetings set aside for a one-on-one session between the student and faculty mentor. Students may also be matched to professional mentors off campus depending on their interests and future goals. The regular meeting times should be set during the first week of class. Working hours must not conflict with other course obligations or consume too much of students’ study time. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Gain an understanding of the current research areas in health sciences.
2. Develop and design an honors research project specific to the student’s research interests.
3. Conduct and complete an individualized research project to gain further understanding of the student’s specific research area of interest.
|
| HSCI 51400 - Radiation Instrumentation Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Laboratory techniques required for the application of radiation and radionuclides. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 52600 - Principles Of Health Physics And Dosimetry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of health physics, radiation dosimetry, and radiation shielding. Topics covered include natural and man-made radiation environments, operational radiation quantities and units, radiation protection philosophy, risk and dose limits, dose-response models, mortality estimates and risk calculations. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 53400 - Applied Health Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Lecture and case studies related to the application of radiation dosimetry and shielding principles to the practice of health physics, including environmental and in-plant monitoring, emergency response, decommissioning and decontamination, operational criteria for meeting ALARA exposure limits, and the transport, disposal and treatment of radioactive waste. Epidemiological studies related to radiological accidents and nuclear power are also examined. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 54000 - Radiation Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Effects of ionizing radiation on living systems at the molecular, cellular and tissue levels. Biological basis for radiation therapy treatment planning and radiation protection. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 54500 - Advanced Topics In Exposure Assessment |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Current research and practice in human environmental exposure assessment including homogeneous exposure groups, job-task modeling, physiologically-based pharmacokinetic and modeling of exposure and dose, biological markers of exposure, statistical issues, exposure assessment in epidemiology, and risk assessment. Students and faculty present readings and lead discussions. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 54600 - Advanced Industrial Hygiene Control Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students and faculty present readings and lead discussions on current research and practice in industrial hygiene control technology, including general control strategy, personal protective equipment, and ventilation. Students conduct self-paced, step-wise solutions to practical case studies. Ventilation design software is used to solve design problems. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 54700 - Environmental Epidemiology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The use of epidemiological methods to study the adverse effects of environmental agents on human health. Study designs, association and causation, statistical analysis, bias and confounding, modeling of exposure-response relationships, molecular epidemiology, and investigation of disease outbreaks. The emphasis of the course is on analytical studies, quantitative measures of association, and critical readings of current literature. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 55100 - Physical Agents In Environmental Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Physical characterization and biological interactions of nonionizing radiation with emphasis on the adverse effects of human exposure. Topics include source characterization, environmental exposure assessment, measurement instrumentation, toxicological and epidemiological findings, control strategies. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 55200 - Introduction To Aerosol Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The principles of aerosol behavior and sampling, with particular emphasis on applications in the health sciences. Topics include aerosol aerodynamics, aerosol filtration, pulmonary deposition of aerosols, methods of environmental sampling, and generation of laboratory aerosols. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 56000 - Toxicology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (MCMP 56000) Introduction to general principles of toxicology, target organ toxicity, and safety evaluation. Covers toxicity of metals, solvents, pesticides, gases, dusts, and food additives. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 56200 - Analytical Toxicology And Pathology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Historically, toxicology has been defined as the study of the adverse effects of xenobiotics. Today, toxicology encompasses much broader areas, including the study of endogenous compounds, physical agents, and even using toxicants as research tools. Basic and introductory toxicology courses cover the principles of toxicant metabolism and target organ toxicity. This course, Analytical Toxicology and Toxicologic Pathology is focused on the research and clinical applications of these principles. Two major areas will be covered: (1) principles of toxicant detection in biological matrices and (2) the assessment of pathological effects caused by toxicant exposure in biological systems. Laboratory sessions associated with each major topic allow students to have hands-on experience in these advanced analytical and pathological technologies. This course provides a unique opportunity for students to learn techniques that research and clinical toxicologists use daily in scientific or clinical laboratories. The course is suitable to both graduate and upper-class undergraduate students who are interested in toxicology, forensic science, veterinary medicine, environmental and occupational health, food toxicity, pharmaceutical drug testing, medical laboratory science, and general human and children’s health. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Have a basic understanding of how to measure toxicant levels.
2. Have essential knowledge in evaluating histopathological alterations of major organs and tissues upon exposure to typical toxicants.
3. Be able to assess and interpret the adverse effects of toxicants in mammalian systems.
|
| HSCI 57000 - Introduction To Medical Diagnostic Imaging |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course teaches the fundamentals of medical imaging, including the basic physics and engineering associated with each imaging modality (CT, MRI, PET, and ultrasound), as well as mathematics and computational tools associated with image reconstruction and image processing. The course is intended for students in health sciences, biomedical engineering, physics, and life sciences. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 57200 - Radiation Oncology Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course to the physical principles, equipment, processes, imaging guidance, and clinical techniques involved in the treatment of cancer patients with external radiation beams and radioactive sources. Various external radiation beam types and their energy deposition characteristics are described. Treatment planning dose calculation algorithms and point dose calculations are discussed. The use of international dosimetry protocols for radiation beam calibration are covered in detail. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 57400 - Medical Health Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course introduces the legislation and international and national recommendations relevant to the practice of radiation protection in medicine. Principles for the design of radiation use monitoring programs and shielding for radiation facilities is covered. Radiation risk avoidance and management for staff, patients and their families, and members of the public are discussed. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 57500 - Introduction To Environmental Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (HK 57500) An introduction to chemical, physical and biological factors in the environment that affect the health of the community. This course examines health issues, scientific understanding of causes and approaches to the control of major environmental health problems in industrialized and developed countries. This is a core course for the Masters in Public Health (MPH) degree at Purdue. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Define the major sources and types of environmental agents.
2. Discuss the transport and fate of these agents in the environment.
3. Identify the carriers or vectors that promote the transfer of these agents from the environment to the human.
4. Describe how these agents interact with biological systems, and the mechanisms by which they exert adverse health effects.
5. Explain and use models for prediction of the magnitude of adverse effects in biological systems.
6. Identify and define the steps in the risk-assessment and risk-management processes.
7. Describe the steps in the regulatory process in terms of risk assessment and risk management and identify current legislation and regulation regarding environmental issues.
8. Identify significant gaps in the current knowledge base concerning the health effects of environmental agents and identify areas of uncertainty in the risk-assessment process.
|
| HSCI 58000 - Occupational Safety And Ergonomics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Occupational safety is a cross-disciplinary area concerned with protecting the safety, health and welfare of people engaged in work. Occupational ergonomics is a branch of science that focuses on optimizing the relationships between workers and their work environment. This course focuses on the principles and applications of safety and ergonomics as it applies to workers. The first part of the course will consist of lectures on the fundamentals of safety standards and liability and the development of work-related musculoskeletal disorders, ergonomic risk factors including work practices, tools and workstation design. The last part will consist of identification and use of safety and ergonomic controls to reduce and prevent work-related fatalities, injuries, and musculoskeletal disorders. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 59000 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Special topics, projects, or readings in selected areas of health sciences at a level appropriate for seniors and graduate students. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HSCI 67100 - Biochemical Toxicology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. (MCMP 671) Analysis of experimental methods for evaluating toxic mechanisms of selected chemicals such as halogenated solvents, arsenic, alcohols, and nitriles. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: HSCI 56000. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HSCI 69000 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Special topics, projects, or readings in selected areas of health sciences at a level appropriate for graduate students. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HSCI 69600 - Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 or 1.00. Selected topics in health sciences presented by staff, students, and invited speakers. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HSCI 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HSCI 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Health Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HSRV 10000 - Introduction To Human Services |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An orientation to human services. History, current concepts and roles of the various workers in the field are discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| HSRV 10300 - Helping Relationship Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will provide the student with opportunities to increase their effectiveness in helping people. This course will examine the helping process in terms of skills, helping stages, and specific issues involved in a helping relationship. This course is appropriate for anyone who is entering a career dealing with people. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| HSRV 10500 - Basic Interviewing Skills |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to introduce and develop skills associated with interviewing clients. The focus will be on skill building and competencies in attending behaviors, client observations skills, open and closed questions, encourager skills, paraphrasing and summarizing, and reflection of feelings and meaning. Advanced interviewing skills will include confrontation, probes, focusing and information giving. This course is open to non-HSRV majors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| HSRV 16900 - Introduction To Wellness And Stress Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the philosophies and techniques for achieving individual wellness optimum health. Includes topics in stress management, nutrition awareness, lifestyle planning, nontraditional approaches to building healthy lifestyles, exercise, and psycho-physiological well-being. Class sessions will incorporate experiential and participatory styles of learning, lecture, discussion, and small-group interaction. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| HSRV 20000 - Behavioral Therapies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will cover major theories, terms, and techniques of behavioral therapeutic approaches. It will explore a broad range of intervention strategies with application appropriate for diverse problems. The course will critically examine how these techniques can be adapted in different cultures where different interpersonal dynamics and values may exist. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| HSRV 20100 - Clinical In Case Study Method I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This is the first of two courses which will provide the student with field opportunities in an approved field instruction site that provides structured learning opportunities for the student to demonstrate human services foundational knowledge, professional standards, and practice competencies required of an entry-level human services worker. An agency supervisor and a faculty member supervise students as they complete the required 160 hours of field work. The classroom component relates theory and principles of practice to agency field-study experience. Through group interaction, discussion, and analysis, students learn to develop supportive relationships with clients and apply the values of confidentiality and client self-determination. They learn how their values and personal experiences affect their work with clients. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| HSRV 21100 - Dynamics Of Group Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focus is upon the properties of groups, awareness of personal factors in group interaction, dimensions of leadership behavior in achieving group effectiveness, characteristics of larger social systems, and the dynamics of change. Small-group experiences are supplemented by skill practice sessions and theory presentations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| HSRV 25100 - Clinical In Case Study Method II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is the second of two courses which will provide the student with field opportunities in an approved field instruction site that provides structured learning opportunities for the student to demonstrate human services foundational knowledge, professional standards, and practice competencies required of an entry-level human services worker. An agency supervisor and a faculty member supervise students as they complete the required 160 hours of field work. The classroom component relates theory and principles of practice to agency field-study experience. Through group interaction, discussion, and analysis, students learn to develop supportive relationships with clients and apply the values of confidentiality and client self-determination. They learn how their values and personal experiences affect their work with clients. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Be able to communicate effectively in both oral & written forms.
2. Be able to manage the own feeling, stress & conflict in the workplace. Appropriately end relationships at the internship site.
3. Be able to apply HSRV ethical standards.
4. Be able to apply knowledge & techniques gained from previous HSRV coursework.
5. Be able to write & explain the components and functions of a treatment plan.
6. Be able to develop professionalism as demonstrated by punctuality, appropriate dress and successful interaction with staff members and clients from diverse populations.
7. Be able to apply a variety of skills within an appropriate cultural framework.
8. Be able to enhance and/or develop positive self-care strategies.
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| HSRV 29900 - Mental Health Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Hours and subject matter to be arranged. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HSRV 30900 - Working With Diverse Populations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines healthcare practices and beliefs in various cultural and religious groups. Cultural phenomena including communication, space, biological variations, environmental control, time, and social organization are reviewed. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| HSRV 31500 - Introduction to Theory and Therapies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discusses specific theories and therapies that are essential for human service professional practice. This course aalso provides kknowledge that is required to pass the Indiana certification exaqmination for addiction counselors. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| HSRV 32000 - Case Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will provide theoretical knowledge of techniques in case management related to human service clients and agencies. Case management with a wide range of populations will be discussed. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| HSRV 32500 - Current Trends In Psychsocial Rehabilitation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Current models of psychiatric rehabilitation emphasize communicty integration and support for persons with a serious mental illness, and developmental disorders. This course examines historical attitudes toward those classified with these disorders; current theoretical perspectives; physiological evidence of a disease process; and research into the various intervention models ofr psychopharmacological, social-environmental and individual treatment. One semester of Abnormal Psychology is strongly recommended, but not required, prior to taking this course. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| HSRV 33000 - Psychopharm Human Services |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An overview of the effects and side effects of psychiatric medications. Focus of the course will be knowledge useful in identifying: 1) whether or not a client is responding to pharmacological treatment, and; 2) client behaviors indicating adverse effects of medication which should be reported to the client's health care provider. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| HSRV 34000 - Addictions Special Pop |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on special issues related to addictions in women, adolescents, the elderly and persons of color. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| HSRV 35000 - Drugs And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 6.00. Emphasizes the social, psychological, biological, and cultural contexts in which addiction develops and occurs. Encourages an understanding of substance use, abuse, and addictive behaviors within a larger pattern. For this reason, the course is applicable to anyone who will be in a position in which they must a) work with people on a daily basis; b) provide supervision or support services within an organization; or c) work in any aspect of the helping professions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| HSRV 35100 - Human Services For The Elderly |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 6.00. Utilizing Maslow's hierarchy of needs as a point of reference, services for the aging in Northeastern Indiana will be surveyed and related to state and national resources. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| HSRV 36000 - Group Skills For Chemical Dependency |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Recognizing symptoms of dependency, the role of the family, emotional complications of chemical dependency, various approaches to treatment. The course will make use of role playing discussion, films and lectures. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
TSW-Richmond
|
| HSRV 37700 - Ethics, Policy, Law And Professional Issues In Human Services |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will examine ethics, social policy, and laws that arise in the practice of human services. In addition, standards for professional behavior in human services will be addressed. This course is open to students who have completed HSRV 10000, 10300, 10500, 20000, 211000 in the Department of Human Services. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Comprehend the content of the ethical code of the Organization for Human Services.
2. Apply the ethical code of the National Organization for Human Services to client situations and personal conduct.
3. Interpret social policy's effect on clients who receive human services.
4. Analyze legislation which affects human service delivery systems.
5. Evaluate standards which guide behavior in professional settings.
6. Synthesize the values which underlie the profession of Human Services.
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| HSRV 39900 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Hours, credits, and subject matter to be arranged by department. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HSRV 40000 - Internship I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. This course will provide experiential learning related to human services agencies. Students will be assigned to a human service agency and work with an agency preceptor to apply knowledge of case management skills including intake, client assessment, and development and implementation of intervention plans. Course is limited to students admitted to the B.S. in Human Services degree. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HSRV 40100 - Internship Seminar I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will focus on professionalism, ethical issues and social welfare policy as applied with human service clients and agencies. Course is limited to students admitted to the B.S. in Human Services degree. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| HSRV 41700 - Research Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide the student with a comprehensive knowledge of quantitative, qualitative, and mixed method research designs. Specific information will be provided on: the research problem, the research question, IRB application and the informed consent form, the literature review, instrumentation, methodology, ethics, and the research proposal. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate a solid foundation of quantitative, qualitative, and mixed methods design.
2. Analyze research literature to identify appropriate research topics.
3. Develop a research problem statement and research question.
4. Analyze relevant research literature.
5. Create an appropriate research design.
6. Apply ethical standards in planning research with human participants.
7. Communicate effectively through scholarly writing
|
| HSRV 42000 - Substance Abuse Prevention |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides an overivew of substance abuse theory, practice and prevention. Includes concepts related to substance abuse prevention in the educational setting. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| HSRV 45000 - Internship II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. The course will provide advanced experiential learning related to human service agencies. Students will be assigned to human service agency and work with an agency preceptor to apply knowledge of program evaluation, legal implications related to human service practice, and management issues related to directing human service programs. Course is limited to students admitted to the B.S. in Human Services degree. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| HSRV 45100 - Internship Seminar II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will provide a forum for discussion of advanced theories and skills applicable to developing, assessing and managing human service agencies. Topics will include program evaluation, legal implications related to human service practice, and management issues related to implementing human service programs. Course is limited to students admitted to the B.S. in Human Services degree. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| HSRV H2020 - Introduction To Alcohol And Drug Abuse I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course designed to give students a basic overview of the physiological, psychological, and sociological aspects of alcohol and drug abuse. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Richmond
|
| HSRV H2050 - Treatment Issues In Alcohol And Drug Abuse |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discussion of methods of treatment, continuum of care, selected approaches to counseling, and the treatment functions of screening, intake, orientation, and referral. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HSRV H3020 - Psychological Aspects Of Alcohol And Drug Abuse |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course designed to acquaint students with psychological aspects of alcohol and other drug use, abuse, and addiction. Will include assessment, motivation, emotional aspects, personality characteristics, and individual treatment approaches. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Richmond
|
| HSRV H3230 - Social Systems Aspects Of Alcohol And Drug Abuse |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will acquaint the student with social systems such as family, peer and cultural systems as they interrelate with persons abusing alcohol and other drugs. Will also include substance abuse in the workplace and organization and development and impact of social policy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Richmond
|
| HSRV H4010 - Alcohol And Drug Abuse Treatment Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course designed to acquaint the student with diagnosis and treatment of alcohol and drug abusing clients. Will include counseling styles and methods in facilitating change, self-help methods, treatment facilities, and outcomes of effective treatment programs. Special types will include the poly-addicted client, women, adolescents, and the family. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Richmond
|
| HST 11000 - Orientation To Sports Health |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Overview of the basic prevention, assessment, and management techniques for athletic injuries. Students will be instructed in the basic policies and procedures of a variety of health disciplines and how each discipline is connected to Sports Health. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Define the nature and scope of the sports health profession.
2. Outline the changing concepts of sports health through its history.
3. Apply basic prevention, assessment, and management techniques for athletic injuries.
4. Discuss the sports health profession through the study of its current issues, associations, laws, and leaders.
5. Describe the various career opportunities within sports health.
|
| HST 21000 - First Responder: First Aid And Emergency Care |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The students will learn consistent and universal guidelines that enable first responder rescuers (athletic trainers) to be able to respond to and provide appropriate care, regardless of the type of emergency. Classroom and practice sessions introduce the acute athletic injury care environment, as well as traumatic emergency triage, and the primary principles of first aid, spinal injury management, and emergency action plan creation and application. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply working knowledge of AED technology.
2. Evaluate first aid/CPR scenarios and apply appropriate first aid/CPR techniques to those scenarios.
3. Recognize and use a three step plan of action in an emergency.
4. Assess appropriate action in a variety of adult, child and infant emergency situations.
5. Demonstrate first aid skills in a variety of adult, child and infant emergency situations.
6. Demonstrate appropriate and correct usage of AED technology.
7. Recognize and provide care for various types of respiratory and cardiac emergencies for adult, child and infant.
8. Provide care for shock and heart attack.
9. Provide general care for wounds.
10. Recognize burn emergencies and provide care.
11. Understand and provide care for heat and cold emergencies.
12. Recognize and provide care for sudden illness situations.
13. Recognize and provide care for bone and joint injuries.
14. Understand appropriate use of AED technology.
|
| HST 21800 - Human Development And Health Promotion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course develops the knowledge required to effectively promote health throughout the lifespan. Theory and evidence-based develpomental influences and challenges are addressed. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Utilize a systematic, holistic approach to identify needs of individuals throughout the lifespan.
2. Describe evolving social, cultural, and health care delivery trends in the provision of optimal health care throughout the lifespan.
3. Identify theory guided, evidence-based practice used to provide developmentally appropriate quality care across the lifespan.
4. Discuss health promotion outcomes in providing safe, quality care.
5. Demonstrate developmentally appropriate communication strategies throughout the lifespan.
6. Identify health promotion teaching-learning strategies in the delivery of health care.
7. Describe legal and ethical issues relevant to human development across the lifespan.
|
| HST 22000 - Concepts Of Fitness |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The purpose of this course is to provide knowledge and appreciation of the importance of regular physical activity for life-long health, wellness, and a quality of life and to provide opportunities for psychomotor development. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Increase leisure time physically active.
2. Increase proportion of people who do moderate daily activity for 30 minutes.
3. Increase proportion of people who do vigorous physical activity three days a week.
4. Increase proportion of people who do regular muscle fitness exercise.
5. Increase proportion of people who do regular exercise for flexibility.
6. Increase prevalence of healthy weight.
|
| HST 35000 - Biomechanics And Structural Kinesiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course looks at the analysis of structural principles and mechanical application pertaining to human movement. Course will discuss concepts of human movement with investigation of biomechanics and structural kinesiology. Efficiency of movement, neuromuscular integration, proprioception, mechanical concepts related to muscular function, and analysis of human motion/motor skills will be extensive. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Analyze motions of the human body. This analysis will be categorized by plane of motion, biomechanics, and force generation.
2. Identify specific parts of human anatomy and describe their function when motion occurs in the human body.
3. Recognize and describe the origins, insertions, and actions of muscular groupings in specific joints of the body.
|
| HST 36000 - Exercise Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exercise physiology is an evaluation of the acute responses and some chronic adaptations of the body to the stresses of exercise. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Integrate principles of biology, chemistry, nutrition, human anatomy and physiology related to responses and adaptations to physical activity and exercise.
2. Illustrate basic laboratory skills pertaining to assessments, laboratory methods, experimental and analytical practices, data acquisition, and reporting in the exercise sciences.
3. Demonstrate knowledge of the importance and influence of physical activity, nutrition and exercise on health and be an advocate for physically active lifestyles as a means to improve quality of life and reduce the risk and prevalence of lifestyle related diseases.
4. Evaluate wellness and fitness programs, nutrition projects, and exercise physiology tracks based in sport, clinical, industrial, and/or corporate environments.
5. Examine requisite skills and abilities for meaningful employment in exercise science related areas or pursue graduate studies in an exercise science related area.
|
| HST 40000 - Advanced Sports Health |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course integrates professional aspects of athletic training, including collaborating with other health professionals. There will be a focus on relations organizations and the administration of an athletic training program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
Students will be able to identify:
1. Common risk factors and causes of athletic injuries in various sports.
2. Risk factors associated with congenital or acquired postural abnormalities, physical disabilities and diseases.
3. Specific risk factors associated with conditioning, coaching methods, and motor skill performance.
4. Administration of static and dynamic postural evaluation and screening procedures.
5. Administration of anthropometric measurement techniques.
6. Safe athletic programs and to minimize injury/illness risk factors to the fullest possible extent.
7. A thorough, comprehensive injury/illness prevention program.
8. Cooperation among administrators, coaches, athletic trainers, parents, and athletes.
9. Normal anatomical structures of the human body.
10. Anatomical and physiological growth and development characteristics.
11. Principles and concepts of body movement.
12. Common injuries to each major body part.
13. Characteristic pathology of all common closed soft tissue injuries.
14. The human body’s normal immediate and delayed physiological response to trauma.
15. Relationships between etiological factors and resulting injury/illness pathologies.
16. Typical symptoms and common clinical signs associated with athletic injuries/illnesses.
17. Commonly accepted techniques and procedures for clinical evaluation of common athletic injuries/illnesses.
18. Use of manual muscle testing.
19. Administration of special tests.
20. Administration of appropriate sensory and motor neurological tests for intracranial injuries.
21. Basic records and form pertaining to the management of athletic injuries.
|
| HTM 10000 - Introduction To The Hospitality And Tourism Industry |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 (West Lafayette) 1.00 to 3.00 (Calumet, Fort Wayne) An overview of the supervisory careers, opportunities, and responsibilities in the foodservice, lodging, and tourism industry; including historical developments, pioneers, and industry leaders; representatives of companies from the three areas. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 10010 - Introduction To The Hospitality And Tourism Industry |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An overview of the basic dimensions of professionalism, customer service, sustainability, civic engagement, ethics, and the historical perspective that is integral to the hospitality and tourism industry. Students will also keep pace with current industry trends through guest lectures from executives of companies from foodservice, lodging, and tourism. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Define ethical behavior and apply it to hospitality and tourism management.
2. Name the four behavioral styles and apply them to be a more effective hospitality and tourism industry professional.
3. Define the basics of customer service concepts in the hospitality and tourism industries.
4. Summarize the basic principles and concepts of substainability in the hospitality and tourism industries.
5. Define professionalism and it's importance to hospitality and tourism businesses.
6. Indentify the pioneers that shaped today's hospitality and tourism industry.
7. Indentify current issues in the Hospitality Industry by listening to Industry leaders.
|
| HTM 10100 - Hospitality And Tourism Student Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Course assists the student new to Purdue to become acquainted with the Purdue system and with the HTM department and program. Information presented to assist students with developing strategies for academic and career-related success at Purdue. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the curriculum of the Hospitality and Tourism Management Department; the Purdue University registration process and apply that knowledge to plan their academic program
and develop a schedule each semester at Purdue.
2. Use the principles of time management in planning their time commitments.
3. Demonstrate individual skills and interests related to career choice.
4. Define and apply civic engagement principles in the local community in service to a non-profit hospiitality or tourism related business.
5. Create a professional resume and understand the interview process in searching for employment.
|
| HTM 14100 - Financial Accounting For The Service Industries |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental accounting principles and procedures applied to the hospitality and service industries. Includes study of the uniform system of accounts, financial statements, special purpose journals, and subsidiary ledgers unique to the hospitality and service industries. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 17300 - Introduction To Tourism Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an introduction to tourism management using a system approach that integrates a variety of hospitality and travel organizations and businesses. It focuses on the understanding of tourism from the perspectives of travelers and destinations, while identifying tourism's economic, socio-cultural, and environmental impacts on communities. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 18100 - Lodging Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Organization, management and operating procedures of lodging facilities. Guest-employee interactions will be analyzed along with current trends and cutting edge topics in the lodging industry. A history of the lodging industry will be discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Summarize the history of the lodging industry from ancient times to the present.
2. List and describe the many segments of the lodging industry by identifying types of hotels, ownership categories and proper terminology.
3. Describe the organizational structures of different size and type of lodging properties.
4. Describe the relationships between the various departments in the hotel and explain the human side lodging administration impacts the success of the lodging organization.
5. Formulate, apply and assess front office procedures in a variety of different types of lodging operations.
6. Identify and explain technological advances and assess the application of technology in the lodging industry.
7. Describe and explain the management philosophy necessary to maintain honesty and integrity in the operation of the hotel’s front office and other departments in the hotel.
8. Identify and describe related industries with an emphasis on Tourism.
|
| HTM 19000 - First Year Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A one-credit (each semester) first-year honors seminar consists of guest speakers and discussions of broad intellectual issues. Admitted high school students who have either a 1200 combined SAT score ( equivalent ACT score ) or graduate in top 10 percent of class. Letter of invitation from the CFS dean. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Presentation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| HTM 19100 - Sanitation And Health In Foodservice, Lodging, And Tourism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces students to the foodservice component of the Hospitality and Tourism industry and explores food safety and other health related issues. Application of sanitation principles in restaurants, hospitals, schools, hotels, cruise ships, airlines, and international travel are covered. Students must pass a National Sanitation Certification Examination to receive credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 19700 - First Year Honors Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A one-credit (each semester) first-year honors seminar consisting of guest speakers and discussions of broad issues within Consumer and Family Sciences. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| HTM 20200 - Hospitality And Tourism Management Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will consist of an approved hospitality industry experience. Students are required to obtain a letter from their employer verifying their paid employment. A minimum of 300 hours are needed for each credit hour given for a summer experience and the maximum number of credits in a semester is two. Students will be required to prepare weekly reflection reports which will each have a different topic that they will have to address. Students must present proof of their 300 hours of paid employment upon completion of their experience. Typically offered Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Internship, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Assist students in developing skills necessary to seek their first positions in a hospitality organization.
2. Develop skills to analyze issues in a hospitality organization through the use of weekly reflection reports.
3. Analyze the culture and work environment in an organization and determine its strengths and weaknesses.
4. Identify the functions of the various departments within the specific type of operation in which they work.
5. Ability to distinguish between engaged employees and those employees who are disengaged.
6. Describe effective customer service encounters versus those which here not handled properly by their organization.
|
| HTM 21100 - Healthcare Material Management Concepts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. No credit for HTM students, since course is geared toward specific audience. The purpose of this course is to develop managers who can provide the right product at the right time to the right place. Students will learn about strategic planning, budgeting, capital funding, purchasing, supplier waste control, warehousing and storage.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 21200 - Organization And Management In The Hospitality And Tourism Industry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic principles of planning, organizing, directing, and controlling human and physical resources will be addressed. Students will also learn how these principles can be applied to maximize the organizational effectiveness of hospitality and tourism businesses. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 21300 - Supervision Principles: Leadership Strategies For Healthcare Facilities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. No credit for HTM students, since course is geared toward specific audience. The purpose of this course is to focus on proven management principles and unique skills that healthcare supervisors can use to manage people. Students will learn techniques of supervision that can last them a lifetime and will better prepare them to cope with the many professional and personal challenges facing them.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 21400 - Introduction To Food Selection And Preparation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will introduce students to fundamental knowledge, skills and working environment pertaining to professional food preparation through lecture and laboratory exercises. Lectures will introduce food types, compare and contrast culinary methods as well as explain the underpinning physical and bio-chemical transformations that are occurring. Laboratory work will allow students to observe and practice professional cooking as well as appreciate the results from a consumer¿s perspective. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
Know the people, tools and ingredients of the professional kitchen:
The people, kitchen organization, roles, responsibilities
The tools and equipment
The ingredients, identification of:
Meat, poultry Game
Fish and shellfish
Fruit, vegetable and fresh herbs
Dairy Egg
Dry goods
Identify the ingredients and cooking techniques:
Stocks, sauces and soups
Meat, Poultry and Fish
Fabrication
Grilling, sautéing, Steaming and Braising
Vegetables, potatoes, grains, legumes, pasta and dumplings
Breakfast and garde-manger
Baking and pastry
Appreciate and evaluate food from a customer¿s perspective
|
| HTM 23100 - Hospitality And Tourism Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course teaches students a customer-oriented approach to marketing in hospitality and tourism. The role of marketing in an organization's overall strategic plan is emphasized. Techniques available to hotels, restaurants, and other tourism businesses are described and evaluated, including packaging, the travel trade, advertising, sales promotion, positioning and branding. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 24100 - Managerial Accounting And Financial Management In Hospitality Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Managerial and financial analyses of numerical data used for decision-making. Consideration of systems, techniques, information types, and presentational forms used by hospitality management. Emphasis on situations oriented to the hospitality industry. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 25100 - Computers In The Hospitality Industry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explore the applications of computers in the hospitality industry. Special emphasis is placed on those impacting the management of the organization. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| HTM 29000 - Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Current issues facing the hospitality and tourism industry are presented and discussed. An emphasis is placed on exploring the various means used to study and understand these issues. Admittance into the HTM Honors Program. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| HTM 29100 - Quantity Food Production And Service |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 (West Lafayette, Fort Wayne) 4.00 (Calumet) An introduction to food preparation methods and service techniques in quantity food settings. Students become familiar with ingredients and culinary terminology, and learn to read and evaluate menus. Recipe conversion and costing skills are developed. Different production schemes and product flow are examined, and the relationship between back-of-the-house and front-of-the-house activities is discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 29101 - Quantity Food Production And Service Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Basic knowledge of foodservice operations. Students learn and develop food production and service skills in the HTM Cafe and the John Purdue Room. Students are exposed to quantity cooking methods, the use and care of equipment, and service techniques as they rotate through various positions commonly found in foodservice operations. All aspects of the dining experience are experienced by students. National Sanitation Certification needed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 29700 - Introduction To Honors Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduces students to the design and implementation of an honors research project. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 30000 - Semester Internship Experience In Hospitality And Tourism |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Mechanism to recognize students in the Purdue system the semester they are off campus participating in an approved semester internship program with a hospitality company. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 30100 - Hospitality And Tourism Industry Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Training and practical experience at the entry-level, totaling at least 300 hours, in an approved hospitality or tourism operation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| HTM 30200 - Hospitality And Tourism Industry Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course consists of an approved hospitality industry experience. Students are required to obtain a letter from their employer verifying their paid employment. A minimum of 320 hours are needed for each credit hour given for a summer experience and the maximum number of credits in a semester is two. Students will be required to prepare weekly reflection reports which will each have a different topic that they will have to address. Students must present proof of their 320 hours of paid employment upon completion of their experience. Typically offered Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Full-Time Privileges, Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 2 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Assist students in developing skills necessary to seek their first positions in a hospitality organization.
2. Develop skills to analyze issues in a hospitality organization through the use of weekly reflection reports.
3. Analyze the culture and work environment in an organization and determine its strengths and weaknesses.
4. Identify the functions of the various departments within the specific type of operation in which they work.
5. Ability to distinguish between engaged employees and those employees who are disengaged.
6. Describe effective customer service encounters versus those which here not handled properly by their organization.
|
| HTM 30900 - Hospitality And Tourism Management Publicity And Promotion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Written and oral skills activities focusing on the promotion of the academic major. Newsletter writing and production, public speaking events, preparation and design of academic recruitment materials and other portfolio building public relations types of activities required. Good independent study habits and research skills are developed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| HTM 31000 - Food And Beverage Operation Management |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course will allow students to understand restaurant and food service business models and master the essential principles of managing successful food and beverage operations. In a balanced approach of theory and practice students will learn to develop food and beverage production and service skills and understand the choices and opportunities available in this field. A special focus is placed on marketing, planning, cost control and guest satisfaction as well as developing the right ambiance and attitude that contributes to successful food preparation and service in a restaurant setting. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Recall and apply lessons learned in HTM 19100 and FN 20300.
2. Familiarize you with culinary procedures and terminology, and food in general.
3. Discuss front-of-the-house operations.
4. Review management systems such as production schedules, standardized recipes, inventory management, and sales reports.
5. Analyze common problems encountered within our industry.
6. Demonstrate recipe cost and production analysis.
|
| HTM 31100 - Procurement Management For Foodservice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Identifies and describes food, supplies, and related merchandise used in the foodservice industry. Provides methods and criteria for recognizing quality, evaluating, specifying, purchasing, and inspecting these products. Discusses the use of technology in the purchasing component of the foodservice industry. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| HTM 31200 - Human Resources Management For The Service Industries |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The principles and practices of managing human resources for effective operations of hospitality and tourism businesses will be covered including: analysis and design of work, recruiting, selection, training and development, performance management, compensation, employee relations, and strategies for supporting organizational strategies. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| HTM 31400 - Franchising |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of franchise administration, operations, and marketing, with a special emphasis on hospitality-related franchises. Includes a study of the legal regulation of franchises, the franchisee-franchisor relationship, and unique problems in operating a franchise. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| HTM 31500 - Club Management And Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the organization, administration, operation, and opportunities within the private club industry, with emphasis on the manager's duties. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| HTM 31600 - Casino Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of the development, operations and management of casino enterprises. Includes the evolution of gaming, regulatory statutes and agencies, operational concerns, marketing strategies, financial controls, security/surveillance requirements, ethical considerations, and the economic/social impact on the community. Field trip required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
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| HTM 31700 - Business Etiquette For Managers |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A review of contemporary standards of human interaction in the workplace. How manners, etiquette and style affect and enhance everyday dealings with others. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HTM 32100 - Equipment For Restaurants, Hotels, And Institutions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of selection, operation, and maintenance of food service equipment, including materials, structural details, design, cost performance, and specification standards. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
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| HTM 32200 - Hospitality Facilities Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Technical and managerial issues relating to the operation and maintenance of the physical plant and equipment in hospitality industry facilities. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| HTM 32300 - FoodService Layout And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Arrangement of Food Service equipment for efficient use of space. An intorduction to computer aided design for equipment placement in thin space constraints. Development of workflow patterns and human engineering considerations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| HTM 32400 - Distribution Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is intended to help undergraduate students gain fundamental knowledge about electronic distribution as it relates to the lodging industry. The course covers a wide range of topics that are related to marketing, yield management, content distribution, payments, channel management, and networks in context of a rapidly changing landscape. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Remember history of online distribution as it relates to current structure and services.
2. Identify the purpose of electronic distribution in relation to reaching out to consumers.
3. Understand reservation and booking processes that relay electronic distribution.
4. Explain how rate, inventory and availability is distributed from the properties to various end users.
5. Classify services offered by electronic distribution from a consumer and hotel operator’s perspective.
6. Discuss the merits of various channels.
7. Distinguish between the various data that is distributed, breaking these down into categories such as content.
8. Relate costs of distribution as they relate to various channels.
9. Assess value of the services provided within the electronic distribution train.
10. Explain the role of social media, mobile technology and flash sales in distribution.
11. Identify the payment processes within electronic distribution.
12. Examine how technology developments might affect the future of electronic distribution.
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| HTM 33100 - Hospitality And Tourism Sales And Service |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of sales and customer service methods used to generate revenues for hospitality and tourism businesses. Emphasis is placed on a hands-on assignment which requires students to identify a product that they will market and sell, as well as participate in a sales blitz. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| HTM 33400 - Introduction To Sports Hospitality Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to various components of the hospitality and tourism industry and examines the role hospitality plays in professional and collegiate pro sports, with particular focus on hosting of pro sports events. Students will learn business and marketing principles of pro sports and hospitality, study and practice customer services principles, and gain exposure to various careers available in hospitality and tourism. Students will also develop interpersonal relationship skills and gain crisis mode training. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate practical and useful knowledge of ways to network and make connections.
2. Itemize the types if jobs found throughout the pro sports hospitality and management industry.
3. Describe jobs unique to different sports in the sport hospitality and management industry.
4. Discuss the Foundations of Sports Hospitality and how hospitality plays a role in college and professional sports.
5. Demonstrate Career Preparation, including resume and cover letter writing and conducting mock interviews.
6. Demonstrate customer service principles and crisis mode training.
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| HTM 34100 - Cost Controls In Foodservice And Lodging |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of cost controls; development of cost-reduction methods through management policy and decisions; examination of cost-control techniques for food, labor, and supplies in addition to the emphasis on beverage management control. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| HTM 35100 - E-Business For The Hospitality Sector |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the students to the technological foundation of the internet, e-business strategies and models, as well as the social and ethical issues concerning the internet. The students will gain a better understanding of how hospitality and tourism organizations conduct internet-based activities, and have integrated their online and overall business strategies. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| HTM 35200 - International Cuisine |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Research in and hands-on food preparation of various international cuisines with corresponding study of their cultures and languages. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HTM 36100 - Managed Services For The Foodservice Industry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on the unique aspects of contract and institutional foodservice management as it compares to commercial foodservices; including operations in airline, business dining, school and campus, healthcare, conference and convention center, vending, correctional, and leisure foodservices. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Enable students to more easily and logically move through the revised plan of study.
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| HTM 37100 - Introduction To Tourism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles, practices, and philosophies which affect the economic, social, cultural, psychological, and marketing aspects of human travel and the tourism industry. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| HTM 37200 - Global Tourism Geography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction and analysis of specific world travel destinations, including the exploration of geographic features, customs and tradition, population centers, visitor attractions, political, religious, language and other cultural differences as these relate to the hospitality and travel industry. The course is designed to teach students specific geographic knowledge, and develop a deeper understanding and empathy for cultural values and traditions that exist outside their own culture. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| HTM 37300 - Travel Industry Operations And Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This class is designed to provide a comprehensive understanding of the roles, sizes, structure, operations, and relationships of travel industry organizations with a particular emphasis on travel agencies, tour operators and wholesalers, corporate travel management, incentive travel, and meeting-convention planners. The latest technologies of travel information and reservations technology are also reviewed in the class, including airline reservation and World Wide Web-based systems such as Travelocity, Expedia, and Preview Travel. The class is divided into two parts: lecture and laboratory (hands-on instruction on airline reservation systems using the SABRE program developed by American Airlines). Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 37400 - Revenue Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Revenue management is widely used in the field of hospitality management to maximize revenue or profits from fixed and/or perishable resources such as event space, resort facilities or hotel rooms. Revenue management is a multidisciplinary process that blends elements of marketing, operations, and financial skills. This course will review a set of revenue maximization strategies and tactics that use rate, revenue streams, and distribution channel management to achieve the above mentions business objectives. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Define the concept of revenue management.
2. Explain what is meant by today’s more sophisticated “prosumer” and define the concepts of bundling, dynamic packaging, and branding.
3. Explain the concept of environmental scanning as well as the elements of a SWOT analysis.
4. Define the various channels of distribution particularly the 3rd party channels.
5. Describe the four building blocks supporting the revenue management process.
6. List pricing laws currently in place to protect consumers.
7. Provide the formulas used to calculate the price elasticity of a product or service to determine its price sensitivity.
8. Describe the use of quantitative methods to analyze price elasticity, demand forecasting, and inventory management of distribution channels employed in the maximization of revenue.
9. Examine the professional characteristics and responsibilities needed to be successful in the revenue management field and review prior job experience and topics of study useful to a revenue management professional.
|
| HTM 37500 - Sport-Related Tourism And Leisure Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (FM 37500) Integration of Sport and Tourism disciplines. Sport participation and spectator travel, hard and soft adventure tourism, and management of leisure time are emphasized. Focus on the dynamics behind the explosion in Sport and Adventure Tourism. Not open to students with cedit in FM 37500. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HTM 37600 - Sustainable Tourism Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will study the effects of tourism on the local and ecological environment. They will gain understanding of ways to minimize the impact of tourism on the local environment while providing opportunities that directly benefit hosts and visitors as well as the environment. This course will also explore current trends in the travel market in terms of perceptions and needs of the contemporary traveler asking the question whether ecotourism itself a trend or the reflection of a more profound change in values that impact consumer behavior in the tourism industry. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the nature of sustainability and its relevance to tourism.
2. Recognize the impacts of tourism on the physical environment, society, culture and economy in a variety of contexts.
3. Differentiate between sustainable tourism and its subsets including eco-tourism, geo-tourism, alternative tourism, voluntourism and heritage tourism.
4. Evaluate methodologies for application and management of sustainable tourism practices in a variety of types of tourism destination (nature areas, resorts, heritage sites, urbanized tourism destinations) and recognize barriers to implementation.
5. Evaluate the importance of various visitor management techniques, including carrying capacity assessment at tourist destinations.
6. Analyze the role of the consumer in sustainable tourism development.
7. Assess the business case for sustainability in tourism.
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| HTM 37700 - Resort Property, Rental And Services Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Linking practice to theory, this course will allow students to participate fully in the operation of a resort to become familiar with all its services and activities. Particular attention will be paid on understanding the different revenue streams and their role in offering a total resort experience to the different market segments that are being attracted to the island resort. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Recognize and evaluate the role of each department in the successful operation of the whole resort.
2. Understand the contribution to revenue of each department within a resort and apply principles to practice.
3. Evaluate the role of department managers within a resort.
4. Understand the role of senior management, for example the General Manager in a resort.
5. Evaluate the implications of various ownership models for resort properties.
6. Identify key elements in the evolution of resorts and their products.
|
| HTM 37800 - Destination And Resort Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Destinations are emerging as a fundamental concept in the study of tourism development. Resorts are, in most cases, nested within destinations, their commercial destiny being therefore interdependent. This course will examine the challenges and opportunities associated with promoting resorts and destinations. Students will examine and compare strategies. They will also have opportunities to develop and apply some hands on marketing approaches. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the nature of destination marketing and its challenges.
2. Understand the nature of resort marketing and the relationship with destination marketing.
3. Analyze the contribution of different sectors within the destination to the whole destination product.
4. Recognize and analyze the contribution of different departments within a resort to the overall marketing of the resort.
5. Evaluate the importance of yield management and revenue management systems as part of the marketing process.
6. Recognize the nature of competition and develop strategies to become more competitive for both resorts and destinations.
7. Demonstrate an awareness of the role of appropriate crisis management procedures in the marketing of resorts and destinations.
8. Understand the process of creating a marketing plan.
|
| HTM 37901 - Ecotourism, Sustainable Tourism Development And Conservation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The history of ecotourism in the hospitality industry, the pros and cons of the impact of sustainable development on people, the hospitality industry, ecology and communities, and a review of recent initiatives in conservation of resources. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. To understand that for Ecotourism, Sustainable Development and Conservation to be successful it requires the commitment of developers, operators, government agencies and eco-tourism educators and experts working and planning together;
2. To appreciate the contribution and vital part the discerning touring customers make in being attracted to and supporting such special destinations;
3. To explain how managers in ecotourism operations must be committed to the unique physical structure and entertainment limitations of such developments and the ultimate impact on the local community;
4. For students to be able to define differences between ecotourism, sustainability and conservation in hospitality operations worldwide; and
5. To guide students in analyzing the maximum carrying capacity of tourist destinations and to learn how to abide by them.
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| HTM 38100 - Executive Housekeeping Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Management principles and practices relative to the internal maintenance of public lodging facilities. Experience in room preperation, cleanliness, tools, record keeping and departmental organization. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Enable students to more easily and logically move through the revised plan of study.
|
| HTM 38110 - Lodging Management II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will add to and build upon the knowledge acquired in HTM 18100 Lodging Management. The class will provide a theoretical perspective on service management and how service management concepts can be applied to the hospitality business. The course will also provide an understanding of revenue management's key concepts and applicability of revenue maximization strategies and their operational aspects, components of effective revenue management will be analyzed and its effects on overall profitability. The course will also review the latest issues and trends affecting all aspects and segments of the lodging industry. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the roles that service plays in the success of a hotel in regards to repeat patronage and overall profitability.
2. Analyze issues related to yield and revenue management and how sales and marketing, front office and reservations departments work together.
3. Identify important security issues in the hotel and related industry, especially as it affects the world situation today.
4. Explain and evaluate issues that hotels face in regard to the environment and community they are located in.
5. Demonstrate creative abilities in analyzing the effectiveness of new hotel concepts.
|
| HTM 38200 - Lodging Service Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Covers aspects of the relationship between guest service departments in a hotel and the housekeeping department in maintaining positive guest relations. Principles and practices along with the functions and responsibilities of departments will be examined as they relate to guest services. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 38300 - Resort, Cruise, And Entertainment Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This class provides a comprehensive analysis of the operations of different styles of resorts, as well as cruise lines, gaming, and other entertainment attractions. Operating structures, systems, and management practices are compared with traditional hotels. The resort development process is explained and alternative resort concepts are discussed, including resort condominium and vacation/interval ownership. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 38500 - Educational Study Cruise |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of the Cruise Line Industry with a focus on hospitality and leisure management, as well as the Cruise industry history and marketing operations. Includes experiential learning multi-day cruise component with land and sea lectures, tours, and exposure to many languages/cultures. Prerequisites: 21 years of age and valid passport. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| HTM 39000 - Undergraduate Special Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 6.00. Individual or group participation in supervised reading, laboratory experiences, field experiences, or research in special areas of the field. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Research
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| HTM 39100 - Specialty Food Service And Catering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration and creative use of specialty foods and unusual cuisine for the hospitality field. Concepts of management for the effective operation of quantity specialty food service organizations within a financial framework involving menu-planning, customer-relations, and production service logistics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| HTM 39200 - Classical Cuisine |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Supervised hands-on cooking experience to enhance competencies needed in professional cooking. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 39300 - Advanced Foodservice Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The purpose of this course is to develop students' understanding of dining room management, give exposure to various service styles, and to extend their knowledge of gastronomy. Students will become familiar with the lines of authority found in various food service settings, and required to master the specifics of different service styles and service etiquette. Course is available as an elective for all students enrolled in Hospitality and Tourism Management. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 39400 - Advanced Service Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The purpose of this course is to provide students the opportunity to obtain greater service experience. Students are exposed to various service styles and event management. The functions range in size from 6 to over 1000 guests, and the level of service differs greatly. Students must be selected to enroll in course. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
|
| HTM 39700 - Directed Honors Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Directed independent honors research for CFS Honors Program students. Students must select a faculty advisor for the course. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| HTM 39800 - International Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Course taken during an international experience that is recognized by the University. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HTM 39900 - Special Topics In HTM |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Various topics that may change from semester to semester are presented by HTM faculty. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HTM 40800 - Hospitality Management Environmental Issues, Opportunities And Challenges |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the student to the global sustainability trends, their impact on the hospitality industry, and responses to and opportunities associated with sustainability. The course attempts to portray a variety of viewpoints regarding issues of contemporary interest to society and the business community, particularly those in the hospitality industry. The current interest in sustainability within the hospitality industry is fueled by the consumers increased awareness and changes in the regulatory environment. These trends seriously influence strategic and operational management decision. Impact consumer behavior and directly affect profitability as well as growth in all sectors of the hospitality industry. A clear understanding of the issues surrounding environmental politics, private industry environmental impacts, and corporate social responsibility will help those in the hospitality industry enhance their reputation, obtain badly needed capital funds, and attract the best and brightest human resources. This is a trend that is not going away and understanding of basics of sustainability and the trends inherent in the industry will assist the student in the student’s career path in the hospitality industry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand what sustainability is and the varied reasons industry has taken or will undertake sustainable projects and to know the impact of the hospitality industry on the environment.
2. Understand the history of environmentalism, of the green movement, governmental regulations, of sustainability and project into the future the potential legal, regulatory, political and economic requirements for the environment and sustainability.
3. Understand the four general areas of sustainability; water, energy, transportation and waste and the options a hospitality entity has to deal with these areas.
4. Understand the various Environmental Systems, strategies, certifications that exist and how these can impact a hospitality entity or event.
5. Understand the marketing implications of a sustainable policy and how to leverage sustainability into a global brand.
6. Understand the economics of sustainability and be able to complete a cost benefit analysis to provide rationale for undertaking sustainability projects.
7. Understand the conflicting needs of different stakeholders with respect to hospitality.
|
| HTM 41000 - Dinner Series, Capstone |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Capstone Food and Beverage operation course where students will utilize managerial skills and techniques such as but not limited to: planning, organizing, directing, and controlling a fine dining experience. In this course students will: develop, manage, market, and operate a fine dining experience that is open to the public. Emphasis is placed on creating an event that is appreciated by guests by utilizing effective management skills to create a high quality, profitable operation with well planned systems and highly motivated, organized employees. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| HTM 41100 - Hospitality And Tourism Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of the fundamental legal framework that governs the conduct of hospitality and tourism managers. Topics include civil rights, contracts, court procedures, ethics, and risk management. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 41900 - Senior Seminar In Hopsitality And Tourism Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The exploration, discussion and presentation of current research concerned with or related to the hospitality and tourism management industry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HTM 42000 - Event Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will review the field of event management, convention and association management. Emphasis will be put on the logistical requirements and economics impact of this area of business as well as on the required skill set needed in the various employment opportunities existing in this field. The course will include a practical application that will involve students in the planning, organizing and execution of an event. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Distinguish the managerial duties and responsibilities involved in event management from a client and providers perspective.
2. Establish the objectives of an event and evaluate sites, services and facilities accordingly.
3. Negotiate with the various service providers involved in execution of an event.
4. Establish budget(s) and develop processes for booking housing, and food and beverage issues efficiently.
5. Evaluate transportation options as well as the logistics involved in moving attendees; setting up and organizing exhibits including aspects such as security, insurance and dealing with unionized workforces.
6. Plan detailed event programs including meeting room setups, amenities, gala events and the selection of guest speakers/attractions.
|
| HTM 43000 - Hospitality Strategic Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The purpose of this course is to understand the use and effects of strategic management at various levels of implementation such as personal, business and political in as far as they can positively affect a person¿s life and business success. To achieve this we will put in practice management skills and knowledge together with personal skills in both practical and reflective situations. This is a dynamic process that will prepare you and develop lifelong learning skills in areas such as formulating and implementing strategic management. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| HTM 44100 - Financial Management For The Hospitality Industry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course deals with subjects and issues facing a hospitality financial manager. The primary purposes of this course are to understand the role of financial management, to learn analytic concepts and managerial tools to make capital investment decisions and to become familiar with major financial instruments and concepts such as time value of money, risk-return, bond and stock valuation, capital budgeting, cost of capital, capital structure and dividend policy. This course also handles hospitality-specific cases and readings for investments, capital structure, and dividends. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 44200 - Fraud Examination For Hospitality Managers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fraud Examination will cover the principles and methodology of fraud detection and deterrence. The course includes such topics as skimming, cash larceny, check tampering, register disbursement schemes, billing schemes, payroll and expense reimbursement schemes, non-cash misappropriations, corruption, accounting principles and fraud, fraudulent financial statements, and interviewing witnesses. The impact of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act 2002 on the Hospitality industry and issues of compliance will be addressed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| HTM 45200 - Professional Development |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. In this course, students will learn about the process of career development and planning, which includes self-assessment, job search strategies, awareness of workplace issues, and decision-making. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Actively engage in vital job searching skills.
2. Identify competencies sought by employers.
3. Become aware of theories regarding career development.
4. Asses personal interests, values, and skills.
5. Realize how personal interests, values, and skills influence career development.
6. Utilize a variety of resources to explore occupational options.
7. Acquire knowledge of current workplace issues and expectations.
8. Recognize decision-making skills for effective career/life planning and management.
|
| HTM 49000 - Independent Study |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Independent study. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Research
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| HTM 49100 - Beverage Management |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Principles and practices regarding the production, selection, purchasing, storage, and service of beverage alcohol in the hospitality industry. State of Indiana responsible alcohol service certification is required to earn course credit. Must be 21 years or older. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the historical role of alcoholic beverages and the beverage operation in our society.
2. Describe and explain the strategies involved in management of a modern day operation selling beverage alcohol including the design and layout of the operation.
3. Identify the components necessary to manage a successful beverage operation, including purchasing and security of beverage alcohol; cost control and pricing strategies; maintaining and controlling inventory.
4. Describe how legal, ethical and social responsibilities impact the management of a beverage alcohol operation.
5. Describe the principles, policies and actions necessary to serve beverage alcohol in a responsible manner.
6. Identify the role of marketing and merchandising in the overall management of a beverage operation.
7. Identify the production methods, types of products, quality determination, merchandising and pairing with food items of fermented, distilled and brewed beverage alcohol.
8. Identify the major global wine producing regions in terms of geography, geology and climate.
|
| HTM 49101 - Sales And Service For Beverage Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles and practices regarding the production, selection, purchasing, storage, marketing and service of alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages in the hospitality industry. Includes lab component for hands-on experience. Students must acquire responsible alcohol service certification to earn course credit. Must be 21 years of age. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will acquire the skills and experience necessary to manage beverage operations in a hospitality setting.
2. Students will acquire the hands-on experience they will need in order to work in the industry, and to successfully complete the program’s capstone course.
|
| HTM 49110 - Wine Sommelier Certification |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course involves the application of previously learned information about the principles of wine including vine growing, wine production, sensory evaluation of wine and practices involved in selection and sales of wine in a foodservice establishment. Students are immersed in the analysis and application of the principles and practices of the Guild of the Master Sommelier Program including Level one Certification. Student must be at least 21 years of age. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the historical role of the wine sommelier and the purpose of the International Guild of the Master Sommelier.
2. Identify the major global wine producing regions in terms of Terroir, wine grape growing and wine making practices and traditions specifying whether the region is an Old World or New World area.
3. Identify wine production methods, quality standards, merchandising and pairing with food items for any given wine product.
4. Identify, describe and apply the Guild of the Master Sommelier Wine Evaluation process to specific wine types.
5. Given a specific wine producing region, identify and describe: the quality control system for that region or area and the wine production factors that are controlled through those regulations; a representative wine for each specific wine producing sub-region and/or district of that region, and specific production steps and wine production terms for the wine produced there.
|
| HTM 49111 - Beverage Operation Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course teaches students the historical background and modern day principles and management practices regarding the production, selection, purchasing, storage and service of beverage alcohol in all aspects of the hospitality industry. Certification in State of Indiana Responsible Service of Alcohol program is required to earn course credit. Students must be at least 21 years of age. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the historical role of alcoholic beverages and the beverage operation in our society.
2. Describe and explain the strategies involved in management of a modern day operation selling beverage alcohol including the design and layout of the operation.
3. Identify the components necessary to manage a successful beverage operation, including purchasing and security of beverage alcohol; cost control and pricing strategies; maintaining and controlling inventory.
4. Identify and describe how legal, ethical and social responsibilities impact the management of a beverage alcohol operation.
5. Identify, describe and apply the principles, policies and actions necessary to serve beverage alcohol in a responsible manner.
6. Identify the role of marketing and merchandising in the overall management of a beverage operation.
|
| HTM 49112 - Management And Service Of Beverage Alcohol |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course introduces the principles and practices regarding the production, and service of beverage alcohol in the hospitality industry. Structured tastings will be utilized to identify and describe specific factors necessary to serve specific spirits, wines and beers in the hospitality industry. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and describe the categories of beverage alcohol including spirits, wine, beer and ale including the factors involved in the fermentation and distillation of beverage alcohol.
2. Through structured tastings, identify and describe the specific factors that make up and customer appeal of specific distilled beverage alcohol, including Scotch, Bourbon and Cognac.
3. Identify and describe the market impact of the major global wine producing regions in terms of geography, geology and climate.
4. Identify the key wine producing grape varietals, production standards and terms and the criteria for producing quality wines.
5. Identify and describe the major growing regions, production methods, and characteristics of a given wine from either an Old World or New World wine producing country.
6. Through structured tastings, identify and describe how each sense is used to evaluate a wine.
7. Through structured tastings, deduce and describe the predominant sensory characteristics of specific New and Old World wines.
8. Through structured tastings, describe the production of beer and ale including types of ingredients, styles and products produced for the Hospitality Industry.
9. Identify the merchandising and pairing with food items of fermented, distilled and brewed beverage alcohol.
|
| HTM 49200 - Advanced Foodservice Management |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Utilize managerial skills and techniques with planning, organizing, directing and controlling a full service restaurant operation. Management teams of two to three students develop, market, and operate a restaurant that is open to the public. Emphasis is placed on utilizing effective management skills to create a high quality, profitable operation with well planned systems and highly motivated, organized employees. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and apply the principles of idea generation and brainstorming in the development of a restaurant concept; demonstrate the ability to design a menu and marketing campaign responsive to the economic and aesthetic requirements of the concept.
2. Demonstrate the ability to forecast production schedules and staffing needs; explain and demonstrate the ability to work cohesively in a team environment, and demonstrate an appropriate level of professional supervision of a restaurant concept.
3. Apply principles of production flow and timing; demonstrate facility and equipment operation and maintenance and demonstrate competency in utilizing a POS system in the current restaurant concept.
4. Apply principles of purchasing and selection of materials; product storage and rotation and service quality appropriate to the current restaurant concept.
5. Demonstrate the ability to analyze and effectively decrease food costs and increase contribution margins to the current restaurant concept.
6. Identify and apply principles of safety and sanitation (in accordance with Indiana law), and principles of quality food production and wine service to the current restaurant concept.
7. Describe and apply an appropriate ethical standard of conduct in dealings with customers, staff, fellow students and instructors in all parts of the lab and classroom experience.
|
| HTM 49700 - Honors Research Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. The completion of the independent honors research project for CFS Honors Program students. Must have an approved Honors Project Proposal. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 49900 - Feasibility Studies And Business Development In Hospitality And Tourism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of business development. The course will cover all stages in the feasibility and development process. Emphasis will be on strategic planning, design of systems, models and problem analysis, leading to the opening of a successful hospitality or tourism business. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 50100 - Research Methods In Hospitality And Tourism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to behavioral and economic research design, and the development of research proposals. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 50101 - Statistical Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to the use of software used in behavioral research projects. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 50200 - Management Information Systems For The Hospitality Industry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis and design of management information systems for hotels, restaurants, and the travel industry. Topics include cost and value information, data management, local area and wide area networks, implementation of system and impact of information systems on hospitality organizations. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 52200 - Foodservice Equipment And Facility Design |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Development of efficient work spaces for hospitality operations. Topics include the principles of selection, operation, and maintenance of foodservice equipment; the application of human factors, ergonomics, environmental concerns in the development of work-flow patterns; and the use of computer-aided design (CAD) to prepare facility drawings. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 53100 - Hospitality And Tourism Marketing II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of the multidimensional marketing functions common to complex hospitality organizations. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 54100 - Advanced Hospitality Accounting And Finance Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Specialized accounting and finance systems as related to the hospitality industries. Applications of budgeting and pricing models, performance evaluations and incentives systems, and short-term asset management are discussed, as well as other current subjects. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 57100 - Economics Of Travel And Tourism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course includes the asset theory of tourism, cost-benefit analysis, tax policy impacts, and other economic and statistical aspects of tourism. The course will examine research designed to determine economic impacts of the hospitality and tourism industries. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 58100 - Advanced Hotel Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of current service management theories as they apply to hotel management. Theory topics include strategic planning, hotel organization and communication, organizational leadership, and control systems. Topics will be discussed from the viewpoint of the hotel's general manager. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 59000 - Problems In Hospitality And Tourism |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Individual study in advanced subject areas. A course plan must be submitted to the supervising professor. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HTM 59100 - Research Issues In Food Service Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course will focus on research issues related to the food service industry and their short- and long-term implications. Topics will include essential issues in food safety, product development, food service consumer interests, food production, and waste management. Exposure to quantity food production and purchasing. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 60200 - Research Topics And Methods Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Examination of current research in hospitality and tourism. Focuses on industry research needs and appropriate methodologies. Open to graduate students and honors undergraduates. Required for doctoral students. Prerequisite: HTM 50100, STAT 50100, 50200. Typically offered Spring Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| HTM 61200 - HTM Management Challenge Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course designed to discuss specific management problems in the hospitality and tourism industries. Through the use of case studies, students study current challenges, management analysis, the process of decision making, and the impacts of corporate decisions. Prerequisite: basic management organization class. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 63100 - Strategic Marketing in Hospitality And Tourism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Evaluates the role of marketing strategy within overall corporate strategic planning. Segmentation theory, brand segmentation, niche marketing, program life cycles, and positioning approaches are discussed. Emerging concepts, such as visioning, relationship marketing, strategic alliances, and database marketing are studied. Prerequisite: HTM 53100. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 64200 - Advanced Personnel Systems in Restraurants, Hotels, and Institutions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of the philosophical and operational alternatives related to establishing and directing human resource systems in complex restaurant, hotel, and institutional organizations. Prerequisite: HTM 34100, 41100; 6 credit hours at the upper division undergraduate level in Business, Management, Marketing. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 68100 - Seminar In Hotel Management Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of hotel industry research based on current policy issues. Prerequisite: HTM 58100. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| HTM 69000 - Hospitality And Tourism Research Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Development of an individual research project for doctoral students. Projects are designed to broaden understanding of specific research techniques or to add to subject matter knowledge necessary for completion of the doctoral thesis. A paper worthy of submission to a refereed journal is expected upon project completion. Prerequisite: Doctoral student standing. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| HTM 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HTM 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: School of Hosp & Tourism Mgmt
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| HUBI B1010 - The Human Organism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Integrated study of human physiology, metabolism, genetics, evolution, environment, behavior, and culture examined through cases and collaborative learning to emphasize the scientific method and uncertainty as fundamental to scientific inquiry and discovery. Content will align with the expertise of faculty, student learning interests, and complex problems facing a global society. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HUBI B1020 - Seminar In Human Organisms |
|
Credit hours: 1.00. Interdisciplinary, interactive and community-building seminar promoting student-guided exploration of questions uncovered in B1010. Students will deepen their understanding through written and oral work and projects. They will develop an e-portfolio to document and reflect upon their learning and personal growth. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| HUMA U1010 - Introduction to Humanities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the development of the humanities to the Renaissance, with an emphasis on the relationship between ideas and the arts.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HUMA U1020 - Introduction To Modern Humanities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the approach to attending live performances including opera, symphony, theatre, and dance. Topics include protocol and traditions of the audience, criteria for critical listening, and discrimination of basic elements of performance. Students will attend live performances and engage in discussions of performances by genre, and develop critical listening skills.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| HUMA U1030 - Introduction To Creative Arts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An interdisciplinary course that brings together music, art, dance, theatre, cinema, and storytelling into a cohesive, comprehensive, and thematic study of the interrelationships of the fine arts.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| IDE 20000 - Sophomore Seminar |
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Credit Hours: 0.00. IDE operations: design of plans of study, mechanics of approval, co-op program preregistrations; selected topics on related fields of study, employment, engineering registration, and professional development. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Interdisciplnry Engr
Department: Interdis Engineering Programs
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| IDE 29000 - Professional Internship |
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Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Interdisciplinary Engineering. Internship experience intended to complement academic coursework and help prepare for a career as a practicing engineer. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Interdisciplnry Engr
Department: Interdis Engineering Programs
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| IDE 29100 - Industrial Practice I |
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Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and comprehensive written reports of this practice. Must be accepted for the program by the cooperative program coordinator. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Interdisciplnry Engr
Department: Interdis Engineering Programs
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| IDE 29200 - Industrial Practice II |
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Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and comprehensive written reports of this practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Interdisciplnry Engr
Department: Interdis Engineering Programs
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| IDE 30000 - Junior Seminar |
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Credit Hours: 0.00. Continuation of IDE 200. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Interdisciplnry Engr
Department: Interdis Engineering Programs
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| IDE 30100 - Professional Preparation In Interdiciplinary Engineering |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Seminar covering topics required for professional preparation of engineers including functioning in teams, communication, ethics, global and societal impacts, how people learn, and contemporary issues impacting and impacted by engineering. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Interdisciplnry Engr
Department: Interdis Engineering Programs
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| IDE 39300 - Industrial Practice III |
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Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and comprehensive written reports of this practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Interdisciplnry Engr
Department: Interdis Engineering Programs
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| IDE 39400 - Industrial Practice IV |
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Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and comprehensive written reports of this practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Interdisciplnry Engr
Department: Interdis Engineering Programs
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| IDE 39500 - Industrial Practice V |
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Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and comprehensive written reports of this practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Interdisciplnry Engr
Department: Interdis Engineering Programs
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| IDE 40000 - Senior Seminar |
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Credit Hours: 0.00. Employment opportunities, graduate study, continuing education, professional societies, and engineering registration. Required of all IDE seniors. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Interdisciplnry Engr
Department: Interdis Engineering Programs
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| IDE 48500 - Interdisciplinary Engineering Design |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Capstone design experience for interdisciplinary engineering students. Physical system or process system design projects, related to contemporary or potential problems involving interdisciplinary teams of engineers. Use of patent literature. Creativity methods. Analysis of design alternatives using case studies, economics and optimization. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Interdisciplnry Engr
Department: Interdis Engineering Programs
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| IDE 48700 - Multidisciplinary Engineering Senior Professional Design Seminar |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Senior professional design seminar covers and assesse students in Multidisciplinary Engineering professional outcomes including, teamwork, professional and ethical responsibility, communication, impact of engineering in context, lifelong learning, impact of contemporary issues, and leadership. Presentation of student’s designs. Methods to obtain a professional position after graduation. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Interdisciplnry Engr
Department: Interdis Engineering Programs
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to function on multidisciplinary teams.
2. An understanding of professional and ethical responsibility and actions that are congruent with this understanding.
3. An ability to communicate effectively by speaking and writing.
4. The broad education necessary to understand the impact of engineering solutions in a global, economic, environmental, and societal context.
5. An understanding of how one learns and recognition of the need for lifelong learning.
6. A knowledge of how contemporary issues affect engineering and how engineering can impact these issues.
7. An understanding of the principles, applications and importance of leadership.
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| IDE 49500 - Special Topics In Interdisciplinary Engineering |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Primarily designed for interdisciplinary engineering subject areas for which there is no specific course offered, but for which there is sufficient student interest to justify teaching a specialized course on a trial basis. May be repeated for credit as long as the topic being taught is not repeated. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Interdisciplnry Engr
Department: Interdis Engineering Programs
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| IDIS 10000 - Freshman Honors Seminar |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A discussion class with limited enrollment. Topics vary and are usually focused on contemporary topics. Typical titles might be "Creative Problem Solving", "Language as Culture", or "Death and Dying". Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| IDIS 10001 - Undergraduate Interdisciplinary Research |
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Credit Hours: 0.00. Applied Experiential research opportunity in student’s major field and one other discipline, guided by a classroom instructor. Research opportunity requiring 15 hours more or less of experiential research activity during the semester. Must be taken with a four credit course in the major requiring a research paper or research project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| IDIS 10100 - Perspectives Contemporary Issues |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Perspectives Contemporary Issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: General Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| IDIS 10600 - Introduction To Gender Studies |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An interdisciplinary course introducing students to the study of gender as a category for social and cultural analysis. Examines how ideas about sexual and gender differences have shaped experiences in a global society. Explores construction of gender roles and sexuality; biological arguments about gender and sexuality; the interplay of gender with sexuality, class, race/ethnicity, and nationality; the ways gender shapes families, workplaces, and other institutions. Assists students in learning about theories of gender and methods of analysis in order to formulate questions about gender as it relates to their on-going work in various disciplines across the curriculum. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the differences between sex and gender.
2. Understand the construction of gender as it relates to definitions of femininity and masculinity in various cultures and to expressions of sexuality.
3. Describe the ways gender shapes the lives of men and women in a patriarchal society.
4. Articulate how gender structures social institutions (families, workplaces, schools, religious institutions).
5. Explain how gender as a category of analysis interacts with race-ethnicity, nationality, religion, sexuality, class caste.
6. Use theories and feminist analysis to examine key gender issues.
7. Understand and be able to explain the varieties of sexual orientations and matters essential to lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender/transsexual identities.
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| IDIS 11000 - Freshman Success Course |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Freshman success course is designed to increase the success of freshmen by assisting them with the skills necessary to reach their educational goals. Topics in this course include: academic concerns (academic major information, learning skills, study skills, time management) and personal social concerns (interpersonal relationship skills, communication skills, setting goals). Credit for only one of: IDIS 11000, G1020, G1030, G1040. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture 1, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: General Studies
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
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| IDIS 11100 - International Student Success |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is an introduction to the student experience at IPFW, the rules and regulations for F-1 immigration status for international students, and the cultural values of our campus community, local community, and American society. The course is intended for incoming international students. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| IDIS 11500 - Career Beginnings |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Eight-week course designed for the undecided student entering IPFW who wants to begin career exploration. Includes strategies to confirm major choice through topics such as decision making, goal setting, self-assessment, major information, career information, and employment trends. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| IDIS 15001 - Basic Experiential Undergraduate Research |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Applied Experiential research opportunity in student’s major field and one other discipline, directed by a tenure-track faculty member. Requires Level 1 research project presented in at least a classroom environment and requiring 15 hours of individual experiential research during the semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
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| IDIS 19900 - Freshman Learning Community |
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Credit Hours: 0.00. Conglomerate course used for registration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| IDIS 20000 - Interdeptmental Colloquium |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A more advanced seminar but similar to IDIS 10000 with limited enrollment. Typical titles might be "Lectures on the History of Science", "1984 and Beyond," or "War Crimes and Individual Responsibility". Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| IDIS 23500 - Introduction To Great Issues |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Gateway course for Bachelor of Liberal Studies students: to be completed in the first year of a BLS plan of study. Examines fundamental issues facing humanity as a measure to develop cognitive and communication skills. The course is tied thematically and substantively to the two BLS capstone courses: IDIS 43500 and IDIS 43600. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| IDIS 25001 - Intermediate Experiential Undergraduate Research |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Applied Experiential research opportunity in student’s major field and one other discipline, directed by a tenure-track faculty member. Requires Level 2 research project presented in a School-wide or University-wide forum and requiring 30 hours of individual experiential research during the semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
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| IDIS 26000 - Underclass Seminar In Science And Society |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Seminar for majors in the curriculum in science and culture and others. The seminar will approach special problems in the area. Choice of problem areas will determine structure of the seminar. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| IDIS 27000 - African American Experience |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Dimensions of the African American experience, including history, education, politics, psychology, economics, religion, social organization, and art will be covered. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| IDIS 27200 - Introduction To Latin American Society And Culture |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of topics on antiquity, culture, geography, economics, ecology, national histories, ethnic identities, literature, and politics of Latin American countries. Lectures and readings primarily in English; however, students may request Spanish-language readings. Typically offered Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| IDIS 28000 - Women's Studies: An Introduction |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory survey of the concepts and research data in the new scholarship on women. Topics covered include biology, sexuality, socialization, family and work, creativity, and politics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| IDIS 29000 - Interdisciplinary Topics |
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Credit Hours: 0.00 to 6.00. Course topics and patterns will vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| IDIS 29900 - Honors Tutorial |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Honors tutorials are individually arranged programs of directed reading and research. A student who wishes to engage in intensive study growing out of an undergraduate seminar or to pursue a clearly defined research interest may enroll under HON 299 for 1-3 hours under the tutelage of a faculty sponsor. Applications for a tutorial, accompanied by the recommendations of the prospective faculty tutor, should be submitted to the Honors Committee for approval prior to semester in which the project is to be undertaken. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| IDIS 30000 - Interdepartmental Colloquium |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Advanced interdisciplinary seminar on contemporary topics. Topics Varies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| IDIS 33000 - Introduction To Jewish Studies |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An interdisciplinary course touching on the full range of Jewish experience from antiquity to the present. Several members of the Jewish Studies faculty and guest lecturers participate, representing such fields as anthropology, history, language, literature, philosophy, politics, religion, and sociology. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| IDIS 35001 - Advanced Experiential Undergraduate Research |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Applied Experiential research opportunity in student’s major field and one other discipline, directed by a tenure-track faculty member. Requires Level 3 research project presented in a Regional or State-wide conference setting or professional meeting or a submitted/published paper (refereed journal) and requiring 45 hours of individual experiential research during the semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
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| IDIS 38000 - Gender And Multiculturalism |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course expands students' understanding of gender issues by exploring the multicultural diversity of women's lives. It examines how race, class, sexuality, and culture interact and shape society and ecology in the United States and in a global context. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| IDIS 39900 - Honors Independent Study |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Open to juniors and who wish to pursue independent reading or research.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| IDIS 43500 - Great Issues I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A consideration of major issues affecting humankind from the perspective of our total experience, with an emphasis on the historical unfolding of those issues and great thinkers' answers to them. Focus includes discussions of moral decision-making, political systems, aesthetics, religion and spirituality, our use of symbols, and the character of human nature.
Open to Bachelor of Liberal Studies students with Junior or Senior standing only. Typically offered Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| IDIS 43600 - Great Issues II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of IDIS 43500, examining the further development, in a historical framework, of those issues considered enduring and important. Focus on the development of the diversity of ideas and perspectives in the modern era, including questions of political organization, religion and spirituality, the evolution of science, ethics and modernity, the exercise of power, and the uses of rationality.
Open to Bachelor of Liberal Studies students with Senior standing only. Typically offered Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| IDIS 45001 - Undergraduate/Graduate Experiential Undergraduate Research |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. Applied Experiential research opportunity in student’s major field and one other discipline, directed by a tenure-track faculty member. Requires Level 4 research project presented at a National Conference or Professional Meeting or a submitted/published paper (refereed journal) and requiring more than 45 hours of individual or more than 90 hours of paired students’ experiential research during the semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
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| IDIS 48200 - Interdisciplinary Studies In Sexuality: Scholarship On Lesbian And Gay Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course offers an interdisciplinary introduction to recent work in lesbian and gay studies in various fields, including literature, history, film, cultural theory, medicine, law, and studies of sexuality. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| IDIS 48400 - Ethnic Nationalism In The Modern World |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Questions of ethnic/national identity have been central to the development of the modern world. In this course, students will gain an understanding of the conceptual framework of theories of ethnicity and nationality, how these concepts change over time, and the influence of ethnicity on the development of national character, inter-group relations, international politics, the migration of peoples, and the dynamics of cultural variation in the modern world. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the changing historical concepts of nationality, ethnicity and race.
2. Understand the role played by nationality, ethnicity and race in the development of history and culture of the modern world.
3. Apply the concepts of nationality, ethnicity and race to real world situations.
4. Analyze literature, film and are in the context of concepts of nationality, ethnicity and race.
5. Compare the historical, literary and artistic experiences of different nations and regions in the context of nationality, ethnicity and race.
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| IDIS 49000 - Directed Reading in Interdisciplinary Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Reading under the direction of the instructor in a particular field of study. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: General Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| IDIS 49100 - Special Topics In Interdisciplinary Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Special topics or projects under the direction of the instructor in a particular field of specialization. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: General Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| IDIS 59000 - Directed Reading In Interdisciplinary Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Reading under the direction of the instructor in a particular field of study. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: General Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| IDIS 59100 - Selected Topics In Interdisciplinary Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of selected topics, taught by an instructor in whose particular field of specialization the content of the course falls. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: General Studies
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| IDIS G1020 - Physical And Natural World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to scientific study of the physical and natural world. Interdisciplinary approach integrating mastery of subject-matter content with improvement of learning strategies, critical thinking, and problem solving. Meets criteria of IPFW General Education Area II. Topic varies. Credit for only one of: IDIS 110, G102, G103, G104. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| IDIS G1030 - Freshman Seminar: The Individual, Culture, And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to study of the nature and diversity of individuals, cultures, and societies. Interdisciplinary approach integrating mastery of subject-matter content with improvement of learning strategies, critical thinking, and problem solving. Meets criteria of IPFW General Education Area III. Topic varies. Credit for only one of: IDIS 11000, G1020, G1030, G1040. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| IDIS G1040 - Freshman Seminar: Humanitistic Thought |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to major questions, traditions, and tools of humanistic inquiry. Interdisciplinary approach integrating mastery of subject-matter content with improvement of learning strategies, critical thinking, and problem solving. Meets criteria of IPFW General Education Area IV. Topic varies. Credit for only one of: IDIS 11000, G1020, G1030, G1040. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| IDIS G1050 - Odyssey: Your Journey To Success |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Introduction to critical academic and life skills necessary for success in college and career. As students are introduced to the university environment and learn about financing their education, self-management, leadership, motivation, confidence, communication and collaboration skills. Through introspection, students focus on who they are, where they want to go, and who is responsible for getting them there. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| IE 20000 - Industrial Engineering Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. An orientation course to inform students of the major options in the industrial engineering program, assistance in selection of appropriate electives to meet career objectives, introduction to the faculty, and selection of an academic advisor. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 23000 - Probability And Statistics In Engineering I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to probability and statistics. Probability and probability distributions. Mathematical expectation. Functions of random variables. Estimation. Applications oriented to engineering problems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 29199 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional practice with qualified employers in industry, government, or small business and a comprehensive written report of this practice. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 29299 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional practice with qualified employers in industry, government, or small business and a comprehensive written report of this practice. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 30000 - Honors Program Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. An orientation course intended for juniors who have demonstrated exceptional academic ability and desire to conduct meaningful independent research or solve unique engineering design projects during their senior year of study. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 33000 - Probability And Statistics In Engineering II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of IE 23000. Introduction to statistical inference and experimental design. Correlation, regression, single and multi-factor ANOVA, non-parametric methods. Applications to statistical quality control. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn use of statistical software packages (e.g. Minitab).
2. Learn parametric statistical tests (e.g. t-test, ANOVA).
3. Learn non-parametric statistical tests.
4. Learn design of experiments (e.g. factorial).
5. Learn how to implement statistical process controls.
|
| IE 33200 - Computing In Industrial Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to computing in industrial engineering. Reinforcement of scientific programming skills on typical IE tasks, together with introduction to simulation and related computer tools. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 33500 - Operations Research - Optimization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to deterministic optimization modeling and algorithms in operations research. Emphasis on formulation and solution of linear programs, networks flows, and integer programs. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 33600 - Operations Research - Stochastic Models |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to probablistic models in operations research. Emphasis on Markov chains, Poisson processes, and their application to queueing systems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 34300 - Engineering Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Cost measurement and control in engineering studies. Basic accounting concepts, income measurement, and valuation problems. Manufacturing cost control and standard cost systems. Capital investment, engineering alternatives, and equipment replacement studies. Not open to students with credit in C E 394. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn how to evaluate the financial worth of an engineered project.
2. Learn how to choose between multiple engineering projects.
3. Learn how economic concepts affect cash flows associated with projects.
|
| IE 35600 - Human Factors Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Engineering design and analysis of man-machine systems. Study of man's input, output, and processing subsystems. Measurement of human factors. Environmental and task considerations in the design and performance of total systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
|
| IE 37000 - Manufacturing Processes I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principal manufacturing processes; metal cutting, grinding and metal forming operations, machine tools, and tools and tooling. Nontraditional machining and welding. Introduction to computer-aided manufacturing and computer-aided graphics and design, N/C programming, robots, and flexible manufacturing systems. Classroom and laboratory demonstrations included. Not open to students with credit in ME 36300. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 38199 - Professional Practice Co-Op I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional practice with qualified employers in industry, government, or small business and a comprehensive written report of this practice. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 38299 - Professional practice Co-Op II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional practice with qualified employers in industry, government, or small business and a comprehensive written report of this practice. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 38300 - Integrated Production Systems I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic concepts in the design and operational control of integrated production systems. Includes topics on facility layout and material handling, material flow and information flow, resource and capacity planning, and shop floor control and scheduling. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 38399 - Professional Practice Co-Op III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional practice with qualified employers in industry, government, or small business and a comprehensive written report of this practice. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 38600 - Work Analysis And Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of work methods and measurement. Applications of engineering, psychological, and physiological principles to the analysis and design of human work systems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 39399 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional practice with qualified employers in industry, government, or small business and a comprehensive written report of this practice. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 39499 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional practice with qualified employers in industry, government, or small business and a comprehensive written report of this practice. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 39599 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional practice with qualified employers in industry, government, or small business and a comprehensive written report of this practice. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 39699 - Professional Practice Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business and a comprehensive written report of this practice. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| IE 43100 - Industrial Engineering Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Capstone design experience for industrial engineering students involving analysis and synthesis of unstructured problems in practical settings. Students work in teams to formulate issues, propose solutions, and communicate results in formal written and oral presentations. Prerequisite: all 30000-level industrial engineering courses required for the BS IE degree. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 47000 - Manufacturing Processes II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The interrelations of materials, processes, and design with various aspects of manufacturing. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 47400 - Industrial Control Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to automatic controls with reference to automation of industrial machines and processes, including linear dynamic systems, feedback control, and elements of systems analysis. Introduction to digital control. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 48400 - Integrated Production Systems II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Extensions of topics on the design and operational control of integrated production systems. Includes production databases, facility layout, material handling, advanced control and scheduling, and physical distribution. Case studies, lab assignments, and projects. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 48600 - Work Analysis And Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of IE 38600. Applications of engineering, computer sciences, information sciences, and psychological principles and methods to the analysis and design of human work systems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 49000 - Special Topics In Industrial Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Special topic courses and projects of contemporary importance or of special interest that are outside the scope of the standard undergraduate curriculum. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| IE 49500 - Industrial Practices Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Solution of industrial engineering problems, with particular emphasis on current industrial experience obtained through the cooperative engineering education program. For cooperative program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| IE 49600 - Professional Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Industrial Engineering. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit a summary report. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| IE 49900 - Research In Industrial Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Individual research projects for students with honors standing, or other students with the approval of their advisors. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| IE 53000 - Quality Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles and practices of statistical quality control in industry. Control charts for measurements and for attributes. Acceptance sampling by attributes and by measurements. Standard sampling plans. Sequential analysis. Sampling inspection of continuous production. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| IE 53200 - Reliability |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reliability of components and multi-component systems. Application of quantitative methods to the design and evaluation of engineering and industrial systems and processes for assuring reliability of performance. Economic and manufacturing control activities related to product engineering aspects of reliability. Principles of maintainability. Product failure and legal liability. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| IE 53300 - Industrial Applications Of Statistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The application of statistics to the effective design and analysis of industrial studies relating to manufacturing and human factors engineering in order to optimize the utilization of equipment and resources. Emphasis on conducting these studies at the least cost. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| IE 53500 - Linear Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Optimization of linear objective functions subject to linear constraints. Development of theory and algorithmic strategies for solving linear programming problems. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| IE 53600 - Stochastic Models In Operations Research I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to techniques for modeling random processes used in operations research. Markov chains, continuous time Markov processes, Markovian queues, reliability and inventory models. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| IE 53700 - Discrete Optimization Models And Algorithms |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to classic models and algorithms for discrete optimization. Basic theory and computational strategies for exact and heuristic solution of integer, combinational, and network problems in the context of classic models. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 53800 - Nonlinear Optimization Algorithms And Models |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of computational tools for solving constrained and unconstrained nonlinear optimization problems. Emphasis on algorithmic strategies and characteristic structures of nonlinear problems. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 54500 - Engineering Economic Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of engineering costs and capital investments. Applications of classical optimization, mathematical programming, and the theory of production to the analysis of investment proposals. Evaluation and selection of individual projects and formulation of capital investment programs. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| IE 54600 - Economic Decisions In Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics in decision making and rationality including decision analysis, decision making under uncertainty, and various descriptive and prescriptive models from operations research, economics, psychology, and business. Applications are drawn from engineering decision making, public policy, and personal decision making. Attention also is paid to designing aids to improve decision making. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
|
| IE 55600 - Job Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (PSY 55600) Task analysis, personnel selection and training, job and organization design, and criteria development and use. Human factors related to job design in order to increase job satisfaction and productivity. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 55800 - Safety Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of human factors and engineering practice in accident prevention and the reduction of health hazards are presented. The objective of this course is to provide an understanding of the safety and health practices which fall within the responsibilities of the engineer in industry. Special attention is devoted to the detection and correction of hazards and to contemporary laws and enforcement on occupational safety and health. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| IE 55900 - Cognitive Engineering Of Interactive Software |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (PSY 55500) Theory and applications of software design to improve productivity and job satisfaction on information processing and cognitive tasks in the work place. Human information processing models and cognitive theories will be used to provide a theoretical basis for how to choose and display information to the user. Other topics include user-friendly displays and empirical approaches to software design. Applications of the design theory are stressed by class projects. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 56600 - Production Management Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Background and development of production management, plus current concepts and controls applicable to production management functions. Not open to Industrial Enginering students with a minor in management. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 57000 - Manufacturing Process Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theories and applications of materials forming and removal processes in manufacturing, including product properties, process capabilities, processing equipment design, and economics. A systems approach to all aspects of manufacturing process engineering. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| IE 57400 - Industrial Robotics And Flexible Assembly |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Lab by arrangement. Design, analysis, and operation of robotic systems. System components and their control. Languages for robot control. Application design and analysis. Part feeders and tooling for robot workstations and automated assembly. Methods for planning robotic and assembly applications. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| IE 57700 - Human Factors In Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (PSY 57700) Survey of human factors in engineering with particular reference to human functions in human-machine systems, and consideration of human abilities and limitations in relation to design of equipment and work environments. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| IE 57900 - Design And Control Of Production And Manufacturing Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design and control of discrete part manufacturing systems in contemporary production environments, with emphasis on flexible, demand-driven, product-based manufacturing. Currently used planning and control methodologies, such as MRP, OPT, and JIT are reviewed and integrated with appropriate facility design methodologies, including cellular design algorithms. Introduction to Computer Integrated Manufacturing (CIM) architecture and reference models and relevant control procedures, including basis approaches to appropriate data management methodologies. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| IE 58000 - Systems Simulation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Philosophy and elements of digital simulation language. Practical application of simulation to diverse systems. Computer simulation exercises and applications are required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| IE 58100 - Simulation Design And Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to simulation of stochastic systems on digital computers. Emphasis is on the fundamentals of simulation as a statistical experiment. Topics include uniform random numbers, input modeling, random variate generation, output analysis, variance reduction, and optimization. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 58200 - Advanced Facilities Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the theoretical and applied aspects of manufacturing systems layout. Emphasis on contemporary manufacturing, including the layout of cellular systems, automated material handling systems, and storage systems. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| IE 58300 - Design And Evaluation Of Material Handling Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis for design and evaluation of material handling systems with emphasis on material flow control and storage. Analytic models and simulation used. Economic justification models for material handling systems. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| IE 58800 - e-Work And e-Service |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. e-Work is defined as the collaborative, computer-and-communication-supported work in highly distributed organizations of humans/robots/autonomous systems. This course is devoted to learning the basic principles, theories, and applications for the design of effective e-Work and e-Service systems. Relevant discoveries at Purdue and elsewhere are also presented. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand fully the theory and design principles of collaborative e-Work and e-Service systems.
2. Model correctly workflow, protocols and agents for e-Work and e-Service systems.
3. Design, specify, evaluate and optimize e-Work and e-Service applications correctly.
4. Discuss benefits, limitations, and emerging trends of e-Work and e-Service systems critically and correctly.
|
| IE 59000 - Topics In Industrial Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Selected topics in industrial engineering for seniors and graduate students. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| IE 63000 - Multiple Objective Optimization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and applications of multiple objective optimization and multiple criteria decision making. Existence and specification of single and multiple attributive value and utility functions. Risk aversion. Characterization and generation of efficient (Pareto optimal) solutions to vector optimization problems. Domination cones. Interactive algorithms. Prerequisite: IE 53500. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 63200 - Scheduling Models |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development and discussion of mathematical and simulation models for scheduling and sequencing the flow of jobs or activities in manufacturing environments. Techniques include dynamic programming, branch and bound, linear and integer programming, heuristics and stochastic network simulation. Prerequisite: IE 57900; IE 53500 or 53700. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| IE 63300 - Dynamic Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and applications of finite and infinite stage sequential decision processes, including Markovian decision problems, efficient computational methods, and computer software package. Prerequisite: IE 53500, 53600. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 63400 - Integer Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced course on theory and algorithms for integer and mixed integer optimization problems. Convergence of integer programming algorithms, dual relaxations, Benders decomposition, cutting plane theory, group theory of integer programs, and linear diophantine equations. Prerequisite: IE 53500, 53700. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 63500 - Theoretical Foundations Of Optimization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced course in theoretical foundations of mathematical programming. Convex analysis, global and local duality and optimality, general algorithmic convergence. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: IE 53500. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 63900 - Combinatorial Optimization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced course in combinatorial optimization. Emphasis on the theory and strategies of combinatorial algorithms including complexity theory, advance issues in network flows, matching, matroids, and combinatorial polyhedra. Prerequisite: IE 53500. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 64600 - Advanced Decision Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced course on the theory and models of decision making and rationality. Material includes advanced topics in decision analysis, models of probabilistic reasoning, decision making in competitive situations, and models of human and computer reasoning (including artificial intelligence). Prerequisite: IE 54600. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 65600 - Research Seminar In Human Factors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An in-depth study of topics of special interest in human factors. A variable title course where topics change from semester to semester. Possible topics include cognitive engineering in expert systems, human resource management, skills acquisition and retention, knowledge elicitation, and knowledge representation. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| IE 65900 - Human Aspects In Computing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced topics in ergonomic, cognitive, and social aspects of using computerized systems are discussed with regard to comfort and user satisfaction, ease and productive use of computerized systems, and effective implementation of computerized technologies in the workplace. Prerequisite: IE 55900. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IE 67000 - Advanced Topics In Manufacturing Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced research topics and approaches in manufacturing engineering, including processes and equipment. Research methodology, nontraditional processes, manufacturing systems, and competitive aspects of manufacturing. Prerequisite: IE 57000. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| IE 67400 - Computer And Communication Methods For Production Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of the theoretical foundation and relevance of advanced computer and communication methods in the planning and control of intelligent production operations; manufacturing operating systems; synchronization in decentralized systems; recovery in decentralized systems; parallel processing; distributed databases; factory networks; reasoning and logic for production control. Prerequisite: IE 57400 or 57500 or 57900. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
|
| IE 69000 - Advanced Topics In Industrial Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Advanced study in various fields of industrial engineering for graduate students. Credits and hours to be arranged. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| IE 69600 - Graduate Professional Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and comprehensive written reports of this practice. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Practicum
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| IE 69700 - Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Industrial engineering problems with particular emphasis on current research. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| IE 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| IE 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
Department: Industrial Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| IET 10400 - Industrial Organization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A detailed survey of organizational structures, operational, financial, marketing, and accounting activities; duties of management, planning, control, personnel, safety, wages, policy, and human factors necessary for effective management. Not open to students taking, or with credit in, IE 36600. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| IET 10500 - Industrial Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of industrial engineering technology including manufacturing organization and quality production. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| IET 10600 - Principles Of Ergonomics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for students interested in the areas of engineering technology, industrial/operations management, and occupational health. An understanding of how to prevent musculoskeletal disorders and improve manual working conditions will be gained through the use of applicable real life exercises and exploration of research in various industries. This course will cover a general study of the musculoskeletal system as well as guidelines for lifting, reaching, seated work, machine work, hand tools and vibration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Define the term ergonomics and list the basic objectives of ergonomics.
2. Explain the history of ergonomics and how it has been applied in different types of work environments.
3. List and identify governmental agencies responsible for gathering and disseminating usable data and legal regulations associated with ergonomics in work environments.
4. Apply anthropometric data in the design of work environments.
5. Explain the basic concepts of the musculoskeletal system and its supporting systems.
6. Solve basic biomechanical equations used when considering loads on the human body for design of work environments.
7. Classify and evaluate manual work which includes solving equations designed to determine manual material handling limits.
|
| IET 15000 - Quantitative Methods For Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of statistical techniques to typical problems in technology. Topics include data collection, descriptive statistics calculation, hypothesis testing, sampling, continuous and discrete distribution, probability, ANOVA, and related topics. The course also introduces the use of spreadsheet and other software to solve statistical calculations. Introduction to SPC is included. Basic metrology, concepts of gage and meter calibration calculations, instrument linearity, repeatability, reproducibility, sensitivity, precision, and instrument control are included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| IET 19800 - Industrial Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Practice in industry for co-op students, with written reports of this practice.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| IET 20200 - Principles Of Industrial Robotics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Applications of robotic principles with emphasis on the evaluation, selection and installation of robotic technology in manufacturing systems.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| IET 20400 - Maintaining Quality |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of the basic principles of quality control. Includes an overall view of quality control from an engineering and manufacturing perspective. Includes the statistical aspects of tolerance, concepts of variation and control charting. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| IET 20500 - Applied Statistics For Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to Engineering Technology applications of statistical methods. Emphasis on data and of technological and industrial problems. Introduction of Design of Experiments, basic probability, sampling distributions, confidence intervals, significance tests for means and proportions, correlation and regression. Software is used throughout. Typically Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn categorical and quantitative data.
2. Display data and results of analyses in a meaningful manner.
3. Understand the elements of probability and its application in engineering technology.
4. Learn about normal distribution and its applications.
5. Understand statistical inferences, hypothesis testing, and their applications.
6. Utilize spreadsheets for statistical analysis and data/results presentation.
|
| IET 22400 - Production Planning And Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Preproduction planning of the most economical methods, machines, operations, and materials for the manufacture of a product. Planning, scheduling, routing, and detailed procedure of production control. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| IET 24000 - Quality Techniques For Electronics Manufacturing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of contemporary quality concepts and techniques. Topics include total quality management philosophy, process improvement, vendor certification, quality systems, ISO 9000 documentation, electronics industry quality applications, SPC, introduction to design experiments, basic reliability concepts, testing, and related topics. Team approaches to quality improvement and the application of the basic quality tools to improve processes are covered. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| IET 25000 - Fundamentals Of Production Cost Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Surveys of fundamental mechanics of accounting, principles of account classification, financial and operating statements, and the generation of cost data according to cost accounting principles. Surveys the generation of cost data according to the principles of engineering economy. Examines applications of cost accounting data and engineering economy cost data to specific management decision areas through selected case problems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| IET 25200 - Teaching Indirect Labor Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of the characteristics and importance of indirect and service sectors of our business, industrial, and government economy. Topics covered in the course include size and cost factors of indirect and service lab, problems encountered in measurement and control, human relations aspects associated with employees in these areas, selling proposals, and implementing programs.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| IET 25700 - Ergonomics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course covers application of ergonomic principles to the design of interface between human and machine systems, and consideration of human abilities and limitations in relation to design of equipment and work environment. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| IET 26200 - Motion Study Work Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of the various techniques of motion study including process charts, operation charts, multiple activity charts, micro and memo motion study, therbligs, the video camera, along with actual practice in their use. Study and application of the basic principles used to develop better methods of performing work. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| IET 26400 - Fundamentals Of Lean Work Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on work methods design. Fundamental problem solving techniques and Lean methodology are applied to solve work methods issues and design proper work systems. Work methods tools are used to conduct macro and micro system analysis and various work measurement techniques are learned including time study, predetermined time systems, work sampling and computer based standard time data. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| IET 26600 - Work Measurement Incentive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the fundamentals of time study and work measurement with actual practice in their use. Includes stop watch time study, measuring work with video camera, the establishment of allowances by both stopwatch and work sampling studies, the establishment and use of predetermined time values, and the construction and use of formulae for work measurement
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
|
| IET 26700 - Work Methods Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to workplace design and work measurement, including time and motion study, ergonomics, and process standardization. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| IET 26800 - Facilities Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Arrangement of stock, machine, layout of aisles, and use of space, and material handling for the highest efficiency of production.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
|
| IET 27200 - Job Evaluation |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. (OLS 27200) A survey of the basic principles and significance of job evaluation. An analysis of current practices and techniques used in job analysis, job descriptions, and job evaluation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
|
| IET 27300 - Principles Of Quality And Process Improvement |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the management culture, philosophy, practices, and processes necessary to develop a total quality orientation. The course bridges quantitative, behavioral, and strategic concepts for designing organizations to be dynamic, integrated systems whose outputs are monitored for quality and continuously improved. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Define the term Quality.
2. Explain the history of Quality and how it applies to different types of business.
3. Use a data-based approach to problem solving while keeping a strong emphasis on organizational and behavioral considerations, focusing on a customer-oriented market-sensitive approach to designing and delivering both products and services, and keeping a desire for continual improvement.
4. Apply the tools of quality to everyday business practices.
5. Demonstrate the ability to solve problems using basic quality tools and a systematic problem solving process for a team environment.
|
| IET 27400 - Industrial Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Practice in industry and written reports of this practice for co-op students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| IET 27500 - Industrial Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Practice in industry and written reports of this practice for co-op students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| IET 29000 - Experimental Design - Conventional Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An applications-oriented course for presenting the fundamental concepts and emphasizing the basic philosophy of design of conventional experiments using simple numerical problems, many from actual research work. For each type of experiment, the distinctions among the experiment, the design, and the analysis are emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| IET 29100 - Experimental Design - Taguchi Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An applications-oriented course in industrial problem solving using the experimental design concepts of Genichi Taguchi. The loss function is emphasized along with the differentiation among system design, parameter design, and tolerance design. Actual case histories are used to explain and promote comprehension of orthogonal arrays, linear graphs, classification of characteristics, and signal-to-noise ratio. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| IET 29600 - IT Case Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Application of theories developed in the several industrial technology courses to select general case problems - to provide practice in the integration of principles.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
|
| IET 29800 - Industrial Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Practice in industry for co-op students, with written reports of this practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| IET 29900 - Industrial Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 9.00. Hours and subject matter to be arranged by staff. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
|
| IET 30000 - Metrology for Quality Assurance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of the basic principles of linear and geometric dimensional metrology. Topics include basic measuring instruments; mechanical, electroinc, pneumatic, and optical measuring instruments; quality data acquisition systems; coordinate measuring machines; attribute gaging; geometric functional gaging; surface integrity determination; and geometric profile measurement. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| IET 30100 - Cost Evaluation And Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Develops the tools for designing, installing, and improving cost systems in industry, including the establishment of basic standards. Cost systems are examined with reference to estimating, scheduling, facilities planning, and making economic evaluations. Microcomputers will be utilized in this course.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
|
| IET 30400 - Advanced Metrology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Variable and attribute gage capability studies; measurements and calculations of repeatability, reproducibility, bias, stability, and linearity; measurement uncertainty; traceability to NIST standards; inspection of parts using GD&T callouts. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| IET 30800 - Engineering Project Management And Economic Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to principles of engineering project management and techniques. Topics include technical feasibility studies, project specifications, scheduling validation, lifecycle costing, and economic analysis. The focus is on managing an engineering project through scheduling, budgeting, resource management, execution, and control. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| IET 31000 - Plant Layout And Material Handling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Plant layout involves the design of a production system. The layout must provide for machines, work places, material handling systems, and storage in the capacities necessary so feasible schedules can be met for parts and products; auxiliary services such as offices, shipping and handling, security, maintenance, etc., must support the firm's requirements for safe and efficient production. The design of this system must possess an appropriate degree of flexibility to cope with future design change, new products, volume variations and advancing technology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
|
| IET 31100 - International Quality Standards |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course addresses what compliance with ISO and other international standards means to an organization and how an organization may attain certification. Students will gain a working understanding of standards, requirements, and methodologies of compliance. Emphasis will be on how implementation of the standards can serve as one of the building blocks of an organization's quality system. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| IET 31200 - Materials Handling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of materials handling elements, the unit load, packaging, bulk handling, the economics of materials handling, improving existing handling methods, justification for handling equipment, special handling techniques, and the management of the materials handling division in the industrial organization.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
|
| IET 32400 - Production Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of operation planning, with emphasis on the equipment, tools, and techniques used in mass production. Adaptation of proposed plans to conform to existing facilities.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| IET 32500 - Essentials Of Logistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students shall learn the elements of business objective logistics, increase of greater asset productivity, building customer loyalty and market share. Integration of real-time information technology to make production and distribution more efficient, global competition and global technology and elimination of lengthy distribution channels. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| IET 34000 - Industrial Procurement |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of modern pruchasing in a manufacturing firm, with emphasis on industrial organization, quantity and quality analysis, sources, legal requirements and related topics. Includes case discussion and anaylsis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| IET 34400 - Introduction To Simulation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to simulation techniques using commercial software packages. Topics include modeling new or existing manufacturing systems, capacity analysis, inventory control, and modeling for production scheduling analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| IET 35000 - Engineering Economy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the concepts and techniques of analysis useful in evaluating the worth of systems, products, and services in relation to their cost. The objective is to help students grasp the significance of the economic aspects of engineering and to become proficient in the evaluation of engineering proposals in terms of worth and cost. Project analysis will require computer proficiency. Not open to students who have credit for IET 25000. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| IET 35100 - Production Control Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of established techniques for analyzing and improving production operations with emphasis on the application of analysis techniques such as critical path scheduling, PERT inventory control, inventory management, forecasting, and linear programming. Emphasizes the use of computer programs for solving problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| IET 35200 - Operations Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an understanding of the concepts involved in designing and managing manufacturing and service systems. Topics include manufacturing strategy, inventory systems, work analysis and design, production planning, quality management, process design, and lean manufacturing. Case studies and articles integrate these topics and highlight managerial implications. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| IET 35400 - Attribute Variable Sampling |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Survey single, double, sequential, variable and continuous production sampling plans. It includes the calculation and plotting of OC and AOQ curves and determining the economic sampling number. Also includes the use of Dodge Romig, MIL STD 105 and MIL STD 414 tables. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| IET 35500 - Statistical Process Control I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Evaluation, analysis and installation of various procedures that comprise total quality control. Market research, product design, manufacturing planning, purchasing, production, and delivery are covered. Data analysis, quality improvement, quality design and vendor relations are included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| IET 36200 - Technological Optimization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to linear programming applied to optimization in a manufacturing environment. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| IET 36400 - Total Quality Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is aimed at determining customer needs and wants and interpreting these into design during production, follow-up on field performance, and feeding back quality information to further improve the quality system. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| IET 36500 - Statistical Process Control II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of IET 355. Product control and acceptance techniques, customer relations, and quality assurance are covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| IET 36900 - Manufacting Simulation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to computer simulation of complex manufacturing systems. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| IET 37400 - Nondestructive Testing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of industrial X-ray and ultrasonic inspection, surface penetrant inspection, magnetic particle and holography applications, and laser interferometry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| IET 37500 - Industrial Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Practice in industry and written reports of this practice for co-op students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| IET 37600 - Industrial Practice IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Practice in industry and written reports of this practice for co-op students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| IET 39800 - Industrial Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Practice in industry for co-op students, with written reports of this practice.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| IET 40100 - Design For Manufacture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis and planning of common production processes. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| IET 40200 - Logistics And The Global Supply Chain |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students shall learn the elements of business objective logistics, increase of greater asset productivity, building customer loyalty and market share. Integration of real time information technology to make production and distribution more efficient, global competition and global technology and elimination of lengthy distribution channels. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Define relevant terms related to the field of logistics.
2. State the general impact of logistics on any organization and relate its relevance to company viability (profitability).
3. Apply logistics management techniques within an organization.
4. Develop plans to build customer loyalty and increase market share for an organization.
5. Develop plans to utilize information technology to make production and distribution more efficient for an organization.
6. Relate the effects of global competition and global technology in the marketplace.
7. Identify lengthy distribution channels within an organization and suggest ways to eliminate them to provide value to the customer.
|
| IET 40400 - Industrial Organization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of industrial organization structure and an introduction to managerial resopnsibilities including the activities of industrial administration, managerial controls, manufacturing engineering, amterial and quality control and labor management. Special emphasis is placed on the interrelationship between these functions. Students will demonstrate the relationship of their discipline of study to the overall organization. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| IET 41100 - Applications Of Lean And Six Sigma Methodologies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This hands-on course focuses on emerging business practices that are geared toward making an organization more effective and efficient. Highlighted topics will include use of lean and six sigma methodologies in today's business environments. These methods are used for achieving long term profits through customer satisfaction, waste elimination, and elevation of employee skills to eliminate waste and defects at the source. Application of these methods in various environments such as service, health care and manufacturing organizations will be explored. Students are expected to work in teams to apply systematic problem solving processes to solve case studies and/or real-world issues. Supporting concepts such as implementation of new business practices and culture change will also be explored. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
|
| IET 45000 - Production Cost Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to financial statements and to the study of the costs of production in terms of break-even and least cost alternatives, including present and future costs when related to the time value of money, budgeting, labor and overhead, production cost control, and the role of the supervisor and the engineering technologist to cost control. Computer applications for determining rate of return for complex problems are introduced. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| IET 45100 - Monetary Analysis For Industrial Decisions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the time value of money and how it relates to capital investments, equipment replacement, production cost, and various engineering technology alternatives. Not open to students who have had IET 25000. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| IET 45400 - Statistical Process Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Online process control including design and analysis of process control charts and sampling plans. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| IET 46000 - Motion And Time Study |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Techniques of motion and time study, process charts, operation charges, multiple activity charts, micromotion
study, therbligs, and stopwatch time study. Not open to students who have had IET 262.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| IET 46400 - Off-Line Quality Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Off-line quality methods, including experimental designs and standards. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| IET 47400 - Quality Improvement of Products and Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to experimental design to improve products or processes. Topics include fractional factorial experiments, response curves, experimental noise, orthogonal arrays, and ANOVA. DOE using classical and Taguchi techniques. Introduction to QFD, FEMQ and Six Sigma for quality improvements. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| IET 47500 - Industrial Practice V |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Practice in industry and written reports of this practice for co-op students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| IET 47800 - Lean Manufacturing And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers theory and practical aspects of lean manufacturing concepts. Students will be able to apply the basic lean concepts of 5S, waste elimination, inventory and setup reduction, visual management, standardized work, error proofing, lean layout design, value stream mapping, pull system, and lean measurables. The course includes required project work to be done in teams. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| IET 48000 - Cost Estimating And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Economic design of manufacturing systems. Includes a capstone project. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| IET 49500 - Senior Project Survey |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will consider several projects and develop a topic for the following IET 49700 course. They will develop project scope, establish time schedules, and give a written and oral report on their proposal. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Successfully propose a complex, open-ended project using multiple areas of knowledge.
2. Demonstrate written communication skills at a professional level by preparing a report detailing how the chosen project will be completed.
3. Demonstrate oral communication skills at a professional level by giving a presentation to the faculty, other students, and guests detailing the chosen project.
4. Prepare for and take a nationally normed test.
|
| IET 49700 - Senior Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Directed work on individual projects for senior industrial engineering technology students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
|
| IET 49800 - Industrial Practice IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Practice in industry for co-op students, with written reports of this practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| IET 49900 - Industrial Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 9.00. Hours and subject matter to be arranged by staff. Course may be repeated for credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
|
| IET 51000 - Product And Process Development Optimization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Product and process development and optimization is an efficient statistical procedure for planning a series of experiments such that the data obtained can be analyzed to yield valid and objective conclusions. It can be used to screen a set of variables to identify those with most effect, optimize an experimental process or retrospectively analyze a set of experimental data. Both the design and analysis steps require the application of techniques for statistical data analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply the concepts of data collection and statistical analysis in business and industry.
2. Apply design of experiments techniques to gain economic advantages in today’s competitive markets.
3. Analyze business, industrial and service situations to optimize productivity.
|
| IET 52000 - Enterprise Quality Planning And Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides advanced quality techniques required for improving quality, reliability and maintenance in modern business enterprises by providing essential tools. The course will focus on problem solving and team sessions with high participation of students. Instructor permission required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the organizational characteristics needed to support an overall quality program.
2. Learn how to attain leadership in enterprise quality.
3. Learn to apply Six Sigma and Lean principles to improve processes.
4. Undertsand the choice of statistical tests that can add value to an enterprise.
|
| IET 56000 - Discrete Event Simulation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides students opportunity to apply discrete event system simulation to design, analyze, and improve complex systems such as business and industrial systems. Theoretical background of discrete event process simulation concepts will be covered. Topics include systems concepts, modeling systems using discrete events, and modeling of various industrial and commercial systems through simulation. Theoretical topics include random variable generation, model verification and validation, statistical analysis of output, variance reduction techniques and optimization via simulation. High-level commercial simulation languages will be utilized. Students will complete and present a simulation project. Graduate student status or senior status with instructor approval. Leveling courses may be required based upon student undergraduate degree. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate a comprehension of discrete event simulation theory.
2. Successfully gather data and process it for use in a discrete event simulation.
3. Develop modeling skills necessary to convert real systems into abstract models for testing, analysis, and evaluation.
4. Demonstrate proficiency in documenting simulation of systems.
5. Successfully use discrete event simulation to model and analyze a real system.
|
| IET 58100 - Workshop In Industrial Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. Advanced study of technical and professional topics. Emphasis is on new developments relating to technical, operational, and training aspects of industry and technology education. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Mastery of diverse topics related to Industrial Engineering Technology.
2. Integrate the concepts from various topics related to Industrial Engineering Technology.
|
| IET 59000 - Special Problems In Industrial Engineering Technologies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.0 to 6.0. Intensive individual study of selected current developments and issues in Industrial Engineering Technology. A faculty sponsor is required for this course. Does not substitute for either M.S. thesis or M. S. project credit. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| IIM I3000 - Foundations And Principles Of Integrated Information Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to concepts of integrated information management. Techniques for information sharing. Discussion of hardware and software standards. Supporting end users. Using microcomputers as work stations. Related ethical issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Richmond
|
| ILCS I2080 - International Cinema |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this course students will study international cinema in order to increase their critical thinking, analytical, and communicative ability through reading and writing about films made outside of the United States. It will focus on the international filmmakers that work consciously to express their own sense of national identity. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ILCS I2090 - From Myths To Fairy Tales: Back To The Germanic Roots In Storytelling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an exploration of the Germanic people and cultures. The readings (articles, tales, sagas, and poems) mainly deal with germanic languages, societies, and cultures. We will trace the development of certain cultural elements from their origin in Germanic mythology to their reappearance in literature of the twentieth century. Credit not given for both INTL I209 and GER G309. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ILCS I3000 - Methods Of Research And Criticism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of methods of literary analysis and bibliographical documentation. Basic techniques of research, footnoting, and intensive writing. Critical approaches to drama, novel, and poetry. Required for French, German and Spanish majors. Approved by Arts and Sciences for use in fulfilling the sophomore writing requirement. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ILCS I3300 - Cultural Crossroads: Comparative International Cultures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this course students will study in depth a topic of international significance in order to increase their critical thinking, analytical ability, and cultural competence. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| ILCS I3500 - International Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines international communication, global business etiquette, and it teaches cultural sensitivity and awareness based on the study of the interfaces of language, culture, and communication. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| IM 10500 - Introduction To Informatics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This is a required foundation course for all students interested in the study of Informatics leading to the fulfillment of requirements in the minor or certificate programs. The course will cover key topics relating to ethics and social issues regarding Informatics. The course will provide applications and discipline specific examples involving all of the current converging technologies utilized in Informatics. The material presented will explore the interdisciplinary nature of Informatics. This course will provide the program plan of study and describe the various courses so the student can make the decisions necessary for the elective options as well as the semesters in which the course will be taken. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| IM 21000 - Problem Solving And Programming For Informatics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An introduction to computer programming and problem solving at the level needed for the study of Informatics. Programming topics include data representation, expressions, control statements, subprograms, simple input/output, GUI development basics, and event-driven programming. Problem solving techniques include problem specification, pseudo-code, and stepwise refinement. Typically offered Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| IM 22000 - Database Applications For Informatics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and application of database systems from the viewpoint of Informatics. Topics include: data analysis and design, data storage, data querying, and data visualization. A special emphasis will be put on developing web applications that allow for information gathering and graphical representation of information through the deployment of database technology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| IM 23000 - Informatics Infrastructure |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the fundamental informatics technologies and their use in the company, business, or organization. Topics include design and development of web and other applications, computer operating systems, distributed systems, data applications, data information analysis, e-commerce, multimedia technology, social implication of informatics, current and emerging technologies. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| IM 31000 - Problem Solving And Programming For Informatics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of IM 21000 for students interested in a deeper understanding of program development. New topics include arrays, file I/O, fundamentals of object-oriented programming, and development of user-defined classes, advanced GUI programming, graphics, and presentation of visual data. Reinforcement of problem solving techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| IM 33000 - Information Retrieval And Presentation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the basic concepts and techniques in information retrieval and visualization. Topics include information organization, access, and visualization, web-based information retrieval, searching, and graphical presentations and interfaces. Students will study existing information retrieval and visualization systems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| IM 37000 - Network Design And Management For Informatics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The design, implementation, and management of computer networks for informatics. Topics include telecommunication concepts, client-server environments, internet and intranet, wireless systems, network devices, network operating systems, network design, implementation and management, and network security. Students are expected to design and implement small networks.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| IM 38000 - HCI Design For Informatics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of human-computer interaction concepts, methods, and evaluation. Topics Include HCI design issues, Web design, user interface design and techniques, multimedia, and simulated environments. Students are expected to design, implement, and evaluate user interface designs in small projects. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| IM 45000 - Informatics Design Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will incorporate a discipline oriented project. The student will be involved in a project from the planning through the end project. Parts of the project will include the data design, gathering, manipulating, and analysis. The project will also consider web interface and network considerations. Final graphics and visualization presentations (including multi-media if needed) will be the end project. Students will work in teams.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| INFO B5190 - Introduction To Bioinformatics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Sequence alignment and assembly; RNA structure, protein and molecular modeling; genomics and proteomics; gene prediction; phylogenetic analysis; information and machine learning; visual and graphical analysis bioinformatics; worldwide biologic databases; experimental design and data collection techniques; scientific and statistical data analysis; database and data mining methods; and network and Internet methods. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO B5290 - Machine Learning In Bioinformatics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course covers advanced topics in Bioinformatics with a focus on machine learning. The course will review existing techniques such as hidden Markov models, artificial neural network, decision trees, stochastic grammars, and kernel methods. Examine application of these techniques to current bioinformatics problems including: genome annotation and comparison, gene finding, RNA secondary structure prediction, protein structure prediction, gene expression analysis, proteomics, and integrative functional genomics. Typicaly offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO B5350 - Clinical Information Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Clinical Information Systems includes: human computer interface and systems design; healthcare decision support and clinical guidelines; system selection; organizational issues in system integration; project management for information technology change; system evaluation; regulatory policies; impact of the internet; economic impacts of e-health; distributed healthcare information technologies and future trends. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO B5810 - Health Informantics Standards And Terminologies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Health information standards specify representation of health information for the purpose of communication between information systems. Standards not only standardize data formats, but also the conceptualization underlying the data structures. The design process of data standards, domain analysis, conceptualization, modeling, and the methods and tools commonly used are explored. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO B5820 - Health Information Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course describes the drivers and challenges, the data and services of electronic health information exchange (HIE). The five focus areas of HIE are reviewed relative to strategies and actions: Aligning Incentives; Engaging Consumers; Improving Population Health; Managing Privacy, Security and Confidentiality; and, Transforming Care Delivery. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO B5830 - Security And Privacy Policies And Regulations For Health Care |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course discusses privacy and security regulations for health care information transactions including policy, procedures, guidelines, security architectures, risk assessments, disaster recovery, and business continuity. Particular attention is given to the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) and the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO B6190 - Structural Bioinformatics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course covers informatics approaches based on the sequence and 3D structure of biological macromolecules (DNA, RNA, Protein) whose objective is to improve our understanding of the function of these molecules. Topics will include molecular visualization; structure determination, alignment, and databases; and prediction of protein structure, interactions, and function. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO H5630 - Psychology Of Human Computer Interaction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Covers the psychological behavioral science of human-computer interaction related to cognition, memory mental models, perception, action, and language. Emphasis is placed on understanding the interaction between human and machine system and how these processes impact the design and testing of interactive technologies. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO H5640 - Prototyping For Interactive Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Covers methodologies for designing and prototyping graphic user interfaces, including rapid (paper) and dynamic (interactive) prototypes. Principles of visual communication are discussed to the context of interaction design, cognition and user behavior, as well as usability testing techniques for concept validation. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO H5830 - Security And Privacy Policies And Regulations For Health Care |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course discusses privacy and security regulations for health care information transactions including policy, procedures, guidelines, security architectures, risk assessments, disaster recovery, and business continuity. Particular attention is given to the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) and the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I1000 - First Year Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course introduces specific survival skills for success in college and beyond, while reconciling personal learning skills with instructor-based teaching styles. Master the art of inquiry and elevate your sense of integrity while sharpening your personal edge by exploring critical thinking, project management and current/future job market trends. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| INFO I1010 - Introduction To Informatics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Emphasis on topics in human computer interaction and human factors; collaborative technologies; group problem solving; ethics, privacy, and ownership of information and information sources; information representation and the information life cycle; the transformation of data to information; and futuristic thinking. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| INFO I1120 - Basic Tools Of Informatics-Programming And Database Concepts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to programming and database design concepts. Emphasis on problem-solving and information-gathering techniques. The lecture will discuss general concepts and syntax. The lab will focus on the use of software, including a programming language, modifying and accessing data using visual tools, and building database applications using forms and development tools. Lecture and laboratory. Offered on the IUPUI campus only. Equivalent to the combination of INFO I110 and INFO I111 Credit given for INFO I112 and either INFO I110 or INFO I111. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| INFO I2010 - Mathematics Foundations Of Informatics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An introduction to the suite of mathematical and logical tools used in information sciences, including finite mathematics, automata and compatability theory, elementary probability and statistics, and basics of classical information theory. Cross listed with COGS Q2500. Credit given for either INFO I2010 or COGS Q2500. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| INFO I2020 - Social Informatics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces the social and behavioral foundations of informatics. Theoretical approaches to how technology is used from psychological and sociotechnical perspectives. Examples of how current and emerging technologies such as games, e-mail, and electronic commerce are affecting daily lives, social relations, work, and leisure time. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| INFO I2100 - Information Infrastructure I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The software architecture of information systems. Basic concepts of systems and applications programming. Cross-listed with CSCI A2010. Credit given for only one of the following: INFO I2100, CSCI N3310 (IUPUI) or CSCI A2010 (IUB). Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| INFO I2110 - Information Infrastructure II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The systems architecture of distributed Applications. Advanced programming, including an introduction to the programming of graphical systems. Cross-listed with CSCI A202. Credit given for only one of the following: INFO I2110, CSCI N3450 (IUPUI), CSCI A2020 (IUB), or CSCI C2120 (IUB). Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| INFO I2130 - Web Site Design And Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to web site design and development covering high-level concepts in addition to hands-on activities. Topics include internet infrastructure, client-side technologies, embedded media, page design, site design, usability and other topics. Technologies to be covered include XHTML, JavaScript, and cascading style sheets. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| INFO I2500 - Photography At A Crime Scene I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course teaches the basics of photography using film, digital and video cameras in the recording of a crime scene. Lectures, discussions and practical exercises help students practice each system applying specific photographic principles that will be used to document mock crime scenes. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I2510 - Photography At A Crime Scene II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course teaches how to document a crime scene with high quality photographs that fairly and accurately represent what was found at a scene so that the implications can be conveyed to others sitting in judgment. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I2600 - Scientific Digital Imaging I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Scientific Digital Imaging I. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I2610 - Scientific Digital Imaging II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Scientific Digital Imaging II. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I2700 - Introduction To Human-Computer Interaction Principles And Practices |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students learn the fundamental principles and practices of human-computer interaction (HCI) and evaluations. Specific focus is given to the introductory knowledge of HCI methods, tools, and techniques for designing and evaluating user interfaces through the use of low and high fidelity prototypes for the Web and software. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| INFO I2750 - Introduction To Human-Computer Interaction Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will learn the fundamental theories of human-computer interaction (HCI) and user-centered design. This course is both a survey of HCI research and an introduction to the psychological, behavioral, and other social science knowledge and techniques relevant to the design of interactive and ubiquitous computing systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I3000 - Human-Computer Interaction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The analysis of human factors and the design of computer application interfaces. A survey of current best practices with an eye toward what future technologies will allow. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-New Albany
|
| INFO I3030 - Organizational Informatics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the various needs, uses, and consequences of information in organizational contexts. Topics include organizational types and characteristics, functional areas and business processes, information-based products and services, the use of and redefining role of information technology, the changing character of work life and organizational practices, sociotechnical structures, and the rise and transformation of information-based industries. Credit given for either INFO I3030 or SPEA V3690. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-South Bend
|
| INFO I3050 - Introduction to Research in Informatics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course presents a broad overview of research philosophy, designs and methods. Its focus is on social science research methods and the content is specifically tailored reflect the rapidly emerging field of informatics. The course will include major methods that are the core of contemporary approaches to research in informatics. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Articulate the major constructs of the theoretical/paradigmatic perspectives and appropriate research questions for each.
2. Demonstrate familiarity with a body of literature on a subject area of interest.
3. Deisgn a cohesive research proposal for a project, including appropriate research questions/hypotheses, a substantive literature review and sampling, methodological and analytical design.
4. Address the ethical issues that accompany any research endeavor.
5. Identify the faculty members and graduate students who can support their research area of interest.
|
| INFO I3080 - Information Representation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The basic structure of information representation in digital information systems. Begins with low-level computer representations such as common character and numeric encodings. Introduces formal design and query languages
through Entity Relationship modeling, the Relational Model, XML, XHTML. Laboratory topics include SQL and XPath querying. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-New Albany
|
| INFO I3100 - Multimedia Arts And Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of the evolution of media arts and underlying principles of communication. Application development paradigms in current practice. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-South Bend
|
| INFO I3300 - Legal And Social Informatics Of Security |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will examine that set of ethical and legal problems most tightly bound to the issues of information control. The interaction and technology changes, but the core issues have remained: privacy; intellectual property; Internet law; concepts of jurisdiction; speech anonymity versus accountability; and ethical decision-making in the network environment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I3500 - Foundations In Legal Informatics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the basic concepts of the design, evaluation and use of technology in the study and practice of law. The course provides an overview of the application of a variety of emerging informatics and new media technologies to the field of law. Will cover technology for law office management, legal research, litigation support, document management, imaging and animations, case management, and electronic court filings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| INFO I3910 - Internship In Informatics Professional Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Students gain professional work experience in an industry or research organization setting, using skills and knowledge acquired in informatics course work. Maximum of 6 credit hours given for any combination of I3910 and I4910. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| INFO I3990 - Current Topics In Informatics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Emphasis is on new developments and research in informatics.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| INFO I4000 - Topics In Informatics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Emphasis is on new developments and research in informatics. Can be repeated twice for credit when topics vary, subject to approval of the dean. Typically offering Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| INFO I4020 - Informatics Project Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will focus on project management in an informatics setting. Students will become conversant in the tools and techniques of project management, such as project selection methods, work breakdown structures, network diagrams, critical path analysis, critical chain scheduling, cost estimates, earned value management, motivation theory, and team building. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I4100 - Electronic Discovery |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will cover the legal, ethical, financial, logistical, procedural and technological considerations of electronic discovery and its implications for lawyers and their clients. It will highlight recently revised federal and state rules, new state and federal legislation and recent court cases that impact electronic discovery policies and processes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I4200 - Internship in Informatics Professional Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00-6.00. Students gain professional work experience in an industry or research organization setting, using skills and knowledge acquired in informatics course work. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I4210 - Applications Of Data Mining |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the use of data mining techniques in different settings, including business and scientific domains. The emphasis will be on using techniques, instead of developing new techniques or algorithms. Students will select, prepare, visualize, analyze, and present data that leads to the discovery of novel and usable information. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I4500 - Design And Development Of An Information System |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. System design and development present both technical and managerial problems with which students will be familiar from their undergraduate course work. This course puts these lessons into practice as students work in teams to develop an information system. Examples of course projects include design and development of a database for a business or academic application, preparation and presentation of an interactive media performance or exhibit, or design and implementation of a simulated environment
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-South Bend
|
| INFO I4510 - Design And Development Of An Information System |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. System design and development present both technical and managerial problems with which students will be familiar from their undergraduate course work. This course puts these lessons into practice as students work in teams to develop an information system. Examples of course projects include design and development of a database for a business or academic application, preparation and presentation of an interactive media performance or exhibit, or design and implementation of a simulated environment
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I4530 - Computer And Information Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Ethical and professionalization issues that arise in the context of designing and using networked information technologies and information resources. Examines frameworks for making ethical decisions, emergent technologies and their ethical implications, information/computer professionalism. Topics include privacy, intellectual property, cybercrime, games, social justice, and codes of professional ethics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I4650 - Informatics For Social Change |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the theory and practice of service learning at IUPUI. Students will apply the knowledge of their expertise area in a service project for the local or global community. Projects will be completed though students’ current and developing new media production, information technology, and client-based research skills. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I4700 - Litigation Support Systems And Courtroom Presentations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provide students with an opportunity to use specialized software that is available for organizing, managing, retrieving, and presenting documents and evidence in a legal matter. Students will gain hands-on experience with software tools and learn what is effective and allowable from a technical, legal and ethical standpoint.Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I4800 - Experience Design And Evaluation Of Ubiquitous Computing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course focuses on ubiquitous computing and related interface/system design, and user-experience issues. Applications include interactive systems which support natural/gesture/touch-based interactions on devices such as mobile, extra-small-and-large displays, and other non-traditional pervasive technologies. Projects include interaction and evaluative techniques: field observation, contextual inquiry, ethnography, survey/interviews, and cognitive walkthrough. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I4910 - Capstone Project Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Students put their informatics education to practice through the development of a substantial project while working in a professional information technology environment. Maximum of 6 credit hours given for any combination of I391 and I491. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-New Albany
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| INFO I4920 - Senior Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I4930 - Senior Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The senior student prepares and presents a thesis: a substantial, typically multichapter paper based on a well-planned research or scholarly project, as determined by the student and a sponsoring faculty member. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| INFO I4940 - Design And Development Of An Information System I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. System design and development present both technical and managerial problems with which students will be familiar from their undergraduate course work. This course puts these lessons into practice as students work in teams to develop an information system. Examples of course projects include design and development of a database for a business or academic application, preparation and presentation of an interactive media performance or exhibit, or design and implementation of a simulated environment (virtual reality).Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-New Albany
|
| INFO I4950 - Design And Development Of An Information System II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. System design and development present both technical and managerial problems with which students will be familiar from their undergraduate course work. This course puts these lessons into practice as students work in teams to develop an information system. Examples of course projects include design and development of a database for a business or academic application, preparation and presentation of an interactive media performance or exhibit, or design and implementation of a simulated environment (virtual reality).Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I4990 - Readings And Research In Informatics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Independent readings and research related to a topic of special interest to the student. Written report required. Can be repeated for a maximum of 6 credit hours. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| INFO I5010 - Introduction To Informatics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic information representation and processing; searching and organization; evaluation and analysis of information. Internet-based information access tools; ethics and economics of information sharing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I5020 - Information Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of information organization in medical-, health-, chemical-, and biology-related areas; basic techniques of the physical database structures and models, data access strategies, management, and indexing of massively large files; analysis and representation of structured and semistructured medical/clinical/chemical/biological data sets.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I5110 - Laboratory Information Management Systems For Health And Life Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course involves a comprehensive study of Laboratory Information/Laboratory Information Management Systems in the Healthcare and Life Sciences. It consists of the history, applications, case studies, functional requirements, databases, data flow, workflows, system and network architecture, laboratory roles, establishment of these systems including selection, installation, customization, integration, and validation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I5120 - Scientific And Clinical Data Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Management and mining of data generated in scientific laboratories and clinical trials for data mining and knowledge discovery requires robust solutions that include knowledge discovery techniques and databases, extraction of data/metadata stored in data warehouses that use Storage Area Networks and dealing with security issues of handling this data. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I5290 - Machine Learning For Bioinformatics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course covers advanced topics in bioinformatics with a focus on machine learning. The course will review existing techniques such as hidden Markov models, artificial neural network, decision trees, stochastic grammars, and kernel methods. Examine application of these techniques to current bioinformatics problems including: genome annotation and comparision, gene finding, RNA secondary structure prediction, protein structure prediction, gene expression analysis, proteomics, and integrative functional genomics. Prerequisite: INFO I5190. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I5300 - Foundations Of Health Informatics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Presents an overview of the various professional applications and research directions taken in health informatics. Requires directed laboratory experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I5320 - Seminar In Bioinformatics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Presentation and discussion of new topics in bioinformatics. Concentration on a particular area each semester to be announced before registration. Total credit for seminars and independent study courses may not exceed 9 credit hours. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| INFO I5410 - Human-Computer Interaction Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Human-Computer Interaction Design (HCID) describes the way a person or group accomplishes tasks with a computer - what the individual or group does and how the computer responds; what the computer does and how the individual or group responds. Sometimes
known as “interface design,” HCID becomes increasingly important as computing intelligence and connectivity spread ubiquitously to home, work, and play environments. This course will be organized around a collection of readings and three design projects concerned with applying human-computer interaction principles to the design, selection, and evaluation of interactive systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I5430 - HCI Design And Evaluation Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will learn basic concepts and methods for usability studies and evaluation of interactive systems as well as apply those methods to actual system design evaluations. This course is not only for understanding the basics and traditional approaches in this area, but also for exploring new ways of evaluating the usability of state-of-the-art technology-based systems such as systems in ubiquitous computing, CSCW, tangible and social computing areas.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I5500 - Legal And Business Issues In Informatics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides students with a solid foundation on legal and business matters that affect informatics and new media, including intellectual property, privacy, confidentiality and security, corporate structure, project planning, tax implications, marketing, obtraining capital, drafting business plans and working with professionals such as attorneys, accountants, and insurance agents. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I5560 - Biological Database Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study about database management and its application to bioinformatics. Topics include data modeling, data indexing and query optimization with a bioinformatics perspective, and database issues in complex nature of bioinformatics data. The course also involves study of current challenges related to bioinformatics data management, data integration and semantic Web.
Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I5610 - Human-Computer Integration Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a continuation of Human-Computer Interaction
Design I, emphasizing the justification of design effectiveness. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I5720 - Computational Chemistry and Molecular Modeling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course has two main objectives. I) To give you a thorough introduction to computational chemisty and
modern methods of electronic structure theory that form the basis of molecular modeling today. Mainly, we will concentrate on quantum mechanical methods and pay special attention to Density Functional Theory. Instead of digging deep into the mathematics of quantum chemistry, we will concentrate on practical aspects and examine in
detail how computational chemistry can be used to explain chemical reactions and electronic properties. II) To get your 'Hands Dirty' and conduct real and original research designed to allow you to see the knowledge obtained from the first part of the course in action and apply a wide range of state-of-the-art methods to solve a specific chemcial research problem at a high level of scientific rigor.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I5730 - Programming For Science Informatics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will receive a thorough understanding of software development for chem- and bioinformatics, and broaden experience of working in a scientific computing group. Topics include programming for the web, depiction of chemical and biological structures in 2D and 3D, science informatics tool kits, software APIS, AI and machine-learning algorithm development, high-performance computing, database management, managing a small software development group, and design and usability of science informatics software. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I5750 - Informatics Research Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction and overview to the spectrum of research in informatics. Qualitative and quantitative reserach paradigms, deterministic experimental designs to a posterior discovery. Issues in informatics research. Conceptual, design, empirical, analytical, and disseminative phases of research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I5900 - Topics in Informatics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| INFO I6050 - Social Foundations Of Informatics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics include the economics of information businesses and information societies, legal and regulatory factors that shape information and information technology use, the relationship between organization cultures and their use of information and information technology, and ownership of intellectual property. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I6170 - Informatics In Life Science And Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces the fundamental notions in genome and proteome informatics and chemical informatics, focusing on the design and organizing issues in information systems used in those areas. The course is designed for students with no biology or chemistry background, but some knowledge in informatics, who want to learn basic topics in bioinformatics and chemical informatics. Typicall offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I6420 - Clinical Decision Support Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an overview of the background and state-of-the-art Clinical Decision Support Systems (CDSS). Topics include: the design principles behind clinical decision support systems, mathematical foundations of the knowledge-based systems and pattern recognition systems, clinical vocabularies, legal and ethical issues, patient centered clinical decision support systems, and the applications of clinical decision support systems in clinical practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I6430 - Natural Language Processing And Text Mining For Biomedical Records And Reports |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course familiarizes students with applications of Natural Language Processing and text mining in health care. While the course provides a short introduction to commonly used algorithms, techniques and software, the focus is on existing health care applications including clinical records and narratives, biomedical literature and claims processing.
Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO I6460 - Computational Systems Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction of how Omics data are generated, managed, analyzed from large-scale computational perspectives, exploring computational resources, especially biological pathways for integrative mining and computational analysis representing and modeling multiscale biological networks, relating static/dynamic properties to the understanding phenotypic functions at the molecular systems level. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INFO T1000 - Topics In Informatics Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.0 to 3.0. The course serves an an introduction to a specific information technology in a hands-on setting. Emphasis is on problem solving techniques using technology. Credit hours may not be applied toward satisfying major requirements in the School of Informatics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| INFO Y1950 - Directed Study |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Directed Study. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| INFO Y2950 - Directed Study II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Directed Study. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| INFO Y3950 - Career Development For Informatics Majors |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Career Development For Informatics Majors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INST H1000 - Beginning Hindi I |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Introduction to the Hindi language, the writing system and basic grammar. Graded exercises and readings leading to mastery of grammatical structures and essential vocabulary. Development of reading and writing competence and simple conversations based on personal information, courtesy expressions, greetings in contemporary Hindi. Classroom use of stories, tapes, films and songs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INST H1500 - Beginning Hindi II |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Continuation of the first semester. Graded exercises and reading for mastery of grammatical structures and essential vocabulary. Composing short dialogues on everyday survival topics. Improve reading skill to understand main ideas from the simplest connected texts. Writing competence is increased to be able to write letters and journals, etc. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INST H2000 - Second-Year Hindi I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading mythology, folklore, modern short stories, essays and poetry, including several examples from Hindi literature. Students compose and perform dialogues based on the material read and the usage of role playing cards. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INTG I3000 - Junior/Senior Integrater |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Junior/Senior Integrater. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INTL I1000 - Introduction To International Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This introductory, interdisciplinary course exposes students to the various academic approaches essential to international studies and to the various concentrations that comprise the major. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INTL I1550 - Introduction To Language And Culture In Near Eastern Studies And East Asian Studies |
|
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3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| INTL I2000 - Introduction to International Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An interdisciplinary, team-taught course for students who wish to deepen their understanding of an increasingly interdependent world and broaden their perspective of a variety of international topics such as international politics and history, global environmental issues, international business and economics, and international cultural studies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| INTL I4410 - America In Global Perspective |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (AMST A441) This course examines domestic and foreign interpretations of America as a world citizen from a variety of disciplinary perspectives. The course is intended to make students more aware of global issues and of what it means to be a "global citizen", and more understanding of views of America from outside its borders. Credit not given for both AMST A441 and INTL I441. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| INTR 10300 - Introduction To Interior Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of the field of interior design, its history, and theory. An application of the principles and elements of interior design. Basic hand drafting. This course is for those who are seeking or considering a degree in Interior Design. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| INTR 11000 - Introduction To Interior Design For Non-Majors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of the field of interior design and its history that introduces students to planning, designing, instructing, maintaining and evaluating physical spaces in which we live, work and play. This course is for non-majors only. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INTR 11100 - Introduction To Interior Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to requirements of design with emphasis on people, space, scale, light, color, materials, furniture, accessories, and budget in the residential environment. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| INTR 11200 - Interior Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced techniques of furniture arrangements and design principles. Coordination of interior design principles throughout a complete residential environment (i.e. house, apartment, condominium). Estimating of drapery, floor, and wall coverings as it applies to various projects. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| INTR 12100 - Freehand Sketching |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Drawing in the "freehand" (non-mechanical) method will be presented in pencil, ink, and markers. The course is aimed at the beginning design student. It will utilize objects of interior environment as a means of understanding various drawing principles and familiarize the student with basic rendering techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| INTR 12300 - Perspective Drawing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Perspective drawing of building interiors and rooms in one- or two-point projection incorporating light, shadow, and furnishings are emphasized. Application of texture and color are presented in multimedia. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| INTR 12400 - Space Planning For Interiors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the fundamentals of design for human activity, standards for space, programming, and graphic communication. Requirements for ADA and Universal Design will be included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INTR 12500 - Color And Lighting Of Interiors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of the physiological, psychological, and phenomenal aspects of color and light in interior spaces. Application includes specification and selection of lighting fixtures and light sources. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INTR 13100 - Decorative Materials and Accessories I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. History of textiles, fiber content, weaves, and designs. Functional uses of fabrics for interiors (i.e., windows, upholstery). Emphasizes decorative treatment of textile patterns and uses of materials throught design problems. The assembling of notebooks is required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| INTR 13200 - Decorative Materials And Accessories II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of area rugs, hand-made carpeting and hard surface floorcovering with regards to practical application. Construction techniques of carpeting, upholstery, and case goods. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| INTR 15100 - Textiles For Interiors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An extensive study of textiles: fiber types, yarn production, fabric construction, finishing, coloring, and printing. Application of textiles for use in residential and commercial interiors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INTR 19800 - Topics:Interior Design |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Hours, credit and subject matter to be arranged by staff.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| INTR 20100 - CAD For Interior Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study and application of computer-aided design and drafting (CAD) as a means of visualizing complex spatial designs of the built environment, reducing the amount of time needed to produce complicated hand-constructed drawings. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| INTR 20200 - Interior Materials And Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analyzes information related to use of surfacing materials applied as interior finishes in interior design projects. The role of green design is introduced, and ecological issues are integrated into each category of materials analyzed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INTR 20400 - History Of Interiors And Furniture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of historical development of interiors, furniture, and decorative arts from early history to the present. Emphasis is on design motifs, ornamentation, and furniture styles. Adaptation and use of period styles within contemporary design are included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INTR 20600 - Portfolio And Professional Presentation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students will study portfolio design, materials selection, and publication methods. Graphic themes, reprograhic techniques, and binding or alternative presentation will be studied. Development of a personal portfolio is required. Course may include development of a public exhibition of student work. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| INTR 22000 - Architecture and Urban Form |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of styles and influence of cultures which led thru history to the development of architecture and engineering from the earliest times to the early 20th century. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| INTR 22400 - Residential Interior Design Studio |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This studio class will emphasize the design of residential space, recognizing design development as a process. Space design, working drawings, plans, and client presentations also will be covered. The course will utilize computer-aided drafting and design (CAD). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INTR 22500 - Three-Dimensional Interior Design Studio |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This studio class includes the fundamentals of three-dimensional design and drawing. Model building techniques will be taught as students design a piece of furniture that is functional, ergonomic, and aesthetic. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INTR 22600 - Commercial Interior Design Studio |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This studio course emphasizes the elements used in development of nonresidential space. Studies include technological and building requirements; building and life-safety codes; square footage and space planning standards. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INTR 22800 - Design For Contemporary Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This capstone course for the A.S. two-year program. Students take a single project from job procurement through bid documentation. Emphasis is placed on project management skill development, design and building team coordination, and addressing client and societal built needs using appropriate design principles and industry practices. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INTR 24100 - Lighting And Color Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of how natural and artificial lighting and color affect the human environment. Principles of physical and psychological aspects of lighting and color (i.e., hue, value, and intensity) are applied to design theory. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| INTR 25200 - Interior Building Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey course of building systems that covers the design implications of heating, air-conditioning, plumbing, and electrical systems of both residential and commercial buildings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INTR 25300 - Business Practices Of Interior Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to business principles and practices as they relate to the interior design profession. Includes business formation and management, professional ethics and organizations, certification and licensing issues, design liability, and project management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INTR 29000 - Interior Design Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Minimum of 10 weeks of work experience in the interior design field. Written report of the experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INTR 29800 - Topics:Interior Design |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| INTR 29900 - Topics In Interior Design |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Special topics of study with concentration on developing a working knowledge in a specific area of interior design. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
|
| INTR 30400 - History Of American Interiors And Furniture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The continuation of a survey of historical development of interiors, furniture, and decorative arts beginning with 1650 Colonial America through the 20th century. Emphasis is on design motifs, ornamentation, and furniture styles. Adaptation and use of period styles within contemporary design are included. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INTR 30600 - Interior And Furniture Styles I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. All courses in historical interiors and furniture styles include slides or photographs of each period. Each student will be required to keep a notebook. I. Historical interiors and furniture styles of the ancient world: Egyptian, Greek, Roman, Byzantine, Romanesque, Gothic, and 15th, 16th, and 17th centuries of Renaissance Europe.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| INTR 30700 - Interior And Furniture Styles II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. All courses in historical interiors and furniture styles include slides or photographs of each period. Each student will be required to keep a notebook.
I. Historical interiors and furniture styles of the 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries in France, England, and the United States. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| INTR 30800 - Interior Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An environmental study of the principles of commercial/institutuional design wih special emphasis on sociophysiological factors relating to the design elements of individual contract projects. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| INTR 30900 - Interior Design III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The development and application of spatial concepts through the design of a commercial/institutional interior project. Incorporates contents of all prerequisite courses. Presentation techniques will be emphasized. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| INTR 31000 - Interior Design Travel |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course emphasizes an investigation of design solutions, aesthetic language, symbol language, and cultural context through visits to sites of art, architecture and design significance. A greater understanding is developed through analysis and reflection. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| INTR 32000 - Architecture and Urban Form in the Modern World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of architectural and engineering developments by site visitations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| INTR 32400 - Residential Interior Design Studio II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This studio class will emphasize the design of residential space, recognizing design development as a process. Space design, working drawings, plans, and client presentations also will be covered. The course will utilize computer-aided drafting and design (CAD). Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INTR 32500 - Environmental Lighting And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study and practice of interior lighting fundamentals with an emphasis on environmentally efficient lighting systems and energy economy. Through the design process and execution of luminaire layouts, students will examine the visual process, lamp and luminaire selection, calculation methods, lighting controls and evaluation of effective solutions. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INTR 32600 - Commercial Interior Design Studio II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This studio course emphasizes the elements used in development of nonresidential space. Studies include technological and building requirements; building and life-safety codes, ADA guidelines, square footage and space planning standards. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INTR 33000 - Culture And Design: A Cross-Cultural Comparison Of Architecture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Architecture and the built-environment reflect political, economic, social, and cultural aspects of a society. Cross-cultural comparisons of architectural design philosophy are explored through the study of design principles such as space and order, form and color, architecture semiotics and building components. The comparison is between Western and Eastern architecture with the same type of building. The inter-relationship of architecture and culture is examined through design theories and philosophy by the expression of architecture digital photos and videotapes. Papers, presentations, group studies, and non-written projects are required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| INTR 39000 - Interior Design Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Minimum of ten weeks of work experience in the interior design industry, with at least five weeks experience in the field. Written report of this experience. See department chair about detailed requirements for this course. Experience work needs to be completed before signing up for the course. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INTR 40000 - Interior Design Studio I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course emphasizes development of a functional need program, and design of complex interior spaces, with special consideration of psychological aspects of spatial components. Studio projects will be chosen from the following list: residential design, special population - aging; healthcare design, education design, hotel design, restaurant design, or corrections design. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| INTR 40100 - Interior Design Studio II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Interior Design Studio II is the second capstone course, which will emphasize on design development and construction documents for the project that is continued from INTR 40000. Students identified the project based on their interests in INTR 40000. The course contents will be including design development, construction documents, senior project report and senior show preparation. Graphic presentation skills and digital 3-D model creation skills will be further developed. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| INTR 40200 - Professional Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of professional office and business procedures for the practice of interior design. Includes public relations, marketing, legal, accounting and financial considerations, professional organizations and conduct, resourcing, project management, contracts, forms, and documents. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| INTR 40300 - Interior Design Details |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of typical and specialty interior details. Emphasis will be placed on creative problem solving and the inter-relationship of detailing and fine craftsmanship to over-all project aesthetics. Details and material selection related to green design will be studied. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| INTR 40400 - Interior Design Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Special problems in planning, furnishing, design, crafts, or work-study. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| INTR 42600 - Health Care Design Studio |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This studio course emphasizes the principles and process of design for health care facilities. Additionally, students will require working knowledge of codes and guidelines specific to health care and issues of liability in designing such spaces and buildings. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INTR 42800 - Interior Design Capstone Design Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this B.S. Capstone course the designer tackles a semester long advanced design problem by applying the design process from project obtainment through coonstruction documents. This class is team-taught and must be taken in conjunction with INTR 48000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INTR 45200 - Interior Building Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey course of building systems that covers the design implications of heating, air-conditioning, plumbing and electrical systems of both residential and commercial buildings. Sustainable technologies such as solar energy for heating, cooling, or hot water heating, day-lighting, and recycling systems will be included. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INTR 45300 - Business Practices Of Interior Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Business principles and practices as they relate to the interior design profession. Includes business formation and management, professional ethics and organization, certification and licensing issues, design liability, and project management. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INTR 48000 - Senior Thesis Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An independent design application that includes phases of the design process, from initial client consultation through programming, schematic design and design development, contract documents, with a proposal presentation to the client or review committee. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Research
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INTR 49500 - Sustainable Design In Engineering And Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this multidisciplinary course students will create industrial ecological solutions within their unique disciplines. A theoretical framework on Green Design is used to identify and apply green concepts while working on multidisciplinary teams. Environmental concerns for better air quality and global environmental issues are explored. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| INTR 49900 - Interior Design Projects |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Special topics of study with concentration on developing a working knowledge in a specific area of interior design. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| IPPH 10000 - Pharmaceutical Sciences Orientation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An orientation course for incoming freshmen or CODO students enrolled in the Bachelor of Sciences in the Pharmaceutical Sciences program. Provides an introduction to the scope of the program, the career opportunities for graduates, the curriculum rationale, and the faculty and staff support structure. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Industrial and Physical Pharm
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IPPH 36200 - Basic Pharmaceutics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental physical chemical principles and their application to pharmaceutical systems. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Industrial and Physical Pharm
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IPPH 45100 - Industrial Practical Training |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Course allows students to gain employment experience in industrial pharmacy. Students receive credit for practical experience in the time period just prior to course enrollment when they complete the course paper requirement. Pre-approval of enrollment required prior to employment experience. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Industrial and Physical Pharm
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Ensure pharmaceutical science students receive early exposure to the most common career paths taken by today¿s graduates and gain a first-hand perspective of industry responsibilities and activities in their roles. This contributes to a foundation for gaining appreciation of the strategies for continually evolving requirements and skills in industry.
2. Provides pharmaceutical science students with opportunities to have early in their program observation of scientists providing services, particularly those that address Pharmaceutical Science Outcome Ability Goals. These include Conceptual Competence, Scientific Comprehension, Mathematical Competence, Integrative Competence, Critical Thinking and Decision Making Abilities, Communication Skills and Abilities, Responsible Use of Professional Values and Ethical Principles, Social Awareness and Social Responsibility, Professional Abilities and Habits, and Group Interaction and Citizenship. See the "Student Handbook" for specific descriptions of the components of these outcome abilities.
3. Provide pharmaceutical science students with early industry exposure that illustrates the reasons they need in-depth learning of the basic and applied sciences and a commitment to lifelong learning for professional effectiveness.
4. Provide pharmaceutical science students with experiences and learning in applications that are essential to evolving professional responsibilities in an industrial setting.
5. Contribute to pharmaceutical science student development as well as providing the vision and motivation to become a positive scientific influence or change agent.
6. Broaden students' perspectives on career pathways and foster initiatives to enhance career planning.
|
| IPPH 47100 - Parenteral Products |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Methods of preparing and testing injectable and other sterile dosage forms. Demonstrations are included to illustrate the principles of parenteral therapy, aseptic techniques, and the use of intravenous equipment. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lab 1, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Industrial and Physical Pharm
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| IPPH 47500 - Biopharmaceutics And Pharmacokinetics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Characterization of the time course of drug absorption, distribution and elimination, drug accumulation. Concept of clearance, half-life and volume of distribution and design of multiple dosing regimens. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Industrial and Physical Pharm
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IPPH 49000 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. An honors course for superior students to be used in relation to, and to supplement, an existing course; an in-depth approach to topics of current interest, utilizing the original literature as prime source material. A laboratory project may be included. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Industrial and Physical Pharm
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| IPPH 56200 - Introduction To Pharmaceutical Manufacturing Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course intended to provide the student with basic understanding of both the theoretical and practical aspects of pharmaceutical manufacturing by combining a thorough classroom treatment of the underlying principles of each pharmaceutical unit operation with hands-on execution of these activities in the laboratory. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Industrial and Physical Pharm
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IPPH 58000 - Physical Chemical Principles |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Applications of physical chemical principles to pharmaceutical systems. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Industrial and Physical Pharm
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IPPH 58300 - Advanced Biopharmaceutics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comprehensive course dealing with the interaction of biological and physico-chemical considerations relating to drug effectiveness and dosage form design. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Industrial and Physical Pharm
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IPPH 58700 - Pharmaceutical Solids |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Provides students with the ability to identify and characterize polymorphs and hydrates and to understand their behavior in the presence of water. Both classical methods and new techniques for the study of pharmaceutical solids and their interaction with water are included. Scientific principles are blended with practical examples to provide a conceptual basis for understanding particular problems. Typically offered Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Industrial and Physical Pharm
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IPPH 59000 - Special Topics In Industrial And Physical Pharmacy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Special topics in selected areas of industrial and physical pharmacy. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Industrial and Physical Pharm
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| IPPH 69000 - Special Problems |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Individual research topics selected from the areas of industrial pharmacy, physical pharmacy, or biopharmaceutics. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Industrial and Physical Pharm
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| IPPH 69600 - Seminar In Industrial And Physical Pharmacy |
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Credit Hours: 0.00 or 1.00. Discussion of recent research developments in physical pharmacy, industrial pharmacy, and biopharmaceutics related to the physico-chemical properties, availability, effectiveness, and safety of drugs and drug products. Topics are presented by staff, students, and invited speakers. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Industrial and Physical Pharm
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| IPPH 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Industrial and Physical Pharm
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| IPPH 87500 - Biopharmaceutics And Pharmacokinetics II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of pharmacokinetic principles applied clinically to the therapeutic management of individual patients and their disease states. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Industrial and Physical Pharm
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| ISM 10200 - Computer Utilization For Management |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to computer application software with an emphasis on use within the management area. Topics include word processing, spreadsheets, presentations, and databases, with applications targeted specifically for marketing, finance, human resource, accounting and economics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and describe concepts in computer hardware, secondary storage, and system software.
2. Identify and describe concepts in application software, computer networks, and the World Wide Web.
3. Identify and describe concepts in databases, computer security and ethics, information systems, and the application of technology in business.
4. Demonstrate competency in Microsoft Word.
5. Demonstrate competency in using Microsoft Excel to analyze business problems.
6. Demonstrate competency in using Microsoft Access to analyze business problems.
7. Demonstrate competency in Microsoft PowerPoint.
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| ISM 21100 - Principles Of Information Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to information systems from the perspective of a manager. This course provides an overview of information systems, systems theory, human information processing, and current legal and ethical issues relating to computer usage. Extensive lab exercises on advanced spreadsheet and database management applications in business context are assigned. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. The ability to effectively make business decisions and manage data. Students will benefit from hands on practice.
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| ISM 30700 - System Analysis And Design |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces the information systems student to the procedural requirements of the systems development life cycle (SDLC). A case study approach is used to introduce the student to the techniques of systems planning, analysis, form and file design, documentation, implementation, and evaluation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. MIS majors will benefit from hands on practice.
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| ISM 30800 - Database Management Analysis And Design |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course discusses the functions and components of database management systems and the role of databases in the Systems Development Life Cycle. Both relational and object oriented database techniques are discussed. Data moldeling tools presented include enterprise models, entity relatinship diagrams, the data dictionary, object diagrams, and normalization techniques. Also, the role and function of the Database Administrator are addressed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. MIS majors will benefit from hands on practice.
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| ISM 31100 - Management Information Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the capabilities, limitations, and applications of computers in the business environment. Topics include information systems, hardware, software, data management, telecommunications and networking, decision support, artificial intelligence, expert systems, security, privacy, ethical issues in information systems, and implementation of effective information technology (IT) utilization. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Define the term Information Systems.
2. Name the components of an information system and describe several system characteristics.
3. Identify some of the strategies employed to lower costs and improve service.
4. Describe how to select and organize computer system components to support information system objectives.
5. Discuss the speed, functionality, and importance of input and output devices.
6. Identify and briefly describe the functions of the two basic kinds of software.
7. Define general data management concepts and terms, highlighting the advantages and disadvantages of the database approach to data management.
8. Identify the common functions performed by all database management systems and discuss the key features of three popular end user database management systems.
9. Define the terms communications and telecommunications and describe the components of a telecommunications system.
10. Identify and describe Internet, intranet, and extranet and discuss how organizations are using them.
11. Define the terms Enterprise Resource Planning, transaction processing, and electronic commerce.
12. List and discuss important characteristics of decision support systems (DSS), artificial intelligence systems (AI), and expert systems (ES).
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| ISM 31800 - E-Business Strategy |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of e-business from design to operations of organizations engaging in the fast-paced highly competitive, global environment of e-commerce. Topics include the impact of e-business, strategic use of IT for competitive advantage, e-business impact on organization, globalization, and the impact on options created through applied IT. It is designed for students pursuing leadership roles in defining IT policy and strategy. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. MIS majors will benefit from hands on practice.
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| ISM 32000 - Advanced Spreadsheet Applications For Business |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course can be used as a business elective for BS of Management majors to prepare students to analyze data and solve real-life business problems, using Microsoft Excel as a tool. Moving beyond the basic point and click focus of most computer application texts, it challenges students to use critical thinking and analysis to find efficient and effective solutions to real-life situations. Topics include statistical analysis tools, data visualization and manipulation, logics in decision making, financial analysis, what-if analyses, goal-seek tools, and solver model. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply advanced spreadsheet skills and tools in business problem solving and decision making.
2. Determine effective data display with charts.
3. Retrieve and organize data from a variety of sources for effective computation and analysis.
4. Create spreadsheet applications and troubleshoot workbooks.
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| ISM 32200 - E-Business Applications |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course can be used as a business elective for BS Management majors. The course content takes an in-depth look at Web design concepts and techniques. The course examines theoretical concepts that make the world of Web design unique. Also, this course adopts a practical hands-on approach when examining Web page styles. Along with examining different coding techniques and technologies, this course explores the advancement of Web development, as well as, E-business problem solving strategies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the differences between the Internet, intranet, and extranet and how each is used today in business.
2. Apply XHTML guidelines to Web development assignments.
3. Exhibit the ability to use the Web Development Life Cycle throughout the Web page/site development process.
4. Demonstrate competency in utilizing HTML and CSS in the development of Web pages suitable for course work, professional purposes, and personal use.
5. Illustrate how to add functionality to Web pages using JavaScript, the Document Object Model (DOM), and XML.
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| ISM 32500 - Logistics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course analyzes the elements of business logistics. The course will focus on the integration of real-time information technology to increase the effectiveness of production and distribution. Global competition and technology and channels of distribution will also be discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the strategic importance of good supply chain design, planning and operation.
2. Identify the major drivers and their role in supply chain performance.
3. Explain the significance of planning in a supply chain, identify decisions, and discuss the tools available for forecasting and planning.
4. Describe the role inventory plays in a supply chain and discuss actions managers can take to decrease inventories without increasing costs or decreasing product availability.
5. Describe how transportation, facilities, and information technology influence the performance of a supply chain.
6. Understand how the lack of coordination across the supply chain can result in poor performance, even when each stage is doing its best.
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| ISM 41600 - Information Systems Control And Audit |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of information systems (IS) control and audit. IS auditing assesses whether computer systems safeguard assets, maintain data integrity, and facilitate the implementation of the goals of the organization. The reasons why companies control and audit computer systems, the nature and purposes of the information systems audit function, and the overall approach to a systems audit will be studied. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate understanding of information systems risks, controls, security, and compliance.
2. Demonstrate understanding of transaction processing and financial reporting systems, systems development and maintenance, and computer-assisted audit tools and techniques.
3. Demonstrate understanding of the revenue and expenditure cycles, enterprise resource planning systems, and information systems issues related to ethics and fraud.
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| ISM 41700 - Business Problem Solving With Advanced Spreadsheet |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The course addresses the need of using advanced spreadsheet application to analyze and solve business problems. This course will be offered as an elective course for MIS/CIS majors and other business major/minor students in the School of Management. It is a design project/undergraduate research experiential course where students will learn the process of designing and implementing solutions for business problems with spreadsheets. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Help students transfer their understandings of advanced spreadsheet features into practical hands-on skills that can be directly applied to the business world or research projects.
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| ISM 41800 - Knowledge Management And Business Intelligence |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the theories, strategies, methods, and tools for managing organizational knowledge and making business decision more efficiently and effectively through utilizing intelligent Information Systems (IS) in a fast-paced, highly competitive, global environment. Topics include decision making process and modeling, decision support systems, expert systems, artificial intelligence, data mining, knowledge representation and reasoning, etc. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Be able to describe the generic characteristics of DSSs
2. Appreciate the difference between a decision support system and a management information system
3. Recognize various special classes of DSSs
4. Be clear about the distinction between a DSS and a DSS development tool
5. Be conversant with basic DSS terminology including language system, knowledge system, presentation system, and problem processing system
6. Have studied a variety of knowledge management techniques that can be used in decision support systems
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| ISM 48300 - Business Data Communications |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course can be used as a business elective for BS management majors. It introduces the subject of data communication and the use of telecommunication in business applications. Topics include client-server architecture, network hardware and software, distributed computing, key issues in telecommunication and network management, and the fundamentals of data communications. In addition to this, the course covers both legacy networks and modern high-speed networks used in business communications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Define the term network, identify the network elements, distinguish LANs, WANs, and SOHO LANs; discuss IP and Ethernet addresses.
2. Describe and demonstrate common layered and hybrid TCP/IP-OSI standards architecture.
3. Describe security threats and security planning principles; identify types of attackers, discuss firewall protection and access control.
4. Describe network management including cost analysis, management tools and methods; explain binary data and digital signaling; understand UTP and optical fiber cabling and signaling; discuss network topologies.
5. Describe Ethernet LANs including data link layer and Wireless LANs including 802.1x transmission standards, security and management.
6. Explain radio signal propagation; describe the 802.11 wireless standards and operation.
7. Explain 802.11 WLAN security, wireless LAN management and cellular data service; describe local wireless technologies.
8. Explain TCP/IP, IP, TCP, and UTP, describe how routers make routing decisions, understand ARP, and MPLS.
9. Explain IP subnet, Network Address Translation, Domain Name System, and Secure Internet communication; understand VPNs, and Directory server basics; describe networked application architectures including client/server, email, VOIP, cloud computing, and P2P.
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| ISM 48600 - Project Management |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The application of the knowledge, skills, and techniques that project managers use to manage projects. Emphasis is placed on learning and applying concepts of Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK), which includes integration, scope, time, cost, quality, human resource, communication, and procurement aspects. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. MIS majors will benefit from hands on practice.
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| ISM 48700 - Knowledge And Decision Management |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the application of Decision Support Systems (DSS), Expert Systems (ES), and Knowledge Management Systems (KMS) to a company's strategic decision-making process. Topics include the decision-making process, decision contexts and types, expert system opportunities, knowledge management, and the roles of decision-making tools. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the fundamental concepts in the study of knowledge and its creation, acquisition, representation, dissemination, use and re-use, and management.
2. Appreciate the role and use of knowledge in organizations and institutions, and the typical obstacles that KM aims to overcome.
3. Know the core concepts, methods, techniques, and tools for computer support of knowledge management.
4. Understand how to apply and integrate appropriate components and functions of various knowledge management systems.
5. Be prepared for further study in knowledge generation, engineering, and transfer, and in the representation, organization, and exchange of knowledge.
6. Critically evaluate current trends in knowledge management and their manifestation in business and industry.
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| ISM 48801 - E-Auction In Practice |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The course will cover fundamentals of e-Auction and exchange instruments and provide an immersion experience via projects and classroom experiments designed to provide experiential learning and using case studies and hands-on online store practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will utilize an existing publically-accessible online auction environment, along with available tools for competitive intelligence for their project.
2. Students will perform roles in process as a client and also as a seller by changing online environment settings.
3. Students will utilize an online auction environment, along with available tools for competitive intelligence in e-Auction environments to include context information in the design of such mechanisms.
4. The practical experience will be supplemented with real world cases and other managerially focused contemporary reading material for contextual understanding of the concepts discussed in the class.
5. Students will positively be impacted by 1) using this course to fulfill their ExL requirement and 2) building practical skills integrating online auction theory with practice.
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| ISM 48901 - Enterprise Resource Planning Implementation |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This class studies the types of issues that managers will need to consider in implementing cross-functional integrated enterprise systems. The objective of this course is to make students aware of the potential and limitations of enterprise resource planning implementation. This objective will be reached through case studies, lectures, guest speakers, and a real-world project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students are usually very interested in learning more about career options.
2. ERP Implementation is a complicated business process.
3. Students will visit a company project office to discuss what it is like to implement an ERP project.
4. Students will work with industry ERP administrators who will present students with knowledge that is impossible to obtain from textbooks and classroom settings.
5. The course has a dual faction; first analyzing ERP systems through a managerial prospective, and second the focus is on system implementation experiences.
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| IST 14000 - Introduction To Visual Basic For Applications |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to programming using the Visual Basic language and its integrated development environment. Example applications are typical of what may be found in business or technical environment. Topics to be covered include the syntax and structure of the VB language; controls, dialog boxes, and other interface tools; menu design; multiple forms; error-trapping, and arrays. Other topics that may be covered include object linking and embedding (OLE); VB for applications; database development using record sets and databound controls; data handling; grids; validation and election; drag and drop; and graphics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| IST 15500 - COBOL Programming |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the COBOL programming language with emphasis on file organization and processing. Topics covered include data types, data definition, subprograms and parameter passing. Emphasis on developing program structure and style. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| IST 16000 - Foundation And Role Of Information Systems |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to introduce students to contemporary information systems (IS) and demonstrate how these systems are used throughout global organizations. The focus of this course will be on the key components of information systems - people, software, hardware, data, and communication technologies, and how these components can be integrated and managed to create competitive advantage. Through the knowledge of how IS provides a competitive advantage students will gain an understanding of how information is used in organizations and how information technology (IT) enables improvement in quality, speed, and agility. This course also provides an introduction to systems and development concepts, technology acquisition, and current emerging application software in modern organizations and society. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn how and why information systems are used today and be able to explain the technology, people, and organizational components of information systems.
2. Understand globalization and the role information systems has played in this evolution.
3. Learn how businesses are using information systems for competitive advantage vs. competitive necessity.
4. Understand the value of information systems investments as well as learn to formulate a business case for a new information system, including estimation of both costs and benefits.
5. Learn of the major components of an information systems infrastructure and how to mitigate risks as well as plan for and recover from disasters.
6. Learn how information systems are enabling new forms of commerce between individuals, organizations, and governments.
7. Learn of emerging technologies that enable new forms of communication, collaboration, and partnering.
8. Learn how various types of information systems provide the information needed to gain business intelligence to support the decision making for the different levels and functions of the organization.
9. Learn how enterprise systems foster stronger relationships with customers and suppliers and how these systems are widely used to enforce organizational structures and processes.
10. Learn how organizations develop and acquire information systems and technologies.
11. Learn how to secure information systems resources, focusing on both human and technological safeguards.
12. Learn how information systems raise ethical concerns in society and how information systems influence crime, terrorism, and war.
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| IST 20300 - Advanced Visual Basic |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course continues the study of Visual Basic begun in IST 14000/CS 11400/ECET 11400. Topics to be covered include reading and writing of sequential and direct files; custom controls; advanced SQL; the creation of online help; object linking and embedding (OLE); calling DLL procedures (Windows API); class modules; and an introduction to ActiveX components. Students will learn the skills needed to create stand-alone and www-based Visual Basic applications for personal computer use. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| IST 25600 - Application Software Project |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Project course requiring implementation of an integrated application system from a structured design. Emphasis on structured development techniques on a system and user documentation. Other topics include indexed and relative file organization, JCL, Reportwriter, and introduction to information and business systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| IST 26500 - Enterprise Systems |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide students with an understanding of the theoretic and practical issues related to the application of Enterprise Systems within organizations. The main focus of this course is to demonstrate how Enterprise Systems integrate information and organizational processes across functional areas, and global operations, with a unified system comprised of a single database and shred reporting tools. Example software will be used to illustrate how Enterprise systems work. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the fundamentals of Enterprise Systems and issues associated with their implementation.
2. Learn to evaluate the costs and benefits of implementing an Enterprise System.
3. Understand how enterprise systems integrate functional areas into one enterprise-wide information system.
4. Learn to explain how "best practices" are incorporated in Enterprise Systems.
5. Learn to recognize how an organizational process often spans different functional areas.
6. Learn to describe the role of Enterprise Systems in carrying out processes in an organization.
7. Learn to integrate key concepts from functional-oriented courses, such as accounting, marketing, and organizational behavior, to promote the development of integrative skills.
8. Learn to explain how integrated information sharing increases organizational efficiencies.
9. Learn to identify, describe, and evaluate the major Enterprise System software providers and their packaged systems.
10. Understand current trends related to Enterprise Systems.
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| IST 27000 - Data And Information Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides the students with an introduction to the core concepts in data and information management. It is centered around the core kills of identifying organizational information requirements, modeling them using conceptual data modeling techniques, converting the conceptual data models into relational data models and verifying its structural characteristics with normalization techniques, and implementing and utilizing a relational database using a database management system. This course will also include coverage of basic database administration tasks, how large-scale packaged systems are highly dependent on the use of a Database Management System (DBMS) and data and information management technologies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn to understand the role of databases and database management systems in managing organizational data and information.
2. Learn to understand the historical development of database management systems and logical data models.
3. Understand the role of information requirements specification processes in the broader systems analysis and design context.
4. Learn to use at least one conceptual data modeling technique (such as entity-relationship modeling) to capture the information requirements for an enterprise domain.
5. Learn to link to each other the results of data/information modeling and process modeling.
6. Learn to design high-quality relational databases.
7. Learn to understand the purpose and principles of normalizing a relational database structure and to design a relational database so that it is at least in 3NF.
8. Learn to implement a relational database design using an industrial-strength database management system, including the principles of data type selection and indexing.
9. Learn to use the data definition, data manipulation, and data control language components of SQL in the context of one widely used implementation of the language.
10. Learn to perform simple database administration tasks.
11. Learn the concept of database transaction and apply it appropriately to an application context.
12. Learn to understand the basic mechanisms for accessing relational databases from various types of application development environments.
13. Learn to understand the role of databases and database management systems in the context of enterprise systems.
14. Learn to understand the difference between on-line transaction processing (OLTP) and online analytic processing (OLAP), and the relationship between these concepts and business intelligence, data warehousing and data mining.
15. Learn to create a simple data warehouse ("data mart").
16. Learn to understand how structured, semi-structured, and unstructured data are all essential elements of enterprise information and knowledge management. In this context, the students will learn the principles of enterprise search.
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| IST 28000 - Survey Of Information Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to information technology development from a perspective using business fundamentals that relate to information systems and the analysis and design of those systems. Topics include competitive, strategic, and technological advantages; collaborative partnerships within e-business; decision making; and databases. Supply chain management, customer relationship management, enterprise resource planning, and other applications will be surveyed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| IST 29200 - Intermediate Topics In Information Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intermediate seminar addressing current topics or issues in Computer Science or Information Systems. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
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| IST 29500 - Industrial Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Practical problems in local industry limited to about 10 to 20 hours per week for which the student may receive some renumeration. May be repeated but the total combined credit that may be applied to a degree is limited to three. Open only to full-time students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Practicum
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
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| IST 34000 - Business Process Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this course students will be introduced to the design and approaches to business process management and improvement. Students will learn how to identify, document, model, assess, and improve core business processes, be introduced to process design principles, how information technology can be used to manage, transform, and improve business processes and be exposed to challenges and approaches to organizational change, outsourcing, and inter-organizational processes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn how to model business processes.
2. Learn how to benchmark business processes performance.
3. Learn how to assess business processes performance.
4. Learn how to design business process improvements.
5. Understand the role and potential of IT to support business process management.
6. Understand the challenges of business process change.
7. Understand how to support business process change.
8. Understand different approaches to business process modeling and improvement.
9. Understand the challenges and risks concerning business process outsourcing.
10. Learn to use basic business process modeling tools.
11. Learn to simulate simple business processes and use simulation results in business process analysis.
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| IST 35000 - IT Infrastructure |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to IT infrastructure issues for students majoring in Information Systems. It covers topics related to both computer and systems architecture and communication networks, with an overall focus on the services and capabilities that IT infrastructure solutions enable in an organizational context. The students will gain the knowledge on designing organizational processes and software solutions that require in-depth understanding of the ITY infrastructure. The course focuses strongly on Internet-based solutions, computer and network security, business continuity, and the role of infrastructure in regulatory compliance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn to understand key principles of data representation and manipulation in computing solutions.
2. Learn to understand the principles underlying layered systems architectures and their application to both computers and networks.
3. Learn to understand the differences and similarities between the core elements of an IT infrastructure solution, such as clients, servers, network devices, wired and wireless network links, systems software, and specialized security devices.
4. Learn to understand how IT infrastructure components are organized into infrastructure solutions in different organizational environments.
5. Learn to understand the principles underlying service virtualization.
6. Learn to understand through practical examples how protocols are used to enable communication between computing devices connected to each other.
7. Learn to configure an IT infrastructure solution for a small organization, including a network based on standard technology components, servers, security devices, and several different types of computing clients.
8. Learn to apply the core concepts underlying IP networks to solve simple network design problems, including IP sub netting.
9. Learn to understand the role and structure of the Internet as an IT infrastructure component.
10. Learn to understand the components and structure of a large-scale organizational IT infrastructure solution at a level that allows them to utilize it effectively and negotiate with vendors providing design and implementation solutions.
11. Learn to understand the opportunities that virtual computing service provision models, such as cloud computing, create for organizations.
12. Learn to analyze and understand the security and business continuity implications of IT infrastructure design solutions.
13. Learn to understand the environmental and resource consumption impacts of IT infrastructure decisions.
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| IST 36500 - Enterprise Architecture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the design, selection, implementation and management of enterprise information technology (IT) solutions. The focus is on applications and infrastructure and their fit with the business. Students learn frameworks and strategies for infrastructure management, system administration, content management, distributed computing, middleware, legacy system integration, system consolidation, software selection, total cost of ownership calculation, IT investment analysis, and emerging technologies. These topics are addressed both within and beyond the organization, with attention paid to managing risk and security within audit and compliance standards. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| IST 36600 - Structured Analysis Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Methods used in analyzing information systems. Topics include user interviewing and observation, event analysis, data flow diagrams, data dictionaries, mini-specifications, decision trees, decision tables, and both logical and physical models. Students practice these techniques in a major structured analysis project resulting in a requirements specification document. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| IST 36700 - Structured Design Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Methods used in designing information systems. Topics include structure charts, module specifications, pseudocode, coupling, cohesion, transform analysis, transaction analysis, and user interface design. Includes the detailed design of an information system and the implementation of a prototype of that design. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| IST 37000 - Systems Analysis And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course discusses the processes, methods, techniques and tools that organizations use to determine how they should conduct their business, with a particular focus on how computer-based technologies can most effectively contribute to the way business is organized. The course covers a systematic methodology for analyzing a business problem or opportunity, determining what role, if any, computer-based technologies can play in addressing the business need, articulating business requirements for the technology solution, specifying alternative approaches to acquiring the technology capabilities needed to address the business requirements, and specifying the requirements for the information systems solution. The course specifically acknowledges the fact that in many cases technology capabilities are purchased from outside the organization either through the use of packaged systems or consulting resources. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the types of business needs that can be address using information technology-based solutions.
2. Learn to initiate, specify, and prioritize information systems projects and to determine various aspects of feasibility of these projects.
3. Learn to use at least one specific methodology for analyzing a business situation (a problem or opportunity), modeling it using a formal technique, and specifying requirements for a system that enables a productive change in a way the business is conducted. Within the context of this methodology, students will learn to write clear and concise business requirements documents and convert them into technical specifications.
4. Learn to communicate effectively with various organizational stakeholders to collect information using a variety of techniques and to convey proposed solution characteristics to them.
5. Learn to manage information systems projects using formal project management methods.
6. Learn to articulate various systems acquisition alternatives, including the use of packaged systems (such as ERP, CRM, SCM, etc.) and outsourced design and development resources.
7. Learn to systematically compare the acquisition alternatives.
8. Learn to incorporate principles leading to high levels of security and user experience from the beginning of the systems development process.
9. Learn to design high-level logical system characteristics (user interface design, design of data and information requirements).
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| IST 39500 - Industrial Practicum I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Practical problems in local industry limited to about 10-20 hours per week. May be repeated, but the total combined credit that may be applied to a degree is limited to six. Open only to full-time students. Permission of the department is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| IST 42000 - Information Systems Innovation And New Technologies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. New IS technologies are being used to change how organizations communicate both internally and as well as with external partners. These technologies have been integrated into an exciting academic discipline that is integral to all business activities. This course is designed to introduce students to new and innovative technologies and examine how these powerful systems have fundamentally reshaped modern organizations along with our society. Using online collaborative technologies that were developed in the context of social networking and online communities, corporations are reengineering both internal business processes and those related to customers, suppliers, and business partners. Developing innovative ways to communicate and collaborate can lead to new business opportunities, and new efficiencies. This course investigates the technologies, methods and practices of developing new innovations such as online communities, and how this knowledge and these skills are applied to re-engineer business processes. For example, how products, services and information systems are developed, and how geographically disperse virtual teams collaborate. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn how IS plays a role in the world around them and the business world.
2. Learn how technologies are increasing the ability of organizations to globalize business processes and to extend their reach to global customers.
3. Learn the process and techniques used to innovate IS technologies.
4. Learn where businesses have used IS technologies to innovate and reengineer business processes.
5. Learn the concepts associated with network effects.
6. Learn how the web as a platform enhances creativity, information sharing and functionality.
7. Learn the role of web technologies such as online communities in the business work, and how they deliver value.
8. Learn about the popular community-oriented tolls, such as online social networking tools.
9. Learn the economics involved with digital goods and services.
10. Learn how to deal with the challenges associated with new technologies and innovation.
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| IST 43000 - IT Security And Risk Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to the fundamental principles and topics of Information Technology Security and Risk Management at the organizational level. Students will learn critical security principles that enable them to plan, develop, and perform security tasks. The course will address hardware, software, processes, communications, applications, and policies and procedures with respect to organizational IT Security and Risk Management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the fundamental principles of Information Technology security.
2. Understand the concepts of threat, evaluation of assets, information assets, physical, operational, and information security and how they are related.
3. Understand the need for the careful design of a secure organizational information infrastructure.
4. Understand risk analysis and risk management.
5. Understand both technical and administrative mitigation approaches.
6. Understand the need for a comprehensive security model and its implications for the security manager.
7. Gain an understanding of security technologies.
8. Gain an introductory understanding of basic cryptography, its implementation considerations, and key management.
9. Learn to design and guide the development of an organization's security policy.
10. Learn to determine appropriate strategies to assure confidentiality, integrity, and availability of information.
11. Learn to apply risk management techniques to manage risk, reduce vulnerabilities, threats, and apply appropriate safeguards/controls.
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| IST 44000 - Introduction To Human-Computer Interaction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to the field of human-computer interaction (HCI) an interdisciplinary field that integrates cognitive psychology, design, computer science and others. Examining the human factors associated with information systems provide the students with knowledge to understand the factors that influence usability and acceptance of interactive systems. This course will examine human performance, components of technology, methods and techniques used in design and evaluation of interactive systems. Societal impacts of HCI such as accessibility, user-centered design methods, and contemporary technologies will be discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn to design, implement and evaluate effective computer interfaces.
2. Learn the concepts of user differences, user experience and collaboration as well as how to design contextually.
3. Learn the basic cognitive psychology issues involved in HCI.
4. Learn the different devices used for input and output and the issues / opportunities associated with these devices.
5. Learn how to interact with the software design process in order to create computer interfaces.
6. Learn the role of theory and frameworks in HCI.
7. Learn a number of design techniques.
8. Learn the contemporary techniques to evaluate computer interfaces.
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| IST 45000 - IT Audit And Controls |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the fundamental concept and technologies of the information technology audit and control functions. Focusing on understanding information controls, the types of controls and their impact on the organization, and how to manage and audit them. Students will learn the process of creating a control structure with goals and objectives, audit an information technology infrastructure against it, establish a systematic remediation procedure for any inadequacies, and the challenges of dealing with best practices, standards, and regulatory requirements governing information and controls. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the role and objectives of the information technology audit.
2. Learn to develop an appropriate information technology audit process.
3. Learn to identify risks to the confidentially, integrity, and availability of information and processes.
4. Learn to describe the risks inherent in various types of information systems ranging from manual, basic accounting, to advanced operational information and knowledge for decision making.
5. Understand how to design and implement assurance procedures and control measures to effectively manage risks.
6. Understand best practices, standards, and regulatory requirements governing information and controls.
7. Learn to gain the ability to measure the degree of compliance with them.
8. Understand the role of auditing in systems development, including the review of the development process and participation in systems under development.
9. Understand data forensics.
10. Learn to develop disaster recovery and business continuity plans.
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| IST 46600 - Information Systems And Technology Strategy, Management And Acquisition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the issues and approaches in managing the information systems function in organizations and how the IST function integrates / supports / enables various types of organizational capabilities particularly for strategic advantage. IT takes a senior management perspective in exploring the acquisition, development and implementation of plans and policies to achieve efficient and effective information systems. The course addresses issues relating to defining the high-level IST infrastructure and the systems that support the operational, administrative and strategic needs of the organization. The remainder of the course is focused on developing an intellectual framework that will allow leaders of organization to critically assess existing IST infrastructures and emerging technologies as well as how these enabling technologies might affect organizational strategy. The ideas developed and cultivated in this course are intended to provide an enduring perspective that can help leaders made sense of an increasingly globalized and technology intensive business environment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the various functions and activities within the information systems area, including the role of IT management and CIO, structuring of IST management within an organization, and managing IST professionals with the firm.
2. Learn to design an effective structure for various types of IST organizations.
3. Learn how to view an organization through the lens of the information systems used to enable core and supportive business processes as well as those that interface with suppliers and customers.
4. Understand the concepts of information economics at the enterprise level.
5. Gain insight into how IST represents a key source of competitive advantage for firms.
6. Learn to structure IST-related activities to maximize the business value of IST within and outside the company.
7. Understand existing and emerging informational technologies, the functions of IST and its impact on the organizational operations.
8. Understand the issues and challenges associated with successfully and unsuccessfully incorporating IST into a firm.
9. Understand how strategic decisions are made concerning acquiring IST resources and capabilities including the ability to evaluate the different sourcing options.
10. Learn how to manage relationships with vendors of IT services.
11. Learn how to manage intellectual property related to IT.
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| IST 46700 - Information Systems Project Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course discusses the processes, methods, techniques and tools that organizations use to manage their information systems projects. The course covers a systematic methodology for initiating, planning, executing, controlling, and closing projects. This course assumes that project management in the modern organization is a complex team-based activity, where various types of technologies (including project management software as well as software to support group collaboration) are an inherent part of the project management process. This course also acknowledges that project management involves both the use of resources from within the firm, as well as contracted from outside the organization. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn to initiate, specify, and prioritize information systems projects and to determine various aspects of feasibility of these projects.
2. Understand the foundations of project management, including its definition, scope, and the need for project management in the modern organization.
3. Understand the phases of the project management lifecycle.
4. Learn how to manage project teams, including the fundamentals of leadership and team motivation.
5. Learn how to manage project communication, both internal to the team, and external to other project stakeholders.
6. Learn to initiate projects, including project selection and defining project scope.
7. Learn the techniques and tools for managing project schedules.
8. Learn how to manage project resources, including human resources, capital equipment, and time.
9. Learn how to manage project quality, including the identification of the threats to project quality, techniques for measuring project quality, and the techniques for ensuring project quality is achieved.
10. Learn how to manage project risk, including the identification of project risk, and the techniques for ensuring project risk is controlled.
11. Learn how to manage the project procurement process, including understanding external acquisition and outsourcing, as well as the steps for managing external procurement.
12. Learn to manage project execution, including monitoring project progress and managing project change, and appropriately documenting and communicating project status.
13. Learn how to control projects through information tracking and cost and change control techniques.
14. Learn to close projects, including administrative, personnel, and contractual closure.
15. Understand the mechanisms for dealing with legal issues in complex project contexts.
16. Learn to use a common project management tool to perform typical project activities.
17. Learn to work through several cases in each chapter, and complete a significant overall project.
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| IST 49200 - Topics In Information Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Seminar addressing current topics or issues in computer science or information systems. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
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| IST 49400 - Directed Study |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Independent study for students who desire to execute a complete computer- oriented project. Course may be repeated for credit up to six hours toward graduation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
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| IST 49500 - Cooperative Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. For cooperative program students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 12 credits
|
| IT 10100 - Industrial Technology Biotechnical Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students are introduced to the fields of biotechnology, bioengineering, biomedical engineering, and bio-molecular engineering. Students design, fabricate and evaluate devices that solve biotechnical problems. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
|
| IT 10200 - Industrial Technology Aerospace Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces students to the world of aeronautics, flight, and engineering. Students apply scientific and engineering concepts to design materials and processes that measure, repair, improves, and extend aeronautical systems. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
|
| IT 10300 - Industrial Technology Exploring Civil Engineering And Architecture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students learn various aspects of civil engineering and architecture, apply their knowledge to designing and development of a commercial property. Students learn about documenting their project, problem-solving, and communcations in the civil engineering community. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
|
| IT 10400 - Industrial Organization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A detailed survey of organizational structures, operational, financial, marketing, and accounting activities; duties of management, planning, control, personnel, safety, wages, policy, and human factors necessary for effective management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
|
| IT 10500 - Industrial Technology Introduction To Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course develops students' problem solving skills, with emphasis placed upon the concept of developing a three-dimensional model of an object. Students focus on the application of visualization processes and tools currently used in the design and manufacturing environments. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IT 10600 - Industrial Technology Digital Electronics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is the study of applied digital logic. Students will study the application of electronic logic circuits and apply Boolean logic to the solution of problems. Students will design circuits, export their design to a printed program that generates printed circuit boards, and construct the design using electronic components. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IT 10700 - Industrial Technology Principles Of Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores various engineering systems and manufacturing processes. Students examine how the field of engineering technology addresses social and political consequences of technological change. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IT 10800 - Industrial Technology Computer-Integrated Manufacturing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course builds on students' solid modeling skills to develop manufactured products. Students evaluate products using mass property analysis, make appropriate modifications, and use prototyping equipment to produce three-dimensional models of the solutions. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IT 10900 - Industrial Technology Engineering Design And Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this capstone course students work in teams to design and construct a solution to an engineering problem, applying the knowledge and skills previously developed. Students maintain a portfolio of their design and development activities. Teams are responsible for making final presentations of the solution to an engineering review panel. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IT 11100 - Prototyping In Engineering/Technology Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course provides basic instruction on the proper and safe use of tools and equipment used to fabricate prototypes. Students demonstrate technical competency related to fabrication of prototypes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate the technical competencies to properly and safely operate common engineering/technology education prototyping equipment and tools.
|
| IT 11400 - Problem-Solving In Manufacturing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The goal is to expose students to many of the current problem-solving processes used in industry. This includes the Six Sigma quality process, project management, and lean manufacturing concepts. Lecture and lab exercises use teamwork, process mapping, project management, and disciplined problem-solving. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
|
| IT 19000 - Topics In Industrial Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Hours, credit, and subject matter to be arranged by staff. This is not for independent study. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| IT 19100 - Supervised Work Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Supervised work experience directed toward providing background and orientation rather than depth in a particular specialty. Craft, technical, industrial, and participation in the conduct of industrial training programs are typical examples of acceptable experiences. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division, Practicum
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| IT 19900 - Selected Topics For Vocational Teachers In Service |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Designed primarily for conditionally certified vocational teachers for development and improvement of basic teaching skills and license upgrading. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
|
| IT 21400 - Introduction To Lean Manufacturing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Lean manufacturing is a systematic approach to eliminating non-value added activities throughout a production system. Five basic principles characterize a lean production system: value definition, value stream mapping, flow optimization, pull production, and continuous improvement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
|
| IT 22600 - Biotechnology Laboratory I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Focuses on nucleic acid manipulation. Modules include, making a eukaryotic library, identifying clones, sub-cloning into a bacterial expression vector and verification of the clone's identity by restriction analysis and DNA sequencing. Basic laboratory techniques (solution making, buffer preparation, good safety techniques), sterile technique and compliance procedures. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Concurrent Credit
West Lafayette
|
| IT 22700 - Biotechnology Laboratory II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The second laboratory course should use the cloned material to produce a protein. This protein should be purified, utilized immunologically, checked for purity by Edman degradation, and in some kind of bio assay. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IT 23000 - Industrial Supply Chain Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of industrial supply chains. Emphasis is on in-plant shipping and receiving functions; modes of distribution; functions of, and services provided by supply chains. Emphasis is placed on how manufacturers, distributors and end users can provide value in the supply chain. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
|
| IT 27200 - Gateway To Engineering/Technology Teacher Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course into the components of teaching engineering/technology (E/T) education in today's public schools. Students explore the K-12 E/T education curriculum, national standards, and professional associations. Development of educational objectives and effective lesson planning is discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the K-12 E/T education curriculum.
2. Identify national K-12 E/T education standards.
3. Identify national E/T education professional associations.
4. Describe the requirements to become a licensed E/T education teacher.
5. Describe the essential components and their sequence for an effective instructional lesson.
|
| IT 27500 - Teaching The T & E Of STEM |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course for teacher education majors that provides rationale and techniques for integrating engineering and technological literacy into the K-12 mathematics and science curriculum. Experiences focus on the engineering design process as it relates to mechanisms, robotics, materials, electrical circuits and electronics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the national importance of the integrative nature of the K-12 STEM curriculum.
2. Describe how technology and engineering can be integrated into K-12 mathematics and science.
3. Demonstrate hands-on learning activities appropriate to integrate technology and engineering into the K-12 STEM curriculum.
|
| IT 27600 - Teaching Design And Communications Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the development of design and communications technology taught in middle and high school technology education courses. Students present design and communications technology lessons. Students explore activities in secondary design and communications technology in a laboratory setting. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IT 27700 - Teaching Manufacturing Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the development of manufacturing technology knowledge and skill required to teach middle level technology education courses. Students prepare and present manufacturing technology lessons and learning activities. Students explore, through laboratory activities, content areas included in secondary manufacturing technology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IT 27800 - Teaching Construction Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on construction technology knowledge and skill required to teach middle technology education courses. Students present construction technology lessons and learning activities. Students explore, through laboratory activities, the variety of content areas included in secondary construction technology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IT 28100 - Industrial Safety |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course designed to develop understanding of, and insight into, the basic aspects of accident prevention and safety. Specific attention will be given to (1) the psychological aspects of accident prevention; (2) the principles of accident prevention; (3) the practical aspects of planning, implementing, and maintaining a safe environment; and (4) standards, current laws, and regulations. Field trips may be required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
|
| IT 29100 - Industrial Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Practice in industry. Written reports required documenting practice. Admission to the Industrial Technology Cooperative Education Program required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IT 29200 - Industrial Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Practice in industry. Written reports required documenting practice. For cooperative education students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IT 33000 - Industrial Sales And Sales Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Sales and sales management techniques for analyzing distribution challenges and providing solutions through effective communication; establishing credibility, effective questioning techniques, developing and presenting solutions, anticipating objections and gaining a commitment, plus techniques for building, developing and compensating an effective sales organization. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
|
| IT 33200 - Purchasing, Inventory, And Warehouse Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course designed to develop understanding of types of warehouses, methods of organizing the warehouse environment, and determining efficient inventory control procedures. Purchasing of products, storage of inventory, placement of inventory and other internal logistics management topics will be explored. Real world projects conducted in lab environment will be utilized. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
|
| IT 34200 - Introduction To Statistical Quality |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic concepts of quality systems in business and manufacturing settings are presented. Basic statistical methods as applied to quality control, and an introduction to sampling plans are included. Field trips may be required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
|
| IT 34500 - Automatic Identification And Data Capture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course provides a basic understanding of automatic identification and data capture technologies and concepts with regard to how their deployment affects business and industry. Laboratory applications of bar codes, radio frequency identification, card technologies, and biometrics will be emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
|
| IT 35100 - Advanced Industrial Safety And Health Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to OSHA and standards development for occupational health in general industry. Special emphasis is on fire protection and egress, flammable and combustible liquids, electrical, personal protective equipment, machine guarding, industrial hygiene/blood borne pathogens, ergonomics, and ISO 9000/14000 integration. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
|
| IT 37100 - Instructional Planning And Evaluation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students gain experience in determining content and writing instructional objectives. Emphasis is placed on developing good testing instruments and evaluating those instruments as they relate to measuring student achievement in the cognitive, affective, and psychomotor domains. Field trips may be required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IT 37200 - Teaching Civil Engineering And Architecture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Strategies for teaching secondary students about civil engineering and architecture, project planning, site planning, building design, and project documentation and presentation. Three-dimensional modeling software is used to design a structure for a simulated development site. Field trips may be required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IT 37700 - Teaching Design And Innovation I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the development of appropriate engineering design knowledge and skill required to effectively teach middle and high school engineering/technology education courses by infusing engineering design into the curriculum. Students will use 3-D solid modeling software, rapid prototyping, and other design technologies as they engage in the engineering design process through an open-ended engineering design challenge. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Display the ability to teach students to develop skills for living in a knowledge-based, technological society using design-based pedagogical approaches.
2. Use the engineering design process to solve open-ended, ill-defined problems.
3. Demonstrate the ability to teach basic engineering design techniques.
|
| IT 38100 - Total Productive Maintenance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a study of the role and scope of total productive maintenance (TPM) in manufacturing. The three types of maintenance activities: corrective, preventive, predictive, and their associated quantitative techniques are studied. Reliability and queuing theory are discussed. Team projects are required. Field trips may be required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
|
| IT 38500 - Industrial Ergonomics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course designed to focus on work design and ergonomics in manufacturing. Specific attention will be focused on introducing the terminology and the techniques used in work design and on the fundamental concepts embodied in industrial ergonomics. During scheduled laboratory times, exercises will permit the student to apply the concepts of industrial ergonomics. Field trips may be required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
|
| IT 39300 - Industrial Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Practice in industry. Written reports required documenting practice. For cooperative education students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IT 39400 - Industrial Practice IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Practice in industry. Written reports required documenting practice. For cooperative education students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IT 39500 - Industrial Practice V |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Practice in industry. Written reports required documenting practice. For cooperative education students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IT 43200 - Financial Transactions In Distribution |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course is designed to familiarize students with various methods of pricing strategies, marketing concepts, and the terms and procedures involved. Special emphasis will be on computer applications and case study problems that help and enhance marketing of products and services. Field trips may be required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| IT 43400 - Global Transportation And Logistics Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the various aspects of logistics in industrial systems and product support. The development, implementation, and control of physical transportation systems, product distribution, warehousing, and inventory policy models will be emphasized. The impact of logistics and transportation in the global environment will be discussed. Case studies and software applications will be included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
|
| IT 43500 - Distribution Management Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course designed to build upon previous distribution-related courses with subjects related to managing a distribution enterprise. Modules in sales management, strategic planning, supply-chain logistics, purchasing, and the legalities of distribution manufacturer relationships will be combined with case studies to provide students with practice in making decisions and establishing policy from the manager's point of view. Field trips may be required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| IT 44200 - Production Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of industrial organization and management, research and development, production, personnel, and sales. Examples of the procedures necessary to provide a product or service are included. Field trips may be required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
|
| IT 44300 - Leadership Development For Technology Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The role and function of technology education youth groups, planning programs, public relations, and social activities; responsibilities of officers; leadership principles and styles. Technology Students of America in concert with the International Technology Education Association activities will be emphasized. Field trips may be required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IT 44500 - Problem-Solving With Automatic Data Collection |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. The problem-solving skills learned in IT 34500 are applied to manufacturing, distribution, or business data collection problems. Depending on the problem, one or more of the available data collection technologies will be used to address the issue of concern. Field trips may be required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
|
| IT 44600 - Six Sigma Quality |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the six sigma quality and process improvement methodology, using the define, measure, analyze, improve, and control (DMAIC) process. The course addresses advanced topics in statistical quality as they pertain to the six sigma methodology and provides preparation for the Green Belt Certification exam. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
|
| IT 45000 - Production Cost Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to financial statements and to the study of the costs of production in terms of break-even and least-cost alternatives, including present and future costs when related to the time value of money, budgeting, labor and overhead, production, cost control, and the role of the supervisor and the engineering technologist to cost control. Computer applications for determining rate of return for complex problems are introduced. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
|
| IT 47000 - Teaching Design And Innovation II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course builds on the student competencies developed in prerequisite courses. Students will apply rapid prototyping and other fabrication technologies to create a specified solution. Students will consider operations process flow chart planning and logistics of engineering/technology education laboratory management. Prototypes will be tested in real situations and data gathered on performance. Designs will be revised to reflect a deeper understanding of manufacturing and use, being sensitive to structure, function, and behavior from a systems-level perspective. Intellectual property, marketing, and infrastructure will be discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Appreciate the complexity of implementing design solutions.
2. Select appropriate fabrication technologies.
3. Operationalize performance criteria into measurable variables.
4. Gather data and make rational, data-driven decisions, which are transparent and justifiable.
5. Optimize design solutions and perform iteratively in the design process.
|
| IT 47100 - Managing The Technology Education Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides future technology education teachers with information on designing, organizing, and managing technology education facilities. An in-depth study of specific laboratory requirements related to safety is covered. Management skills related to students, equipment, and supplies are addressed. Students design a technology education laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IT 47200 - Methods Of Teaching Technology Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students identify and demonstrate a variety of instructional techniques appropriate for teaching secondary technology education. Students plan lessons and assess their effectiveness on student achievement. Methodological insights and understanding for teaching technical subject matter is stressed. Field trips may be required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IT 48300 - Facility Design For Lean Manufacturing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This capstone course integrates all aspects of manufacturing activities and materials handling focusing on lean concepts. A systematic approach is used to design a manufacturing facility integrating principles of lean production systems and eliminating waste through continuous improvement. Computer simulation and projects are required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
|
| IT 49000 - Special Problems In Industrial Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Supervised individual research in industrial education topics. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
|
| IT 50700 - Measurement And Evaluation In Industry And Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (TECH 50700 - PUI) An introduction to measurement strategies in industrial, technical, and human resource development environments. The evaluation of measurement outcomes will be the primary focus of the course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| IT 50800 - Quality And Productivity In Industry And Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (AT 50800) Examines the contemporary issues of continuous improvement in quality and productivity in manufacturing and service industries. Includes a close examination of the evolving philosophies bearing on the scope, improvement, and costs of quality assurance programs in industry and technology. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| IT 51000 - Developing Courses For Industry And Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles and procedures in planning, organizing, and developing instructional content for industrial, technical, and human resource development courses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| IT 53000 - Biometric Technology Test Design, Performance, and Evaluation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction of methods of designing biometric testing, performance, and evaluation analyses. Specifically, methods of evaluating fingerprint, face recognition, iris, and voice recognition data are explored using ROC curves, CMC, Rank statistics, and DET curves. The course examines testing requirements from submission of IRB documents to the final analysis. A component of comparative analysis within modalities is included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the metrics of evaluating a biometric system.
2. Understand the proper steps of developing a testing protocol.
3. Understand the components of experimental design.
4. Outline a testing protocol and performance evaluation plan.
5. Interpret results from performance testing.
6. Define current Standards activities that direct testing and evaluation analyses.
7. Evaluate developed testing protocols.
8. To compare testing methodologies within a biometric modality.
9. To compare testing methodologies across modalities.
10. Transfer of knowledge and understanding of evaluation methodologies to other analytical scenarios.
11. Perform data analysis and report findings of the testing protocol developed during the course.
|
| IT 53500 - Global Supply Chain Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The objective of this course is to provide in-depth knowledge of global supply chain management and its application in industries. This course explores supply chain management, expanding beyond the linkage between producer and distributor to include other enterprises in the product life cycle, beginning with concept design and ending in disposal. Learning methodologies include lecture, case study, and collaborative student group activities in applied research. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate knowledge of supply chain management terminology, issues, and models.
2. Construct supply chain models and identify advantages and limitations.
3. Critically evaluate supply chain management techniques in applied case studies.
4. Independently develop in-depth knowledge of a supply chain and present the findings in a coherent and informative manner.
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| IT 54000 - Biometric Performance And Usability Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction of test methodologies from disciplines outside of biometrics, which include: usability, ergonomics, human factors, and human-computer interaction, in order to demonstrate how biometric data analysis can benefit from understanding how humans interact with biometric sensors during the testing and evaluation of biometric systems. The course explores test methods, case studies, and prior biometric testing reports in order to develop a test methodology that includes information on how users interact with biometric systems. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the operation of biometric systems.
2. Understand how people use biometric systems in operational settings (both controlled and uncontrolled).
3. Understand traditional technology, scenario, and operational testing methodologies.
4. Understand traditional ergonomic and usability testing methodologies.
5. Understand and analyze the limitations of biometric systems.
6. Understand basics of quantitative and qualitative research.
7. Evaluate the issues in designing a biometric system, including but not limited to: the impact of language and culture (instructions and symbols), ergonomics and anthropometrics (heights-angles, positioning), training and habituation or accessibility, affordance, and perception.
8. Interpret results from reports on: biometric technologies evaluation methods, ergonomic and usability methods, and statistical methods.
9. Appraise and critically evaluate prior scenario and operational test reports and case studies of biometric technologies to examine where the application of Human-Biometric Sensor Interaction principles, such as usability, human factors, and ergonomics could have provided additional data on system performance.
10. Transfer knowledge and understanding of usability, ergonomic, and usability evaluation methodologies to the testing and evaluate biometric devices and systems.
11. Establish a test methodology and collect data using a Human-Biometric Sensor Interaction based methodology (usability, ergonomic, human factors) to investigate a current problem facing industry.
12. Perform the appropriate data analysis and report findings in a report.
13. Students will produce final reports, conference papers, etc… based on their course project.
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| IT 54500 - Biometrics Technology And Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines biometrics technology as it relates to security, access control, and the authentication of individuals. The course will examine biometric technologies including iris, face, finger, hand geometry, dynamic signature verification, skin print analysis, and voice recognition. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| IT 56800 - Developing Instructional Materials For Industry And Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles and procedures in locating, evaluating, producing, and integrating instructional materials and aids into industrial, technical, and human resource development programs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| IT 57100 - Project Management In Industry And Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The factors influencing decisions during the initiation, implementation, and termination of industrial and manufacturing projects are examined. Students work as project teams, using project management tools to develop implementation strategies. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand and learn latest tools and techniques used in projects.
2. Develop a system perspective for understanding projects.
3. Align projects with strategic objectives.
4. To develop and think analytically in order to successfully apply knowledge and technical expertise to the solution of real business problems.
|
| IT 58100 - Workshop In Industrial Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. Advanced study of technical and professional topics. Emphasis is on new developments relating to technical, operational, and training aspects of industry and technology education. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| IT 59000 - Special Problems In Industrial Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Independent study of a special problem under the guidance of a member of the staff. Does not substitute for either M.S. thesis or M.S. project credit. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| IT 59800 - Directed MS Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A formal investigation of a particular problem under the guidance of the advisory committee. Not applicable to a thesis option plan of study. Enrollment during at least two consecutive terms for a total of three credits is required. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| IT 65700 - Fingerprint Performance And Usability |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers topics of fingerprint capture, fingerprint feature extraction, fingerprint matching, and attacks on fingerprint systems. The course requires analysis of real fingerprint data and the integration of fingerprint recognition in existing infrastructures. Development of a fingerprint recognition system is required. Prerequisites: IT 54500 and either IT 50700 or STAT 50100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To learn about history of fingerprint recognition.
2. To understand concepts of fingerprint recognition technology.
3. Ability to critically evaluate the application of fingerprint recognition technology in different operational scenarios.
4. Ability to present findings to individuals in a clear and coherent manner.
|
| IT 65800 - Biometric Systems Interoperability: Applications And Challenges |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides a technology neutral approach to the discussion of biometric system interoperability. It examines the issues of biometric sub-systems of different biometric modalities and sub-systems of the general biometric model. Students will be able to critically evaluate the impact of interoperability of sub-systems on the performance of the entire system. Prerequisites: IT 54500 and either IT 50700 or STAT 50100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand sub-systems of a generic biometric system model.
2. Understand sub-systems of different biometric modalities – fingerprint, face, iris, and hand recognition.
3. Ability to critically evaluate the impact of interoperability of sub-systems on performance of the entire system.
4. Ability to present findings in a clear and coherent manner.
|
| IT 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Industrial Technology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ITAL 10100 - Italian Level I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A beginning Italian course with emphasis on communicative skills (listening and speaking), literacy (reading and writing) and culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Recognize familiar words and very basic phrases.
2. Speak and write simple phrases and sentences.
3. Interact in a basic way, provided the other person is prepared to repeat or rephrase things at a slower rate of speech and help the student to formulate the intended thought.
4. Ask and answer simple questions in areas of immediate need or on very familiar topics.
|
| ITAL 10200 - Italian Level II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of ITAL 10100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Speak a series of simple phrases and sentences to describe commonly discussed topics.
2. Develop a basic understanding of simple social exchanges.
3. Write short, simple sentences related to areas of immediate needs.
4. Read short, simple texts, by identifying predictable information.
|
| ITAL 10500 - Accelerated Basic Italian |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An accelerated basic Italian course that substitutes for ITAL 10100 and 10200. Knowledge of a foreign language required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ITAL 11100 - Italian Conversation I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Basic development of oral skills. Guided practice in conversation to enhance communicative competence. Small group discussions in Italian on practical topics. May be taken concurrently with Italian Level I. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ITAL 11200 - Elementary Italian Conversation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Development of oral skills for self-expression. Guided practice in conversation to enhance communicative competence. Small group discussions in Italian on various topics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 2 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop listening skills and improve oral Italian proficiency.
2. Acquire new vocabulary and grammar through discovery in various media and conversation.
3. Read, view, listen to and discuss relevant texts in the target language.
|
| ITAL 20100 - Italian Level III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of ITAL 10200. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ITAL 20200 - Italian Level IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intermediate Italian course with emphasis on communicative skills (listening and speaking), literacy skills (reading and writing) and culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ITAL 20500 - Accelerated Intermediate Italian |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An accelerated second-year Italian course with focus on furthering the development of listening, reading, speaking and writing abilities at the intermediate level. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ITAL 21100 - Italian Conversation III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Continuation of ITAL 11200. May be taken concurrently with ITAL 20100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ITAL 21200 - Intermediate Italian Conversation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Development of oral skills for self-expression. Guided practice in Italian conversation to enhance communicative competence. Small group discussions in Italian on various topics. Not open to students enrolled in or having credit for ITAL 30100 or above. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 2 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop intermediate listening skills and improve oral Italian proficiency.
2. Acquire new vocabulary and grammar through discovery in various media and conversation.
3. Read, view, listen to and discuss relevant texts in the target language.
|
| ITAL 23100 - Dante's Divine Comedy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading and discussion of Dante's Divine Comedy. The major critical approaches to Dante's masterpiece will be reviewed. All readings, papers, and examinations will be in English. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ITAL 28100 - The Italian Renaissance And Its Impact On Western Civilization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces students to the most important literary, cultural, and political writings of the Italian Renaissance, and shows the pivotal influence of the Renaissance on the development of Western civilization as a whole. Classes and readings entirely in English; no knowledge of Italian is needed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Become acquainted with the canonical works of the Italian Renaissance that have had a major influence on modern Western thought and will develop a broad understanding of the Renaissance.
2. Become familiar with different literary genres such as poetry, comedy, novellas, treatises and dialogues, and will develop the tools necessary to approach them critically within the cultural and political context that produced them.
3. Improve their critical and writing skills.
|
| ITAL 30100 - Italian Level V |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continued development of Italian speaking, listening, reading, and writing abilities, using materials dealing primarily with everyday life and civilization in Italy from a variety of sources (e.g., newspapers, magazines, TV, recent literature, etc.). Conducted primarily in Italian. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will develop oral communication skills in Italian at advanced level through classroom discussions, presentations, and interpersonal communication.
2. Students will expand and refine their competence to comprehend, analyze, and interpret texts in Italian through integrated reading and discussion of different genres of authentic texts in Italian through integrated reading and discussion of different genres of authentic texts.
3. Students will expand and refine their written proficiency in Italian by producing a variety of genre-specific texts in Italian.
4. Students will expand their knowledge of Italian culture and their cross-cultural proficiency through the use of aural, visual, and written texts in Italian.
|
| ITAL 30200 - Italian Level VI |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Further work to develop speaking, listening, reading, and writing abilities in Italian, on the basis of materials dealing with the ideas and events that have shaped present-day Italy. Conducted primarily in Italian. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ITAL 31200 - Advanced Italian Conversation |
|
Credit Hours 1.00. One credit hour advanced Italian conversation course focused on the development of oral and aural skills for self-expression. Course provides students with guided practice in conversation to enhance communicative competence. Discussions in Italian on various topics. Course may be taken concurrently with ITAL 30100, 30200, 34100 and 34200. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 2 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop advanced listening skills and improve oral proficiency.
2. Acquire advanced vocabulary and grammar through discovery in various media and conversation.
3. Read, view, listen to and discuss assigned materials in Italian.
|
| ITAL 33000 - The Italian Cinema |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The development and evolution of Italian cinema after World War II. The class will center on the viewing and discussion of films and will survey a broad spectrum of directors and styles. Knowledge of Italian not required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ITAL 33300 - The Spirit Of Italian Comedy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores various types of Italian comedy, focusing on theater and cinema. Particular emphasis will be given to Renaissance theater, commedia dell'arte, Goldoni, Pirnadello, Dario Fo, and to the new generation of Italian comedians. In English. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, S Language & Culture, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ITAL 33500 - Italian-American Cinema |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course offers an overview of the major filmmakers associated with the representation of Italian Americans in the United States film world. Students will view and discuss major filmmakers and their films, and will write critical essays on film topics. Conducted in English. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ITAL 34100 - Italian Literature I: From The Middle Ages To The Enlightenment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is the first course of a two-semester sequence presenting an overview of Italian literature. Students will read and discuss major authors and texts and will write critical essays on literary topics. Readings, discussion, and papers in Italian. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ITAL 34200 - Italian Literature II: From Romanticism To The Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is the second course of a two-semester sequence presenting an overview of Italian literature. Students will read and discuss major authors and texts and will write critical essays on literary topics. Readings, discussion, and papers in Italian. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ITAL 38000 - Italian Culture And Civilization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course focuses on salient aspects of Italian culture and civilization from the Middle Ages to the present. In English. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ITAL 39300 - Special Topics In Italian Literature Or Cinema |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will focus on particular aspects of Italian literature, cinema or culture. No knowledge of Italian required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| ITAL 39400 - Special Topics In Italian Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course studies a particular aspect in Italian literature (e.g., a theme, device, character type, motif, place) by reading a varied selection of works of different genres, styles, and/or periods. Readings, discussion, and papers in Italian. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ITAL 39900 - Special Study Abroad Credit It Italian |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. This course number is for assignment after the fact of credits in Italian earned while enrolled at a foreign university on a Study Abroad program which cannot be appropriately accommodated under an established Purdue course number. It is not for use for courses offered at or conducted by Purdue. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
|
| ITAL 49300 - Advanced Topics In Italian Literature Or Cinema |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will analyze in depth particular aspects of Italian literature, cinema or culture. No knowledge of Italian necessary. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| ITAL 59000 - Directed Reading In Italian |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Directed readings in Italian. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ITAL M1170 - Basic Italian I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory language course in contemporary Italian. Focus on grammar, reading, conversation, elementary writing, and culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ITAL M1180 - Basic Italian II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory language course in contemporary Italian. Focus on grammar, reading, conversation, elementary writing, and culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ITAL M1190 - Basic Italian III |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introductory language course in contemporary Italian. Focus on grammar, reading, conversation, elementary writing, and culture.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ITAL M1310 - Begnning Italian I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Beginning Italian I. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ITAL M1320 - Beginning Italian II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ITAL M2000 - Intermediate Italian |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intermediate study of contemporary Italian conversation, grammar, reading, and writing. Introduction to brief literary texts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ITC 11000 - Information Technology Fundamentals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the discipline of Information Technology. This includes the pervasive Information Technology themes, the history of Information Technology, and organization issues surrounding Information Technology and its uses. The relationships to the other main area of computing such as Information Systems, Computer Engineering, Software Engineering, and Computer Science are explored. The main branches of Information Technology including infrastructure and application software are covered. A brief introduction to the various Information Technology courses involved in the degree program will be done. Careers and job opportunities will also be noted in the course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ITC 13000 - Programming Fundamentals I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to computer programming and problem solving at the level needed for the study of information technology. Programming topics include data representation, expressions, control statements, subprograms, recursion, simple input/output, basics of GUI development, and event-driven programming. Problem solving techniques include problem specification and algorithm development using pseudo-code and stepwise refinement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ITC 13100 - Programming Fundamentals II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of IT 13000 that provides a deeper understanding of program development. Fundamentals of data structures, object-oriented programming, and development of user-defined classes. Additional topics include arrays, file I/O, advanced GUI programming and use of graphics, and introduction to a scripting language. Reinforcement of problem solving techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ITC 14500 - Electrical Fundamentals |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of the basic fundamentals of electronics that introduces analog electronics including basic electricity, ohms law, DC and AC circuit analysis, and semiconductor fundamentals such as transistors and op-amps. The principles and practices of digital electronics including number systems, logic gates, memory devices, registers, and counters are also studied. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ITC 17000 - Discrete Computing Structures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A basic course in discrete structures with an emphasis on applications in information technology. Topics include sets and binary relations, vectors and matrices, an introduction to graphs and finite state machines, Boolean algebra, fundamentals of logical inference including direct proof and proof by induction, and recursion. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ITC 21000 - Information Technology Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of essential knowledge and skills that an effective IT specialist must know. Introduction to the basic components of IT systems and the issues encountered in integrating various IT components and administrating IT systems. Topics covered include foundations of networking, database systems and administration, web technologies, scripting techniques, integrative coding, and system integration and administration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ITC 22000 - Computer Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An overview of the hardware of modern microcomputers including motherboards, CPUs, I/O devices, peripherals, bus architectures, memory and storage devices. Techniques of maintenance, upgrading and installation of hardware, and low level software integration are examined. Other topics covered include identifying hardware components along with the study of multiple troubleshooting strategies and electrical safety. Theoretical concepts of the underlying hardware functions will be deliberated and how networking and software relate to hardware functionality. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ITC 23000 - Computer Operating Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to computer operating systems, their organization and functions of hardware components, as well as, system software. Emphasis on system commands, operating system interface, system utilities, shells programming, file systems and security. Concepts, such as, the graphical user interface, device drivers, memory management, processes, concurrency, scheduling, scheduling, multitasking and multiprocessing will be covered. Laboratory experimentation includes the installation, management, troubleshooting, and administration of Microsoft Windows, and UNIX like operating systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ITC 25000 - Web Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of essential knowledge and skills that an effective web administrator must know. Introduction to fundamental topics of web technologies, web-based systems, and web page design. Topics covered include Internet applications, web site development and publishing, information architecture, client and server-side programming, multimedia technologies and publishing, vulnerabilities, and web site implementation and maintenance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ITC 33000 - Networking |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A study of issues in local area network (LAN) planning, design, installation, and management. Topics include LAN components and protocols, topologies and network architecture, network system hardware consideration, LAN design and network layout, wiring and installation, network operating systems, network servers, connection and services for clients, network system administration and management. Other topics may include LAN applications, performance tuning, disaster recovery, hybrid networking environment and integration, network monitoring tools, and network management tools. Laboratory experiences include Microsoft Windows NT and UNIX. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ITC 35000 - Databases |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and application of database systems for information organization and retrieval based on the relational model. Includes database models, query languages, data dependencies, normal forms, and database design. Projects include use of commercial mainframe and microcomputer database software. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ITC 37000 - Human Computer Interaction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to how humans interact with computers and how to improve and evaluate user interfaces. Topics include human factors, HCI design issues, HCI aspects of application domains, human-centered evaluation, cognitive processing, environment, and emerging technologies. Students are expected to design, implement, and evaluate user interfaces in small projects. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ITC 38000 - Project Integration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics include emerging IT technologies, secured data and application integration through enterprise networking infrastructure, Web, data databases, middleware, remote access and mobile services. The student will analyze, design, and implement an instructor-led, team-based, one-semester IT project to practice integration concepts and skills learned from the core courses. The student will also learn how to prepare various project reports, communication memos, and present the final project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ITC 41000 - Information Assurance And Security |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the analysis, design, implementation, and management issues surrounding effective concepts of data security. The business, conceptual, and technological aspects of data security for computer and networks will be examined. Topics include virus protection, firewalls, authentication, encryption, wireless security, security protocols, and network security policy development, forensics and fraud protection. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ITC 48000 - Information Technology Senior Project I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An intensive individual and/or team-based, real-world IT senior project performed in consultation with one or more faculty advisors. Phase I includes, but not limited to: (1) project proposal, (2) defining and limiting project objectives, (3) initial research, feasibility and trade-off studies, (4) intellectual property, (5) team collaboration and communication, (6) project budgeting and schedule management, (7) periodic progress reports, and (8) project presentation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ITC 48100 - Information Technology Senior Project II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Phase II includes, but not limited to: (1) continuing research and finalize the project, (2) project schedule, cost and quality management, (3) project team building, collaboration and communication, (4) project analysis, modeling, design, and implementation, (5) periodic progress reports, (6) oral presentation to faculty and other interested parties, (7) standard-format written technical reports. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ITCS B1060 - CAD Construction Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on the application of computer aided design processes in construction technology. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ITCS B2000 - Site Preparation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of the processes related to the preparation of a construction site. Specific topics include the fundamentals of surveying, soil types, and foundation systems.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| ITS 10000 - Information Technology Fundamentals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is the freshman experience course that also covers pervasive themes in IT, organization issues, and history of IT, IT and its related informing disciplines, application domains, computer math, and other IT topics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 11000 - Web Systems Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers web technologies, information architecture, digital media, web development, vulnerabilities, social software, and other topics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 12000 - Information Technology Interaction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers human factors, HCI aspects of application domains, human-centered evaluation, developing effective interfaces, accessibility, emerging technologies, human-centered software and other topics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 13000 - Platform Technologies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers architecture and organization, computer infrastructure, enterprise deployment software, firmware, hardware and other topics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 13500 - Operating Systems Technologies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers operating systems concepts, applications, administrative activities, installation, customization, maintenance, security, and other topics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 14000 - Introduction To Programming Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers introduction concept of information technology computer programming. Topics include algorithm development, programming logic, evaluating software programs, developing software through a variety of tools, and analysis/development of software specifications. Extensive laboratory assignments are assigned. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 17000 - Networking Technologies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers routing and switching, physical layer, foundations of networking, security, application considerations, network management, and other topics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 19900 - Topics In Information Technology I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. This course covers topics in information technology or security topics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ITS 20000 - Ethical And Legal Issues IT |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers professional communications, social context of computing, teamwork concepts and issues, intellectual properties, legal issues in computing, organization context, professional and ethical issues, responsibilities, privacy and civil liberties, and other topics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 24000 - Programming Fundamentals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers fundamental data structures, fundamental programming constructs, object-oriented programming, algorithms and problem-solving, event-driven programming, recursion, and other topics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Discuss the Importance of algorithms in the problem-solving process.
2. Identify the necessary properties of good algorithms.
3. Create algorithms for solving simple problems.
|
| ITS 24500 - Integrative Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers scripting techniques, integrative coding, overview of program languages, software security practices, data mapping and exchange, emerging technologies, intersystem communication, and other topics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 25000 - Fundamentals Of Information Assurance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers security mechanisms, fundamental aspects, operational issues, policy, attacks, security domains, forensics, information states, security services, threat analysis, vulnerabilities, and other topics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 26000 - Applied Database Technologies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers database query languages, information management concepts and fundamentals, data organization, data modeling, managing the database environment, special-purpose databases, and other topics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 27000 - Internetworking Technologies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers requirements, acquisition/sourcing, integration, project management, testing and quality assurance, organizational context, architecture and other topics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 29900 - Topics In Information Technology II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. This course covers topics in information technology or security topics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ITS 30000 - Simulation And Game Development I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the concepts, methods, and techniques of simulation and game development programming. This course focuses on the mathematics related to game development, game and simulation programming techniques, algorithm design, data structures, game-specific software development, as well as the technical aspects of game testing. Extensive laboratory exercises are assigned. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 33000 - Advanced Operating Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the comparison and contrast of operating systems, the detailed examination of architecture, customization and implementation of the features of specific operating systems. Extensive laboratory exercises are assigned. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 34000 - Advanced Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers advanced topics in programming languages, GUI development, threaded applications, components, testing and debugging methods and advanced topics in event-driven and object oriented programming techniques. Extensive laboratory exercises are assigned. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 35000 - Systems Assurance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the implementation of systems assurance with computing systems. Topics include confidentiality, integrity, authentication, non-repudiation, intrusion detection, physical security, and encryption. Extensive laboratory exercises are assigned. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 35200 - Disaster Recovery And Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers risk management and business continuity. Topics include disaster recovery strategies, mitigation strategies, risk analysis and development of contingency plans for unexpected outages and component failures. Extensive laboratory exercises are assigned. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 35400 - Information Assurance Risk Assessment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers industry and government requirements and guidelines for information assurance and auditing of computing systems. Topics include risk assessment and implementation of standardized requirements and guidelines. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 35600 - Securing Wireless Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the implementation of secure wireless systems and computing systems. Topics include, intrusion detection, physical security, communications security and encryption with wireless systems. Extensive laboratory exercises are assigned. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 36000 - Distributed Application Architecture And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the application development life cycle, modeling techniques, software architecture, design patterns, best practices, and development strategies. Extensive laboratory exercises are assigned. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 36200 - Distributed Application Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a project oriented course in multi-tier application development, interface design and implementation, component based application development and configuration of multi-tier applications. Extensive laboratory exercises are assigned. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 36400 - Database Modeling And Implementation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an advanced course that covers the design of distributed databases, data modeling, normalization rules, query languages, layout and design of forms, transaction management, and implementation of the database design. Extensive laboratory exercises are assigned. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 37000 - Data Communications And Networking |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the configuration of networks and communication conduits, error detection and correction, media, and the open system model. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 37200 - System Administration And Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers system performance analysis, benchmarking, acceptance testing, security strategies, file systems analysis, auditing, server roles, and best practices. Extensive laboratory exercises are assigned. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 39900 - Topics In Information Technology III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. This course covers topics in information technology or security topics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ITS 40000 - Simulation And Game Development II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a continuation of ITS 30000 covering advanced technical aspects of simulation and game development including technology synthesis, system architectures for real-time game and simulation, network, data driven systems, and artificial intelligence. Extensive laboratory exercises are assigned. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 40400 - System Modeling And Simulation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course details topics on modeling and simulation, real-time systems, rendering engines, gaming engines, gaming logic, and interactivity. It addresses a detailed study of how games function to create experiences, including rule design, play mechanics, game balancing, social game interaction, and the integration of visual, audio, tactile and textual elements into total game experience. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 40900 - Topics In Simulation And Game Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers special topics and emerging technologies in simulation and game development. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 43000 - Systems Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers multiple platform scripting tools and script development for customization of systems features, batch operations, and automated system management. Extensive laboratory exercises are assigned. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 45000 - Software Assurance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers defensive programming techniques, bounds analysis, error handling, advanced testing techniques, detailed code auditing, and software specification in a trusted assured environment. Extensive laboratory exercises are assigned. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 45200 - Computer Forensics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the techniques used in the forensic analysis of computerized systems for gathering evidence to detail how a system has been exploited or used. Extensive laboratory exercises are assigned. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 45400 - Assured Systems Design And Implementation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the design and implementation of assured systems in an enterprise environment. Topics include hardening of operating systems, choice of platforms, design criteria within the assured systems domain. Extensive laboratory exercises are assigned. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 45900 - Topics In Information Assurance And Security |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers special topics and emerging technologies in information assurance and security. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 46000 - Distribution Application Configuration And Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers application deployment techniques, life cycle management, performance testing and tuning, maintenance, and quality assurance. Extensive laboratory exercises are assigned. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 46200 - Application Integration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers application integration methods using service oriented computing and various publicly available application programming interfaces (APIs), integration of disparate enterprise and Web applications, implementing interfaces between platforms and applications. Topics include data exchange formats, APIs for processing data of different formats, service creation and service consumption, as well as the latest developments in application integration. Extensive laboratory exercises are assigned. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. List some major considerations for enterprise integration platform selection.
2. Describe how XML and the document object model are being used to integrate and exchanging data between systems.
3. Use DTD and/or XML Schema to create a document definition for a data structure. Given a DTD or XML Schema for data structure, create a XML document with real data.
|
| ITS 46900 - Topics In Distributed Enterprise Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers special topics and emerging technologies in distributed enterprise applications. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 47000 - Large Scale High Performance Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the configuration of networks and communication conduits, error detection and correction, media, and the open system model. Extensive laboratory exercises are assigned. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 47200 - Network Design And Implementation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the design and implementation of enterprise level networks. Topics include network topologies, protocols, technologies, services, design and architecture, and implementation of the network design. Extensive laboratory exercises are assigned. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 47900 - Topics In Networking |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers special topics and emerging technologies in networking. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ITS 48000 - IT Project Development And Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the planning, design, selection, and project management of information technology systems. The course contains the development of requirements, configuration of hardware and software, management of the procurement and implementation process, performance requirements, contract negotiations, and legal issues within a comprehensive project. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. System Integration and Architecture (SIA1 Requirements)
Survey the user environment for appropriate tasks.
Classify the different users and their characteristics.
Outline the requirements section of an RFP.
|
| ITS 49000 - Senior Project Undergraduate Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This capstone course brings together the different domains of Information Technology. The course contains topics of distributed application development, networking, information assurance and security that integrate around an unconstrained problem of substantial complexity with an undefined solution and the implementation of the design solution. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Use and apply current technical concepts and practices in the core information technologies.
2. Effectively integrate IT-based solutions into the user environment.
3. Design, implement and evaluate a computer-based system, process, component, or program to meet desired needs.
4. Identify and analyze user needs and take them into account in the selection, creation, evaluation and administration of computer-based systems.
5. Assist in the creation of an effective project plan.
6. Communicate effectively with a range of audiences.
7. Recognize of the need for, and an ability to engage in, continuing professional development.
8. Display an understanding of professional ethical, legal, security and social issues and responsibilities.
|
| ITS 49900 - Topics In Information Technology IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. This course covers topics in information technology or security topics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ITS 55000 - Biometrics For Cyber Security |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will cover the fundamental concepts and design implications required to implement biometric systems. Key approaches and machine learning techniques specific to vision based, speech based, and behavioral based biometric systems will be discussed. Biometric system performance evaluation and issues related to security and privacy will also be addressed. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Employ biometric specific feature extraction techniques and machine learning skills to applied industry or research problems.
2. Have a good grasp of the multimodal design and implementation of automatic learning techniques to solve problems related to biometric recognition.
3. Collaborate with team members to deliver a solution with limited resources and time.
4. Conduct independent research under the instructor's guidance.
5. Conduct biometric related research that meets peer reviewed publication standards.
|
| ITS 56000 - Database Management Security |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This seminar course covers the concepts of security as it applies to data and database security, including auditing methods using Oracle and SQL server. The course is an appropriate entry-level graduate course for interdisciplinary students. Students should have taken mid-level database, security, and programming classes as an undergraduate. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Employ integrated database security knowledge and skills to the real-world or research problems.
2. Have a good grasp of the full life cycle of I.T. solution design process.
3. Collaborate with team members to deliver a solution with limited resources and time.
4. Conduct independent research under the supervisor’s guidance.
5. Develop sophisticated I.T. solutions that satisfy customer’s needs.
|
| ITS 56200 - Database Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This seminar course covers the concepts of database administration, including topics such as architecture, advanced data management, and performance monitoring. The course is an appropriate entry-level graduate course for interdisciplinary students. Students should have taken mid-level database and programming classes as an undergraduate. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Employ database administration knowledge and skills to the real-world or research problems.
2. Have a good grasp of the full life cycle of I.T. solution design process.
3. Collaborate with team members to deliver a solution with limited resources and time.
4. Conduct independent research under the supervisor’s guidance.
5. Develop sophisticated I.T. solutions that satisfy customer’s needs.
|
| ITS 56400 - Datawarehousing And Business Intelligence |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This seminar course covers data warehousing and business intelligence concepts, with an emphasis on dimensional modeling as it applies to business intelligence. The course is an appropriate entry-level graduate course for interdisciplinary students. Students should have taken mid-level database and programming classes as an undergraduate. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Create the target dimensional model.
2. Design the data warehouse infrastructure.
3. Create the relational atomic database.
4. Create the analysis services databases.
5. Design and build the standard report set.
6. Implementing security.
7. Analyze metadata.
|
| ITS 56600 - Database Object-Oriented Modeling And Architecture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This seminar course covers the concepts of database modeling and architecture including topics as relational modeling, advanced object-oriented modeling and object persistence. Course may be offered as classroom-based, distance or hybrid format. Prerequisite: Graduate student standing or senior status with the consent of instructor. Graduate students without an ITS background may be required to take additional leveling courses. Instructor permission required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Employ database administration knowledge and skills to the real-world or research problems.
2. Have a good grasp of the full life cycle of IT solution design process.
3. Collaborate with team members to deliver a solution with limited resources and time.
4. Conduct independent research under the supervisor’s guidance.
5. Develop sophisticated IT solutions that satisfy customer’s needs.
|
| ITS 56800 - Database Application Integration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This seminar course covers the concepts of database application and integration including topics as transactional processing, data integrity and integration with the web. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Employ database administration knowledge and skills to the real-world or research problems.
2. Have a good grasp of the full life cycle of I.T. solution design process.
3. Collaborate with team members to deliver a solution with limited resources and time.
4. Conduct independent research under the supervisor’s guidance.
5. Develop sophisticated I.T. solutions that satisfy customer’s needs.
|
| ITS 58100 - Workshop In Computer Information Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. Advanced study of technical and professional topics. Emphasis is on new development relating to technical, operational, and training aspects of industry and technology education. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop advanced understanding as well as critical thinking and research skills.
|
| ITS 59000 - Special Problems In Computer Information Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Intensive individual study of selected current developments and issues in Computer Information Technology. A faculty sponsor is required for this course. Does not substitute for either M.S. thesis or M. S. project credit. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| JOUR B1010 - Introduction to Mass Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of mass communication processes, mass media, and new media in historical and societal contexts, emphasizing ethics and law, and constitutional issues. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| JOUR C1900 - Perspectives On Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students are introduced to college learning with a journalism and mass communications environment. Classroom instruction, library activities, and projects are designed to introduce technology and information resources, develop teamwork, and sharpen analytical and evaluative skills. Topics include career planning, study techniques, time management, data collection, and presentations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| JOUR C2000 - Mass Communications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of functions, responsibilities, and influence of various mass communications media. For non majors. Directed toward the consumer and critic of mass media in modern society. No credit for both COM 25000 and JOUR C2000. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| JOUR C2010 - Topics In Journalism |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topical course dealing with changing subjects and material from semester to semester. Variation of fundamental concepts presented in C200. Does not count toward journalism major. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| JOUR C3000 - The Citizen And The News |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the institutions that produce news and information about public affairs for the citizen of American mass society. The problems about the selection of what is communicated. Case studies. International comparisons. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| JOUR C3270 - Writng For Publication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A workshop for non majors to improve writing skills and learn basic requirements of writing for publication. Instruction in market analysis and interpreting specific editorial requirements in gathering and research background materials, and in preparing manuscripts. Examination of varoius types and styles of published writing. Does not count toward journalism major. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| JOUR J1000 - Computer Methods For Journalism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to computing uses in journalism. Hands-on experience with computer software packages commonly used in journalistic research and expression. Experience with using the Internet, Nexis/Lexis, and other library resources for research. This course is for students on the Indianapolis campus only. Bloomington students take SLIS L1550 Information Resources in Journalism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| JOUR J1100 - Foundations Of Journalism And Mass Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of the institutions of journalism and mass communication; their philosophical foundations, history, processes, economic realities, and effects. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| JOUR J1500 - Controversy, Conflict And Characters: Introduction To Sports Journalism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will explore the state and practice of sports journalism through a variety of avenues including case studies, prominent sports journalists, executives and athletes. The course will provide an opportunity for students to learn the craft of sports media by examining some of the most controversial sports stories of this decade. And, to ask the questions about fairness in coverage, economics behind story, societal issues, and portraying characters as real people. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| JOUR J1520 - Introduction To Sports In Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will offer an overview of sport and its societal influence. It will focus on the converging worlds of print journalism, electronic media, public relations, advertising, documentary and emerging technologies. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| JOUR J2000 - Reporting, Writing And Editing I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Small working seminar relating communication theory to practice in journalistic writing. Emphasis on narration, exposition, description and argumentation. Development of skills in conceptualization, organization, gathering evidence, and effective presentation of articles for publication in various mass media. Required course for journalism majors and IPFW journalism minor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| JOUR J2010 - Reporting, Writing, And Editing II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Working seminar focused on the strengthening of basic journalism skills, including in-depth reporting, editing, and multimedia presentations. Creativity, cooperation, and critical thinking are used to shape effective messages for diverse audiences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| JOUR J2100 - Visual Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic principles, theories, and history of channels of human communication other than written and spoken language; development of elementary skills and experimentation in producing nonverbal messages and combining nonverbal with verbal messages. Some darkroom lab activities. Adjustable camera required. Required course for journalism majors and IPFW journalism minor. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| JOUR J2190 - Introduction To Public Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides an overview of public relations and introduces theory and practice of the field. Topics include the relationship between public relations and marketing, the history and development of public relations, media relations, measurement and assessment methods, ethics, and law.
Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| JOUR J2800 - Sophomore Seminar In Journalism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected topics in journalism, e.g. professional ethics, government and the press, contemporary problems of the press. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| JOUR J2900 - Internship In Journalism |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Work as staff member on campus publications. Work will include reporting and writing, layout and paste up work, photo work, and advertising sales work. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| JOUR J3000 - Communications Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. History and philosophy of laws pertaining to free press and free speech. Censorship, libel, contempt, obscenity, right of privacy, copyright, government regulations, and business law affecting media operations. Stresses responsibilities and freedoms in a democratic communications system. Required course for journalism majors and IPFW journalism minor. Also required course for radio and television students. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| JOUR J3100 - Editorial Practices |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Workshop in fundamentals of editing and reporting with special emphasis on news judgment, fairness, accuracy, and editorial balance. Practical experience in gathering, writing, and editing news and public affairs materials. Stress on principles applying to all mass media. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| JOUR J3150 - Feature Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course aims to develop skill in gathering and presenting feature story material, exploring the realm between straight news and editorials. It follows feature-story practice in combining information with entertainment stressing the imperative of research, accuracy, and mechanical correctness. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| JOUR J3190 - Public Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides an overview of public relations and introduces theory and practice of the field. Topics include the relationship between public relations and marketing, the history and development of public relations, media relations, measurement and assessment methods, ethics and law. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| JOUR J3200 - Principles Of Creative Advertising |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of strategy employed in developing creative advertising, with emphasis on role of the copywriter. Research, media, legal aspects, ethical standards as they apply to the copywriting functions. Place of the creative function within the advertising agency and the retail business. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| JOUR J3210 - Principles Of Public Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey course about the theory and practice of public relations. Examines public relations function within organizations, its impact on publics, and its function in society. Topics include the evolution of the field: the range of roles and responsibilities that public relations practitioners assume in a variety of settings; ethics; and significant issues and trends that have shaped the practice.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| JOUR J3270 - Writing For Publication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A workshop for non-majors to improve writing skills and learn basic requirements of writing for publication. Instruction in market analysis and interpreting specific editorial requirements, in gathering and researching background materials, and in preparing manuscripts. Examination of various types and styles of published writing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| JOUR J3350 - Advertising Copywriting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the principles and practices of writing effective commercial messages for media such as magazines, newspapers, billboards, direct mail, directories, and other promotional copy. It includes studies of message elements; the role of research in developing message strategies; the creative process; and clear, effective, and persuasive copywriting.
Application of creative strategy for print and electronic media. Emphasis placed on the development of creative concepts. Requires preparation of advertisements including rough layouts and storyboards. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| JOUR J3370 - Media Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores how economic forces influence production of media content, particularly at U.S. organizations. It examines basic economic concepts, such as market and competition, as they relate to commercial media organizations. Special attention is paid to the effect of advertising and market considerations on news decision making. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| JOUR J3400 - Public Relations Tactics And Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Planning and using a wide variety of public relations tactics and techniques is the cornerstone of an entry-level public relations practitioner’s skill set. This course provides extensive hands-on learning and practice in those basic techniques. The course allows students to apply theory and research to actual problem solving. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and describe the key methods and techniques used to develop and maintain positive media relationships.
2. Describe the process of developing a media-relations database and a basic issues-management database.
3. Demonstrate the ability to develop a media standby document.
4. Demonstrate the ability to pitch news stories to reporters in writing, via voice mail, email and in live telephone conversations.
5. Describe the process for establishing an editorial board meeting and when it is appropriate to do so.
6. Demonstrate the ability to prepare for and participate in broadcast and print media interviews.
7. Understand the role of community relations in maintaining organizational reputation.
8. Be able to create and effectively use a speaker’s bureau.
9. Understand and be able to describe the special tactics of gaining and maintain good relationships with identified community publics.
10. Explain the differences and similarities between marking, public relations and marketing public relations.
11. Describe the most effective organizational alignment between public relations and marketing.
12. Identify and describe the key communications channels and venues for marketing public relations.
13. Describe the basic planning and implementation steps for a trade show.
14. Describe the basic planning and implementation steps for a special event.
15. Describe the basic planning and implementation steps for product media relations.
16. Students will understand the different kinds of internal publics and audiences public relations professionals use communication to maintain relationships with for various organizations.
17. Understand the nature of internal audiences based on current research.
18. Be able to select and use an appropriate variety of tools and tactics to reach and interact with internal audiences.
19. Understand the role and use of Internet communication in public relations.
20. Be able to successfully use social media tools.
21. Be able to successfully use Dreamweaver and maintain websites.
|
| JOUR J3410 - Newspaper Reporting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Techniques of gathering and analyzing news. Practice in interviewing, observation, and use of documentary references and such journalism sources as speeches, press releases, and institutional reports. Structure and behavior of local government from hte perspective of reporting public affairs. Journalism majors must take this course at IUPUI or in Bloomington. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-New Albany
|
| JOUR J3420 - Magazine Reporting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Techniques of gathering and analyzing newsworthy material for specialized and general circulation magazines. Practice in interviewing, observation, and use of documentary references. Perspective on reporting public affairs. Structure of magazine writing as distinguished from other media forms. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| JOUR J3430 - Broadcast News |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Techniques of gathering, analyzing, and writing news and features for broadcast. Practice in interviewing, observation, and use of documentary references that include computer information retrieval and analysis skills. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| JOUR J3440 - Photojournalism Reporting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an introductory photojournalism course focusing on the basics of light, camera operation, and the use of chemical and digital darkrooms. It includes instruction in spot news and feature photography as well as instruction in ethics, privacy, and law.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-New Albany
|
| JOUR J3450 - Sports Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This class offers overview from its origins to its current status in the twenty-first century. The course will enable students to learn fundamentals of the sports writing process from information gathering and interviewing to writing and editing copy. Students will gain skills necessary for working in today’s sports department and newsrooms. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| JOUR J3510 - Newspaper Editing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Workshop in fundamentals of editing newspapers, including both individual and team projects. Emphasis on news judgment, fairness, accuracy, editorial balance, and language usage. Practice in writing news summaries, editing copy, writing headlines, laying out pages, and using computer editing technology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| JOUR J3520 - Magazine Editing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Workshop in fundamentals of editing specialized and general interest publications. Individual and team functions are stressed. Attention is given to editorial voice and judgment, fairness, accuracy, and language usage. Practice in writing headlines and titles, layout, design, and use of computer editing technology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| JOUR J3540 - Photojournalism Editing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Workshop on the role and function of the print media picture editor. Theory and practice of picture editing skills including assigning, selecting, cropping, writing captions and blurbs, producing informational graphics, designing photo pages, editing by computer, and managing. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| JOUR J3600 - Journalism Specialties |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Provides a concentrated study of a well-defined area of specialization. The specialty areas vary each semester. The range of offerings includes such courses as Writing for Magazines, Advertising Copywriting, and Producing Company Publications. Typically offered Spring Fall.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 12 credits
|
| JOUR J3610 - Issues In Sports Journalism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This upper-level course will study sports journalism's key policies, trends, and issues. It will examine sociological, political, legal, ethical, and technological issues in college and professional sports. It will focus on current events and controversies in the world of sports journalism. This course will discuss the symbiotic relationship between sport media and race, gender, doping, steroids, sexuality and homophobia, politics and nationalism, sports fans, loyalty, and violence, disability in sport, and other provocative issues. The class will include discussions in a seminar format integrating lectures, debates, and questions. Students will turn in critical analyses, a media journal, and will conclude the semester with a presentation and final paper or project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| JOUR J3850 - Television News |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Preparation and presentation of news for television. Practice in writing, reporting, filming, and editing news for TV. TV writing problems; use of photographs, film, and videotape; problems of sound in TV news; ethical problems of the TV film reporter and editor.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| JOUR J3900 - Corporate Publications |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course focuses on the practical and specialized concerns of editing and designing newsletters, tabloids, magazines and newspapers for business, industry, institutions, or other organizations. Attention is given to audience surveys, readability, copy editing, headlines, photographs, cut lines, copy-fitting, and printing instruction, with special emphasis on design techniques for the four major types of organizational publications. Includes practice in all facets of publication design. Recommended for persons interested in print communications programs, or in developing limited circulation publications. Limited enrollment; consent of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| JOUR J4020 - Careers In Journalism |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Careers In Journalism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| JOUR J4090 - Media Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Research seminar that examines techniques and processes used in managing media organizations. Through discussions, case analysis, and group projects, the course explores organizational missions and social responsibilities, market analysis techniques, personnel management issues, and budgeting.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| JOUR J4100 - The Media As Social Institutions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of the functions and impact of the mass media in society with primary focus on the United States. Discussion of the values of media organizations and the professional and ethical values of journalists. Critical analysis of the relationship of the media and society and the effect of political, economic, and cultural factors on the operation of the media. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-South Bend
|
| JOUR J4130 - Magazine Article Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In-depth explanation of the non-fiction magazine article field. Examination of trends and problems in non-fiction writing for both general and specialized magazines. Criticism of student articles written for publication. Seminar sessions with editors and freelance writers. Transfer students advised to complete this course at IUPUI or Bloomington. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
|
| JOUR J4200 - Advertising As Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Lectures and practice in copywriting, graphics, layout, and production. Incorporates psychological, social, legal, and marketing aspects of creativity for mass media. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| JOUR J4250 - Supervision Of School Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Lectures, projects, and discussion on legal and ethical aspects of advising school media and on designing, producing, and financing school-based student media, including print, broadcast, and online media. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
|
| JOUR J4270 - Public Relations In A Democratic Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Lectures and discussion on dissemination of public information by industry and institutions. Examination of procedures and policies and evaluation of public relations efforts. Contrasts public relations practices in America with those in other nations and cultures. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| JOUR J4280 - Public Relations Planning And Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theories and principles relevant to public relations research and strategic planning, including development of goals and objectives, client relationships, budgets, and research methods. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| JOUR J4290 - Public Relations Campaigns |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. How to develop a campaign and proposal to meet a client’s business objectives and how to present it. Part of the course focuses on media relations and crisis communication training. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| JOUR J4380 - Advertising Issues And Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Seminar in current developments in advertising as an economic and social force. Examines contemporary issues in the profession. Student will conduct independent and original research projects. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| JOUR J4600 - Topics Colloquium |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topical seminar dealing with changing subjects and material from semester to semester. May be repeated once for credit with a different topic. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| JOUR J4630 - Computerized Publication Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This publishing design course incorporates typesetting, electronic photo editing, graphics, and page design. Students are instructed in design theory, computer publishing skills, and creative problem solving. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-South Bend
|
| JOUR J4750 - Race, Gender, and the Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey and analysis of how news and entertainment media represent issues of race and gender. History of women and people of color as media professionals and media consumers. Discussion of contemporary problems and potential solutions.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| JOUR J4920 - Media Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Must have permission to enroll. Supervised professional experience in communications media. Does not contribute to 27 credit hours of required course work in journalism major but will count toward 33 credit hours maximum allowed in journalism and telecommunications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| JOUR J4990 - Honors Research In Journalism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Opportunity for independent reading, research, and experimentation on relevant issues in mass communications. Work with faculty member on individual basis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| JOUR J5600 - Topics Colloquium |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| JOUR J5630 - Desktop Publishing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A publications design course utilizing desktop publishing technology to achieve fundamental design objectives. Emphasizes use of typography, photography, and graphics within an electronic grid pattern which communicates effectively.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| JPNS 10100 - Japanese Level I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. A basic study of standard Japanese. Students will be introduced to spoken and written forms of the language from the beginning. Language form and use are equally emphasized. Relevant cultural aspects. Hiragana, Katakana, and 85 Kanji. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| JPNS 10200 - Japanese Level II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. A continuation of the study of elementary Japanese. Task-oriented activities will be incorporated to encourage language use as well as pattern practice for linguistic accuracy. Relevant cultural aspects will be introduced. 120 Kanji. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| JPNS 20100 - Japanese Level III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. A study of intermediate Japanese. Occasional use of authentic materials for listening and reading practice. Task-oriented exercises, communicative activities, and pattern practice are used to facilitate learning of the spoken and written language. 110 Kanji. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| JPNS 20200 - Japanese Level IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. A continuation of intermediate Japanese. Active use of authentic materials for listening and reading practice. Task-oriented exercises, communicative activities, and pattern practice for learning of the spoken and written language. 150 Kanji. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| JPNS 23000 - Japanese Literature In Translation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading and discussion of selected texts from major writers and genres. The course provides a broad survey of the Japanese literary tradition and its cultural and historical background. Emphasis may vary from year to year. Knowledge of Japanese not required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| JPNS 24100 - Introduction To The Study Of Japanese Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading and discussion of selected Japanese poetry, prose, and drama; introduction to methods of literary criticism, applied to the reading of Japanese literary discourse. Texts, discussion, and written assignments largely in Japanese. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| JPNS 28000 - Introduction To Modern Japanese Civilization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of modern Japanese culture. Various aspects are covered, such as geography, economy, society, the political system, family, education, traditional arts, business, and language. Current issues will be discussed in a timely manner. Lectures in English. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| JPNS 30100 - Japanese Level V |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continued development of Japanese speaking, listening, reading, and writing abilities, using materials dealing primarily with everyday life and civilization in Japan from a variety of sources (e.g., newspapers, magazines, TV, recent literature, etc.). Conducted primarily in Japanese. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| JPNS 30200 - Japanese Level VI |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Further work to develop speaking, listening, reading, and writing abilities in Japanese, on the basis of materials dealing with the ideas and events that have shaped present-day Japan. Conducted primarily in Japanese. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| JPNS 31300 - Intermediate Reading In Japanese I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides students with further study in reading Japanese at the intermediate level. The course also reviews and introduces 500 basic kanji. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| JPNS 33000 - Japanese Cinema |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the development of Japanese cinema after World War II. The class focuses on the viewing and discussion of the films and examines a variety of directors with different styles and thematic messages. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| JPNS 34100 - Japanese Literature I: Modern Japanese Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected reading of poetry, drama, and fiction of modern Japanese literature. Students will read and discuss major authors and texts and will write critical essays on literary topics. Conducted largely in Japanese. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| JPNS 34200 - Japanese Literature II: Classical Japanese Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected reading of classical Japanese poetry, prose, and drama. Students will gain reading skills in classical Japanese and will discuss and write critical essays on various literary topics. Conducted largely in Japanese. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| JPNS 36100 - Elementary Survey Of Japanese Linguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course surveys all areas of Japanese Linguistics, including phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, and pragmatics, focusing on systematizing fragmentary knowledge students are assumed to have acquired through Japanese language courses. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| JPNS 36200 - The Structure Of Japanese II: Advanced Sentence Structure And Applied Linguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Presents the structure of Japanese complex sentences as well as selected aspects of inter-sentential structures, and treats selected sociolinguistic and psycholinguistic aspects of the language. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| JPNS 36300 - Relationship Of Japanese Language And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the Japanese language with reference to the way the language is being used in the Japanese society. Particular areas include keigo (honorific language), aizuchi (backchannel), silence, gender issues, in-group vs. out-group. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| JPNS 39900 - Special Study Abroad Credit In Japanese |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. This course number is for assignment after the fact of credits in Japanese earned while enrolled at a foreign university on a Study Abroad program which cannot be appropriately accommodated under an established Purdue course number. It is not for use for courses offered at or conducted by Purdue. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
|
| JPNS 40100 - Japanese Level VII |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced work on the development of Japanese speaking, reading, and writing abilities, focusing on materials dealing with culture and the arts of Japan. Conducted mostly in Japanese. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| JPNS 40200 - Japanese Level VIII |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Further advanced work on speaking, listening, reading, and writing abilities in Japanese. Course materials will cover a variety of topics illustrated by film and other media, both print and nonprint. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| JPNS 48000 - Japanese Civilization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces various aspects of contemporary Japanese culture through readings and discussions. Topics include geography, history, family, education, society, religion, and values. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| JPNS 49000 - Special Topics In Japanese Language |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| JPNS 52100 - Teaching Japanese As A Foreign Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces a wide range of techniques used in teaching Japanese as a foreign language. Discusses theoretical issues concerned with the learning and teaching of Japanese. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| JPNS 54300 - Modern Japanese Popular Literature And Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of modern Japanese entertainment literature, together with cinema, comic strips, animations, and contemporary theaters. Emphasis is on the examination of the development of the modern Japanese cultural consciousness expressed in the area of popular literature and culture. Typically offered Spring Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| JPNS 56000 - Survey Of Japanese Linguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is intended to provide the student with a systematic overview of the Japanese language. It covers most major areas of linguistics, from phonetics to pragmatics. Conducted in Japanese. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| JPNS 57500 - Theories Of Japanese Language Acquistion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced course designed to provide an overview of major theoretical issues in Japanese language acquisition research. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| JPNS 59000 - Directed Reading In Japanese |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Directed readings in Japanese. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
|
| JPNS 59400 - Special Topics In Japanese Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Reading and extensive discussion of selected texts from different writers and genres. Provides in-depth research on a variety of issues related to Japanese literary and cultural traditions. Knowledge of advanced Japanese required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| JPNS 59600 - Special Topics In Japanese Linguistics. |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| JPNS 67900 - Seminar In Japanese Linguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study and research on a significant topic in Japanese linguistics. Topic to be announced in advance. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| JPNS 69800 - Research MA Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MA Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| JWST 33000 - Introduction To Jewish Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An interdisciplinary course touching on the full range of Jewish experience from antiquity to the present. Several members of the Jewish Studies faculty and guest lecturers participate, representing such fields as anthropology, history, language, literature, philosophy, politics, religion, and sociology. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| JWST 59000 - Directed Readings In Jewish Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A reading course in aspects of Judaica directed by the instructor in whose particular field of specialization the content of the reading falls. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Deepen the knowledge of select topics in Judaica.
|
| KINS K6900 - Sexual Science Research Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Methodological issues and research data in sex research are presented and discussed. The emphasis is on an interdisciplinary perspective to the study of sexuality. Presenters will include IU faculty, visiting faculty, doctoral students and post-doctoral fellows. May be repeated for credit with authorization of instructor. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| LA 10100 - Survey Of Landscape Architecture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A general overview of the profession of landscape architecture and a description of Purdue's landscape architecture program. This course will provide entering prelandscape architecture and landscape horticulture-design students a preview of the profession that they have chosen to pursue and will be a general information course for students across the campus who have an interest in becoming familiar with landscape architecture. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LA 11600 - Graphic Communication For Students Of Landscape Architects And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to design and presentation techniques fundamental to landscape architecture. Short projects give students exposure to a variety of presentation materials (pencil, ink, pastel, watercolor and acrylic, paper and board) to freehand lettering, and to two- and three-dimensional illustrations. Materials used are purchased by the student. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LA 11700 - Computer Technology In Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course that covers the computer technology skills needed to communicate, create, and implement designs in the field of landscape architecture. The course will include current technology in the following areas: CAD, desktop publishing, image processing, GIS, spread sheet, file transfer protocol, scanning, printing and file management. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LA 15000 - Preservation Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An introduction to the preservation movement in the United States, focusing on the chronology of developments and organizational structure of the public, private, and not-for-profit sectors at the federal, state, and local levels. Course meets during weeks 1-5. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LA 15100 - Building Preservation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Identification of architectural styles, the language of preservation, preparation of a national register application, tax credits and tax incentives for historic preservation will be covered. The student is to develop a working knowledge of the Secretary of Interior Historic Preservation Guidelines. Course meets during weeks 6-10. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LA 15200 - Community Preservation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Downtown revitalization using historic preservation as an economic development strategy will be presented. The unit focuses on the roles of the National Main Street Center, Indiana Main Street Center, federal, state, and local legislative initiatives and local historic districts, guidelines, and local historic review boards. Course meets during weeks 11-15. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LA 16600 - History And Theory Of Landscape Architecture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the historic evolution of landscape architecture to the status of a recognized profession. The course covers the social, economic, political, climatic, and other factors that have influenced the development of design styles and theories. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LA 17600 - Urbanization And Change In The Midwest Landscape |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course traces the evolution and meaning of the human-made midwest environment from the retreat of the Wisconsin glacier to the present. The course intertwines economic, cultural, historical, political, technological, anthropological, and social data to develop a working model of change in the midwestern environment. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LA 21600 - Landscape Architectural Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Landscape architectural site design, an introduction into processes and products. Building on the introduction to graphics in L A 116 this is an introduction to the processes and production of site design and development drawings. Recording, conceptualizing and presenting site design ideas through problem solving projects. Emphasis on hand and computer drafting and drawing skills to communicate design ideas. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LA 22600 - Landscape Architectural Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Methods, principles and the process of designing in the built environment. Basic principles of site organization and composition are presented and applied in a series of exercises and studio projects. Role of the design process is reinforced both as a problem-solving tool and as a means of creativity and ideation. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LA 22700 - Planting Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of design principles as related to plant design characteristics; design implications of plant responses to environment; review of landscape plants in fall. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LA 24600 - Site Systems I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Properties of hardscape materials, their methods of detailing and specification. Introduction to masonry, wood and site furnishings. Design of pavements, walls, steps, ramps and other common site elements. Standards and methods of detailing and notation are presented in small-format exercises. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LA 25000 - Architectural Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course will focus on the language of architecture, from classical periods to current practices and explore the application of traditional systems of proportion and geometry. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop and maintain knowledge of successful design principles essential to the practice of the related design profession of architecture.
2. Familiarize the student with the language of architecture from the classical periods to current practices.
3. Develop the student's knowledge of past and current architects who are recognized as significant contributors to the design legacy and current practices of architecture.
|
| LA 26600 - Frank Lloyd Wright |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The course is an overview of the architecture, philosophy, and biographical background of one of America's foremost architects, Frank Lloyd Wright. The lectures explore his prolific output of architectural commissions along with his efforts at community planning, furniture design, textile design, and related arts. L A 266 provides a broad overview of American architecture through a survey of Wright's predecessors, mentors, peers, and his antagonists. The course includes two field trips, one to Oak Park, Illinois, the community featuring the largest number of built works by Wright, and to the John E. Christian residence, 'Samara' in West Lafayette. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LA 27500 - Honors Course - Lower Division |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Utilized to offer a new honors course for a maximum of three years. Variable title, credit, and instructional type. Course may be repeated for credit if content and titles are different. Offered primarily to first- and second-year students. Courses offered must be approved by departmental or program faculty and College of Agriculture Honors Committee. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 12 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Critical thinking.
2. Communication.
3. Cultural understanding.
4. Civic responsibilities.
5. Professional preparation.
6. Scientific principles.
7. Social science principles.
8. Teamwork.
|
| LA 30900 - Co-Op Preparation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The material presented in this course consists of a broad overview of the employment opportunities in the professional practice of landscape architecture and the ways to secure an internship. It provides the student with information about career choices in landscape architecture and an appropriate knowledge base with which to make informed internship choices. Students prepare written and graphic documents for seeking employment. Students prepare for interviews and communications leading to employment as an intern in landscape architecture. Course meets during weeks 1-8. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LA 31600 - Landscape Architectural Design III |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Design theory and meaning in landscape architecture. Past, current and emerging design theories are investigated via lectures, research assignments and studio projects. Projects gain in size, complexity and depth of meaning. Emphasis on the role theory plays both as a stabilizing force and as a catalyst for change. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LA 32500 - Planting Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of plants as unique elements of landscape design. Plants will be studied for their aesthetic and functional uses in the landscape. Various scales of planting and design will be approached. Natural distribution and ecological considerations in planting design will be explored. Requires class trips. Students will pay individual lodging or meal expenses when necessary. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LA 32600 - Landscape Architectural Design IV |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Community planning and design. Past, current and emerging planning theories are investigated via lectures, research assignments and studio projects. The interrelationship of land use, circulation, and open space are explored using environmental and sustainable principles within a framework of traditional neighborhood design. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LA 34600 - Site Systems II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Earthwork, grading, surface drainage and storm water management. Properties of contour lines and topographic representation. Standards for grading practices, notation and nomenclature. Methods for calculating volumes of cut and fill. Methodology for horizontal and vertical alignment of roads and trails. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LA 35600 - Site Systems III |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Methods and standards of construction documentation using current technology. Preparation and packaging of site-related technical drawings and bid packages. Methods for site layout and dimensioning. Organization and composition of planting plans, plant lists, grading plans, lighting plans, and associated detail sheets. Standards and sequence of site-related specification documents. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LA 39000 - Professional Cooperative Programs In Landscape Architecture |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Supervised work experiences in landscape architectural offices and in the landscape construction or maintenance industry. Programs must be preplanned and conducted under the direction of the cooperative educational coordinator in cooperation with an employer. Students must submit a summary report of the work experience. Consent of cooperative program coordinator required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| LA 40000 - Landscape Architecture Study Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. Utilized to record credits earned through participation in Purdue study abroad programs with cooperating foreign universities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 24 credits
|
| LA 41600 - Landscape Architectural Design V |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Understand issues, develop concepts and implement ideas beginning with research and precedents in urban design, which is then applied to the planning and design of complex urban sites, and resolved through detailed site design. Urban design will focus on the relationship and interaction between development patterns and land uses; access circulation and parking; and open space. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LA 42600 - Capstone Course In Landscape Architecture |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. This course will focus on the integration and application of accumulated knowledge of landscape architecture from the student's previous coursework and internship experience. Students will be challenged to identify and solve problems in community-based projects. The students will also communicate, through reports and presentations, their results and plan to community audiences, faculty, and other students. Students will also do directed readings and then discuss topics related to the current and future practices of landscape architecture and environmental design. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LA 45000 - In The English Landscape:Integrating History, Horticulture, and Landscape Architecture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive four-weeks in residence in Corsham, UK with visits to significant sites to examine the intersections between human culture and the natural environment that results in the developed landscape. Offered in even-numbered years. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LA 47500 - Honors Course - Upper Division |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Utilized to offer a new honors course for a maximum of three years. Variable title, credit, and instructional type. Course may be repeated for credit if content and titles are different. Offered primarily to third- and fourth-year students. Courses offered must be approved by departmental or program faculty and College of Agriculture Honors Committee. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Critical thinking.
2. Communication.
3. Cultural understanding.
4. Civic responsibilities.
5. Professional preparation.
6. Scientific principles.
7. Social science principles.
8. Teamwork.
|
| LA 47600 - Professional Practice Of Landscape Architecture |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A study of the principles and practice of landscape architecture in private and public offices. The course covers project acquisition, office management, and project implementation procedures. Preparation of a professional compendium is required. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| LA 48000 - Landscape Architecture Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Exploration and discussion of current problems in the environmental design profession. Student presentation of selected landscape architectural problems. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LA 49000 - Special Problems In Landscape Architecture |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Independent in-depth study and presentation of specific research or design problems selected by the student in consultation with the instructor. Open only to advanced students. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| LA 49900 - Thesis Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. For students doing individualized research on landscape architecture; report required. Arrange with academic advisor and honors research advisor before registering. Admission to the honors program required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| LALS 10100 - Introduction To Latin American Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course outlines the political, social, cultural, and historical dimensions of Latin America organized in thematic units. Topics cover from the cultural heritage of Spain and the pre-Spanish civilizations to contemporary Latin America. Course conducted in English. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| LALS 25000 - Introduction To Latin American And Latino Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Interdisciplinary and integrative presentation and examination of the historical, political, economic, and cultural processes of Latin America, from independence to the present followed by an analysis of scholarly works that include theoretical models, methodological strategies, and analytical approaches to learning about US Latinos. Special emphasis is placed on the immigrant experience and its role in the incorporation of Latinos into the US society. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LALS 26000 - U S Latino Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course uses an interdisciplinary approach to study Latino culture in the United States through art, film, literature, music and theater. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LALS 35500 - Political Economy Of Latin America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the salient issues of the 21st century in the political economy of Latin America. The first part introduces students to the historical evolution of the region's economy and its socio-economic and political determinants. Then it focuses on topical inquiry, analyzing key policy areas, frameworks and choices at the core of the current political economy of the region's countries: fiscal and industrial policies, monetary and financial policies and policies on trade, migration and inequality, energy and the environment. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LALS 49500 - Humanigration: A Border Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The purpose of this course is to introduce students to the highly debated topic of immigration. The topic of immigration will be centralized to the discussion of Mexican immigration and will further analyze current issues; however, a general history of immigration to the U.S. will also be covered. This course requires students to participate in an immersion trip to the Mexican/Arizona border during Spring Break. This course seeks to equip students with the knowledge surrounding the debate of immigration, while providing an understanding of the human or individual motivations to immigrate. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The student will have first-hand knowledge and experience with immigration issues.
2. The student will have met immigrants and immigration professionals.
3. The student will learn about the historical and updated aspects of immigration.
4. The ability to articulate their views on immigration will have improved significantly.
5. The student will be able to present their knowledge and personal findings from this course to others.
|
| LAS 20100 - The Hispanic American Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Dimensions of the Hispanic American experience, including history, education, politics, psychology, economics, religion, social organization, and art are covered in the course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| LAS 27100 - Latin American To 1824 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of Latin American history from its origins to the end of the major movements toward independence, with emphasis on discovery, colonization, expansion, and the transfer of institutions from Spain and Portugal. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| LAS 27200 - Latin American Since 1824 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of Latin American history from independence to the present with particular attention on political, economic, and social problems connected with modernization. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| LAS 33000 - United States And Latin America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will explore political, economic and social aspects of relations between the United States and various Latin American nations from independence to the present. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| LAS 34000 - Latin American Population Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores demographic changes and migration trends relating to Latin America. Topics addressed will include internal and external migration, birth rates and international population policy. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| LAS 37300 - The Caribbean |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Will explore various topics and issues unique to the Caribbean. Emphasis will be placed on European and African influence on the complex nature of Caribbean history, languages and literature, societies and cultures. Students may take the course for credit in either Latin American Studies or History, but not both. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| LAS 37600 - Latin American Cinema |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of films produced in Latin America or addressing Latin American topics/issues. Students will engage in critical analysis of the films, and expect to develop greater understanding of the social context of subjects introduced. May include documentaries or feature films. Approximately two hours each week will be devoted to viewing films, and two hours to class lecture/discussion. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| LAS 37700 - Latino/Hispanic Cinema |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of films produced by Hispanic-Americans and/or depicting the Hispanic American experience. Students will engage in critical analysis of the films, and expect to develop greater understanding of the social context of subjects introduced. May include documentaries or feature films. Approximately two hours each week will be devoted to viewing films, and two hours to class lecture/discussion. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| LAS 39000 - Latin American Themes Of Culture, Politics And Economy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics addressed will include general themes of culture and political economy in Latin America. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| LAS 45000 - Hispanic Heritage At The Calumet Region |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An exploration of the history of Hispanic immigration into the Calumet Region. The course will include an examination of cultural diversity, politics, community organizations, and contributions of local Hispanic-Americans. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| LAS 47200 - History Of Mexico |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A history of the Mexican people from the pre-Columbian period to the present. Special emphasis is placed on the successful social revolutions that led to the development of today's dynamic nation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| LAS 48000 - Practicum In Latin American Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course is designed to offer students credit for field experience in Latin American studies. Work may include study abroad, community service, or research. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| LAS 49000 - Topics In Latin American Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Special topics course designed to address various subjects. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| LATN 10100 - Latin Level I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This introduction to Latin language is designed to give the student mastery over basic Latin grammar and vocabulary and to enable the student to read simple Latin prose passages. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| LATN 10200 - Latin Level II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The first part of the semester is devoted to a review of the fundamentals of grammar through reading and analysis of relatively simple passages in prose (e.g., Caesar's Gallic Wars). Reading of Caesar is followed by reading and continuing analysis of selections from the speeches and letters of Cicero. Some attention to other prose writers (Pliny, Livy, Tacitus, et al.). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| LATN 20100 - Latin Level III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced course designed for students whose specialty requires a good knowledge of Latin literature. Drawn from "Golden Age" or "Silver Age" Latin, readings are offered in epic, lyric, drama, narrative verse, and picaresque; also in rhetoric, history, social satire, epistolography, and philosophy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LATN 20200 - Latin Level IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A second reading course in Classical Latin, with emphasis on representative poetic texts (Vergil, Ovid). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LATN 34300 - Roman Oratory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Readings and discussion of Roman Oratory based on the speeches of Cicero. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LATN 34400 - Roman Epic |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Readings and discussion of the Roman Epic, including selected passages from Vergil, Lucan, Silius Italicus, and Statius. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LATN 34500 - Roman Elegy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Readings and discussion of selections from Roman Elegy, including selected passages from such authors as Catullus, Tibullus, Propertius, and Ovid. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LATN 34600 - Roman Rhetoric |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Readings and discussion of selections from Roman rhetorical theory, including selected passages from the Rhetorica ad Herennium, Cicero, and Quintilian. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LATN 34700 - Roman Comedy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Readings and discussion of Roman comedy, including selected works of Plautus and Terence. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will have greater facility in translating Latin in general, and Latin verse in particular.
2. Intensive study of texts representative of this genre will enhance their understanding and appreciation not simply of other pieces of Roman literature, but also of western comedy as a whole, whose roots are in the comedies of Plautus and Terence.
3. Focus on the background of Roman comedy will also enable students to recognize important connections between literature and its social contexts.
|
| LATN 44200 - Roman Lyric Poetry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Readings and discussion of selections from Roman lyric poetry, with special attention to Catullus and Horace. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LATN 44300 - Roman Satire |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Readings and discussion of Roman satire, including selected passages from Horace, Juvenal, Petronius, and Seneca. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LATN 44400 - Roman Philosophers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Readings and discussion of Roman philosophical texts. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LATN 44500 - Roman Encyclopedists |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Readings and discussion of texts representative of Roman encyclopedism, including selected passages from Pliny the Elder, Aulus Gellius, and Nonius Marcellus. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LATN 44600 - Roman Historians |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Readings and discussion of Roman historical texts. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LATN 49000 - Directed Reading In Latin |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Directs the reading of students with special interests. Guides students in profitable reading in subjects of their own choice. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| LATN 51900 - Teaching College Latin |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Designed to provide a forum for ideas connecting theory and research to teaching practice. Explores issues related to how learning and teaching can be enhanced and presents practical ideas that can be implemented in the classroom. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
|
| LATN 59000 - Directed Reading In Latin |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Directed reading of selected texts in classical and/or medieval Latin. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Summer Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| LATN 60100 - First Course To Establish Reading Knowledge |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The first of two Latin courses designed to satisfy the graduate reading proficiency requirement. Typically offered Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LATN 60500 - Second Course To Establish Reading Knowledge |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The second of two Latin courses designed to satisfy the graduate reading proficiency requirement. Prerequisite: LATN 60100. Typically offered Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LAW D7740 - Law And Forensic Science |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Law and Forensic Science. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| LAW D8740 - Psychiatry and the Law |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course introduces the psychiatric discipline as it relates to the law and covers its use as a forensic art in court.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| LBST D5000 - Graduate Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Independent project to be undertaken in consultation with graduate advisor. This project requires students to demonstrate mastery of some specific topics or medium of expression. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LBST D5010 - Humanities Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An interdisciplinary graduate seminar in the humanities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LBST D5020 - Social Science Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An interdisciplinary graduate seminar in the social sciences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| LBST D5030 - Science Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An interdisciplinary graduate seminar in the sciences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LBST D7000 - Topics In Liberal Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Interdisciplinary approach, seminar format. Individual project required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| LC 10100 - Special Topics In Foreign Languages I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Special topics in Foreign Languages. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
|
| LC 10200 - Special Topics In Foreign Languages II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.0 or 4.00. Topics vary. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
|
| LC 20100 - Special Topics In Foreign Languages III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Topics vary. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
|
| LC 20200 - Special Topics In Foreign Languages IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Special Topics in Foreign Languages IV. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
|
| LC 23000 - Introduction To Comparative Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (CMPL 23000) Foundations for comparison of works in different languages, thematic (philosophical, sociological, psychological) and structural (genre, composition, use of linguistic devices); parallel interrelation of theme and structure in works of different literatures. The importance of literary norms and systems of genres. Examination of crosscurrents in different literatures during successive periods of development. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LC 23300 - Love, Sex, And Gender In Western European Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course examines major works in translation that were, and continue to be, formative upon modern attitudes to love, sex, and gender in the West. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LC 23500 - East Asian Literature In Translation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading and discussion of selected East Asian poetry, prose, and drama. Focus will be on the traditions of China and Japan, but may include works of other cultures such as Korea. Emphasis may vary yearly, stressing traditional or modern literatures. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LC 23900 - Contemporary Foreign Women Writers In Translation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of women's literary creativity in the context of feminist theory. Reading and analysis of major works by contemporary women writers abroad. Course content will vary. Knowledge of a foreign language not required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| LC 26100 - Introduction To The Linguistic Study Of Foreign Languages |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of linguistics and the role of language in society; fundamental concepts of linguistic analysis. The course focuses on linguistic phenomena found in French, German, Russian, and Spanish, with material, examples, and assignments drawn primarily from those languages whenever appropriate. Credit will not be awarded for both LC 26100 and SLHS/ENGL 22700. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LC 33100 - Comparative Literature In Translation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course in the study of a special topic related to works in several foreign literatures, directed by an instructor whose particular field of specialization will be highlighted. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| LC 33300 - The Middle Ages On Film |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the Middle Ages through films in various languages and genres from the beginning of film history to the present. Reading literary, historical, legal, and film theory texts in conjunction with the films, students critically analyze representations of the Middle Ages and the cultural context from which these emerge. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LC 36100 - Sound And Form In Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of the nature of sound systems (phonology) and form systems (morphology) of language, as well as techniques of phonological and morphological analysis, using material from various languages. Central focus on phonetic and phonological structure, and on inflectional and derivational morphology. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LC 36800 - Sociolinguistic Study Of African American English |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the history, structure, uses, and educational concerns of African American English in African American speech communities and the U.S. culture at large. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LC 37100 - Phonetics Of Foreign Languages |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to articulatory phonetics for students of foreign languages. Mechanisms of production of speech sounds. Production and discrimination of sounds of other languages; contrast with English sounds; practice in pronunciation and phonetic transcription. Introduction to the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA). Credit will not be awarded for more than one of SLHS 30600, LING 31500, and LC 37100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| LC 39900 - Special Study Abroad Credit In Foreign Languages |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. This course number is for assignment after the fact of credits in foreign languages earned while enrolled at a foreign university on a Study Abroad program which cannot be appropriately accommodated under an established Purdue course number. It is not for use for courses offered at or conducted by Purdue. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
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| LC 49000 - Special Topics In Foreign Languages And Literatures |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| LC 49900 - Research In Foreign Languages |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Undergraduate research into a topic in foreign languages. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
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| LC 51900 - Teaching Of Foreign Languages |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A basic course designed to provide a forum for ideas connecting theory and research to teaching practice. Explores issues related to how learning and teaching can be enhanced and presents ideas that can be implemented in the classroom. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| LC 56100 - Introduction To The Linguistic Analysis Of Foreign Languages |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the fundamental concepts of linguistic analysis; overview of linguistics and the role of language in society. Focus on linguistic phenomena found in French, German, Russian, and Spanish; material, examples, and assignments drawn primarily from those languages whenever appropriate. Credit will not be given for both LC 261 and 561. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| LC 56300 - Historical Linguistics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (ANTH 56300, ENGL 56300) A survey of mechanisms and motivations of linguistic change. Topics include phonological, morphological, semantic and syntactic change, comparative and internal reconstruction, linguistic variation, language contact, and linguistic typology. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| LC 56500 - Sociolinguistics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (ANTH 56500, COM 56500, ENGL 56500) An introduction to language in its social context, focusing on uses and users of language. Topics include social class, ethnic group, gender, language attitudes, and bilingualism. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| LC 57000 - Introduction To Semiotics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (ANTH 51900, SLHS 58900, COM 50700, ENGL 57000) The study of languages, literatures, and other systems of human communication. Includes a wide range of phenomena that can be brought together by means of a general theory of signs. The course deals with three fundamental areas: 1) verbal communication, 2) nonverbal communication (iconic systems, gestures, body language, etc. ), and 3) communication through art forms. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| LC 57500 - Theories Of Foreign Language Acquisition |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced course designed to provide an overview of major theoretical issues in foreign language acquisition research. Provides a broad historical introduction to theories of acquisition that underlie these different perspectives. This course also provides an understanding of skills assessment and selection of instructional materials. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| LC 59000 - Directed Reading In Foreign Languages |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| LC 59300 - Special Topics In Literature |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Special topics in Literature. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| LC 59600 - Special Topics In Linguistics |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Special topics in Linguistics. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| LC 63000 - Comparative Literature: Function And Methods |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (CMPL 63000 and ENGL 66000) An introduction to methods, problems, and the bibliographical tools pertaining to comparative study. Required of all students in the Comparative Literature Program. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| LC 63900 - Seminar In Comparative Literature |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (ENGL 66500 and CMPL 65000) Exploration of a significant topic in comparative literature, e. g., the arts of translation, thematology, genre studies, literary movements, literary relations between countries. (See Comparative Literature. ) Prerequisite: ENGL 66000 or LC 63000. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| LC 65000 - Topics In Theory |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of theoretical approaches to literature, the arts, or general culture (e. g., cognitive science, deconstruction, feminism, hermeneutics, postmodernism, postcolonial studies, reader response, semiotics). Examines methodologies and confronts them with literary texts. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| LC 66500 - Methods Of Sociolinguistics Analysis |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (ANTH 675, SLHS 665, ENGL 675) An advanced course in the application of theory to sociolinguistic analysis, with discussion of relevant theoretical concerns and experience with the current dominant paradigms. Prerequisite: ANTH 56500 or SLHS 56500 or ENGL 56500 or LC 56500. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| LC 67900 - Seminar In Linguistics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study and research on a significant topic in linguistics. Topic to be announced in advance. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| LC 69800 - Research MA Thesis |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MA Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| LC 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| LESA L1050 - Beyond The Sample Gates |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. L105 is a service-learning course that develops social responsibility, active citizenship and community engagement by combining academic inquiry with service that meets genuine community needs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| LGBT 20000 - Introduction To Scholarship On Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, And Transgender Issues |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an interdisciplinary introduction to scholarship and research on lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) issues in a number of fields, including history, philosophy, cultural studies, literature, film, psychology, sociology, education, medicine, and law. Through examining the lives, concerns, and contributions of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender individuals, students will have the opportunity to gain a greater understanding and appreciation of the multifaceted nature of the society within which we live. Additionally, it is intended that this greater appreciation will cultivate a more accepting and supportive society. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate knowledge of issues relevant to lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender individuals and communicate this knowledge effectively to others.
2. Demonstrate knowledge of the major theoretical frameworks employed by the different disciplines to understand LGBT development, life, and issues, and communicate this knowledge effectively to others.
3. Identify and apply the methods of inquiry, issue formulation, data collection, analysis, and interpretation for the disciplines that examine issues relevant to LGBT individuals and use those methods to evaluate information about LGBT individuals and other issues pertinent to sexual orientation and sexual identity.
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| LGBT 40000 - Capstone Independent Study On Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Issues |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The course provides the opportunity to demonstrate that a student has achieved the learning goals established for the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender (LGBT) Certificate Program. This involves individualized work on one major project (e.g., empirical study, scholarly paper, creative project). Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate knowledge of specific LGBT issues.
2. Demonstrate knowledge of the major theoretical frameworks employed for the project to understand specific LGBT issues.
3. Identify and apply the most appropriate methods of inquiry, issue formulation, data collection, analysis, and interpretation to examine specific issues relevant to LGBT individuals.
4. Produce an outcomes that is developed through a project employing the selected theoretical frameworks and methods.
5. Communicate knowledge of all aspects of the project effectively to others.
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| LGBT 40100 - LGBT Certificate Portfolio Evaluation |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Students pursuing the LGBT Certificate are required to create a portfolio of all work completed for the certificate. The purpose of LGBT 40100 is to formalize and complete the organization, documentation, and analysis of these previous works. A final document by the student should be included in the portfolio indicating how the works, projects, and artifacts submitted achieve the certificate objectives. Students must register for LGBT 40100 after completing all other requirements for the certificate. The portfolio will be submitted to three members of the Certificate Advisory Committee for review and approval prior to the award of the LGBT certificate. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Provide evidence through projects completed in earlier LGBT certificate courses that a student substantially and meaningfully achieved the objectives established for the certificate program across the various projects.
2. Present a conceptual analysis of the LGBT certificate course projects explaining the process through which greater understanding and development of expertise related to LGBT issues occurred for the student.
3. Describe the types of goals the student developed throughout the educational process in the certificate program, how those goals changed, and the goals related to LGBT issues the student proposes for future efforts.
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| LING 20100 - Introduction To Linguistics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic concepts of linguistics and methods of analysis of language; overview of linguistics and the role of language in society. Introduction to phonology, morphology, syntax, and semantics, and to problem-solving techniques, with material drawn from a variety of languages. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| LING 31100 - Fundamentals Of Phonology And Morphology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic concepts and tools of phonological and morphological analysis viewed through the material of American English. Current theoretical approaches to phonology and morphology, including word-formation processes and applications. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| LING 31500 - Elements Of Phonetics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to articulatory phonetics. Mechanisms of production of speech sounds. Sounds of languages of the world, ear training for discriminating speech sounds, and practice in broad and narrow phonetic transcription. Introduction to the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA). Credit will not be given for both LING 31500 and AUS 30600. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| LING 32100 - Foundations Of Syntax And Semantics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to syntactic and semantic analysis based on American English and its dialects. Underlying structure and its relation to meaning. Analysis of parts of speech, constituent phrases, sentence structure, representations, ambiguity, and applications of current theory. Credit will not be given for both LING 32100 and ENGL 32800. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| LING 36800 - Sociolinguistic Study Of African American English |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the history, structure, uses, and educational concerns of African American English in African American speech communities and the United States culture at large. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| LING 39800 - Special Topics In Linguistics I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigation of a special topic in linguistics. The topic will vary from semester to semester. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| LING 49000 - Directed Reading In Linguistics |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Independent study and reading on a topic in linguistics directed by a faculty member. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| LING 49800 - Special Topics In Linguistics II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigation of a special topic in linguistics. The topic will vary from semester to semester. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| LING 49900 - Research In Linguistics |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Undergraduate research into a designated topic in linguistics. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
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| LING 50000 - Introduction To Linguistics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental concepts and methods of linguistic analysis of natural languages; overview of linguistics and the role of language in society. Introduction to phonology, morphology, syntax and semantics, and to problem-solving techniques, with material drawn from a wide variety of languages. Offered in conjunction with ANTH 51400 or AUSL 58000 or ENGL 50600 or LC 56100. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| LING 51100 - Phonology I: Descriptive Analysis |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Foundations of phonological analysis. Development of concepts and methods for the analysis of phonological data and the phonological structures of natural languages within the framework of generative phonology. Focuses on problem solving and linguistic argumentation. Offered in conjunction with ENGL 51300. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| LING 51200 - Phonology II: Theoretical Approaches |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination, comparison, and evaluation of contemporary phonological theories, with focus on the contribution of each theory to our understanding of representations and operations in phonological analysis. Primary emphasis is on autosegmental phonology, metrical phonology, lexical phonology, and optimality theory. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| LING 52100 - Syntax I: Syntactic Analysis |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Foundations of syntactic analysis and syntactic theory within the framework of generative grammar. Focuses on the central concepts of syntactic theory and on the principles and methods of syntactic analysis and argumentation using a core of topics relevant for syntactic theory. Offered in conjunction with ENGL 51200. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| LING 52200 - Syntax II: Issues In Syntax |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Deeper examination of a wider range of syntactic phenomena and evaluation of competing theoretical analyses proposed to account for them. Constructing theoretical analyses and evaluating their explanatory adequacy for Universal Grammar. Topics include LF phenomena, functional projections, and structural representations. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| LING 53100 - Semantics I: Lexical And Sentential Semantics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Foundations of semantic analysis and survey of current linguistic semantic theories and methods. Semantics at the lexical and sentential levels. Combinatorial, truth-conditional, pragmatic, contextual, and computational semantics. Offered in conjunction with ENGL 51100. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| LING 53200 - Semantics II: Formal And Grammatical Semantics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A formal, logic-based study of semantic relations. Semantics of individuals and objects, attributes, determiners, definite descriptions, quantifiers, events, time, and space. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| LING 54100 - Historical Linguistics And Language Change |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A general examination of the ways in which languages and their subsystems change over time and of the forces that produce change. The comparative method; internal reconstruction; geographical variation; and social variation. Overview of world language families and genetic relationships. Offered in conjunction with ENGL 56300 or LC 56300. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| LING 56000 - Service Learning In Languages And Linguistics |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. This course aims to introduce the student to critical reflective thinking and experiential learning that address local and global needs and foster civic responsibility. This service learning course is a multifaceted method of teaching and learning that enriches a students’ academic life and real life learning by engaging her/him in meaningful hands-on service to the community while gaining valuable knowledge and skills that integrate with course objectives. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Participated in socially responsible activities that would have a positive impact not only on her/his local and global community.
2. Acuqired skills that are transferable to her/his future work environments.
3. Reflected on how to maximize her/his personal and academic development to help her/him achieve her/his goals in life.
4. Gained knowledge and insights that will prepare her/him for active civic engagement.
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| LING 56500 - Sociolinguistics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (ANTH 56500, COM 56500, ENGL 56500, LC 56500) An introduction to language in its social context, focusing on uses and users of language. Topics include social class, ethnic group, gender, language attitudes, and bilingualism. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to discuss the relationship between language and society and identify the roles of language in its social and cultural context.
2. Students will be able to critique current theories in sociolinguistics using data sets provided in course texts.
3. Students will be able to identify the major models for sociolinguistic analysis and suggest reformulations and refinements necessary for various societies and cultures.
4. Students will be able to recognize the sociolinguist’s responsibility in the ethical treatment of human subjects and collected data.
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| LING 57000 - Field Methods In Linguistics |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. This course deals with the basic techniques for collecting language data, and is designed to reproduce and explore the conditions and methods of linguistic fieldwork in a classroom. The course also addresses questions related to the ethics of retrieving linguistic data, the relations between the linguist and the speaking communities, and the use of the collected data. A non-Indoeuropean lesser-studied language will be examined with the help of a native speaker of the language. The main area of its grammar will be covered: phonetic and phonological system, inflectional and derivational morphology, basic syntactic structures and basic semantic phenomena. The final goal is to obtain a basic grammatical description of the language. Lab sessions will be directed towards the training in the software and audio and video tools used for the trade. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify the key parts of the grammar of language.
2. Formulate questions about the language that (a) can reveal the structure of language and (b) can be answered by a speaker with no knowledge of linguistics.
3. Use the tools of the trade (software, equipment, etc.)
4. Develop methodologies based on a Participatory Action Research approach.
5. Develop sensitivity about what is of relevance to the speaking community and how to interact with the community in general and the speakers in particular.
6. Develop skills on how to transfer newly discovered scientific knowledge of the language back to the speaking community.
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| LING 57600 - Latin American Indigenous Languages And Cultures |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will help students to learn the importance of understanding the diversity of Latin American indigenous languages and cultures as well as the intercultural understandings gained when these indigenous languages are valued within the global context. Moreover, this course will provide a general cultural and linguistic framework to understand the sociolinguistic status of the language within the context where it exists. In this course, students will deepen their knowledge of Latin American indigenous cultures and their historics, as a means to achieving a greater understanding of both a shared humanity and the variety of human experiences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Acquire in-depth knowledge in a chosen, specific indigenous people while demonstrating panoramic understanding of Latin American indigenous groups.
2. Explain the brief history of US interaction with a particular Latin American country of this course topic.
3. Show basic oral and auditory competency in the language; will demonstrate how to express and understand basic statements, greetings, requests for directions, for food, and general courtesy interactions in the particular language.
4. Identify the particular complex interactions of the indigenous language within the context of the dominant colonial language.
5. Identify the linguistic position of the language within the context of indigenous languages of the Americas.
6. Identify basic cultural characteristics associated with the language speaking community.
|
| LING 59000 - Directed Reading In Linguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Independent study and reading on a topic in linguistics directed by a faculty member. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| LING 59100 - Special Topics In Phonology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigation of an advanced topic in phonology. Topic varies from semester to semester. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| LING 59300 - Special Topics In Semantics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigation of an advanced topic in semantics. Topic varies from semester to semester. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| LING 59400 - Special Topics In Historical Linguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigation of an advanced topic in historical linguistics. Topic varies from semester to semester. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| LING 59800 - Special Topics In Linguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Investigation of an advanced topic in linguistics. Topic varies from semester to semester. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| LING 61900 - Seminar In Phonology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive study and research on a selected topic in phonology. Topic varies from semester to semester. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| LING 62900 - Seminar In Syntax |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive study and research on a selected topic in syntax. Topic varies from semester to semester. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| LING 68900 - Seminar In Linguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive study and research on a selected topic in linguistics. Topic varies from semester to semester. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| LING 69000 - Individual Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Under the individual guidance and supervision of a faculty member, students will select and investigate a topic and will produce a paper of professional caliber on the subject. Prerequisite: Doctoral student standing and Linguistics majors only. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| LING 69800 - Research MA Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Research MA Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| LING 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Linguistics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| LING L1000 - English Language Improvement |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 12.00. Non-native speakers of English develop skills in various aspects of English use, e.g. conversation, grammar, reading, and writing, with a focus on improving oral communication skills within the academic context. To this end, students may be required to lead small and/or large group discussions, give informal and/or formal presentations, etc. Does not count toward any degree. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| LING L1030 - Introduction to the Study Of Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Linguistics as a body of information; nature and function of language; relevance of linguistics to other disciplines, with reference to modern American English. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LING L3030 - Introduction To Linguistic Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to basic concepts of linguistic analysis, exemplifying the general principles of structural approaches to the study of language. Application of analytical methods to problems in phonology, syntax, and semantics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LING L3070 - Phonology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic concepts such as phoneme and distinctive feature as defined and used within particular theories. The relationship of phonology to phonetics and morphology; exploration of salient aspects of sound structure and some characteristic modes of argumentation; extensive phonological analysis with some practice in writing phonological rules. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LING L3100 - Syntax |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of the basic concepts, assumptions, and argumentation of modern syntactic theory to describe and analyze common syntactic structures in English and other languages. Practice in constructing and evaluating grammars. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LING L3210 - Methods And Materials For Tesol I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an overview of teaching English to speakers of other languages with an emphasis on methodology, examining different approaches, techniques, and various instructional options in light of different teaching contexts and learners' needs. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LING L3220 - Methods And Materials In Tesol II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course aims at enhancing participants' understanding of theoretical principles underlying the preparation of ESL instructional materials as well as course participants' knowledge and skills in materials preparation and effective implementation. It also addresses issues related to course design, content selection and organizing, and language assessment. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LING L3250 - Semantics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the systematic investigation of the relation between linguistic forms, its use, and interpretation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LING L3600 - Language In Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A general introduction to sociolinguistics, for the non-specialist. Topics covered include regional and social dialects, the politics of language use in social interaction, language and social change, and men's and women's language, as well as issues in applied sociolinguistics such as bilingualism and black English in education. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LING L3660 - Linguistics And Adjacent Arts And Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to basic interdisciplinary problems involving linguistics, with special reference to language and culture, sociolinguistics, linguistics or literature, psycholinguistics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LING L4300 - Language Change And Variation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic principles of diachronic linguistics. The comparative method. Phonological and morphological development. Growth of lexicon. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LING L4310 - Field Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the procedures involved in the structural description of language, using a native speaker of an unfamiliar language whose speech will be analyzed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LING L4700 - TENL Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Under supervision, students teach English as a new language. The course provides experience in instruction, assessment, placement, and materials preparation. Classroom lectures, discussions, and assigned readings focus on teaching English as a new language. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LING L4850 - Topics In Linguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Studies in special topics not ordinarily covered in departmental courses. Eligible for graduate credit. Prerequisites vary according to topic. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| LING L4900 - Linguistic Structures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The linguistic analysis of particular aspects of the structure of one language or a group of closely related languages. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| LING L5050 - Professional Scholarship In Language Study And Linguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Training in the practices of professional scholarship in language study, focused on research and presentation approaches necessary for participating in the primary subfields of linguistics. Also provides coherent, structured introduction to the study of language itself. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LING L5320 - Second Language Acquisition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the major theories of first and second language learning and their potential application to language development strategies. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LING L5340 - Linguistic Resources and The Teaching of English as Second Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of current resources in linguistic theory and psycholinguistics as they apply to aspects of teaching English as a second language. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LING L5350 - TESOL Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Under supervision, students teach English as a second language to adult learners. The course also provides experience in testing, placement, and materials preparation. Classroom lectures focus on issues related to the art and profession of language teaching. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LING L5410 - Introductory Phonetics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Survey of speech sound types in languages of the world with practice in discrimination, transcription, and production. Introduction to acoustic phonetics, physiology of speech production, and speech perception; with concurrent laboratory section. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LING L5430 - Syntactic Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the methods and argumentation used in syntactic analysis conducted within the framework of generative grammar. Emphasis on constructing and evaluating grammatical analyses and promoting critical understanding of the generative framework. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LING L5750 - Introduction To Linguistic Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction To Linguistic Theory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LING L5900 - Linguistic Structure |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of particular aspects of the structure of a language or of a group of closely related languages. Methods used may include text analysis, informant work, study of secondary sources, lectures, and reports. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LING L6190 - Language And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Relationship between geographical and historical factors and dialectal differentiation and spread of linguistic features. Evaluation of linguistic atlases; practical training in collection of dialect data. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LING L6900 - Advanced Readings In Linguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| LING P5110 - Methods And Materials In Tesol I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an overview of teaching English to speakers of other languages with an emphasis on methodology, examining different approaches, techniques, and various instructional options in light of different teaching contexts and learners' needs. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LING P5120 - Methods And Materials In TESOL II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course aims at enhancing participants' understanding of theoretical principles underlying the preparation of ESL instructional materials as well as course participants' knowledge and skills in materials preparation and effective implementation. It also addresses issues related to course design, content selection and organizing, and language assessment. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LING S1030 - Honors Introduction To The Study Of Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Equivalent of L103 for Honors students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LING T5100 - Applied Traditional & Structural English Grammar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of pregenerative treatments of English grammar with an emphasis upon the ability to analyze within the framework of a transformational grammar. Special attention to generative treatments of English syntax for pedagogical purposes. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LING T6600 - Contrastive Discourse |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Practice in various methods of differential analysis with application to selected languages in terms of second language development. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LS 30000 - Land Survey Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. History of the development of land survey systems. United States Public Land System from earliest instructions to present day regulations. Introduction to methods of describing property. Survey licensure. Present day developments in the concept of land information systems. Overview of base mapping methods for the cadastral layer of land information systems. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LS 30100 - Property Surveys And Descriptions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Judicially accepted principles for interpretation of existing descriptions and rules guiding the writing of new descriptions. Senior rights and adjoiners, mathematical correctness, rule of intent, monumentation, nonlinear boundaries, weight of descriptive items, modification of existing descriptions, and partitioning of parcels. Right-of-way procedures. Systems of recording property descriptions in Indiana; boundary surveys, resurveys, and retracements. Surveyor's responsibility in research of records, documents, and field evidence. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LS 40000 - Summer Geomatics Engineering Design Project |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Four weeks of field instruction and practice on an integrated project during the summer following the junior year. Projects include client meetings, work scheduling, survey design, field observations, survey adjustment and analysis, map and report preparation, and final oral presentation. Projects typically involve aspects of one or more of the following: engineering surveys, land surveys, control surveys, topographic surveys, route surveys, and construction surveys. Different locations will be utilized each year and not necessarily on the Purdue campus. Typically offered Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LS 40100 - Legal Aspects Of Surveying |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Common and statute law; structure of the court system. Real property and classification of interests in it. Unwritten rights in land, such as riparian rights and adverse possession and their relationship to land surveying. Written transfers of land to include simultaneous and sequence conveyances, dedications, and reversions. Procedure of legal surveys. Rules of evidence to include classification of evidence, burden of proof, presumptions, and weight of classes of evidence. Discussion of ramifications when using measurements as evidence. Study of typical court cases. Title insurance. Rights, duties, and liability of a professional land surveyor. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LS 40900 - Subdivision Planning And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Relationship between planning of individual subdivisions and the master plans and regulatory aspects of higher government authority. Role of the professional land surveyor in planning. Subdivision planning to include analysis and composing of control ordinances and regulations; preliminary planning; subdivision boundary and lot calculations, including computer applications; final platting; design of sanitary sewers, storm sewers, and streets within the domain of the professional land surveyor, as defined by Indiana statute. Boundary problems peculiar to subdivisions. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| LS 49700 - Land Surveying Projects |
|
Arrange Hours and Credit. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
Department: Civil Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| LSTU L1000 - Introduction to Union And Collective Bargining |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of labor unions in the United States, focusing on their organization and their representational, economic, and political activities. Includes coverage of historical development, labor law basics, and contemporary issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| LSTU L1010 - American Labor History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the origin and development of unions and the labor movement from colonial times to the present. The struggle of working people to achieve a measure of dignity and security will be examined from social, economic, and political perspectives. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| LSTU L1040 - Introduction To The Study Of Labor History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. What can be learned from labor history? This class explores both central issues as well as historical methodologies, looking at primary and secondary sources, considering bias and interpretation. Focusing on a few central questions and events, this class serves as an orientation for the study of labor history. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| LSTU L1100 - Introduction To Labor Studies: Labor And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the changing role of labor in society. The course will emphasize a comparative approach to issues confronting labor organizations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| LSTU L1900 - The Labor Studies Degree |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will provide an introduction to the Labor Studies degree and to the knowledge and skills needed by students to progress toward a degree in a reasonable time frame. Students will learn how to build a plan of study that takes advantage of both credit for prior learning and new learning opportunities.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| LSTU L1990 - Portfolio Development Workshop |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Emphasis on developing learning portfolios as foundation documents for academic self-assessment and planning and as applications for self-acquired competency (SAC) credit. Applies only as elective credit to labor studies degrees. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-South Bend
|
| LSTU L2000 - Survey Of Employment Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Statutes and common law actions protecting income, working conditions, and rights of workers. Topics include worker's compensation, unemployment compensation, fair labor standards, Social Security, retirement income protection, privacy, and other rights. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| LSTU L2010 - Labor Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the law governing labor-management relations. Topics include the legal framework of collective bargaining; problems in the administration and enforcement of agreements; protection of individual employee rights. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| LSTU L2030 - Labor And The Political System |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Federal, state, and local governmental effects on workers, unions, and labor-management relations; political goals; influences on union choices of strategies and modes of political participation, past and present; relationships with community and other groups. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| LSTU L2050 - Contemporary Labor Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of some of the major problems confronting society, workers, and the labor movement. Topics may include: automation; unemployment; international trade and conglomerates; environmental problems; minority and women's rights; community relations; changing government policies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| LSTU L2100 - Workplace Discrimination And Fair Employment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines policies and practices which contribute to workplace discrimination and those designed to eliminate discrimination. Explores effects of job discrimination and occupational segregation. Analyzes Title VII, ADA, and related topics in relation to broader strategies for addressing discrimination. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| LSTU L2200 - Grievance Representation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Union representation in the workplace. The use of grievance procedures to address problems and administer the collective bargaining agreement. Identification, research, presentation, and writing of grievance cases. Analysis of relevant labor law and the logic applied by arbitrators to grievance decisions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| LSTU L2300 - Labor And The Economy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of the political economy of labor and the role of organized labor within it. Emphasis on the effects on workers, unions, and collective bargaining of unemployment, investment policy, and changes in technology and corporate structure. Patterns of union political and bargaining response. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| LSTU L2310 - Contemporary Labor Issues: Globalization And Labor |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the globalization of trade, production, and migration and the effects of these processes on American workers. Through reading, discussion, and problem formation, students will critically think about the ways global processes and policies and impact American workers’ daily lives and explore alternatives to these policies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| LSTU L2400 - Occupational Health And Safety |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Elements and issues of occupational health and safety. Emphasis on the union's role in the implementation of workplace health and safety programs, worker and union rights, hazard recognition techniques, and negotiated and statutory remedies, in particular the Occupational Safety And Health Act of 1970. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| LSTU L2500 - Collective Bargaining |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The development and organization of collective bargaining in the United States. Union preparation for negotiations; bargaining patterns and practices; strategy and tactics; economic and legal considerations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
|
| LSTU L2510 - Collective Bargaining Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Designed to provide collective bargaining simulations and other participatory experiences in conjunction with LSTU L250. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LSTU L2550 - Unions In State And Local Governments |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Union organization and representation of state and municipal government employees, including patterns in union structure, collective bargaining, grievance representation, and applicable law. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LSTU L2600 - Leadership And Representation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Organizational leadership issues for the union, community, and other advocate organizations. Analyzes leadership styles, membership recruitment, and leadership development. Examines the roles of leaders in internal governance and external affairs including committee building, delegation, negotiations, and coalition building. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| LSTU L2700 - Union Government And Organization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of the growth, composition, structure, behavior, and governmental processes of U.S. labor organizations, from the local to the national federation level. Consideration is given to the influence on unions of industrial and political environments; to organizational behavior in different types of unions; and to problems in union democracy. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| LSTU L2800 - Union Organizing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores various approaches and problems in private and public sector organizing. Traditional approaches are evaluated in light of structural changes in labor markets and workforce demographics. Topics range from targeting and assessments to committee building and leadership development. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| LSTU L2850 - Assessment Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Capstone experience for associate degree. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LSTU L2900 - Topics In Labor Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This is a number under which a variety of topics can be addressed in classroom-based programs on the campuses. Courses may focus on contemporary or special areas of labor studies. Others are directed toward specific categories of employees and labor organizations. Inquire at Labor Studies office. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| LSTU L2990 - Self-Acquired Competencies In Labor Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 15.00. Credit for labor-related competencies demonstrated, assessed, and approved according to established procedures. Maximum of 15 credits applicable to Associate and/or Bachelor of Science in labor studies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 15.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| LSTU L3140 - Ethical Dilemmas In The Workplace |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course explores the fundamental basis for ethical decision making in a workplace, both unionized and nonunionized. We will discuss specific considerations for making moral judgments within the work environment and explore the basis upon which those decisions are made. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Appreciate the complexity of decision making in their personal lives and in their union work, by enabling themselves to identify, evaluate and balance the various considerations that enter into a well-reasoned determination of what they “ought to do”.
2. Distinguish the reasons of self-interest from moral and ethical reasons and resolve conflicts among them.
3. Understand the source of duties in their diverse social and institutional roles and undertakings, especially in their union work.
4. Discuss, in detail and with some sophistication, the ethical principles applicable to their work as unionists.
|
| LSTU L3150 - The Organization Of Work |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines how work is organized and jobs are evaluated, measured, and controlled. Explores social and technical elements of work through theories of scientific management, the human relations school of management, and contemporary labor process literature. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| LSTU L3200 - Grievance Arbitration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The legal and practical context of grievance arbitration, its limitations and advantages in resolving workplace problems. Varieties of arbitration clauses and the status of awards. Participants analyze, research, prepare, and present cases in mock arbitration hearings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| LSTU L3300 - Global Comparisons: Labor Relations-Examples From Three Continents |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course uses a political economy framework to explore and compare countries ‘systems of labor relations, drawing from at least three continents. It analyzes the diverse approaches to the structure of twenty-first century labor law and social policy. It focuses on the role of organized labor in the global economy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| LSTU L3310 - Global Problems: Local Solutions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course addresses local manifestations of global problems confronting society, workers and the labor movement. Students will cooperatively analyze issues, propose potential solutions, and engage in activities or practices that address globally driven local issues. Students will identify governmental, non-governmental, and charitable organizations that aid in ameliorating local problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LSTU L3500 - Issues In Collectective Bargaining |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Readings and discussions of selected problems. Research paper ordinarily required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| LSTU L3600 - Union Administration And Development |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Practical and theoretical perspectives on strategic planning, budgeting, and organizational decision making. Addresses needs and problems of union leaders by studying organizational change, staff development, and cohesiveness within a diverse workforce. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| LSTU L3700 - Labor And Religion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course has primarily a historical focus. It looks at the relationship between religion and the labor movement as it developed in the United States over the course of the 19th and 20th centuries. It attempts to uncover the tradition in which workers of faith have connected their religious values to their more secular concerns for social justice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the relationship between religion and the labor movement.
2. Describe the history of labor movement development in the United States during the 19th and 20th century.
3. Examine ways churches have opposed workers and organized struggles for justice.
4. Classify the mobilization of working class and labor union voters in the context of religion and organized labor.
5. Identify traditions of workers of faith and connections to social justice.
6. Discuss personal perceptions of the relationship between religious ideas and the struggles for social and economic justice
|
| LSTU L3750 - Comparative Labor Movements |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Labor movements and labor relations in industrial societies from historical, analytical, and comparative perspectives. Emphasis on interaction between unions and political organizations; national labor policies; the resolution of workplace problems; the organization of white-collar employees; and the issues of workers' control and codetermination. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Kokomo
|
| LSTU L3800 - Theories Of The Labor Movement |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Perspectives on the origin, development, and goals of organized labor. Theories include those which view the labor movement as: a business union institution; an agent for social reform; a revolutionary force; a psychological reaction to industrialization; a moral force; an unnecessary intrusion. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| LSTU L3850 - Class, Race, Gender And Work |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Historical overview of the impact and interplay of class, race, and gender on shaping U.S. labor markets, organizations, and policies. Examines union responses and strategies for addressing class, race, and gender issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| LSTU L3900 - Topics In Labor Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Advanced courses in areas described under LSTU L2900. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| LSTU L4100 - Comparative Labor Movements |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Labor movements and labor relations in industrial societies from historical, analytical, and comparative perspectives. Emphasis on interaction between unions and political organizations; national labor policies; the resolution of workplace problems; the organization of white collar employees; and the issues of workers' control and codetermination. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LSTU L4200 - Labor Studies Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Application of knowledge gained in the classroom in fieldwork experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| LSTU L4300 - Labor Research Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of research design, methods, techniques, and procedures applicable to research problems in labor studies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LSTU L4800 - Senior Seminar Or Readings |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed as either a classroom seminar or directed reading. This course addresses current issues, historical developments, and other labor-related concerns. Topics may vary each semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| LSTU L4900 - Topics In Labor Studyies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Advanced courses, including seminars, geared to specialized labor populations, issues, and areas of discipline. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| LSTU L4950 - Directed Labor Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. A contract course to suit the special and varied needs and interests of individual participants. The contract with the faculty member might include reading, directed application of prior course work, tutorials, or internships. Competencies assessed through written papers, projects, reports, or interviews. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| LSTU L4990 - Self-Acqured Competencies In Labor Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 15.00. Credit for labor-related competencies demonstrated, assessed, and approved according to established procedures. To include only credits beyond 15 and up to 30 applicable to Bachelor of Science in labor studies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 15.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
|
| LSTU L5150 - Work Restructuring: Taylorism To Globalization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course examines how the work process and labor markets have been re-organized from the early factory system to current global production and markets. Analyzing the impact of technology and capital mobility, the course focuses on changes in work, employment and workforce demographics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LSTU L5800 - Graduate Seminar On Labor Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Education designed specifically for workers began early in the 20th century, and included ESL and literacy, union skills and subjects like economics, politics and history. This course will examine various innovative adult labor programs and focus on the character of labor education today, analyzing its mission, content and methodologies. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LSTU L5900 - Poverty Welfare And Workfare |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the political-economic relationship between the prescriptions of welfare reform and the introduction of workfare legislation. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| LTHN 10100 - Lithuanian Level I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to basic skills in the language. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| LTHN 10200 - Lithuanian Level II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of Lithuanian 101. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| MA 00900 - Topics In Elementary Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. A continuation of selected topics in Elementary Algebra. Repeatable, maximum three times. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MA 01300 - Topics In Intermediate Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. A continuation of selected topics in Intermediate Algebra. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| MA 02100 - Beginning Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Beginning level course in algebra. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| MA 03100 - Geometry |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Beginning level course in geometry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| MA 04100 - Intermediate Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. The pruposes of this course are to strengthen and expand the students basic algebraic skills and problem-solving capabilities and to prepare them for higher level mathematics courses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| MA 10000 - An Introduction To Mathematical Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is intended to: integrate freshman mathematics majors into the department; help them adjust to university life; assist them in developing their academic and intellectual capabilities; introduce them to contemporary issues in mathematics; provide an overview of the careers open to those with degrees in mathematics. This course must be taken as pass/no pass only. Credit by examination is not available for this course. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| MA 10100 - Mathematics For Elementary Teachers I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A teacher's perspective of the mathematics of the elementary-school curriculum; in particular, sets, numeration, and operations on the whole numbers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MA 10200 - Mathematics For Elementary Teachers II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A teacher's perspective of the mathematics of the elementary-school curriculum, including operations on the integers and rationals, probability, and statistics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MA 10300 - Mathematics For Elementary Teachers III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Geometry and measurement concepts appropriate for the elementary school curriculum, including metric and non-metric properties of geometric figures, measurement, coordinate geometry, graphs, and real-world applications of geometry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MA 10800 - Mathematics As A Profession And A Discipline |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A "walking tour" of a few topics in mathematics, conducted by a series of guest lecturers. Some talks focus on interesting areas of mathematics, such as chaos theory, fractals, or the mathematics of sending pictures over the Internet. Others focus on where people with degrees in mathematics or statistics work and what they do. This class is open to anyone with an interest in mathematics, regardless of major. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 10900 - Elementary Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of decimals, fractions, percents, integers. Fundamentals of algebra, linear equations and inequalities, word problems, polynomials, factoring, graphs, exponents, square roots, quadratic equations. No credit toward any degree at IPFW. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MA 11100 - Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an algebra review course for students not prepared for MA 15200, 15300, or 15900. Topics covered: real numbers, linear functions, solving linear equations and systems of linear equations, absolute value equations and inequalities, rational expressions, complex numbers, proportions, solving quadratic equations. Not available for credit toward graduation in the College of Science. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| MA 11300 - Intermediate Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of operations with real numbers and algebraic expressions, properties of inequalities, absolute value. Linear equations and applications, polynomials and rational expressions, radicals, quadratic equations and inequalities, word problems, introduction to analytic geometry, functions and mathematical models, systems of equations and inequalities, exponential and logarithmic functions. No credit toward any degree at IPFW. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MA 11500 - Intermediate Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The purpose of this course is to strengthen and expand student's basic algebraic skills and problem-solving capabilities and to prepare them for higher level mathematics courses. For the purposes of general education requirements, Math 115 is not a collegiate level mathematics course, and therefore cannot be used to satisfy the general education requirement for mathematics at Purdue University Calumet. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| MA 12301 - Mathematical Ideas |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to expose students to a variety of topics that will both enrich and stimulate their interest in mathematics. Topics may include (but are not limited to): the Pigeonhole Principles, Numerical Patterns in Nature, Infinity, The Pythagorean Theorem, and Chaos & Fractals. Additional topics may include: Contortions of space, measuring uncertainty, and mathematical decision making. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. To attain a better understanding of some of the rich mathematical ideas.
2. To build sharper skills for analyzing life issues that transcend mathematics.
3. To develop a new perspective and outlook on the way we view the world.
|
| MA 12401 - Introduction To Mathematical Ideas |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to problem solving and critical thinking including set theory, logic, numbers and numerical reasoning and elementary algebra. Not intended for programs requiring calculus. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Understanding of basic methods of problem solving; facility with language of set theory and logic; development of elementary number sense.
|
| MA 13700 - Mathematics For Elementary Teachers I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed for prospective elementary school teachers. Problem solving. Numerical reasoning including self-generated and conventional algorithms. Whole and fractional number systems, elementary number theory. (Not available for credit toward graduation in the College of Science.). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To model and perform arithmetic operations in bases other than base ten.
2. To convert numbers to scientific notation and perform arithmetic operations in scientific notation.
3. To perform operations with signed numbers.
4. To use properties of addition and multiplication to facilitate arithmetic.
5. To determine when two fractions are equivalent, decimals and percents.
6. To use divisibility rules to determine greatest common factors to decide whether numbers are prime.
|
| MA 13800 - Mathematics For Elementary Teachers II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Elementary school teachers must understand how multiplication gives rise to exponents and how to represent, interpret, and compute exponents from problem situations. They must also understand how to represent practical situations using algebraic and fractional expressions, and verbally interpret graphs of functions. They have to know basic concepts of probability theory. This course covers conceptual and practical notions of exponents and radicals; algebraic and rational functions, algebraic equations and inequalities, systems of linear equations, polynomial, exponential, and logarithmic functions. Notions of probability. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, GTC-Quantitative Reasoning, UC-Quantitative Reasoning
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To conceptually understand and correctly perform algebraic operations, solve algebraic equations of degree two, perform operations with exponents and radicals, sketch graphs of certain polynomial, exponential and logarithmic functions.
2. To understand inequalities involving linear functions.
3. To solve 2x2 systems of equation.
4. To understand basic notions of probability, including combinations, permutations, probability of one and/or another event and conditional probability.
|
| MA 13900 - Mathematics For Elementary Teachers III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Geometric, measurement and spatial reasoning in one, two and three dimensions as the basis for elementary school geometry. Metric and non-metric geomery, transformation geometry. (Not available for credit toward graduation in the College of Science.) Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MA 14700 - Algebra And Trigonometry For Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. MA 14700 and 14800 is a two semester sequence in algebra and trigonometry for students in technology. The emphasis is on technique and problem solving. MA14700 concentrates on topics in algebra. NOT open to students with credit in MA 15100 or 15300. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| MA 14800 - Algebra And Trigonometry For Technology II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of MA 14700. MA 14800 concentrates on trigonometry. Not open to students with credit in MA 15100 or MA 15400. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| MA 14900 - Basic And College Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. A one-semester version of MA 11300 and MA 15300. Only three credits may be counted toward graduation in Arts and Sciences, Business, or Public and Environmental Affairs. Typically offered Fall Spring.
5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MA 15200 - College Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a course in college algebra for students who do not need the technical skills required for those who are planning to continue with calculus. There will be an emphasis on applied problems and graphing techniques. Topics covered: real numbers, linear functions, solving linear equations and systems of linear equations, absolute value equations and inequalities, rational expressions, complex numbers, proportions, solving quadratic equations, exponential and logarithmic functions, circle and parabola equations, and the mathematics of finance including compound interest and annuities. Students receiving and "A" or "B" in MA 15200 may continue with MA 15400. (Not available for credit toward graduation in the College of Science.) Prerequisite: demonstrated competence in intermediate algebra. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| MA 15300 - Algebra And Trigonometry I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exponents and radicals; algebraic and fractional expressions. Equations and inequalities, systems of linear equations. Polynomial, exponential, and logarithmic functions. Not open to students with credit in MA 15900. Not available for credit toward graduation in the School of Science. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:IMA 1601 College Algebra
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Exempt, Lower Division, GTC-Quantitative Reasoning, UC-Quantitative Reasoning
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. To correctly perform algebraic operations, to solve algebraic equations of degree two, to perform operations with exponents and radicals.
2. To sketch graphs of certain polynomial, exponential and logarithmic functions.
3. To solve systems of equations and inequalities.
|
| MA 15400 - Algebra And Trigonometry II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. While MA 15400 is a continuation of MA 15300, the course MA 15300 is not a prerequisite. It is suggested that students have a C- or better in MA 15300 or a B- or better in MA 15200. Topics covered include the trigonometric functions, analytic geometry, laws of sines and cosines, vectors, dot product, conic sections, and rational functions. Not open to students with credit in MA 15900. Not available for credit toward graduation in the College of Science. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:IMA 1608 Trigonometric Functions
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Exempt, Lower Division, GTC-Quantitative Reasoning, UC-Quantitative Reasoning
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand and be able to use trigonometric functions, inverse trigonometric functions, analytic geometry, laws of sines and cosines, vectors and the dot product to solve application problems.
2. Learn about conic sections (ellipses, hyperbolas and parabolas) and rational functions.
|
| MA 15800 - Precalculus- Functions And Trigonometry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Functions, Trigonometry, and Algebra of calculus topics designed to fully prepare students for all first semester calculus courses. Functions topics include Quadratic, Higher Order Polynomials, Rational, Exponential, Logarithmic, and Trigonometric. Other focuses include graphing of functions and solving application problems. Not Available for credit toward graduation in the College of Science. Students may not receive credit for both MA 15400 and MA 15800. Students may not receive credit for both MA 15900 and MA 15800. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Exempt, Lower Division, GTC-Quantitative Reasoning, UC-Quantitative Reasoning
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. An understanding of the concept of a function.
2. An ability to graph and interpret the graphs of a wide variety of functions.
3. An ability to develop mathematical models and solve a variety of application problems, using various types of equations, systems of equations, and functions.
4. An understanding the concept of an inverse function and how to apply that in particular with exponential, logarithmic and trigonometric functions.
5. An understanding of graphical transformations of functions.
6. An understanding of Polar Equations and the ability to graph Polar Equations.
|
| MA 15900 - Precalculus |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Algebra and trigonometry topics designed to prepare students for calculus. (Not available for credit toward graduation in the College of Science.) Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Exempt, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
|
| MA 16010 - Applied Calculus I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics include trigonometric and exponential functions; limits and differentiation, rules of differentiation, maxima, minima and optimization; curve sketching, integration, anti-derivatives, fundamental theorem of calculus. Properties of definite integrals and numerical methods. Applications to life, managerial and social sciences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Quantitative Reasoning, UC-Quantitative Reasoning
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Learning Objectives:
1. To create functional models and simplify difference quotients, compute limits of functions and apply limit laws.
2. To compute derivatives of elementary functions, including exponential, logarithmic and trigonometric functions, and apply rules of differentiation.
3. To sketch the graph of functions with the help of differentiation techniques, find maxima and minima of functions; optimization problems.
4. To computes integrals of some elementary functions and apply the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus.
5. Topics to be covered at a level required to perform standard applications related to life sciences, management and technology.
|
| MA 16020 - Applied Calculus II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers techniques of integration; infinite series, convergence tests; differentiation and integration of functions of several variables; maxima and minima, optimization; differential equations and initial value problems; matrices, determinants, eigenvalues and eigenvectors. Applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Quantitative Reasoning, UC-Quantitative Reasoning
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Use techniques of integration to find areas between curves and compute volumes of solids of revolution.
2. Analyze the convergence of infinite series and power series, Taylor series expansions.
3. Compute derivatives of functions of several variables and use them to find maxima and minima of functions.
4. Perform multiple iterated integration.
5. Use differential equations for modeling simple real life situations.
6. Solve first order linear initial value problems and separable equations.
7. Apply matrix operations to solve linear equations, find matrix inverses, compute determinants and eigenvectors.
8. Topics to be covered at a leval required to perform standard applications related to life sciences, management and technology.
|
| MA 16021 - Applied Calculus II And Differential Equations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Techniques of integration and applications to technology problems such as work and fluid pressure; infinite series, convergence tests; differential equations and initial value problems; separable differential equations, second order differential equations; Laplace transform; Fourier series. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, GTC-Quantitative Reasoning, UC-Quantitative Reasoning
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Use techniques of integration to find areas between curves.
2. Compute volumes of solids of revolution, work and fluid pressure.
3. Analyze the convergence of infinite series and Taylor series expansions.
4. Solve first order linear initial value problems and separable equations.
5. Solve second order homogeneous differential equations with constant coefficients.
6. Use the Laplace transform to solve non-homogeneous second order equations.
7. Express the Fourier series of a periodic function (without analyzing its convergence).
|
| MA 16100 - Plane Analytic Geometry And Calculus I |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Introduction to differential and integral calculus of one variable, with applications. Some schools or departments may allow only 4 credit hours toward graduation for this course. Designed for students who have not had at least a one-semester calculus course in high school, with a grade of "A" or "B". Not open to students with credit in MA 16500. Demonstrated competence in college algebra and trigonometry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Exempt, Lower Division, GTC-Quantitative Reasoning, UC-Quantitative Reasoning
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To compute limits and to apply limit laws.
2. To apply rules of differentiation to compute derivatives of elementary functions.
3. To sketch graphs of functions with the aid of differentiation techniques.
4. To find maxima and minima of functions; optimization problems
5. To compute integrals of some elementary functions and to apply the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus to compute areas of certain planar regions
|
| MA 16200 - Plane Analytic Geometry And Calculus II |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Continuation of MA 16100. Vectors in two and three dimensions, techniques of integration, infinite series, conic sections, polar coordinates, surfaces in three dimensions. Some schools or departments may allow only 4 credit hours toward graduation for this course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Quantitative Reasoning, UC-Quantitative Reasoning
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply techniques of integration (integration by parts, trigonometric substitution and partial fractions) to compute areas of planar regions, volumes of solids of revolution and areas of surfaces of revolution, work, moments and centers of mass of homogeneous laminas.
2. Apply tests of absolute convergence of series to find the interval of convergence of some power series.
3. Find the Taylor and Maclaurin series of some exponential, rational and trigonometric functions.
4. Use polar coordinates to make it possible to sketch the graphs of some curves.
5. Understand the definition of a Riemann sum, and should be able to apply elementary approximation methods of integration.
|
| MA 16300 - Integrated Calculus Analysis Geometry I |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Topics from plane analytic geometry. Introduction to differentiation and integration. Applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| MA 16400 - Integrated Calculus Analysis Geometry Il |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Continuation of MA 16300. Completion of introductory study of topics in plane analytic geometry and the calculus of one variable, infinite series. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| MA 16500 - Analytic Geometry And Calculus I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to differential and integral calculus of one variable, with applications. Conic sections. Designed for students who have had at least a one-semester calculus course in high school, with a grade of "A" or "B", but are not qualified to enter MA 16200 or 16600, or the advanced placement courses MA 17300 or 27100, or the honors calculus course MA 18100. Demonstrated competence in college algebra and trigonometry. Typically offered Fall Spring.
CTL:IMA 1602 Calculus - Long I
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, GTC-Quantitative Reasoning, UC-Quantitative Reasoning
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Concurrent Credit
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To compute limits and to apply limit laws.
2. To apply rules of differentiation to compute derivatives of elementary functions.
3. To sketch graphs of functions with the aid of differentiation techniques.
4. To find maxima and minima of functions; optimization problems.
5. To compute integrals of some elementary functions and to apply the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus to compute areas of certain planar regions.
|
| MA 16600 - Analytic Geometry And Calculus II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Continuation of MA 16500. Vectors in two and three dimensions. Techniques of integration, infinite series, polar coordinates, surfaces in three dimensions. Not open to students with credit in MA 16200. Typically offered Fall Spring.
CTL:IMA 1603 Calculus - Long II
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, GTC-Quantitative Reasoning, UC-Quantitative Reasoning
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply techniques of integration (integration by parts, trigonometric substitution and partial fractions) to compute areas of planar regions, volumes of solids of revolution and areas of surfaces of revolution, work, moments and centers of mass of homogeneous laminas.
2. Apply tests of absolute convergence of series to find the interval of convergence of some power series.
3. Find the Taylor and Maclaurin series of some exponential, rational and trigonometric functions.
4. Use polar coordinates to make it possible to sketch the graphs of some curves.
5. Understand the definition of a Riemann sum, and should be able to apply elementary approximation methods of integration.
|
| MA 16700 - Plane Analytical Geometry & Calculus I |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Plane analytic geometry, differential calculus and an introduction to integral calculus of functions of a single variable, with applications. MA 16700 covers the same concepts and topics as MA 16100 combined with a cooperative learning environment and computer laboratory experience. Graduation credit may not be earned for more than one of MA 16100, 16700 and 22300. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, TransferIN
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| MA 16800 - Mathematics For The Liberal Arts Student |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course for liberal arts students that shows mathematics as the language of modern problem solving. The course is designed around problems concerning management science, statistics, social choice, size and shape, and computer science. Applications in quality control, consumer affairs, wildlife management, human decision making, architectural design, political practices, urban planning, space exploration, and more may be included in the course. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MA 16900 - Plane Analytical Geometry And Calculus II |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Vectors, integral calculus of functions of a single variable, sequences and series, parametric equations and calculus, conics, and polar coordinates, with applications. MA 16900 covers the same concepts and topics as MA 16200 combined with a cooperative learning environment and computer laboratory experience. Graduation credit may not be earned for more than one of MA 16200, 16900 and 22400. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, TransferIN
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| MA 17000 - Introduction To Actuarial Science |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. (STAT 17000) An introduction to actuarial science from the point of view of practicing actuaries from life insurance, casualty insurance and consulting; introduction to insurance and the mathematical theory of interest; application of spreadsheets to problems related to actuarial science. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 17300 - Calculus And Analytic Geometry II |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Calculus of transcendental functions, techniques of integration, conic sections, polar coordinates, parametric equations, infinite series. Admission restricted to those who have extablished credit in Calculus I. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Quantitative Reasoning, UC-Quantitative Reasoning
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply techniques of integration (integration by parts, trigonometric substitution and partial fractions) to compute areas of planar regions, volumes of solids or revolution and areas of surfaces of revolution, work, moments and centers of mass of homogeneous laminas.
2. Apply tests of absolute convergence of series to find the interval of convergence of some power series.
3. Find the Taylor and Maclaurin series of some exponential, rational and trigonometric functions.
4. Use polar coordinates to make it possible to sketch the graphs of some curves.
5. Understand the definition of a Riemann sum, and should be able to apply elementary approximation methods of integration.
|
| MA 17400 - Multivariable Calculus |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Continuation of MA 17300. Differential and integral calculus of functions of several variables. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Quantitative Reasoning, UC-Quantitative Reasoning
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 17500 - Introduction to Discrete Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Sets, logical inference, induction, recursion, counting principles, binary relations, vectors and matrices, graphs, algorithm analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MA 18100 - Honors Calculus I |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. This is an honors version of second-semester calculus (MA 16200/16600/17300). Integration and applications, methods of integration, infinite sequences and series, conic sections and polar coordinates. Students must have demonstrated competence in first-semester calculus (ordinarily by exam). Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division, GTC-Quantitative Reasoning, UC-Quantitative Reasoning
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 18200 - Honors Calculus II |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Continuation of MA 18100. This is an honors version of third-semester calculus (MA 22600/17400/27100). Vectors, vector-valued functions, partial derivatives, multiple integrals, line and surface integrals. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division, GTC-Quantitative Reasoning, UC-Quantitative Reasoning
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 18300 - Professional Practicum I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional Practicum. For Cooperative Education students only; must be accepted for the program by the cooperative program coordinator. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| MA 18400 - Professional Practicum II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional Practicum. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| MA 19000 - Topics In Mathematics For Undergraduates |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Supervised reading courses as well as special topics courses for undergraduates are given under this number. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MA 20500 - Discrete Mathematics For Computer Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course covers topics in discrete mathematics which are essential to the discipline of computer technology. These include: logic, sequences, mathematical induction, basic set theory, functions, recursion, relations, graphs, and trees. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| MA 21300 - Finite Mathematics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic logic, set theory. Elementary probability, Markov chains. Vectors, matrices, linear systems, elementary graph theory. Applications to finite models in the managerial, social, and life sciences; and computer science. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Solve linear systems of equations for business, managerial and social science problems.
2. Utilize financial formulas.
3. Apply probability techniques to business, managerial and social science problems.
4. Improve student knowledge in the applications of technology to business, managerial and social science problems.
|
| MA 21400 - Linear Algebra And Linear Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Matrix algebra, systems of equations, topics from discrete mathematics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| MA 21900 - Calculus For Technology I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. MA 21900, 22200 is a two semester sequence in the techniques of calculus for students enrolled in certain technical curricula. MA 21900 develops topics from analytic geometry and introduces differentiation and integration and their applications. The offering pattern depends on the term offered. Not open students with credit in MA 16300 or MA 22300 or MA 22500. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| MA 22000 - Introduction To Calculus |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of differential and integral calculus. Applications to the agricultural, life, managerial, and social sciences. Not available for credit toward graduation in the School of Science. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, GTC-Quantitative Reasoning, UC-Quantitative Reasoning
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To create functional models.
2. To create and simplify difference quotients.
3. To compute basic limits of functions and to apply limit laws.
4. To compute derivatives and to apply basic rules of differentiation.
5. To use derivatives in graphing and solving basic optimization problems.
|
| MA 22100 - Calculus For Technology I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. MA 22100-22200 is a two-semester sequence in the technique of calculus for students enrolled in certain technical curricula. Not available for credit toward graduation in the School of Science. Prerequisite: demonstrated competence in algebra and trigonometry. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, GTC-Quantitative Reasoning, UC-Quantitative Reasoning
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. To compute limits of functions and apply limit laws.
2. To apply rules of differentiation to compute derivatives of elementary functions.
3. To sketch the graph of functions with the help of differentiation techniques.
4. To find maxima and minima of functions; optimization problems.
5. To compute integrals of some elementary functions and to apply the fundamental theorem of Calculus.
6. To apply integral and differential calculus to physical problems.
|
| MA 22300 - Introductory Analysis I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Differential calculus with applications to management and economics. Prerequisites: Demonstrated competence in algebra and trigonometry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:IMA 1604 Calculus - Short I
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division, GTC-Quantitative Reasoning, UC-Quantitative Reasoning
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To create models and simplify difference quotients.
2. To compute limits of functions and apply limit laws.
3. To compute derivatives and apply rules of differentiation.
4. To sketch the graph of functions with the help of differentiation techniques.
5. To maxima and minima of functions; optimization problems.
|
| MA 22400 - Introductory Analysis II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Integral calculus; partial derivatives; differentials; introduction to differential equations. Applications to management and economics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:IMA 1605 Calculus - Short II
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, GTC-Quantitative Reasoning, UC-Quantitative Reasoning
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Compute antiderivatives of functions and to use the fundamental theorem of calculus to compute the area of a region bounded by two curves.
2. Use the mean value theorem for integrals to compute averages of functions with real world applications.
3. Compute derivatives of functions of several variables and use them to find maxima and minima of functions of more than one variable.
4. Optimize real world problems, and approximate changes in function values.
5. Use infinite series to model and solve application problems and approximate functions by polynomials.
6. Use antiderivative to solve simple differential equations.
7. Use integration to solve probability problems.
|
| MA 22500 - Calculus For Business And Economics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Functions and Limits. Differentiation and integration of algebraic functions of one variable. Applications of differentiation and integration. Not open to students with credit in MA 16300, MA 22100 or MA 22300. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| MA 22700 - Calculus For Technology I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Functions, derivatives, integrals. Applications to problems in the engineering technologies. Typically offered Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MA 22800 - Calculus For Technology II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of 227. Further topics in differentiation and infinite series, integration. Introduction to infinite series, harmonic analysis, differential equations, and Laplace transforms. Applications to problems in the engineering technologies. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MA 22900 - Calculus for the Managerial, Social, and Biological Sciences I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Differential and integral calculus of one variable. Applications to problems in business and the social and biological sciences. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MA 23000 - Calculus for the Managerial, Social And Biological Sciences II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of 229 covering topics in elementary differential equations, calculus of functions of several variables, and infinite series. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MA 23700 - Advanced Topics In Mathematics For Elemntary School Teachers I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics in algebra and functions such as axioms, algebraic notation and equations. Modeling of problems, concepts of a function, representation of functions, and types of functions (linear, quadratic, exponential, etc.), number systems, number theory, and set theory. Appropriate technologies for teaching such topics will be used. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an understanding of the instructional decision-making processes of guided reinvention teachers.
2. Have developed the mathematics that underlies the procedures used for operations involving rational numbers.
3. Apply the fundamental ideas of number theory and set theory.
4. Make sense of large and small numbers and use scientific notation.
5. Analyze and explain real numbers and whether or not the field axioms hold.
6. Analyze and represent patterns relations, and functions (for linear, quadratic and exponential functions).
7. Use mathematical models to represent quantitative relationships.
8. Analyze change in various contexts.
|
| MA 23800 - Advanced Topics In Mathematics For Elementary School Teachers II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics in data analysis and probability such as nature and uses of data, designing investigations and sampling, distinguishing between types of data, appropriate representations of data, interpretations of data, basic concepts of probability and randomness, simulations. Appropriate technologies for teaching such topics will be used. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Design investigations, collect data through random sampling or random assignment to treatments, and use a variety of ways to display the data and interpret data representations.
2. Draw conclusions involving uncertainty by using computer-based simulation for estimating probabilities and gathering data to make inferences and decisions.
3. Identify misuses of statistics and invalid conclusions from probability.
4. Use appropriate statistical methods and technological tools to analyze data and describe shape, spread, and center.
5. Investigate, interpret, and construct representations for conditional probability geometric probability, and for bivariate data.
6. Demonstrate an understanding of the instructional decision-making processes of guided reinvention teachers.
|
| MA 23900 - Advanced Topics In Mathematics For Elementary School Teachers III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics in proportionality, geometry, and measurement such as proportional reasoning and rescaling in geometric contexts, perspective, congruence and similarity, basic geometric figures, transformations, coordinate geometry, geometric measurement in multiple dimensions, constructions, proof and argumentation. Appropriate technologies for teaching such topics will be used. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate knowledge of core concepts and principles of Euclidean geometry in two and three dimensions.
2. Exhibit knowledge of informal proof.
3. Specifiy locations and describe spatial relationships using coordinate geometry.
4. Analyze properties and relationships of geometric shapes and structures.
5. Apply transformation and use congruence, similarity, and line or rotational symmetry.
6. Apply techniques, tools, and formulas to determine measurements.
7. Employ estimation as a way of understanding measurement units and processes.
8. Completes error analysis through determining the reliability of the numbers obtained from measurement.
9. Demonstrate an understanding of the instructional decision-making processes of guided reinvention teachers.
|
| MA 25000 - Problem Solving In Probability |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. (STAT 25000) This course is designed to teach techniques for solving problems in probability theory which are relevant to the actuarial sciences. It is intended to help actuarial students prepare for the Society of Actuaries and Casualty Actuarial Society Exam P/1. Credit of Examination is not available for this course. MA/STAT 41600 is strongly recommended. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 26100 - Multivariate Calculus |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Planes, lines, and curves in three dimensions. Differential calculus of several variables; multiple integrals. Introduction to vector calculus. Not open to students with credit in MA 17400 or 27100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division, GTC-Quantitative Reasoning, UC-Quantitative Reasoning
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MA 26200 - Linear Algebra And Differential Equations |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Linear algebra, elements of differential equations. Not open to students with credit in MA 26500 or 26600. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, GTC-Quantitative Reasoning, UC-Quantitative Reasoning
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| MA 26300 - Multivariate And Vector Calculus |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course is primarily for students majoring in mathematics, but is appropriate for students majoring in engineering and the physical sciences who want a stronger background in vector calculus than is available in MA 26100. Geometry of Euclidean space; partial derivatives, gradient; vector fields, divergence, curl; extrema, Lagrange multipliers; multiple integrals, Jacobian; line and surface integrals; theorems of Green, Gauss, and Stokes. Typically offered Fall.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MA 26400 - Differential Equations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A first course in ordinary differential equations. First order differential equations, linear and nonlinear systems of differential equations, and second order differential equations. Not open to students with credit in MA 26200. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| MA 26500 - Linear Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to linear algebra. Systems of linear equations, matrix algebra, vector spaces, determinants, eigenvalues and eigenvectors, diagonalization of matrices, applications. Not open to students with credit in MA 26200, 27200, 35000 or 35100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division, GTC-Quantitative Reasoning, UC-Quantitative Reasoning
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MA 26600 - Ordinary Differential Equations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. First order equations, second and n'th order linear equations, series solutions, solution by Laplace transform, systems of linear equations. It is preferable but not required to take MA 26500 either first or concurrently. Not open to students with credit in MA 26200, 27200, 36000, 36100, or 36600. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, GTC-Quantitative Reasoning, UC-Quantitative Reasoning
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 27100 - Several Variable Calculus |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Solid analytic geometry, infinite series, differential and integral calculus of several variables. Admission restricted to those who have extablished credit for calculus I and II. Prerequisite: demonstrated competence in calculus, plane analytical geometry, Calculus I & II. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Quantitative Reasoning, UC-Quantitative Reasoning
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 27300 - Introduction To Financial Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A mathematical treatment of some of the fundamental concepts of financial mathematics and their application to real world business situations and basic risk management. Includes discussions of interest rates, discount rates, annuity valuation, bond valuation, cash flow valuation, spot rates, forward rates, Macaulay duration, modified duration, effective duration, convexity, and immunization, and their use in risk management. Provides preparation for the SOA/CAS Actuarial Exam FM/2. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate knowledge of key concept, including interest and discount rates, present and future value, annuity, perpetuity, yield rate, allocation of investment income, duration, convexity, immunization, bonds, certificates of deposit, mortgage, and stocks.
2. Demonstrate the ability to apply the key concepts in financial scenarios.
|
| MA 27500 - Intermediate Discrete Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Formal logic, proof techniques, elementary number theory, mathematical induction, functions, recurrence relations, sets, combinatorics, elementary graph theory, and applications. Students may not count both MA 17500 and MA 27500 towards graduation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MA 27900 - Modern Mathematics In Science And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course covers topics in combinatorics and probability applied to real life situations such as the paradoxa of democracy, weighted voting, fair division, apportionment, traveling salesmen, the mathematics of networks, Fibonacci numbers, golden ratio, growth patterns in nature, mathematics of money, symmetry, fractals, censuses and surveys, random sampling, sample spaces, permutations and uniform probability spaces. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The students will gain knowledge, overview, and understanding in several fundamental mathematical discipline which fall into four basic categories: voting and apportionment; growth; management of networks; data analysis.
2. Students will assimilate these mathematical ideas while applying them to practical everyday questions, and in turn gain an understanding how real life programs give rise to development of mathematical theories.
|
| MA 28400 - Professional Practicum III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional Practicum. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| MA 29000 - Topics In Mathematics For Undergraduates |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Supervised reading courses as well as special topics courses for undergraduates are given under this number. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MA 30100 - An Introduction To Proof Through Real Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to abstract reasoning in the context of real analysis. Topics may include axioms for the real numbers, mathematical induction, formal definition of limits, density, decimal representations, convergence of sequences and series, continuity, differentiability, the extreme value, mean value and intermediate value theorems, and cardinality. The emphasis, however, is more on the concept of proof than on any one given topic. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 30300 - Differential Equations and Partial Differential Equations for Engineering and the Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a methods course for juniors in any branch of engineering and science, designed to follow MA 26200. Basic techniques for solving systems of linear ordinary differential equations. Series solutions for second order equations, including Bessel functions, Laplace transform, Fourier series, numerical methods, separation of variables for partial differential equations and Sturm-Liouville theory. Not open to students with credit in MA 30400. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 30303 - Internship In Mathematical Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Directed in-service experience with employers that may include but not limited to government agencies, private industry, and community organizations. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Student will experience how mathematical skills are used on the job.
2. Student will experience working as part of a team.
|
| MA 30400 - Differential Equations And Analysis Of Nonlinear Systems For Engineering And The Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a differential equations course designed to follow MA 26500-26600. Same description as MA 30300 except that material on the qualitative behavior of solutions to nonlinear systems is substituted for material on Laplace transforms. Not open to students with credit in MA 30300. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 30500 - Foundations Of Higher Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental concepts used in higher courses, including logic and proof techniques, set theory, functions and relations, cardinality, number systems, the real numbers as a complete ordered field, and Epsilon-delta techniques. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MA 30800 - Elementary Discrete Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intended for prospective secondary school teachers. Basic concepts of mathematics including number systems, propositional calculus, sets, functions, and mathematical induction are studied in the context of computer experiences designed according to a Piagetian-based constructivist learning theory. Students will deepen their understanding of these concepts and will be introduced to a particular method of fostering the learning process. No previous experience with computers is assumed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 31200 - Probability |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A calculus-based introduction to probability theory and stochastic processes. Topics include probability spaces, random variables, distributions, expectation, conditional probability, and discrete-state-space Markov chains. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| MA 31400 - Introduction To Mathematical Modeling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is intended to be accessible to students outside the mathematical and physical sciences. Formulation of mathematical models for applications in the biological, physical, and social sciences. Discrete and continuous models employing random and nonrandom simulation will be studied, with projects selected to fit the background and interests of the students. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MA 31500 - Introduction To Abstract Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a bridge from the mainly computational mathematics courses to the upper-level abstract courses. It focuses on the development of students' abilities to construct proofs, examples and counterexamples. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
|
| MA 32100 - Applied Differential Equations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed primarily for EET majors. Ordinary differential equations with emphasis on linear equations and their applications. Laplace transforms. Fourier series, and an introduction to partial differential equations and their applications. No credit for Math Majors. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MA 33000 - Concepts In Geometry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental concepts in geometry. Euclidean, non-Euclidean (including sperical and hyperbolic geometry), and fractal geometry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
|
| MA 34100 - Foundations Of Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course in rigorous analysis, covering real numbers, sequences, series, continuous functions, differentiation, and Riemann integration. MA 30100 is helpful but not required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 34500 - Coding And Information Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to topics in coding and information theory: error-detecting and error-correcting codes, variable-length codes, decoding, entropy, information, channel capacity, Shannon's theorems, basics of algebraic coding theory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| MA 34800 - Discrete Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A problem-centered introduction to topics in discrete mathematics including induction, permutations, combinations graphs, recurrence relations and generating functions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
|
| MA 35100 - Elementary Linear Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Systems of linear equations, finite dimensional vector spaces, matrices, determinants, eigenvalues and eigenvector applications to analytical geometry. Not open to students with credit in MA 26500. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, GTC-Quantitative Reasoning, UC-Quantitative Reasoning, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| MA 35300 - Linear Algebra II With Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Factoring matrices, orthogonal projections (with application to least squares estimation), diagonalization and Jordan canonical form (with applications to Markov chains and systems of differential equations), Hermitian matrices, convexity (with application to linear programming). Emphasis on problem solving and applications from science, engineering, economics, or business. Not open to students with credit in MA 51100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 36000 - Advance Calculus Differential Equations Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Elementary ordinary differential equations. Special functions defined by power series and by integrals, Fourier series. An honors version of MA 361. Not open to students with credit in MA 361. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 36200 - Topics In Vector Calculus |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Multivariate calculus; partial differentiation; implicit function theorems and transformations; line and surface integrals; vector fields; theorems of Gauss, Green, and Stokes. Credit granted for only one of MA 36200 and 51000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 36300 - Differential Equations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. First order differential equations, higher order linear differential equations, systems of first order equations, series solutions, integral transforms, introduction to partial differential equations: separation of variables, Fourier series, Sturm-Liouville equations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MA 36600 - Ordinary Differential Equations |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An introduction to ordinary differential equations with emphasis on problem solving and applications. The one-hour computer lab will give students an opportunity for hands-on experience with both the theory and applications of the subject. Typically offered Spring Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: GTC-Quantitative Reasoning, UC-Quantitative Reasoning, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 37300 - Financial Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A mathematical treatment of some fundamental concepts of financial mathematics and financial economics, and their application to real world business situations and basic risk management. Includes discussions of valuing investments, capital budgeting, valuing contingent cash flows, yield curves, spot rates, forward rates, short sales, Macaulay duration, modified duration, convexity, and immunization, financial derivatives, and their use in risk management. Provides preparation for the SOA/CAS Actuarial Exam FM/2. Typically offered Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 37500 - Introduction To Discrete Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Induction, permutations, combinations, finite probability, relations, graphs, trees, graph algorithms, recurrence relations, generating functions. Problem solving in all these areas. Credit granted for only one of MA 27600 and 37500. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 38500 - Introduction To Logic |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Propositional calculus and predicate calculus with applications to mathematical proofs, valid arguments, switching theory, and formal languages. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 38600 - Professional Practicum IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional Practicum. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| MA 39000 - Topics In Mathematics For Undergraduates |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Supervised reading courses as well as special topics courses for undergraduates are given under this number. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MA 40100 - Problem Solving In Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intended primarily for prospective teachers, this course deals with techniques of problem solving and proof. Problems are taken from algebra, number theory, and geometry. Topics relevant to the school curriculum are emphasized. The use of microcomputers and calculators in problem solving is discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| MA 40300 - Mathematical Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Undergraduate research in the mathematical sciences under the direction of a faculty member. May be used to fulfill an experiential learning requirement. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MA 41600 - Probability |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (STAT 41600) An introduction to mathematical probability suitable as a preparation for actuarial science, statistical theory, and mathematical modeling. General probability rules, conditional probability and Bayes theorem, discrete and continuous random variables, moments and moment generating functions, joint and conditional distributions, standard discrete and continuous distributions and their properties, law of large numbers and central limit theorem. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 41700 - Mathematical Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is appropriate for majors in engineering, computer science, and mathematics. Construction of linear programming models; the simplex methods and variants, degeneracy and uncertainty in linear programming, gradient methods, dynamic programming, integer programming, principles of duality; two-person zero-sum, nonzero-sum, n-person, and cooperative games. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MA 41800 - Computations Laboratory For MA 417 |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Implementation on digital computer of those appropriate algorithms created in class to solve mathematical programming problems. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MA 42100 - Linear Programming And Optimization Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Solution of linear programming problems by the simplex method, duality theory, transportation problems, assignment problems, network analysis, dynamic programming. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 42500 - Elements Of Complex Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Complex numbers and complex-valued functions; differentiation of complex functions; power series, uniform convergence; integration, contour integrals; elementary conformal mapping. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 42800 - Introduction To Fourier Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics include: Fourier series, convolutions, kernels, summation methods, Fourier transforms, applications to the wave, heat, and Laplace equations. Prerequisites: Vector calculus and linear algebra. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 44000 - Real Analysis Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic real analysis, limits, continuity, differentiation, and integration. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 44100 - Real Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The theory of functions of a real variable; continuity, theory of differentiation and Riemann integration, sequences and series of functions, uniform convergence, interchange of limit operations. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MA 44200 - Multivariate Analysis I Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics covered may include a unified modern treatment of functions of several variables. Topics covered include the topology of Euclidean spaces, mappings of Euclidean spaces, exterior algebra, Lebesgue integration, and integration on manifolds. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 44600 - Introduction to Real Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to basic concepts fo real analysis; topology of the real line, sequences, series, and various forms of convergence, applications to derivatives and integrals. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| MA 45000 - Algebra Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course, which is essentially the first half of MA 55300, is recommended for students wanting a more substantial background in algebra than is afforded by MA 45300, in particular students intending to do graduate work in science or engineering. Topics include the elements of number theory and group theory; unique factorization in polynomial rings and in principal ideal domains. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 45300 - Elements Of Algebra I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental properties of integers, polynomials, groups, rings, and fields, with emphasis on problem solving and applications. Not open to students with credit in MA 45000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MA 45400 - Galois Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to Galois theory, covering both its origins in the theory of roots of polynomial equations and its modern formulation in terms of abstract algebra. Topics include finite extension fields and their symmetries, ruler and compass constructions, complex roots of unity, solvable groups, and the solvability of polynomial equations by arithmetic and radical operations. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 46000 - Geometry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a course in Euclidean geometry. It begins at the high-school level and then moves quickly to intermediate and advanced topics. Emphasis on proofs. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| MA 46200 - Elementary Differential Geometry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The geometry of curves and surfaces based on familiar parts of calculus and linear algebra. An introduction to the study of differentiable manifolds and Riemannian geometry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 47200 - Introduction To Applied Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the basic ideas and methods of applied mathematics. Topics taken from elementary partial differential equations, separation of variables and Fourier series, Fourier transforms, calculus of variations, applied linear algebra, numerical methods, modeling. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| MA 47400 - Methods Of Random Modeling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (STAT 47400) Poisson and compound Poisson processes, plus topics in discrete and continuous time Markov chains, Brownian motion (including the Black-Scholes formula) and simluation. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 48000 - The Practicum In Applied Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The practicum course consists of a small team (a faculty advisor and 1-4 students) working on a real problem obtained in conjunction with a local business or industry. Not more than two terms of MA 480 and/or CS 480 may be taken for credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| MA 48100 - Advanced Problem-Solving Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Seminar intended to prepare students for the national Putnam examination in mathematics. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 48400 - Seminar On Teaching College Algebra And Trigonometry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a seminar on the teaching of mathematics for our best undergraduate mathematics education students. It provides supervised teaching experience along with a chance for the students to perfect their knowledge of algebra before going on to be high school teachers. Students who take this class will also teach a section of MA 15300. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 48700 - Professional Practicum V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional Practicum. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| MA 49000 - Topics In Mathematics For Undergraduates |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Supervised reading courses as well as special topics courses for undergraduates are given under this number. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MA 50300 - Abstract Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Group theory: definitions, examples, subgroups, quotient groups, homomorphisms, and isomorphism theorems. Ring theory: definitions, examples, homomorphisms, ideals, quotient rings, fraction fields, polynomial rings, Euclidean domains, and unique factorization domains. Field theory: algebraic field extensions, straightedge and compass constructions. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 50400 - Real Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Completeness of the real number system, basic topological properties, compactness, sequences and series, absolute convergence of series, rearrangement of series, properties of continuous functions, the Riemann-Stieltjes integral, sequences and series of functions, uniform convergence, the Stone-Weierstrass theorem, equicontinuity, and the Arzela-Ascoli theorem. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 51000 - Vector Calculus |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Calculus of functions of several variables and of vector fields in orthogonal coordinate systems. Optimization problems, implicit function theorem, Green's theorem, Stokes' theorem, divergence theorems. Applications to engineering and the physical sciences. Not open to students with credit in MA 36200 or 41000. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MA 51100 - Linear Algebra With Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Real and complex vector spaces; linear transformations; Gram-Schmidt process and projections; least squares; QR and LU factorization; diagonalization, real and complex spectral theorem; Schur triangular form; Jordan canonical form; quadratic forms. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| MA 51400 - Numerical Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (CS 51400) Iterative methods for solving nonlinear; linear difference equations, applications to solution of polynomial equations; differentiation and integration formulas; numerical solution of ordinary differential equations; roundoff error bounds. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 51500 - Mathematics Of Finance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the mathematical tools and techniques of modern finance theory, in the context of Black-Scholes option pricing. Brownian motion and its stochastic calculus, Ito's formula, and Feynman-Kac formula. Pricing and hedging of claims on Black-Scholes assets. Incomplete markets. Path-dependent options. Stochastic portfolio optimization. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 51600 - Advanced Probability And Options With Numerical Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Stochastic interest rate models. American options from the probabilistic and PDE points of view. Numerical methods for European and American options, including binomial, trinomial, and Monte-Carlo methods. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 51800 - Advanced Discrete Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course covers mathematics useful in analyzing computer algorithms. Topics include recurrence relations, evaluation of sums, integer functions, elementary number theory, binomial coefficients, generating functions, discrete probability, and asymptotic methods. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 51900 - Introduction To Probability |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (STAT 51900) Algebra of sets, sample spaces, combinatorial problems, independence, random variables, distribution functions, moment generating functions, special continuous and discrete distributions, distribution of a function of a random variable, limit theorems. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 52000 - Boundary Value Problems Of Differential Equations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Separation of variables; Fourier series; boundary value problems; Fourier transforms; Bessel functions; Legendre polynomials. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MA 52100 - Introduction To Optimization Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Necessary and sufficient conditions for local extrema in programming problems and in the calculus of variations. Control problems; statement of maximum principles and applications. Discrete control problems. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MA 52300 - Introduction To Partial Differential Equations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. First order quasi-linear equations and their applications to physical and social sciences; the Cauchy-Kovalevsky theorem; characteristics, classification and canonical forms of linear equations; equations of mathematical physics; study of Laplace, wave and heat equations; methods of solution. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| MA 52500 - Introduction To Complex Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Complex numbers and complex-valued functions of one complex variable; differentiation and contour integration; Cauchy's theorem; Taylor and Laurent series; residues; conformal mapping; applications. Not open to students with credit in MA 42500. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MA 52700 - Advanced Mathematics For Engineers And Physicists I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Courses MA 52700 and 52800 constitute a two-semester sequence covering a broad range of subjects useful in early graduate engineering courses. Topics in MA 52700 include linear algebra, systems of ordinary differential equations, Laplace transforms, Fourier series and transforms, and partial differential equations. MA 51100 is recommended. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
|
| MA 52800 - Advanced Mathematics For Engineers And Physicists II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. MA 52700 and 52800 constitute a two-semester sequence covering a broad range of subjects useful in early graduate engineering courses. Topics in MA 52800 include divergence theorem, Stokes theorem, complex variables, contour integration, calculus of residues and applications, conformal mapping, and potential theory. MA 51000 is recommended. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
|
| MA 53000 - Functions Of A Complex Variable I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Complex numbers and complex-valued functions of one complex variable; differentiation and contour integration; Cauchy's theorem; Taylor and Laurent series; residues; conformal mapping; special topics. More mathematically rigorous than MA 52500. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 53100 - Functions Of A Complex Variable II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced topics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 53200 - Elements Of Stochastic Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (STAT 53200) A basic course in stochastic models, including discrete and continuous time Markov chains and Brownian motion, as well as an introduction to topics such as Gaussian processes, queues, epidemic models, branching processes, renewal processes, replacement, and reliability problems. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MA 53800 - Probability Theory I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (STAT 53800) Mathematically rigorous, measure-theoretic introduction to probability spaces, random variables, independence, weak and strong laws of large numbers, conditional expectations, and martingales. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 53900 - Probability Theory II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (STAT 53900) Convergence of probability laws; characteristic functions; convergence to the normal law; infinitely divisible and stable laws; Brownian motion and the invariance principle. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 54000 - Analysis I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Metric spaces, compactness and connectedness, sequences and series, continuity and uniform continuity, differentiability, Taylor's Theorem, Riemann-Stieltjes integrals. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| MA 54100 - Analysis II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Sequences and series of functions, uniform convergence, equicontinuous families, the Stone-Weierstrass Theorem, Fourier series, introduction to Lebesgue measure and integration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| MA 54200 - Theory Of Distributions And Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Definition and basic properties of distributions; convolution and Fourier transforms; applications to partial differential equations; Sobolev spaces. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 54400 - Real Analysis And Measure Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Metric space topology; continuity, convergence; equicontinuity; compactness; bounded variation, Helly selection theorem; Riemann-Stieltjes integral; Lebesgue measure; abstract measure spaces; LP-spaces; Holder and Minkowski inequalities; Riesz-Fischer theorem. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 54500 - Functions Of Several Variables And Related Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Differentation of functions; Besicovitch covering theorem; differentation of one measure with respect to another; Hardy-Littlewood maximal function; functions of several variables; Sobolev spaces. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 54600 - Introduction To Functional Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of functional analysis. Banach spaces, Hahn-Banach theorem. Principle of uniform boundedness. Closed graph and open mapping theorems. Applications. Hilbert spaces. Orthonormal sets. Spectral theorem for Hermitian operators and compact operators. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 55300 - Introduction To Abstract Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Group theory: Sylow theorems, Jordan Hlder theorem, solvable groups. Ring theory: unique factorization in polynomial rings and principal ideal domains. Field theory: ruler and compass constructions, roots of unity, finite fields, Galois theory, solvability of equations by radicals. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MA 55400 - Linear Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of basics: vector spaces, dimension, linear maps, matrices determinants, linear equations. Bilinear forms; inner product spaces; spectral theory; eigenvalues. Modules over a principal ideal domain; finitely generated abelian groups; Jordan and rational canonical forms for a linear transformation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MA 55600 - Introduction To The Theory Of Numbers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Divisibility, congruences, quadratic residues, Diophantine equations, the sequence of primes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MA 55700 - Abstract Algebra I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of fundamental structures of algebra (groups, rings, fields, modules, algebras); Jordan-Holder and Sylow theorems; Galois theory; bilinear forms; modules over principal ideal domains; Artinian rings and semisimple modules. Polynomial and power series rings; Noetherian rings and modules; localization; integral dependence; rudiments of algebraic geometry and algebraic number theory; ramification theory. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 55800 - Abstract Algebra II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of MA 55700. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 56000 - Fundamental Concepts Of Geometry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Foundations of Euclidean geometry, including a critique of Euclid's "Elements" and a detailed study of an axiom system such as that of Hilbert. Independence of the parallel axiom and introduction to non-Euclidean geometry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MA 56200 - Introduction To Differential Geometry And Topology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Smooth manifolds; tangent vectors; inverse and implicit function theorems; submanifolds; vector fields; integral curves; differential forms; the exterior derivative; DeRham cohomology groups; surfaces in E3., Gaussian curvature; two dimensional Riemannian geometry; Gauss-Bonnet and Poincare theorems on vector fields. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MA 57100 - Elementary Topology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of point set topology with a brief introduction to the fundamental group and related topics, topological and metric spaces, compactness, connectedness, separation properties, local compactness, introduction to function spaces, basic notions involving deformations of continuous paths. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MA 57200 - Introduction In Algebraic Topology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Singular homology theory; Eilenberg-Steenrod asioms; simplicial and cell complexes; elementary homotopy theory; Lefschetz fixed point theorem. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 57500 - Graph Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to graph theory with applications. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| MA 58000 - History Of Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The origins of mathematical ideas and their evolution over time, from early number systems and the evolution of algebra, geometry, and calculus to twentieth-century results in the foundations of mathematics. Connections between mathematics and society, including the role of applications in the development of mathematical concepts. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MA 58100 - Introduction To Logic For Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Sentential and general theory of inference and nature of proof: elementary axiom systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| MA 58300 - History Of Elementary Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of elementary mathematics before calculus. An effort will be made to link the history of mathematics to that of other sciences and to the social history of the relevant periods. Some acquaintance with ancient or medieval history of Europe is desirable. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| MA 58400 - Algebraic Number Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Dedekind domains, norm, discriminant, different, finiteness of class number, Dirichlet unit theorem, quadratic and cyclotomic extensions, quadratic reciprocity, decomposition and inertia groups, completions and local fields. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 58500 - Mathematical Logic I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Propositional and predicate calculus; the Gdel completeness and compactness theorem, primitive recursive and recursive functions; the Gdel incompleteness theorem; Tarski's theorem; Church's theorem; recursive undecidability; special topics such as nonstandard analysis. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 59800 - Topics In Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Supervised reading courses as well as dual-level special topics courses are given under this number. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MA 61100 - Methods Of Applied Mathematics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Banach and Hilbert spaces; linear operators; spectral theory of compact linear operators; applications to linear integral equations and to regular Sturm-Liouville problems for ordinary differential equations. Prerequisite: MA 51100, 54400. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 61500 - Numerical Methods For Partial Differential Equations I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (CS 615) Finite element method for elliptic partial differential equations; weak formulation; finite-dimensional approximations; error bounds; algorithmic issues; solving sparse linear systems; finite element method for parabolic partial differential equations; backward difference and Crank-Nicholson time-stepping; introduction to finite difference methods for elliptic, parabolic, and hyperbolic equations; stability, consistency, and convergence; discrete maximum principles. Prerequisite: MA 51400, 52300. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 62000 - Mathematical Theory Of Optimal Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Existence theorems; the maximum principle; relationship to the calculus of variations; linear systems with quadratic criteria; applications. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: MA 54400. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 63100 - Several Complex Variables |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Power series, holomorphic functions, representation by integrals, extension of functions, holomorphically convex domains. Local theory of analytic sets (Weierstrass preparation theorem and consequences). Functions and sets in the projective space Pn (theorems of Weierstrass and Chow and their extensions). Prerequisite: MA 53000. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 63800 - Stochastic Processes I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (STAT 638) Advanced topics in probability theory which may include stationary processes, independent increment processes, Gaussian processes; martingales, Markov processes, ergodic theory. Prerequisite: MA 53900. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 63900 - Stochastic Process II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (STAT 63900) Continuation of MA 63800. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 64200 - Methods Of Linear And Nonlinear Partial Differential Equations I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Second order elliptic equations including maximum principles, Harnack inequality, Schauder estimates, and Sobolev estimates. Applications of linear theory to nonlinear equations. Prerequisite: MA 52300. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 64300 - Methods Of Partial Differerntial Equations II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of MA 642. Topics to be covered are Lp theory for solutions of elliptic equations, including Moser's estimates, Aleksandrov maximum principle, and the Calderon-Zygmund theory. Introduction to evolution problems for parabolic and hyperbolic equations, including Galerkin approximation and semigroup methods. Applications to nonlinear problems. Prerequisite: MA 64200. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 64400 - Calculus Of Variations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Direct methods; necessary and sufficient conditions for lower semicontinuity of multiple integrals; existence theorems and connections with optimal control theory. Prerequisite: MA 54400. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 65000 - Commutative Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of those rings of importance in algebraic and analytic geometry and algebraic number theory. Prerequisite: MA 55800. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 66100 - Modern Differential Geometry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics chosen by the instructor. Prerequisite: MA 54400, 55400. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MA 66300 - Algebraic Curves And Functions I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Algebraic functions of one variable from the geometric, algebraic, or function-theoretic points of view. Riemann-Roch theorem, differentials. Prerequisite: MA 55800. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 66400 - Algebraic Curves And Functions II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of MA 663. Topics chosen by the instructor. Prerequisite: MA 66300. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MA 66500 - Algebraic Geometry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics of current interest will be chosen by the instructor. Prerequisite: MA 65000 or 66300. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MA 68400 - Class Field Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Ideles, adeles, L-functions, Artin symbol, reciprocity, local and global class fields, Kronecker-Weber Theorem. Prerequisite: MA 58400. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MA 69000 - Topics In Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MA 69200 - Topics Applied Math |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics in applied math. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MA 69300 - Topics In Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics in analysis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MA 69400 - Topics In Differntial Equations |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics In Differntial Equations. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MA 69600 - Topics In Geometry |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics in geometry. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MA 69700 - Topics In Topology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics in topology. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MA 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Mathematics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MARS 12000 - MARS Explorations |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Learning about the Middle Ages and Renaissance by participating in MARS-related events such as museum and library outings, film screenings, play performances, public lectures and workshops. Classes will meet to discuss journal entries discussing the events and related assigned readings. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MARS 22000 - Introduction To Medieval And Renaissance Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the interdisciplinary study of the Middle Ages and Renaissance. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| MARS 42000 - Medieval And Renaissance Studies Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An interdisciplinary seminar in some aspect of medieval and Renaissance studies. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| MATH 00100 - Introduction To Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Covers the material in the first year of high school algebra. Numbers and algebra, integers, rational numbers, equations, polynomials, graphs,
systems of equations, inequalities, radicals. Credit does not apply toward any degree. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 00200 - Geometry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is intended to provide one unit of geometry as a first encounter or as a review for those students with little or no geometry background and needing this prerequisite to pursue higher-level course work. Covers plane and solid geometry, right triangle trigonometry, and mathematical logic through a structure focused on problem-solving and critical thinking skills. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 11000 - Fundamentals Of Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Intended primarily for liberal arts and business majors. Integers, rational and real numbers, exponents, decimals, polynomials, equations, word problems, factoring, roots and radicals, logarithms, quadratic equations, graphing, linear equations in more than one variable, and inequalities. This course satisfies the prerequisites needed for M1180, M1190, 13000, and STAT 30100
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 11100 - Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Real numbers, linear equations and inequalities, systems of equations, polynomials, exponents, logarithmic functions. Covers material in the second year of high school algebra. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 13000 - Mathematics For Elementary Teachers I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed for prospective elementary/middle school teachers. Numeration systems: Operations, algorithms, properties, elementary set and number theory, relations and functions, estimation and numeracy. Not available for credit toward graduation in the School of Science. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
|
| MATH 13100 - Mathematics For Elementary Teachers II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic concepts of geometry, transformations in the plane, congruence and similarity, measurement as process, the metric system. Not available for credit toward graduation in the School of Science. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 13200 - Mathematics For Elementary Teachers III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Counting principle, permutations, combinations, experimental and theoretical probability. Statistics: graphs, stem-and-leaf and box plots, measures of central tendency, dispersion, the normal distribution. Not available for credit toward graduation in the School of Science. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 13600 - Mathematics For Elementary Teachers I |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. This course, MATH 13600, is a one-semester version of 13000 and 13200. Not open to students with credit in 13000 or 13200. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH 15100 - Algebra And Trigonometry |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Algebra and trigonometry for students with inadequate preparation for calculus. Not open to students with credit in MA 153 or 154. Not available for credit toward graduation in the School of Science. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 15200 - College Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a termianl course and not part of a sequence that is meant to be a prerequisite for higher level math courses. This course is specifically designed for students who do not need the same technical skills as those required by students planning to continue with calculus. There will be an emphasis on applied problems and graphing techniques. Real numbers, linear functions, linear equations and systems of linear equations, absolute value equations, rational expressions, complex numbers, quadratic equations, exponential and ingarithmic functions, circle parabola and the mathematics of finance include compound interest and annuities are topics covered in this course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1.Understand, appreciate, and solve algebraic application of mathematics to non-science subjects.
|
| MATH 15300 - Algebra And Trigonometry I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. MA 15300-15400 is a two-semester version of 15100. Not open to students with credit in MA 15100. Not available for credit toward graduation in the School of Science. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
|
| MATH 15400 - Algebra And Trigonometry II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of MA 15300. Not open to students with credit in MA 15100. Open to students with an "A" or "B" in MA 15200. Not available for credit toward graduation in the School of Science. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
|
| MATH 15900 - Precalculus |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Algebra and Trigonometry topics designed to prepare students for calculus. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 16300 - Integrated Calculus And Analytical Geometry I |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Review of plane analytic geometry and trigonometry, functions, limits, differentiation, applications of differentiation, integration, the fundamental theorem of calculus, and applications of integration. An honors option is available in this course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 16400 - Integrated Calculus and Analytical Geometry II |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Transcendental functions, techniques of integration, indeterminate forms and improper integrals, conics, polar coordinates, sequences,
infinite series, and power series. An honors option is available in this course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 16500 - Analytic Geometry And Calculus I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to differential and integral calculus of one variable, with applications. The Fundamental Theorem of Calculus. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 16600 - Analytic Geometry And Calculus II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Continuation of MATH 16500. Inverse functions: exponential, logarithmic, and inverse trigonometric functions. Techniques of integration, applications of integration, differential equations and infinite series. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 17100 - Multidimensional Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to mathematics in more than two dimensions. Graphing of curves, surfaces and functions in three dimensions. Two and three dimensional vector spaces with vector operations. Solving systems of linear of equations using matrices. Basic matrix operations and determinants. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 17900 - Computers And Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of some modern mathematical concepts, using the computer as an experimental tool. Possible topics include iteration, fixed points, convergence, stability/instability, chaos, fractals. Function approximation: polynomials, splines, computer graphics. Calculus: numerical approximations, symbolic manipulations. Arithmetic with large integers: prime numbers, factorization, encryption, unsolved problems in number theory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 19000 - Topics In Applied Mathematics For Freshmen |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Treats applied topics in mathematics at the freshman level. Prerequisites and course material vary with the applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MATH 22100 - Calculus For Technology I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. MA 22100-22200 is a two-semester sequence in the technique of calculus for students enrolled in certain technical curricula. Not available for credit toward graduation in the School of Science. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-New Albany
|
| MATH 22200 - Calculus For Technology II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of MA 22100. Not available for credit toward graduation in the School of Science. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-New Albany
|
| MATH 23100 - Calculus For The Life Sciences I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Limits, derivatives, and applications. Exponential and logarithmic functions. Integrals, antiderivatives, and the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus. Examples and applications are drawn from the life sciences. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 23200 - Calculus For The Life Sciences II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Matrices, functions of several variables, differential equations and solutions with applications. Examples and applications are drawn from the life sciences. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 26100 - Multivariate Calculus |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Planes, lines, and curves in three dimensions. Differential calculus of several variables; multiple integrals. Introduction to vector calculus. Not open to students with credit in MA 17400 or 27100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 26200 - Linear Algebra And Differential Equations |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Linear algebra, elements of differential equations. Not open to students with credit in MA 26500 or 26600. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 26600 - Ordinary Differential Equations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. First order equations, second and n'th order linear equations, series solutions, solution by Laplace transform, systems of linear equations. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 27600 - Discrete Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Content: logic, sets, functions, integer algorithms, applications of number theory, mathematical induction, recurrence relations, permutations, combinations, finite probability, relations and partial ordering, and graph algorithms. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 29000 - Topics In Applied Mathematics For Sophomores |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Treats applied topics in mathematics at the sophomore level. Prerequisites and course material vary with the applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MATH 30000 - Logic And The Foundations Of Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Logic and the rules of reasoning, theorem proving. Applications to the study of the integers; rational, real, and complex numbers; and polynomials. Bridges the gap between elementary and advanced courses. Recommended for prospective high school teachers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 32101 - Elementary Topology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to topology, including metric spaces, abstract topological spaces, continuous functions, connectedness, compactness, curves. Cantor sets, continua, and the Baire Category Theorem. Also, an introduction to surfaces, including spheres, tori, the Mobius band, the Klein bottle and a description of their classification. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 33300 - Chaotic Dynamical Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The goal of the course is to introduce some of the spectacular new discoveries that have been made over the past twenty years in the field of Mathematics known as Dynamical Systems. It is intended for undergraduate students in Mathematics, Science, or Engineering. It will include a variety of computer experiments using software that is posted on the web. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 35100 - Elementary Linear Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Systems of linear equations, matrices, vector spaces, linear transformations, determinants, inner product spaces, eigenvalues, applications. Not open to students with credit in MATH 51100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 35300 - Linear Algebra II With Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course involves the development of mathematics with theorems and their proofs. This course also includes several important applications, which will be used to create a mathematical model, prove theorems that lead to the solution of problems in the model, and interpret the results in terms of the original problem. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Students become proficient in the language of linear algebra, as it is used both formally and informally in theoretical discussions and applications to problems from other disciplines.
2. Students develop their ability to read mathematics and learn from what is read.
3. Students develop the ability to write mathematics, especially the ability to create the clearly write proofs, which are the explanations of why things in mathematics are true.
4. Students develop and sustain an excitement about mathematics and its connections to problems in the "real world" generally, especially the math they need in their professional and personal lives, and that they can communicate that excitement to others.
|
| MATH 37300 - Financial Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A mathematical treatment of some fundamental concepts of financial mathematics and financial economics, and their application to real world business situations and basic risk management. Includes discussions of valuing investments, capital budgeting, valuing contingent cash flows, yield curves, spot rates, forward rates, short sales, Macaulay duration, modified duration, convexity, and immunization, financial derivatives, and their use in risk management. Provides preparation for the SOA/CAS Actuarial Exam FM-2. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 39000 - Topics In Applied Mathematics For Juniors |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Treats applied topics in mathematics at the junior level. Prerequisites and course material vary with the applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MATH 39800 - Internship In Professional Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Professional work experience involving significant use of mathematics or statistics. Evaluation of performances by employer and Department of Mathematical Sciences. May count toward major requirements with approval of Department of Mathematical Sciences. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| MATH 41400 - Numerical Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Error analysis, solution of nonlinear equations, direct and iterative methods for solving linear systems, approximation of functions, numerical differentiation and integration, numerical solution of ordinary differential equations. Not open to students with credit in CSCI 51200 . Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 42100 - Linear Programming And Optimization Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers a variety of topics in operations research, including solution of linear programming problems by the simplex method, duality theory, transportation problems, assignment problems, network analysis, dynamic programming. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Studying the simplex method, and why optimization problems can be challenging when linear inequality constraints are included.
2. Studying the nature of a linear program’s dual, and its relationship to shadow pricing and marginal value of inputs.
3. Studying the Hungarian algorithm and its variations for the classic assignment problem.
4. Studying dynamic programming, including what defines a “state” and applications to the machine replacement problem.
5. Studying zero-sum game theory and how zero-sum games can be modeled as linear programs.
6. Studying integer programming and the complications that adding the integer restriction can introduce to standard linear programs.
7. Studying convex programming and learning the KKT conditions for non-linear constrained optimization.
|
| MATH 42300 - Discrete Modeling And Game Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Linear programming; mathematical modeling of problems in economics, management, urban administration, and the behavioral sciences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn about game theory and its applications to multiple areas
2. Students will review and study ideas, examples, and theorems at the heart of game theory
3. Students will apply their knowledge of game theory to other areas in math and computer science
|
| MATH 42500 - Elements Of Complex Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Complex numbers and complex-valued functions; differentiation of complex functions; power series, uniform convergence; integration, contour integrals; elementary conformal mapping. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 42600 - Introduction To Applied Mathematics And Modeling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to problems and methods in applied mathematics and modeling. Formulation of models for phenomena in science and engineering, their solution, and physical interpretation of results. Examples chosen from solid and fluid mechanics, mechanical systems, diffusion phenomena, traffic flow, and biological processes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 44400 - Foundations Of Analysis I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Set theory, mathematical induction, real numbers, completeness axiom, open and closed sets in Rm, sequences, limits, continuity and uniform continuity, inverse functions, differentiation of functions of one and several variables. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 44500 - Foundations Of Analysis II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of differentiation, the mean value theorem and applications, the inverse and implicit function theorems, the Riemann integral, the fundamental theorem of calculus, point-wise and uniform convergence, convergence of infinite series, series of functions. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 45300 - Beginning Abstract Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic properties of groups, rings, and fields, with special emphasis on polynomial rings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 45400 - Galois Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to Galois Theory, covering both its origins in the theory of roots of a polynomial equation and its modern formulation in terms of abstract algebra. Topics include field extensions and their symmetries, ruler and compass constructions, solvable groups, and the solvability of polynomial equations by radical operation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
This is a second course in abstract algebra. It is preceded by an abstract algebra course that is required of all pure math majors. It is for those students that are interested in algebra beyond the introductory course.
|
| MATH 45600 - Introduction To The Theory Of Numbers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Divisibility, congruences, quadratic residues, Diophantine equations, the sequence of primes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 46200 - Elementary Differential Geometry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Calculus and linear algebra applied to the study of curves and surfaces. Curvature and torsion, Frenet-Serret apparatus and theorem, fundamental theorem of curves. Transformation of R2, first and second fundamental forms of surfaces, geodesics, parallel translation, isometries, fundamental theorem of surfaces. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 46300 - Intermediate Euclidean Geometry For Secondary Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. History of geometry. Ruler and compass constructions, and a critique of Euclid. The axiomatic method, models, and incidence geometry. Presentation, discussion and comparison of Hilbert's, Birkhoff's, and SMSG's axiomatic developments. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 49000 - Topics In Mathematics For Undergraduates |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Supervised reading and reports in various fields. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MATH 49100 - Seminar in Competitive Math Problem-Solving |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This seminar is designed to prepare students for various national and regional mathematics contests and examinations such as the Putnam Mathematical Competition, the Indiana College Mathematical Competition and the Mathematical Contest in Modeling (MCM), among others. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MATH 49200 - Capstone Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. By arrangement.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 49500 - TA Instruction |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. For teaching assistants. Intended to help prepare TAs to teach by giving them the opportunity to present elementary topics in a classroom setting under the supervision of an experienced teacher who critiques the presentations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH 50500 - Intermediate Abstract Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Group theory with emphasis on concrete examples and applications. Field theory: ruler and compass constructions, Galois theory, solvability of equations by radicals. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 51000 - Vector Calculus |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Calculus of functions of several variables and of vector fields in orthogonal coordinate systems. Optimization problems, implicit function theorem, Green's theorem, Stokes' theorem, divergence theorems, applications to engineering and the physical sciences. Not open to students with credit in MA 362 or 410. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 51100 - Linear Algebra With Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Real and complex vector spaces; linear transformations; Gram-Schmidt process and projects; least squares; QR and LU factorization; diagonalization, real and complex spectral therorem; Schur triangular form; Joran canonical form; quadratic form. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 51800 - Advanced Discrete Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course covers mathematics useful in analyzing compute algorithms. Topics include recurrence relations, evaluation of sums, integer functions, elementary number theory, binomial coefficients, generating functions, discrete probability, and asymptotic methods. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Knowledge and critical thinking, to be assessed through written homework sets and exams.
|
| MATH 52000 - Boundary Value Problems Of Differential Equations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Separation of variables; Fourier series; boundary value problems; Fourier transforms; Bessel functions; Legendre polynomials. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 52200 - Qualitative Theory Of Differential Equations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Linear systems; nonlinear conservative and nonconservative systems; classification of critical points; self-oscillating systems, cycles, relaxation oscillations; stability. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 52300 - Introduction To Partial Differential Equations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. First order quasi-linear equations and their application to physical and social sciences; the Cauchy-Kovalevsky theorem; characteristics, classification, and canonical form of linear equations; equations of mathematical physics; study of the Laplace, wave and heat equations; methods of solution. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 52500 - Introduction To Complex Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Complex numbers and complex-valued functions; differentiation of complex functions; power series, uniform convergence; integration, contour integrals; elementary conformal mapping. Not open to students with credit in MA 425. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 52700 - Advanced Mathematics For Engineering And Physics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Courses MA 527 and 528 constitute a two-semester sequence covering a broad range of subjects useful in early graduate engineering courses. Topics in MA 527 include linear algebra, systems of ordinary differential equations, Laplace transforms, Fourier series and transforms, and partial differential equations. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 52800 - Advanced Mathematics For Engineering And Physics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Courses MA 527 and 528 constitute a two-semester sequence covering a broad range of subjects useful in early graduate engineering courses. Topics in MA 528 include divergence theorem, Stokes' theorem, complex variables, contour integration, calculus of residues and applications, conformal mapping, and potential theory. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 53000 - Functions Of A Complex Variable I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Complex numbers and complex-valued functions of one complex variable; differentiation and contour integration; Cauchy's theorem; Taylor and Laurent series; residues; conformal mapping; special topics. More mathematically rigorous than MA 525. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 53100 - Functions Of A Complex Variable II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced topics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 53700 - Applied Mathematics For Scientists And Engineers I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Covers theories, techniques, and applications of partial differential equations, Fourier transforms, and Laplace transforms. Overall emphasis is on applications to physical problems. MA 523 may be substituted for MA 537, but students cannot receive credit for both courses. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 54400 - Real Analysis And Measure Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Algebras of sets, real number system, Lebesgue measure, measurable functions, Lebesgue integration, differentiation, absolute continuity, Banach spaces, metric spaces, general measure and integration theory, Riesz representation theorem. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 54500 - Functions Of Several Variables And Related Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Differentiation of functions; Besicovitch covering theorem; differentiation of one measure with respect to another; Hardy-Littlewood maximal function; functions of several variables; Sobolev spaces. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 54600 - Introduction To Functional Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of functional analysis; Banach spaces. Hahn-Banach theorem; principle of uniform boundedness; closed graph and open mapping theorems; applications; Hilbert spaces; orthonormal sets; spectral theorem for Hermitian operators and for compact operators. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 54700 - Analysis For Teachers I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Inequalities, sequences, functions, limits. Application to such basic concepts as length and area and their implications for the teacher of mathematics. Open only to students in the M.A.T. program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 54900 - Applied Mathematics For Secondary School Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Applications of mathematics to problems in the physical sciences, social sciences and the arts. Content varies. May be repeated for credit with the consent of the instructor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 55200 - Applied Computational Methods II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The first part of the course focuses on numerical integration techniques and methods for ODEs. The second part concentrates on numerical methods for PDEs based on finite difference techniques, with brief surveys of finite element and spectral methods. The final week contains a brief survey of methods for bifurcations, which combine various learned numerical techniques. Four laboratory assignments related to applications are assigned. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 55300 - Introduction To Abstract Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Group theory: finite abelian groups, symmetric groups, Sylow theorems, solvable groups, Jordan-Holder theorem. Ring theory: prime and maximal ideals, unique factorization rings, principal ideal domains, Euclidean rings, factorization in polynomial and Euclidean rings. Field theory: finite fields, Galois theory, solvability by radicals. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 55400 - Linear Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of basics: vector spaces, dimension, linear maps, matrices, determinants, linear equations. Bilinear forms; inner product spaces; spectral theory; eigenvalues. Modules over principal ideal domain; finitely generated abelian groups; Jordan and rational canonical forms for a linear transformation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 55900 - Applied Computational Methods I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Computer arithmetic, interpolation methods, methods for nonlinear equations, methods for solving linear systems, special methods for special matrices, linear least-square methods, methods for computing eigenvalues, iterative methods for linear systems, and methods for optimization and minimization. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 56100 - Projective Geometry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Ideal elements, duality, harmonic sets, projective metric, theory of conics, involution, imaginary elements. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 56200 - Introduction To Differential Geometry And Topology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Smooth manifolds, tangent vectors, inverse and implicit function theorems, submanifolds, vector fields, integral curves, differential forms, the exterior derivative, DeRham cohomology groups, surfaces in E3, Gaussian curvature, two-dimensional Riemannian geometry, Gauss-Bonnet and Poincare theorems on vector fields. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 56300 - Advanced Geometry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics in Euclidean and non-Euclidean geometry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 56700 - Dynamical Systems I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students should learn the basic notions and theorems of the theory of dynamical systems on an advanced level and their connections with other branches of mathematics. Topics covered include: fundamental concepts and examples, one-dimensional systems, symbolic dynamics, topological entropy, hyperbolicity, structural stability, bifurcations, invariant measures, and ergodicity. This course is for graduate students in mathematics. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 57100 - Elementary Topology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of point set topology with a brief introduction to the fundamental group and related topics; topological and metric spaces; compactness and connectedness; separation properties; local compactness; introduction to function spaces; basic notions involving deformations of continuous paths. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 57200 - Introduction To Algebraic Topology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Singular homology theory, Ellenberg-Steenrod axioms, simplicial and cell complexes, elementary homotopy theory, Lefschetz fixed point theorem. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 57400 - Mathematical Physics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics in special functions, representation theory, spectral theory, noncumulative geometry, mathematical foundations of statistical physics. The specific content of the course will vary from year to year, to be determined by the instructor. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. The goal of this course is to expose students to the basic concepts and methods of modern mathematical physics.
|
| MATH 57800 - Mathematical Modeling Of Physical Systems I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Linear systems modeling, mass-spring-damper systems, free and forced vibrations, applications to automobile suspension, accelerometer, seismograph, etc., RLC circuits, passive and active filters, applications to crossover networks and equalizers, nonlinear systems, stability and bifurcation, dynamics of a nonlinear pendulum, van der Pol oscillator, chemical reactor, etc., introduction to chaotic dynamics, identifying chaos, chaos suppression and control, computer simulations and laboratory experiments. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 58100 - Introduction To Logic For Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Not open to students with credit in MATH 385 Logical connectives, rules of sentential inference, quantifiers, bound and free variables, rules of inference, interpretations and validity, theorems in group theory, introduction to set theory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 58300 - History Of Elementary Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of elementary mathematics before calculus. An effort will be made to link the history of mathematics to that of other sciences and to the social history of the relevant periods. Some acquaintance with ancient or medieval history of Europe is desirable. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 58800 - Mathematical Modeling Of Physical Systems II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Depending on the interests of the students, the content may vary from year to year. Emphasis will be on mathematical modeling of a variety of physical systems. Topics will be chosen from the volumes "Mathematics in Industrial Problems" by Avner Friedman. Researchers from local industries will be invited to present real-world applications. Each student will undertake a project in consultation with one of the instructors or an industrial researcher. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 59800 - Topics In Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 6.00. Supervised reading courses as well as dual-level special topics courses are given under this number. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MATH 64600 - Banach Algebra And C*Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Banach algebras, Gelfand theory, the commutative Gelfand-Naimark theorem and applications to normal operators, C*-algebras and representations, the noncommutative Gelfand-Naimark theorem, von Neumann algebras, and Murray-von Neumann equivalence. Some operator theory or other topics may be included as time permits. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 66700 - Dynamical Systems II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a continuation of MATH 56700. Students should learn more advanced notions and theorems concerning the theory of dynamical systems and their connections with other branches of mathematics. Prerequisites: Math 56700. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH 67400 - Mathematical Physics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics in inverse spectrum and scattering problems and their applications to the theory of solitons, spectral theory of difference equations and orthogonal polynomials, geometric quantization, and rigorous results in statistical physics, quantum field theory and random processes. The specific content of the course varies from year to year, to be determined by the instructor. Prerequisites: MATH 54700. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. The goal of this course is to expose students to the basic concepts and methods of modern mathematical physics.
|
| MATH 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. PhD Thesis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MATH A0250 - Computer Based Precalculus Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. MATH A0250 is a self-taught version of MATH M0250. Although there are no formal lectures, free tutoring is available at various times during the week. Student will buy a CD-ROM, not a text. The required work may be done on any campus computer cluster, or possibly on a personal computer in a dormitory. Class meets once a week for quizzes and exams. Credit may not be applied toward a degree in the College of Arts and Sciences; and a grade of C- or better is needed to satisfy the College of Arts and Sciences mathematics fundamental skills requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH A1000 - Fundamentals Of Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Designed to introduce linear models and their applications, graphing of linear and quadratic equations, and to foster the growth of proficiency in a range of algebraic topics including factoring strategies. Does not satisfy the Campus General Education Quantitative Reasoning requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH A1180 - Finite Mathematics for the Social and Biological Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Quantitative reasoning (elementary combinatorics and probability; examples of statistical inference), linear modeling, game models of conflict, and methods and theory of social choice. Applications to genetics, medical diagnosis, law, finance, social science research, ecology, and politics. Credit given for only one of A118, M118, or the sequence D116-D117. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH B1060 - Fundamentals of Intermediate Algebra II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Review of quadratic equations and inequalities, systems of linear equations, and exponential and logarithmic functions. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH B1080 - Intermediate Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of factoring, quadratic equations and inequalities, relations and functions, rational exponents, systems of linear equations, and exponential and logarithmic functions. Not open to students who have credit in MATH 10500, 10600, or any MATH course numbered higher than 10800 except MATH 12500
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH B1110 - Pre-Calculus Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Such topics as polynomial functions and equations, exponential and logarithmic functions, determinants, systems of equations and inequalities, mathematical induction, the binomial theorem, permutations and combinations, and progressions.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH B1120 - Trigonometry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Trigonometric functions, identities, and equations; graphs of the trigonometric and inverse trigonometric functions; solution of right and general triangles; polar coordinates; and complex numbers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH B1250 - Mathematics and Its Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. University Core Curriculum course including such topics as mathematical modeling, problem solving, geometrical concepts, growth patterns, and applications to the physical sciences, social sciences, and economics.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH B1500 - Introduction To Secondary Mathematics Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to secondary mathematics teaching. Content includes constructing an informed vision of mathematics and mathematics teaching, developing basic skills for teaching mathematics, and beginning preparation for teacher licensure.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH B1610 - Applied Calculus I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discussion of limits, derivatives, differentials, and appropriate applications. The definite integral, area, fundamental theorem of calculus, indefinite and improper integrals.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH B1620 - Applied Calculus II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. MATH B1620
derivatives and integrals of transcendental functions with additional applications, techniques of integration, calculus in higher dimensions and series. Not open to students who have credit in MATH S1660.
Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH B1650 - Calculus I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Focuses on the concepts of differential calculus of algebraic and transcendental functions and applications, antidifferentiation and the Riemann integral. It includes the use of graphing calculators and computer software. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH B1660 - Calculus |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Standard techniques of integration, applications of the integral, sequences and series, indeterminate forms, and numerical methods. Includes the use of graphing calculators and computer software.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH B1810 - Elementary Probability and Statistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Algebra-based introduction to statistical applications through descriptive methods, probability, normal distributions, confidence intervals, hypotheses tests, regression, and correlation. Misuses of statistics and common probability misconceptions are discussed. Statistical experiments and simulations are conducted. Technology use is integrated throughout. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH B2210 - Probability And Statistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Elementary probability theory, random variables, discrete and continuous probability distributions. Theory and applications of descriptive and inferential statistics. Statistical software and graphing calculator use is integrated throughout the course. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH B2670 - Calculus III |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Multidimensional calculus and its applications. Topics include three-dimensional vector calculus, Gauss's theorem, Green's theorem, and Stoke's theorem. Includes the use of graphing calculators and computer software.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH K3000 - Statistical Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to statistics. Nature of statistical data. Ordering and manipulation of data. Measures of central tendency and dispersion. Elementary probability. Concepts of statistical inference decision: estimation and hypothesis testing. Special topics discussed may include regression and correlation, analysis of variance, non-parametric methods. Credit given for only one of the following: K3000, K3100; CJUS K3000; ECON E3700 or S3700; SOC S3710; or SPEA K3000. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH K3100 - Statistical Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to probability and statistics. Elementary probability theory, conditional probability, independence, random variables, discrete and continuous probability distributions, measures of central tendency and dispersion. Concepts of statistical inference and decision: estimation, hypothesis testing, Bayesian inference, statistical decision theory. Special topics discussed may include regression and correlation, time series, analysis of variance, non-parametric methods. Credit given for only one of the following: PSY or MATH K3000, K3100; CJUS K3000; ECON E3700 or S3700; SOC S3710; or SPEA K3000. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH L1170 - Mathematics Laboratory: Intermediate Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. A laboratory course supplementing M117 (Intermediate Algebra). Topics are parallel to M117, and provide students with the opportunity for guided practice or exploration. Not distribution satisfying. Does not satisfy science lab requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Richmond
|
| MATH L1230 - College Algebra Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Designed to prepare you for MATH M1250. Algebraic operations; polynomial, exponential, and logarithmic functions and their graphs; conic sections; systems of equations; and inequalities. Laboratory compontent to be taken concurrently with MATH M1230. Not distribution satisfying. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Richmond
|
| MATH M0010 - Introductory Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00 to 6.00. This is a first course in the study of algebra. Real numbers, algebraic expressions, solving equations, graphing equations, operations with polynomials, factoring polynomials, rational expressions and equations, solutions of systems of equations, radical expressions and problem solving strategies are taught. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
4.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M0030 - Algebra Skills Recovery Lab |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. A short laboratory course in the operation and use of graphics calculators to prepare students for mathematics courses utilizing such calculators. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M0040 - Introduction to Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed for remediation of advanced arithmetic and beginning algebra skills. Arithmetic of fractions and signed numbers. Beginning equations in one variable. Credit may not be used toward a degree.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M0050 - Mathematics Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 5.00. Tutorial laboratory designed to prepare students for college courses requiring mathematics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M0060 - Basic Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Whole numbers, fractions, percents, measurement and pre-algebra with applications. Credit may not be applied to any degree. Not distribution satisfying. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M0070 - Elementary Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Signed numbers, operations with polynomials, factoring, fractional and radical expressions, solving equations, and introduction to graphing. Credit may not be applied to any degree. Not distribution satisfying.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M0100 - Pre-Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Covers the required material for preparation for algebra courses. Whole numbers, fractions, decimals, percents, square roots, measurement, and rational numbers. Credit does not apply toward any degree. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M0120 - Preparation For Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Designed for development of advanced arithmetic skills. Arithmetic of fractions, decimals, percents, proportions, signed numbers, square roots, cube roots, the Pythagorean theorem, area and perimeter, and other arithmetic topics. Credit may not be used toward a degree. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M0130 - Beginning Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Designed for development of beginning algebra skills. Evaluation of expressions and equations, linear equations, exponents, polynomials, and other algebra topics. Credit may not be used toward a degree. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M0140 - Basic Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Designed to provide algebraic skills needed for future mathematics courses, such as M118 or M119. Operations with fractions, exponents, linear equations, inequalities, elementary graphs. Credit may not be applied toward a degree in the College of Arts and Sciences, the School of Education, the Kelley School of Business, or the School of Public and Environmental Affairs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M0180 - Basic Algebra For Finite Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Designed to provide algebraic skills needed for the study of finite mathematics: linear equations and inequalities and their graphs, systems of equations, sets, and basic counting. Credit may not be applied toward a degree in COAS, BUS, EDUC or SPEA. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH M0210 - Topics In Algebra I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Covers linear equations, inequalities, and their applications. Credit does not count toward a degree. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Remedial, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M0220 - Topics In Algebra II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This laboratory course covers linear graphing and systems of equations and their applications. Credit does not count toward a degree. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Remedial, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M0230 - Topics In Algebra III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course covers operations of polynomials, factoring, solving quadratic equations and their applications. Credit does not count toward a degree. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Remedial, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M0250 - Pre-Calculus Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to prepare students for M119. Algebraic operations; polynomial, exponential, and logarithmic functions and their graphs; conic sections; systems of equations; and inequalities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M0270 - Precalculus With Trigonometry |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The general content of both M025 and M026 is included, with emphasis placed on exponential, logarithmic, and trigonometric functions at a more sophisticated level and pace. Credit may not be applied toward a degree in the College of Arts and Sciences; and a minimum grade of C- is needed to satisfy the College of Arts and Sciences mathematics fundamental skills
requirement. Non-College of Arts and Sciences students should see their advisor about appropriate mathematics selection. Typically offered Fall, Spring, Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH M0300 - Geometry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is intended to provide one unit of geometry as a first encounter or as a review for those students with little or no geometry background and needing this prerequisite to pursue higher level course work. The purpose of this course is to teach plane and solid geometry, right triangle trigonometry, and mathematical logic through a structure focused on problem solving and critical thinking skills. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M1010 - Topics In Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00: This course covers rational expressions and equations and their applications. Does not satisfy the arts and science distribution requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-New Albany
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MATH M1020 - Topics In Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00: This course covers radical expressions and equations and their applications. Does not satisfy the arts and science requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-New Albany
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MATH M1040 - Foundations Of College Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will develop critical problem solving skills, acquire an understanding of the core concept of functions and learn appropriate technology skills while strengthening their mastery of linear equations and inequalities, systems of linear equations, polynomial operations and graphing techniques for linear equations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
|
| MATH M1050 - College Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will deepen their understanding of functions, acquire non-linear problem solving skills and develop the algebraic skills necessary for precalculus and general education mathematics courses: factoring; quadratic, polynomial, rational and radical equations and applications; and operations with rational expressions, radicals, and rational exponents. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
|
| MATH M1070 - College Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to provide algebraic concepts and skills including sets of real numbers, exponents, complex fractions, linear equations and quadratic equations, rectangular coordinates, polynomial and rational expressions, complex numbers, and The Fundamental Theorem of Algebra. Does not satisfy liberal arts and sciences general education requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M1100 - Excursions into Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course designed to convey the flavor and spirit of mathematics, stressing reasoning and comprehension rather than technique. Not preparatory to other courses; explores topics in the theory of games and probability and statistics. This course does not count toward a major in mathematics.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M1110 - Mathematics In The World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Conveys spirit of mathematical languages of quantity; students apply concepts from algebra, geometry, management science, probability, and statistics, and use scientific software to analyze real world situations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M1140 - Quantative Literacy II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course uses problem solving and technology to introduce discrete math topics. Chosen from set theory, graph theory, voting theory, scheduling and networking theory, and probability and statistics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH M1150 - Pre-Calculus And Trigonometry |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Designed to prepare students for higher numbered mathematics and computer science courses, including calculus MATH M2150. Graphing equations in two variables; functions and their graphs; linear, quadratic, polynomial, and rational functions; exponential and logarithmic functions; trigonometric and inverse trigonometric functions. Equivalent to MATH M1250-MATH M1260. Credit not given for both MATH M1150 and MATH M1250-MATH M1260. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M1170 - Intermediate Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to introduce nonlinear models and their applications, advanced linear systems, and function foundations. Does not satisfy the Campus General Education Mathematical Reasoning requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M1180 - Finite Mathematics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Set theory, logic, permutations, combinations, simple probability, conditional probability, Markov chains. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M1190 - Brief Survey Of Calculus I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Sets, limits, derivatives, integrals, and applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M1200 - Brief Survey of Calculus II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of M119 covering topics in elementary differential equations, calculus of functions of several variables and infinite series. Intended for non-physical science students. Credit not given for both M212 and M120. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M1220 - College Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to prepare students for M119 (calculus). Includes graphing linear and nonlinear functions, exponential and logarithmic functions, linear and nonlinear equations and inequalities. A student taking both M122 and M125 will receive only 3 credit hours toward graduation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M1230 - College Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Designed to prepare you for MATH M1250. Algebraic operations; polynomial, exponential, and logarithmic functions and their graphs; conic sections; systems of equations; and inequalities. Not distribution satisfying. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Richmond
|
| MATH M1250 - Pre-Calculus Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to prepare students for M215. Algebraic operations; polynomial, exponential, and logarithmic functions and their graphs; conic sections; systems of equations; and inequalities. Credit may not be applied toward a degree in the College of Arts & Sciences.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M1260 - Trigonometric Function |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Designed to prepare students for M215. Trigonometric functions; identities. Graphs of trigonometric and inverse trigonometric functions. Credit may not be applied toward a degree in the College of Arts & Sciences.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M1330 - Topics In Probability And Statistics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Topics in set theory, probability, descriptive statistics, biomedical and normal distributions and confidence intervals. Applications from social science, nursing, and other disciplines. Credit will not be given for more than one of the following: MATH M1330, M3660, K3100, ECON E2700, PSY K3000, EDUC M4400 or NURS H3650. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| MATH M1340 - Topics In Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Course covers variable topics in mathematics such as graph theory, logic, mathematics of personal finance, mathematics in music and art, modeling using regression, matrices and Markov chains, geometry, governmental mathematics, game theory, and linear programming. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| MATH M2080 - Technical Calculus |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to differential and integral calculus for today?s technology students. It covers analytic geometry, limits, derivatives, applications of the derivatives, the integrals, and transcendental functions and technical applications. The approach is semi-rigorous with emphasis on the applications of calculus to technology.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M2090 - Technical Calculus II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. It is the second semester of the Technical Calculus (M208) class. It includes applications of the integral, limit techniques, integration techniques, differential equations, for today's technology students.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M2110 - Calculus I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Limits, continuity, derivatives, definite and indefinite integrals, applications, techniques of integration, infinite series. A student cannot receive credit for more than one of the following: M1190, M2110, COAS J1130; likewise not more than one of M1200 or M2120. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M2150 - Calculus I |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Coordinates, functions, straight lines, limits, continuity, derivatives, and definite integral, applications, circles, conics, techniques of integration, infinite series. Credit not given for both M119 and M215, or M120 and M216.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M2160 - Calculus II |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Coordinates, functions, straight lines, limits, continuity, derivatives, and definite integral, applications, circles, conics, techniques of integration, infinite series. Credit not given for both M119 and M215, or M120 and M216.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M2610 - Statistical Inferences |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Estimates for population parameters, estimation judges by unbiasedness and mean square error, t-distribution, chi-square distribution, philosophy of hypothesis testing, probabilities in making conclusions after testing, estimation and hypothesis testing, linear and nonlinear least square regression equation for prediction and forecast. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M2950 - Readings And Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Supervised problem solving. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MATH M3010 - Linear Algebra and Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Solving systems of linear equations, matrix algebra, determinants, vector spaces, eigenvalues and eigenvectors. Selection of advanced topics. Applications throughout. Computer used for theory and applications. Credit not given for both M301 and M303. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M3030 - Linear Algebra for the Undergraduate |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the theory of real vector spaces. Coordinate systems, linear dependence, bases. Linear transformations and matrix calculus. Determinants and rank. Eigenvalues and eigenvectors. Credit not given for both M301 and M303. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M3110 - Calculus III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Elementary geometry of 2, 3, and n-space; functions of several variables; partial differentiation; minimum and maximum problems; multiple integration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M3130 - Elementary Differential Equations With Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Ordinary differential equations of the first order and linear equations of higher order with applications, series solutions, operational methods. Laplace transforms, and numerical techniques.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M3250 - Problem-Solving Seminar In Actuarial Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.0 to 3.0. A problem-solving seminar to prepare students for the acutuarial exams. Typically offered Spring
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
|
| MATH M3430 - Introduction to Differential Equations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Ordinary differential equations and methods for their solution, including series methods and the Laplace transform. Applications of differential equations. Systems, stability, and numerical methods. Partial differential equations of mathematical physics, Fourier series. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M3440 - Introduction to Differential Equations with Applications II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Ordinary differential equations and methods for their solution, including series methods and the Laplace transform. Applications of differential equations. Systems, stability, and numerical methods. Partial differential equations of mathematical physics, Fourier series. II (odd years)
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M3470 - Discrete Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Injective and surjective functions; inverse functions; composition; reflexive, symmetric, and transitive relations; equivalence relations; sets including complements, products, and power sets; cardinality; introductory logic including truth tables and qualification; elementary techniques of proof including induction and recursion; counting techniques; graphs and trees; discrete probability. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M3600 - Elements of Probability |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to theory of probability. Probability models, combinatorial problems, conditional probability and independence, random variables, discrete and continuous distributions, repeated Bernoulli trials, gambler's ruin problems, moments, moment generating functions, law of large numbers, central limit theorem and applications. Course topics match portions of the 110 Exam of the Society of Actuaries. Credit not given for both M360 and M365. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M3650 - Introduction to Probability and Statistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Elementary concepts of probability and statistics. Combinatorics, conditional probability, independence, random variables, discrete and continuous distributions, moments. Statistical inference, point estimation, confidence intervals, test of hypotheses. Applications to social, behavioral, and natural sciences. Credit not given for both M365 and M360. The sequence M365-M366 is not recommended. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M3660 - Elements of Statistical Inference |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Sampling distributions (chi-square, t and F distributions), order statistical decisions and inference. Hypothesis-testing concepts, Neyman-Pearson lemma, likelihood ratio tests, power of tests. Point estimation, method of moments, maximum likelihood, Cramer-Rao bound, properties of estimators. Regression, correlation, analysis of variance, nonparametric methods.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M3800 - History Of Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Brief study of the development of algebra and trigonometry; practical, demonstrative, and analytic geometry; calculus, famous problems, calculating devices; famous mathematicians in these fields and chronological outlines in comparison with outlines in the sciences, history, philosophy, and astronomy. Not distribution satisfying.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M3910 - Intro Mathematical Reasoning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Sets, functions and relations, groups, real and complex numbers. Bridges the gap between elementary and advanced courses. Recommended for students with insufficient background for 400-level courses and for students in education. Not open to students who have received credit for M403, M413, or M420. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M3930 - Bridge To Abstract Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to bridge the gap between elementary and advanced mathematics courses. It prepares students for 400-level math courses by teaching structures and strategies of proofs in a variety of mathematical settings: logic, sets, combinatorics, relations, functions, groups, real and complex numbers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Richmond
|
| MATH M4000 - Introduction To Abstract Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Rigorous construction of the real numbers. Emphasis on understanding and using the logic and language of mathematics and on understanding and constructing various types of proofs.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M4030 - Introduction To Modern Algebra I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of groups, rings, field extensions, with applications to linear transformations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M4040 - Introduction To Modern Algebra II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of groups, rings, field extensions, with applications to linear transformations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH M4050 - Number Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Numbers and their representation, divisibility and factorization, primes and their distribution, number theoretic functions, congruencies, primitive roots, diophantine equations, quadratic residues, and sums of squares. Typically offered Fal Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH M4130 - Introduction to Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Differentiable transformations defined on Euclidean space, inverse and implicit function theorems. Lebesgue integration over Euclidean space and transformation of integrals. Exterior algebra, measure and integration on manifolds. Stoke's theorem. Closed and exact forms. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M4150 - Elementary Complex Variables with Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Algebra and geometry of complex numbers, elementary functions of a complex variable, power series, integrations, calculus of residues, conformal mapping. Application to physics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M4360 - Introduction to Geometries |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Non-Euclidean geometry, axiom systems. Plane projective geometry, Desarguesian planes, perspectivities, coordinates in the real projective plane. The group of projective transformations and subgeometries corresponding to subgroups. Models for geometries. Circular transformations.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M4470 - Mathematical Models and Applications I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Formation and study of mathematical models used in the biological, social, and management sciences. Mathematical topics include games, graphs, Markov and Poisson processes, mathematical programming, queues, and equations of growth. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M4630 - Introduction To Probability Theory I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The meaning of probability. Random experiments, conditional probability, independence. Random variables, expected values and standard deviations, moment generating functions. Important discrete and continuous distributions. Poisson processes. Multivariate
distributions, basic limit laws such as the central limit theorem. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MATH M4660 - Intro To Math Stats |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Rigorous mathematical treatment of problems in sampling and statistical inference. Sufficient. Statistics, exponential distributions, monotone likelihood ratio, most powerful tests, minimum variance estimates, shortest confidence intervals, linear models and analysis of variance, nonparametric methods. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH M4910 - Putnam Exam Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The Putnam Examination is a national mathematics competition for college undergraduates at all levels of study. It is held in December each year. This problem seminar is designed to help students prepare for the examination. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MATH M4930 - Senior Thesis In Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Student must write a paper, relating to 40000-level mathematics study, on a topic agreed upon by the student and the department chairman or advisor delegated by the chairman. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Research
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| MATH S1180 - Honors Finite Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Set theory, logic, permutations, combinations, simple probability, conditional probability, Markov chains. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH S1190 - Honors Brief Survey of Calculus I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to calculus. Primarily for students from business and the social sciences. Credit not given for both M119 and M211 or M215 or COAS J113. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH S1630 - Honors Integrated Calculus And Analytic Geometry I |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Review of plane analytic geometry and trigonometry, functions, limits, differentiation, applications of differentiation, integration, the fundamental theorem of calculus, and applications of integration. An honors option is available in this course However, it is intended for students having a strong interest in mathematics who wish to study the concepts of calculus in more depth and who are seeking mathematical challenge.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH S1640 - Honors Integrated Calculus And Analytic Geometry II |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. This course covers the same topics as Math 16400. However, it is intended for students having a strong interest in mathematics who wish to study the concepts of calculus in more depth and who are seeking mathematical challenge.
5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH S1650 - Honors Analytic Geometry And Calculus I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course covers the same topics as MATH 16500. However, it is intended for students having a strong interest in mathematics who wish to study the concepts of calculus in more depth and who are seeking mathematical challenge. Permission of Instructor required.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH S1660 - Honors Analytic Geometry And Calculus II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Continuation of MATH 16500. Inverse functions: exponential, logarithmic, and inverse trigonometric functions. Techniques of integration, applications of integration, differential equations and infinite series. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MATH S2150 - Honors Crs Analytic Geometry Calculus |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Coordinates, functions, straight lines, limits, continuity, derivatives, and definite integral, applications, circles, conics, techniques of integration, infinite series. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH S2160 - Honors Calculus II |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Coordinates, functions, straight lines, limits, continuity, derivatives, and definite integral, applications, circles, conics, techniques of integration, infinite series. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH T1010 - Mathematics for Elementary Teachers I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Elements of set theory. Operations on counting numbers, integers, rational numbers, and real numbers. Open only to elementary education majors. Not distribution satisfying.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH T1020 - Mathematics for Elementary Teachers II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Sets, operations, and functions. Prime numbers and elementary number theory. Elementary combinatorics, probability, and statistics. Only open to elementary education majors. Not distribution satisfying.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH T1030 - Mathematics for Elementary Teachers III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Descriptions and properties of basic geometric figures. Rigid motions. Axiomatics. Measurement, analytic geometry, and graphs of functions. Discussion of modern mathematics. Open only to elementary education majors. Not distribution satisfying.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH T1090 - Mathematics for Elementary Education I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to problem-solving, including use of patterns and Venn diagrams; study of various numeration systems; whole numbers, fraction, and decimal algorithms with manipulatives; ratio; percent; logic. Open only to elementary education majors. Does not count towards divisional distribution requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH T1100 - Mathematics for Elementary Education II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis on geometry with use of manipulatives; study of plane figures and solids. Discussion of area, volume, symmetry, perimeter, tesselation, constructions with mira and compass, congruence, similarity, probability, statistics. Open only to elementary education majors. Does not count toward divisional distribution requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH T3360 - Topics in Euclidean Geometry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the central aspects of two-dimensional Euclidean geometry from historical and axiomatic points of view as well as through hands-on and/or computer-based explorations of geometric concepts and constructions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MATH V0130 - Algebra I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Basic algebra skills, number systems, linear equations, integer exponents, operations with polynomials, introduction to factoring, rational expressions and equations and graphing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| MATH V0160 - Algebra II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. System of equations and inequalities, functions, further study of polynomials and exponents, factoring, rational expressions and equations. Roots, radicals and radical equations, complex numbers, quadratic equations, graphing, and applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| MATH V1020 - College Algebra |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed as a pre-calculus course for the study of functions (including polynomial, rational, exponential, and logarithmic) and their graphs; includes transformations of functions, operations on functions, solution methods for linear and nonlinear equations, systems, and inequalities, and selected topics from analytic geometry. Utilizes graphing technology. Typically offered Fall, Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| MATH V1030 - Mathematics And Its Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Street networks, visiting vertices, planning and scheduling, linear programming, producing data, exploring data, probability and statistical inference. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| MATH V1040 - Trigonometry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discussion of trigonometric functions of angles and numbers. Use of trigonometric functions both in triangle solutions and in study of physical phenomena such as electric circuit and sound waves. Trigonometric identities and of inverse trigonometric functions. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| MATH V1150 - Survey Of Calculus I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Not open to those with credit in MATH V1180; does not substitute for MATH V1180. For students in business, social science or pre-professional programs. Introduction to derivative, integrals and their application. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| MATH X0180 - Basic Algebra For Finite Mathematics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Designed to provide algebraic skills needed for the study of finite mathematics: linear equations and inequalities and their graphs, systems of equations, sets, and basic counting. Credit may not be applied toward a degree in COAS, BUS, EDUC or SPEA. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MATH Y3980 - Internship in Professional Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Professional work experience involving significant use of mathematics or statistics. Evaluation by employer and Department of Mathematics. Does not count toward major requirements. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| MCMP 20400 - Organic Chemistry I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Organic chemistry; a study of the compounds of carbon on a functional group basis, with particular emphasis on those organic compounds of pharmaceutical and physiological importance; microlaboratory experiments involving the methods of purification, reactions, and synthesis of organic compounds. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Medicinal Chem/Molecular Pharm
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To learn the basic principles of organic chemistry.
2. To develop study techniques that will help you learn maximally and work efficiently.
3. To learn problem-solving skills and to rely less on memorization.
4. To learn to work in teams.
|
| MCMP 20500 - Organic Chemistry II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Continuation of MCMP 20400. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Medicinal Chem/Molecular Pharm
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the basic and advanced principles of organic chemistry.
2. Know the functional classes and reactions of pharmaceutically and biologically relevant compounds.
3. Understand nomenclature, physical properties, and reactivity or organic molecules.
4. Develop study techniques that will help you learn maximally and work efficiently.
5. Learn problem-solving skills and to rely less on memorization.
|
| MCMP 20800 - Biochemistry For Pharmaceutical Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The overall objectives of this course are to increase students’ biomedical understanding and knowledge and their ability to apply that understanding and knowledge. This requires the students in this course to learn and understand the facts, concepts, and formulaic processes, and to become skilled at applying what they have learned. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Medicinal Chem/Molecular Pharm
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The student must demonstrate comprehension of major scientific discoveries and use of the scientific method to make these discoveries:
a. Basic principles of thermodynamics and kinetics and their role in defining chemical processes.
b. The relevance of molecular biology, biochemistry, immunology, and pharmacogenomics and apply key principles to disease states and therapeutics.
Required Materials:
|
| MCMP 30400 - Biological Chemistry I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The chemistry, properties, and function of biologically active constituents of cells, with emphasis on mammalian biochemistry, catalysis, metabolism of major food constituents, hereditary metabolic diseases, and the methods of biotechnology. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Medicinal Chem/Molecular Pharm
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MCMP 30500 - Biological Chemistry II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of MCMP 30400. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Medicinal Chem/Molecular Pharm
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MCMP 31100 - Biometrics And Pharmaceutical Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an introduction to biometrics and quantitative chemical and biochemical analyses. Examples from clinical and pharmaceutical applications will be emphasized. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Medicinal Chem/Molecular Pharm
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MCMP 40100 - The Nature Of Cancer |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An introductory seminar course designed to introduce the subject of cancer to the undergraduate student. The course features speakers from Purdue University and other academic, governmental, and industrial organizations, presenting each week a different aspect or view of the cancer problem. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Medicinal Chem/Molecular Pharm
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MCMP 40700 - Medicinal Chemistry And Molecular Pharmacology I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers chemical and pharmacological principles involved in the therapeutic and adverse actions of drugs that act on the somatic and central nervous systems. This material will be combined with concepts from MCMP 44100 to facilitate an integrated approach to learning the pharmacological actions of specific drugs. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Medicinal Chem/Molecular Pharm
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MCMP 40800 - Medicinal Chemistry And Molecular Pharmacology III |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course integrates both the pharmacological and chemical principles governing the actions of drugs targeting the cardiovascular, renal, and blood systems. Topics include drug classes used in the treatment of hypertension, coronary artery disease, heart failure, and cardiac arrhythmias. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Medicinal Chem/Molecular Pharm
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MCMP 42200 - Immunology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course exposes students to the basic principles of immunology, teaches students to use those principles to understand the cause of immunological disease and the basis of immunoprophylaxis and immunotherapy, and provides students with sufficient information to understand the principles and challenges of gene therapy and the application of genomics to future drug development. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Medicinal Chem/Molecular Pharm
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The basic components of the immune system and their roles in innate and adaptive immunity.
2. The development and function of lymphocytes in adaptive immunity.
3. The molecular basis of antibody diversity.
4. How antigens are recognized by T cells.
5. How B cells develop and function in the body.
6. How T cells develop in the body and differentiate into specialized subsets.
7. How lymphocytes undergo positive and negative selection.
8. How B cells and T cells are activated and participate in adaptive immunity.
9. The basis of MHC polymorphism and the role on the immune response.
10. How the complement system is activated and plays its role in immune responses.
11. How the cellular components of the innate and adaptive immune systems combine to generate an effective response against pathogens.
12. How the body remembers a previous infection.
13. The types and causes of immunodeficiency diseases.
14. How infection with HIV affects the immune system.
15. How the immune system sometimes recognizes harmless antigens (allergic reactions).
16. How the immune system can damage healthy tissue.
17. The basis and practice of immunization.
18. How the immune system complicates organ transplantation.
19. How the immune system recognizes cancer cells and can be used to combat cancer.
|
| MCMP 44000 - Pathophysiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course uses the principles of biochemistry, physiology, and cell biology to study the etiology, molecular pathophysiology, and the resultant clinical effects of general pathological processes such as inflammation and neoplasia and the specific disease states of the various organ systems. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Medicinal Chem/Molecular Pharm
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MCMP 44100 - Medicinal Chem & Molecular Pharm II(Pharmacodyamics, Endocrine & Paracrine Pharmacology) |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the basic pharmacodynamic principles and chemical and pharmacological foundations for therapeutic effects of drugs and natural products that act on endocrine and paracrine systems. These concepts and information are incorporated with material from MCMP 40700 to facilitate the learning of therapeutic and adverse actions of specific drugs. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Medicinal Chem/Molecular Pharm
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MCMP 44200 - Medicinai Chemistry And Molecular Pharmacology IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The focus of this course is to develop a molecular basis for student understanding of the major classes of drugs used in the treatment of infectious diseases and cancer. These principles are applied to the clinical context of diagnosis, therapy selection, and monitoring. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Medicinal Chem/Molecular Pharm
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MCMP 49000 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A course for superior students to be used in relation to, and to supplement, an existing course; an in-depth approach to topics of current interest, utilizing the original literature as prime source material. A laboratory project may be included. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Medicinal Chem/Molecular Pharm
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MCMP 51400 - Biomolecular Interactions: Theory And Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Theory and applications of biophysical and bioanalytical methods for the identification and qualification of biological and pharmaceutical samples. Methods to be discussed include chromatography, electrophoresis, optical spectroscopy, mass spectrometry, electrochemical methods, radiochemical analysis, ultracentrifugation, calorimetry and surface plasmon resonance. Physical measurements, such as binding equilibrium, kinetics and macromolecular structure will be discussed. While fundamentals of each technique will be discussed, a major focus will be on the application and integration of presented methods for the analysis of biological problems. The course will be organized into four general topic areas around the theme of medicinal analysis, and variable credit will be available based on a student's interest in the four topic areas (i.e., 1 credit per topic area). Students should register for 1 credit hour, and the variable credit option will be discussed and determined at the first class period. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Medicinal Chem/Molecular Pharm
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MCMP 54400 - Drug Classes And Mechanisms |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course will integrate basic principles of medicinal chemistry and pharmacology to achieve an understanding of drug mechanisms as applied to autonomic/endocrine, cardiovascular/renal, CNS, and chemotherapy/infectious diseases. The course will apply concepts from organic chemistry, biochemistry, anatomy, physiology, and principles of drug action to describe how drugs are used to treat the symptoms and causes of disease. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Medicinal Chem/Molecular Pharm
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Knowledge and understanding of the major drug classes.
2. Knowledge of the relationships between mechanism of action with drug interactions and adverse reactions.
3. Development of an introductory-level ability to critically evaluate primary literature.
4. An appreciation for the relevant research and discovery processes involving medicinal chemistry and pharmacology related to the major drug classes.
5. A broad knowledge of pharmaceutical and related sciences.
6. An understanding of drug discovery, development, and commercialization.
7. Effective written and oral communication skills.
8. An ability to integrate and apply knowledge to solve problems.
|
| MCMP 57000 - Basic Principles Of Chemical Action On Biological Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Detailed description of modern pharmacology with emphasis on the mechanism of drug action and approaches used to understand their therapeutic and toxic effects. Topics include receptor theory and signal transduction, pharmacokinetics and pharmacogenetics with emphasis on current concepts in molecular pharmacology. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Medicinal Chem/Molecular Pharm
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MCMP 59800 - Introduction To Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Introduction to research in synthetic and analytical medicinal chemistry, pharmacognosy, and natural products under the direction of a member of the graduate faculty. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Medicinal Chem/Molecular Pharm
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MCMP 61700 - Molecular Targets: Neuro Function And Dysfunction |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The application of basic scientific principles from medicinal chemistry and molecular pharmacology, and new discoveries in biology, to the development of new drugs to treat psychiatric disorders and diseases of the central nervous system. Important examples of drug targets, and small molecules (either currently approved drugs or those under investigation) that target them, are discussed. Classes of drug target examples discussed include: G protein-coupled receptors, neurotransmitter transporter proteins, and ion channels. Processes of neurosecretion and neurodegenerative processes will also be discussed, as well as target validation and examples of the use of genetic models to identify CNS targets. Prerequisites: MCMP 57000. Typically offered Spring. This course is offered in the Spring Semester of the even numbered years.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Medicinal Chem/Molecular Pharm
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand completely modern approaches to assessing the nature and relevance of the various targets for CNS drugs and CNS drug discovery.
2. Demonstrate full comprehension and satisfactory presentation of CNS drug discovery findings from the current literature.
3. Demonstrate satisfactory critical evaluation of the primary literature.
4. Demonstrate a synthesis of knowledge acquired/demonstrated through the first three outcomes, to achieve a full understanding of a specific area of CNS drug discovery, and generate a satisfactory original research proposal in that area.
|
| MCMP 61800 - Molecular Targets: Cancer |
|
Credit Hours 2.00. The application of basic scientific principles from medicinal chemistry and molecular pharmacology, and new discoveries in biology, to the development of new anti-cancer drugs. Important examples of drug targets and small molecules (either currently approved drugs or those under investigation) that target them, are discussed. Classes of drug targets discussed include: kinases, small monomeric G proteins, prenyltransfereses, transcription factors, nuclear receptors, cell cycle proteins, cytoskeletal proteins, and topoisomerases. Prerequisites: MCMP 57000. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Medicinal Chem/Molecular Pharm
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand completely modern approaches to anti-cancer drug discovery.
2. Demonstrate full comprehension and satisfactory presentation of anti-cancer drug discovery findings from the current literature.
3. Demonstrate satisfactory critical evaluation of the primary literature.
4. Demonstrate a synthesis of knowledge acquired/demonstrated through the first three outcomes, to achieve a full understanding of an area of anti-cancer drug discovery, and generate a satisfactory original research proposal in that area.
|
| MCMP 62500 - Grant Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Strategies for preparation of grant proposals; generating ideas for proposals and peer review. Lecture and laboratory periods will alternate each week (i.e., lecture week one, laboratory week two). Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Medicinal Chem/Molecular Pharm
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MCMP 69000 - Special Topics In Medicinal Chemistry And Molecular Pharmacology |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 6.00. Special topics, projects, or laboratory exercises in selected areas of medicinal chemistry and molecular pharmacology. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Medicinal Chem/Molecular Pharm
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MCMP 69600 - Seminar In Medicinal Chemistry And Molecular Pharmacology |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 or 1.00. Faculty and student participation in discussion of current research and developments in synthetic medicinal products, quality control, instrumentation, biosynthesis, and structure elucidation of natural products. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Medicinal Chem/Molecular Pharm
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MCMP 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Medicinal Chem/Molecular Pharm
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MCMP 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Medicinal Chem/Molecular Pharm
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MCMP 90000 - Faculty Meeting |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Medicinal Chem/Molecular Pharm
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 11400 - Engineering Drawing |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A technical drawing course covering geometric constructions, pictorial and multiview drawing, sections, graphical vector solutions, dimensioning, detail and assembly drawings. Development of free hand sketching techniques as well as the use of drafting instruments. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ME 11500 - Engineering Drawing I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. (CE 11500) A technical drawing course covering engineering geometry, orthographic projection, auxiliary views, dimensioning, and tolerancing using sketching techniques, and 2-D CAD. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ME 11600 - Engineering Drawing II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. (CE 11600) A continuation of the technical drawing course covering 3-D parametric modeling, part assembly modeling, and detail and assembly drawings. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ME 16000 - Solid Modeling |
|
Credit Hour: 2.00. Communication of form and layout of real world objects, solid modeling of objects. Engineering drawing layouts, orthogonal projections, dimensioning, tolerancing and standard drawing symbols, principles of detail design drawings and assembly drawings, and manufacturability. Use of computer graphics and production of drawings. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
To introduce the student to the operation of a typical three-dimensional parametric CAD system. Content stresses graphic commands and proper manipulation of industrial CAD software to produce engineering parts, assemblies, and drawings. Emphasis is placed on developing solid modeling skills.
|
| ME 18400 - Engineering Industrial Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. For engineering students on cooperative assignment only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ME 19600 - Introduction To Computer Application In Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the engineering profession, graphs, and units. Introduction to computers, computer-aided drafting, and
engineering calculations with mathematical software packages. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ME 19700 - Introduction To Computer Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to FORTRAN programming for engineering freshmen, with emphasis on solutions to engineering
problems.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ME 20000 - Thermodynamics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. First and second laws of thermodynamics, entropy, reversible and irreversible processes, properties of pure substances. Application to engineering problems. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ME 25000 - Statics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (C E 250) Forces and couples, free body diagrams, two and three-dimensional equilibrium of a particle and rigid bodies. Principles of friction, centroids, center of gravity, and moments of inertia. Virtual work, potential potential energy, and static stability of equilibrium. Internal forces, shear, and bending moment diagrams. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 25100 - Dynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (C E 251) Kinematics of particles in rectlinear and curvelinear motion. Kinetics of particles, Newton's second law, energy and momentum methods. Systems of particles. Kinematics and plane motion of rigid bodies, forces and accelerations, energy and momentum methods. Introduction to mechanical vibrations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 25200 - Strength Of Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (C E 252) Plane stress, plane strain, and stress-strain laws. Application of stress and deformation analysis to members subjected to centric, torsional, flexual, and combined loading. Introduction to theories of failure, buckling, and energy methods. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 25300 - Statics And Dynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A shortened combined course in statics, including a study of force systems, free-body diagrams, problems in equilibrium, and mass moment of inertia. Dynamics, including a study of the kinematics and kinetics of particles using force and acceleration, work and energy, and impulse and momentum. Introduction to rigid body kinematics and kinetics using Newton's laws. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 26200 - Engineering Design, Ethics, And Entrepreneurship |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic concepts of the design process. Innovative engineering design of real life applications. Engineering ethics topics. Fundamentals of Entrepreneurship. Design projects focus on open-ended problems. Design modeling, simulation, documentation and communication. Implementation and use of modern computer tools in solving design problems and completing team design projects in the area of Mechanical Engineering. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Implement the design process in engineering design projects.
2. Conduct the planning phase of the design process and plan in terms of deliverables.
3. Understand the design problem and generate engineering specifications.
4. Generate and evaluate design concepts following a functional decomposition.
5. Select materials and manufacturing processes for selected design concepts.
6. Conduct product generation and evaluation.
7. Validate the final design through simulation and/or prototyping.
8. Document the design activities and outcomes through product development file, drawings, and personal design notebook.
9. Work as a team player and demonstrate participation through a personal design notebook.
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| ME 26300 - Introduction To Mechanical Engineering Design, Innovation And Entrepreneurship |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The product design process. Development of product design specifications using customer inputs, benchmarking, product/market research and patent review. Concept generation and evaluation using brainstorming, functional decomposition, modeling and decision matrices. Detailed product design including assembly, economic analysis, CAD, and bill of materials. Oral and written design reviews. Key skills developed include teamwork, communication, project planning, innovation, design, and entrepreneurship. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Instill the philosophy that real engineering design problems are open-ended and multifaceted.
2. Teach a systemic design methodology.
3. Provide guidance in applying engineering principles to open-ended problems.
4. Develop the ability to mathematically model and analyze engineering systems.
5. Sharpen skills in leadership, teamwork, communication, project planning, innovation, design and entrepreneurship.
6. Instill a philosophy of professional and ethical behavior.
7. Provide a foundation for the rest of the mechanical engineering curriculum and future careers.
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| ME 27000 - Basic Mechanics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Vector operations, forces and couples, free body diagrams, equilibrium of a particle and of rigid bodies. Friction. Distributed forces. Centers of gravity and centroids. Applications from structural and machine elements, such as bars, trusses, and friction devices. Kinematics and equations of motion of a particle for rectilinear and curvilinear motion. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| ME 27100 - Basic Mechanics I (Statics) |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (CE 27101) Review of vector algebra and equilibrium. Hydrostatics, virtual work, static stability, friction. First and second moments of areas, volumes, and masses, center of gravity. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ME 27200 - Mechanics of Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Kinematic and dynamic analysis of linkages and mechanical systems. Analytical and graphical approaches to analysis. Vector loop and relative velocity/acceleration solutions. Design and analysis of cams and gears. Static and dynamic balancing. Design for strength of various machine components. Reliability principles. Design documentation and communication. Laboratory experiments on mechanical design and strength. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
Learning Objectives:
1. Employ the strength of materials theory as a tool to approximately solve the complex stresses and deformations in members of structures and machine elements.
2. Use the factor of safety in design of machine components and structures to compensate for the unforeseen factors and stress concentrations.
3. Analyze tensile and compressive stresses and deformations in bars subject to axial loads.
4. Analyze shear stresses and deformations in circular bars subject to torques.
5. Analyze bending stresses and displacements in beams subject to transverse loads.
6. Identify the instability of long bars under compressive forces, and thus use the theory of columns in design of structures and machine components.
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| ME 27400 - Basic Mechanics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review and extension of particle motion to include energy and momentum principles. Planar kinematics of rigid bodies. Kinetics for planar motion of rigid bodies, including equations of motion and principles of energy and momentum. Three-dimensional kinematics and kinetics of rigid bodies. Linear vibrations, with emphasis on single-degree-of-freedom systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
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| ME 27500 - Basic Mechanics II (Dynamics) |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (CE 27500) Fundamental concepts, kinematics, translation and rotation. Kinetics impulse, momentum, work, energy. Rectilinear and curvilinear translation of point masses. Plane motion of rigid bodies and vibration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ME 28200 - Measurements and Instrumentation |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to the theory and application of instrumentation to measurements problems in the area of mechanical engineering. Experiments utilizing basic devices to measure quantities such as pressure, temperature, flow, strain, and force are performed. Methods for recording, interpretation, and presentation of experimental results are illustrated. Statistics and design of experiments are emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 28400 - Engineering Industrial Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. For engineering students on cooperative assignment only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ME 28500 - Industrial Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional practice of engineering in industry. Comprehensive written report of this experience required. For cooperative program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| ME 28600 - Industrial Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional practice of engineering in industry. Comprehensive written report of this experience required. For cooperative program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| ME 28700 - Industrial Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional practice of engineering in industry. Comprehensive written report of this experience required. For cooperative program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| ME 28800 - Industrial Practice IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional practice of engineering in industry. Comprehensive written report of this experience required. For cooperative program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| ME 28900 - Industrial Practice V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional practice of engineering in industry. Comprehensive written report of this experience required. For cooperative program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ME 29000 - Global Engineering Professional Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Forum on contemporary issues in the global profession of mechanical engineering. Professionalism and ethics. Interactions with engineering faculty and with professionals outside the University. Quizzes on assigned readings in the areas of globalization, cultural difference and collaborating across cultural boundaries. Individually developed professional profiles describe technical interests and convey awareness of ethical responsibilities in global context. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Provide a solid foundation in global engineering skills.
2. Introduce the in global engineering community and encourage active involvement with professional associations such as ASME and SAE to develop teamwork and leadership skills.
3. Explore the ME Curriculum and identify resources available for planning a academic program including global literacies (language and area studies) and for obtaining diverse industrial experience appropriate for developing global competencies.
4. Support the development of a strong ethical framework for global professional workplace, including an appreciation for cultural differences, as a responsible member of the global engineering community.
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| ME 29100 - Industrial Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and comprehensive written report of this practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ME 29199 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in mechanical engineering. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 29200 - Industrial Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and comprehensive written report of this practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ME 29299 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in mechanical engineering. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 29300 - Measurements And Instrumentation |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. (ECE 29300) Introduction to the theory and application of sensors/devices and their instrumentation for measurements problems in engineering and science. Experiments utilizing basic circuits and sensors are performed. Methods for recording, interpretation, and presentation of experimental results are illustrated. Statistics and design of experiment are emphasized. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 29500 - Engineering Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Topics of contemporary importance of special interest that are outside the scope of the standard undergraduate curriculum can be offered temporarily under the selected topics category until the course receives a permanent number. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ME 29700 - Mechanical Engineering Sophomore Projects |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Projects or special topics of contemporary importance can be studied under the Mechanical Engineering Projects course. Interested students should seek a faculty advisor by meeting with individual faculty members who work in their area of special interest. Students submit a summary report. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ME 30000 - Thermodynamics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Properties of gas mixtures, air-vapor mixtures, applications. Thermodynamics of combustion processes, equilibrium. Energy conversion, power, and refrigeration systems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 30100 - Thermodynamics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reversibility, availability, power cycles, and the conversion of heat into work; combustion, heat pumps, refrigeration, and air conditioning. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| ME 30201 - Thermodynamics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Properties of gas mixtures, air-vapor mixtures, applications. Thermodynamics of combustion processes, equilibrium. Energy conversion, power, and refrigeration systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| ME 30300 - Materials Science And Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Concepts of materials science and their relevance to engineering design. Structure, properties and uses of engineering materials. Strengthening methods and environmental effects. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 30400 - Mechanics And Materials Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Experimental determination of mechanical properties of selected engineering materials. Experimental verification of assumptions made in M E 252. Use of strain measuring devices. Design of experiments. Typically offered Spring Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 30500 - General Thermodynamics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Properties of pure substances, work and heat, first and second laws of thermodynamics, entropy, irreversibility and availability, power and refrigeration cycles, thermodynamic relations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ME 30600 - General Thermodynamics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Thermodynamic relations. Power and refrigeration cycles, methods of thermodynamic analysis, technical thermodynamics and design, energy conversion. Thermodynamics of combustion processes and equilibrium. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ME 30900 - Fluid Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Continuum, velocity field, fluid statics, manometers, basic conservation laws for systems and control volumes, dimensional analysis. Euler and Bernoulli equations, viscous flows, boundary layers, flow in channels and around submerged bodies, one-dimensional gas dynamics, turbomachinery. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 31000 - Fluid Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Continua, velocity fields, fluid statics, basic conservation laws for systems and control volumes, dimensional analysis. Euler and Bernoulli equations, viscous flows, boundary layers, flows in channels and around submerged bodies, and one-dimensional gas dynamics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| ME 31001 - Fluid Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Continuum, velocity field, fluid statics, manometers, basic conservation laws for systems and control volumes, dimensional analysis. Euler and Bernoulli equations, viscous flows, boundary layers, flow in channels and around submerged bodies, one-dimensional gas dynamics, turbomachinery. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| ME 31100 - Engineering Economics And Project Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ECE 31200). Introduction to principles of engineering project management and techniques. Topics include technical feasibility studies, project specifications, scheduling, validation, lifecycle costing, and economic analysis. The focus is on managing an engineering project through scheduling, budgeting, resource management, execution and control. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Define the terms associated with project engineering.
2. Understand and identify engineering ethics.
3. Develop economic decision making models incorporating time value of money.
4. Apply the decision models developed in solving practical project management problems to select the best alternative.
5. Analyze the effect of budget in resource management and estimate costs.
6. Identify risks, quantify and plan responses.
7. Schedule a project with time constraints, determine critical path.
8. Execute, control and terminate a project.
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| ME 31200 - Fluid Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (CE 31200) Continuum, velocity field, fluid statics, basic conservation laws for systems and control volumes, dimensional analysis, Euler and Bernoulli equations, viscous flows, boundary layer flow in channels and around submerged bodies, one-dimensional gas dynamics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand basic concepts and principles of fluid mechanics.
2. Develop physical understanding of the variety of fluid flow phenomena.
3. Become familiar with applications of fluid mechanics to engineering problems.
4. Understand pressure, velocity, and acceleration.
5. Understand fluid statics.
6. Identify control volume vs. system.
7. Understand and use Continuity Equation.
8. Understand and use Bernoulli Equation.
9. Understand and use Momentum Equation.
10.Understand and use Momentum-of-Momentum Equation.
11.Understand and use Energy Equation.
12.Design a system using dimensional analysis and similitude.
13.Understand surface resistance.
14.Apply fundamental principles to the flow of conduits.
15.Calculate drag and lift.
16.Be aware of CFD concepts and applications.
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| ME 31300 - Fluid Mechanics Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. (CE 31300) Introduction to fluid mechanics laboratory, experiments on flow patterns, velocity profile in an air pipe, wind tunnel calibration, draining of a tank, pipe friction, boundary layer studies, falling ball experiments, and viscosity measurements. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ME 31400 - Heat and Mass Transfer |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Fundamental principles of heat transfer by conduction, convection, and radiation; mass transfer by diffusion and convection. Application to engineering situations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ME 31500 - Heat And Mass Transfer |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Fundamentals of heat transfer by conduction, convection, and radiation; mass transfer by convection. Relevance to engineering applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 31601 - Heat And Mass Tranfser |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Fundamentals of heat transfer by conduction, convection, and radiation; mass transfer by convection. Relevance to engineering applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| ME 31800 - Fluid Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuum hypothesis, velocity field, fluid statics, basic conservation laws for systems and control volumes, dimensional analysis and similitued, Euler and Bernoulli equations, Navier-Stokes equations, viscous flows, boundary-layer flow in channels and around submerged bodies, applications. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 31900 - Fluid Mechanics Lab |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to fluid mechanics laboratory and design of experiments, including experiments on flow patterns, velocity profile in an air pipe, wind tunnel calibration, draining of a tank, pipe friction, drag forces, boundary layer studies, falling ball experiments, and measurements of fluid properties. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 32000 - Kinematic Analysis And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Graphical, analytical, and computer techniques for analyzing displacements, velocities, and accelerations in mechanisms. Analysis and design of linkages, cams and gears. Laboratory projects include analysis, design, construction, and evaluation of mechanisms. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand kinematics and fundamentals.
2. Perform graphical synthesis.
3. Perform mathematical analysis of mechanisms.
4. Perform velocity analysis of mechanisms.
5. Perform acceleration analysis of mechanisms.
6. Perform kinematic analysis of cams.
7. Perform kinematic analysis of gears.
8. Understand static force analysis.
9. Understand dynamic force analysis.
|
| ME 32100 - Heat Transfer |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental principle of heat transfer by conduction, convection, and radiation; mass transfer by diffusion and convection. Application to engineering situations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 32200 - Heat Transfer Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to heat transfer laboratory and design of experiments. Experiments on measurements of temperature and thermal conductivity, transient heat conduction, convection, radiation, boiling, and heat exchangers. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 32300 - Mechanics Of Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Integrated approach to mechanics of materials emphasizing mechanics fundamentals as applied to machine design applications. Stress and strain in machine elements; mechanical properties of materials; extension, torsion, and bending of members; thermal stress; pressure vessels; static indeterminacy, stress transformation, Mohr's circle. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 32401 - Mechanics Of Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (CE 32401) Integrated approach to mechanics of materials emphasizing mechanics fundamentals as applied to machine design applications. Stress and strain in machine elements; mechanical properties of materials; extension, torsion, and bending of members; thermal stress; pressure vessels; static indeterminacy, stress transformation, Mohr¿s circle. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| ME 32500 - Dynamics Of Physical Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development and solution of linear models; translational and rotational mechanical systems, electrical systems, electromechanical systems, thermal systems, hydraulic systems. The Laplace transform, transfer functions, and Bode plots, state variable representation and solutions. Computer analysis and simulation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop a mathematical model generally consisting of ordinary differential equations for a given system.
2. Determine the equilibrium conditions, and where appropriate, obtain a linearized model for a nonlinear system.
3. Rearrange the equations that make up the system model in a new form suitable for an analytical solution and use them to build and simplify block diagrams.
4. Solution for a first order system by the method of time domain response.
5. Use Laplace transform method to find the time response, to determine the role of the transfer function on the system response, and where appropriate, to find the time constraints, damping ratios, and undamped natural frequencies.
6. Use a suitable software (i.e. Simulink - Matlab) to simulate and analyze the behavior of the dynamic systems.
7. Use block diagrams and computer simulations as aids in modeling and analysis of dynamic systems.
|
| ME 32600 - Engineering Project Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ECE 32600) Project management is an important skill that is needed in the private and public sectors as well as specialty businesses. This course will explore the challenges facing today's project managers and will provide a broad understanding of the project management environment focused on multiple aspects of the project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
Upon successful completion of the course, students should be able to
1. Use library resources and internet resources to find information necessary for the project.
2. Use critical thinking in its design process.
3. Use creative approaches when necessary to obtain project objectives.
4. Analyze and interpret data.
5. Function effectively on a multi-disciplinary team through mutual support, consensus seeking, cooperation, and sharing responsibility.
6. Write a project report, adhering to the specified format using an appropriate writing style, grammar, and spelling.
7. Make an oral presentation using effective visual aids.
8. An understanding of professional and ethical responsibility.
9. The broad education necessary to understand the impact of engineering solutions in a global, economic, environmental, and societal context.
10. An ability to use the techniques, skills, and modern engineering tools necessary for engineering practice.
|
| ME 32700 - Engineering Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ECE 32700) Engineering Economics is designed as an overview of economics with a focus on how it relates to the practice of engineering. Topics include interest formulas, rate of return, life cost analysis, depreciation, taxes, and cash flow. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
Upon successful completion of the course, students should be able to
1. Understand the terminology used in engineering economic analysis.
2. Understand time-value-of-money concepts such as net present worth analysis, equivalent uniform annual worth analysis, benefit/cost analysis, internal rate of return analysis, loans, leveraging, and fixed-income investment analysis.
3. Understand the criteria for making economic-based decisions.
4. Analyze before-tax and after-tax cash flows.
5. Understand economic risk analysis techniques.
6. Conduct minimum life cycle cost tradeoffs between initial and repair costs.
7. Formulate economic solutions to real-world case study problems.
8. Demonstrate capability to use Excel spreadsheet analysis in solving economic problems.
9. Experience working in a project team to solve an economic problem and make a presentation of the solution using Powerpoint.
10. Write a project report, adhering to the specified format for business reports using appropriate writing style, grammar, and spelling.
11. Learn how to estimate costs and perform an economic analysis in support of capstone design and other term projects.
12. Develop cash flow analysis problem solving techniques for passing exams including the Engineering Economics portions of the EIT exam.
|
| ME 32800 - Mechanics Of Materials Lab |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. (CE 32800) Experimental approach to mechanics of materials emphasizing mechanics fundamentals as applied to machine design applications. Experiments cover stress and strain in machine elements; mechanical properties of materials; extension, torsion, and bending of members; thermal stress; pressure vessels; static indeterminacy, stress transformation, Mohr’s circle. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| ME 33000 - Modeling and Analysis of Dynamic Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to dynamic engineering systems; electrical, mechanical, fluid, and thermal components; linear system response; Fourier series and Laplace transform. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| ME 33001 - Structure And Properties Of Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (CE 33001) The relationship between the structure of materials and the resulting mechanical, thermal, electrical, and optical properties. Atomic structure, bonding, atomic arrangement, crystal symmetry, crystal structure, habit, lattices, defects, and the use of X-ray diffraction. Phase equilibria and microstructural development. Applications to design. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
Students successfully completing this course will be able to:
1. Describe the most common states that matter can assume.
2. Describe the state and structure of various materials commonly used in construction and machine design.
3. Know how to test the strength and properties of various materials commonly used in engineering.
4. Describe the crystalline structure of commonly occurring materials.
5. Have a sense of the breaking point of materials commonly used in engineering.
|
| ME 33100 - System Dynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Mathematical modeling and response analysis of dynamic systems with mechanical, electrical, fluid/thermal, and electromechanical components used in modern control systems. Concepts of analogous systems; transfer function and block diagram; state-space formulation; time-domain and frequency-domain analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
To provide students with mathematical and computational tools for modeling and analysis of linear dynamic systems in various engineering disciplines. Application of Matlab and Simulink package as an analysis tool.
|
| ME 33300 - Automatic Control Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ECE 33300) Analysis and design of control systems, from modeling and computer solutions to stability and performance issues with an orientation toward electrical and mechanical systems. Classical control system concepts are emphasized but an introduction to modern techniques is also provided. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
This is an introductory course in control systems. The aim is to provide both ME and EE students with the background needed to model and design automatic control systems for electrical, mechanical, and electromechanical systems using the classical concepts of root locus, Bode plots, and Nyquist diagrams, and to assess the stability and performance of such systems. An introduction to the state space techniques is also provided. Matlab and Simulink are used as the primary computer aided design tools for control systems. Multidisciplinary team projects will be assigned.
|
| ME 34000 - Dynamic Systems and Measurements |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Modeling and formulation of differential equations for dynamic systems, including mechanical vibratory systems, thermal systems, fluid systems, electrical systems, and instrumentation systems. Analysis of dynamic systems and measuring devices including transient response and frequency response techniques, mechanical systems, transducers, and operational amplifiers. Consideration of readout devices and their responses to constant, transient, and steady-state sinusoidal phenomena. Calibration and data analysis techniques are introduced. Both analog and digital computation are included. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ME 34400 - Introduction To Engineering Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the structure and properties of engineering materials, including metals, alloys, ceramics, plastics, and composites. Characteristics and processing affecting behavior of materials in service. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ME 34500 - Mechanical Engineering Experimentation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Mechanical measurements and methods of experimentation. Calibration standards, statistical replication and error minimization, transducers and instrumentation, dimensional analysis and the design of an experiment. Laboratory experiments will require formal reports and will deal with displacements, velocities, pressures, and elastics strains. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand theories and methods of experimentation
2. Understand the various types of errors and how to minimize them.
3. Apply the uncertainty analysis to experimental techniques.
4. Understand the statistical analysis of data reduction.
5. Design experiments to measure various quantities.
6. Understand the measurement of various mechanical properties.
7. Write a formal laboratory report.
|
| ME 35200 - Machine Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to the principles of design and analysis of machines and machine components. Design for functionality, motion, force, strength, and reliability. The laboratory experience provides open-ended projects to reinforce the design process. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lab 1, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 35300 - Machine Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to the principles of design and analysis of machines and machine components. Design for functionality, motion, force, strength, and reliability. The laboratory experience provides open-ended projects to reinforce the design process. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| ME 36000 - Mechanism Design |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Graphical, analytical and computer techniques for analyzing the kinematics and dynamics of machinery and mechanisms. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 36100 - Kinematics And Dynamics Of Machinery |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Position, velocity and acceleration analysis and design of machine elements including n-bar linkages, cam followers, and gear trains. Dynamic force analysis and balancing of linkages; flywheels; introduction to cam dynamics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 36200 - Machine Design I Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Case studies and design projects in the area of kinematics and dynamics. Computer-aided design techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 36300 - Principles And Practices Of Manufacturing Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Manufacturing processes for engineering materials, both metallic and non-metallic. Fundamentals of manufacturing processes with a "hands-on" laboratory sequence. Analysis and design of processes for various engineering materials and their link to engineering design. Hands-on experiences through laboratory experiments and demonstrations. Not open to students with credit in IE 37000. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 36500 - Systems And Measurements |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to engineering measurement fundamentals, including digital and frequency domain techniques, noise, and error analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 36600 - Systems And Measurements |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to engineering measurement fundamentals, including digital and frequency domain techniques, noise, and error analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| ME 36900 - Design Of Machine Elements |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of principals of strength of materials to the design of typical mechanical components. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 37000 - Machine Analysis and Design |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Applications of statics, dynamics and strength of materials to machines. Analysis and synthesis techniques for use in the design of mechanical devices. Procedures are computer oriented and include topics on kinematics, kinetics, dynamics and strength vs. stress. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 37100 - System Dynamics And Introduction To Control |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to mathematical modeling and response analysis of dynamic systems with mechanical, electrical, and fluid/thermal elements used in control systems. Concepts of analogous systems, transfer function and state space formulation; analysis in time-domain; analysis in frequency-domain; introduction to modern control theory. Typically offered Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 37200 - Design Of Mechanisms |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Kinematic and dynamic analysis of linkages and mechanical systems. Analytical and graphical approaches to analysis. Vector loop and relative velocity/acceleration solutions. Design and analysis of cams and gears. Static and dynamic balancing. Design documentation report writing and communication. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1 . Identify the mechanical system that satisfies the given engineering requirements.
2. Describe the necessary assumptions in designing mechanical systems.
3. Apply proper engineering principles and theories to solve open-ended design problems.
4. Perform kinematic and dynamic analysis.
5. Perform mechanism analysis and simulation using computer tools.
6. Evaluate the performance of mechanical systems.
7. Design linkages, cams, gears and other machine elements for both motion and strength requirements.
8. Communicate design work through written report and oral presentation.
9. Conduct library/internet search of patents/literature.
10.Explain potential impact of designed mechanical systems on environment and society including safety.
|
| ME 37300 - Numerical Methods For Engineers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (C E 379) Introduction to numerical methods for engineers. Topics include solution methods for nonlinear algebraic equations, sets of linear and nonlinear algebraic equations, eigenvalue problems, interpolation and curve fitting, numerical differentiation and integration, and techniques to solve ordinary and partial differential equations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 37500 - System Modeling And Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to modeling electrical, mechanical, fluid, and thermal systems containing elements such as sensors and actuators used in feedback control systems. Dynamic response and stability characteristics. Closed loop system analysis including proportional, integral, and derivative elements to control system response. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| ME 37600 - System Modeling And Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to modeling electrical, mechanical, fluid, and thermal systems containing elements such as sensors and actuators used in feedback control systems. Dynamic response and stability characteristics. Closed loop system analysis including proportional, integral, and derivative elements to control system response. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| ME 38199 - Professional Practice Co-Op I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 38299 - Professional Practice Co-Op II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 38399 - Professional Practice Co-Op III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 38400 - Engineering Industrial Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. For engineering students on cooperative assignment only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ME 38700 - Electronics And System Engineering Through Robotics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to robotics; microcontrollers, motion actuators, sensors, electric circuits and interference, electronic devices and interfacing, switch elements, electric ladder diagrams. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 38800 - Electronics and System Engineering Through Robotics Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Experiments in building, programming, and testing mobile robots; DC motors; shaft encoders and telemetry. Multidisciplinary mobile robot team projects involving mechanical, electrical and computer engineering designs. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 39300 - Industrial Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and comprehensive written report of this practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ME 39399 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in mechanical engineering. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 39400 - Industrial Practice IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and comprehensive written report of this practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ME 39499 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in mechanical engineering. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 39500 - Industrial Practice V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and comprehensive written report of this practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ME 39599 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in mechanical engineering. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 39600 - Professional Internship II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in mechanical engineering. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit a summary report. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ME 39699 - Professional Practice Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in mechanical engineering. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ME 39700 - Selected Topics In Mechanical Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00-6.00. Topics of contemporary importance or of special interest in Mechanical Engineering. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ME 40100 - Engineering Ethics and Professionalism |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Some ethical, social, political, legal, and ecological issues that a practicing engineer may encounter. Students may not receive credit for both ECE 401 and ME 401. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ME 40200 - Biomechanics of the Musculoskeletal System |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Mechanical design of organisms, with emphasis on the mechanics of the musculoskeletal system. Selected topics in prosthesis design and biomaterials; emphasis on the unique biological criteria that must be considered in biomechanical engineering design. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ME 40300 - Thermal Science Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Applications of thermal science theory to such topics as heating, ventilating, and air conditioning; real cycles of combustion engines; turbomachinery; power plants and combustion. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ME 40400 - Finite Element Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (CE 40400) Brief history of finite element method and ANSYS; direct formulation; minimum total potential energy formulation; verification of results; trusses. Examples using ANSYS, one-dimensional elements. Numerical integration, Gauss Quadrature. Examples of one-dimensional elements in ANSYS; heat transfer problems; solid mechanics problems; two-dimensional elements. Pre-processing with ANSYS; boundary conditions; applications; heat conduction problems; torsion problems; beams and frames. Credit is not allowed for both ME 40400 and CE 40400. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. New course covers material that students should know; will help graduate obtain jobs.
|
| ME 40500 - Seminar And Fundamentals Of Engineering Review |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A seminar series on mechanical engineering career options and guidance, professional development and licensing, and preparation for the Fundamental of Engineering (FE) examination. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ME 41000 - Fluid Mechanics And Hydraulics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. (CE 41000) This course is a continuation of Fluid Mechanics. Topics will include hydraulics, external boundary layer flow, and introduction to fluid power and gas dynamics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Strengthen understanding of boundary layer theory and open channel flow.
2. Strengthen error analysis capability and laboratory experience.
|
| ME 41300 - Noise Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of acoustic waves. Psychoacoustics and theories of hearing. Environmental and building acoustics. Measurement methods and common instrumentation. Noise control methods. Machinery noise. Community reaction. Legal aspects. Design-oriented semester project. Course work in differential equations. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ME 41400 - Thermal-Fluid Systems Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of basic heat transfer and fluid flow concepts to design of thermal-fluid systems. Emphasis on design theory and methodology. Design experience in thermal-fluid area such as piping systems, heat exchangers, HVAC, and energy systems. Design projects are selected from industrial applications and conducted by teams. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ME 41500 - Energy Systems Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of thermodynamics, fluid mechanics, and heat transfer fundamentals to the design of energy systems. Applications include thermal regulation in buildings, nuclear/fossil fuel power plants, internal combustion engines, gas turbines, electronic equipment, processing of primary metals and plastics, and manufacturing processes. Optimization techniques, energy costs, economics, and environmental issues. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 41600 - Heat Transfer |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Steady state and transient heat transfer by conduction, laminar and turbulent convection, film condensation and boiling, and by radiation. Combined heat and mass transfer by diffusion and convection. The analysis and design of heat exchangers for process heat transfer. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ME 41700 - Heat Transfer Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Heat transmission laboratory with measurements of temperature and flows. Experiments include temperature profiles in solids, thermal conductivity, radiation, and the determination of various heat and mass transfer coefficients. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand basic heat transfer principles.
2. Understand theories and methods of measuring techniques in heat transfer.
3. Understand the various types of errors and how to minimize them.
4. Write a formal laboratory report.
|
| ME 41800 - Engineering Of Environmental Systems And Equipment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design and analysis of systems and equipment used in conditioning buildings. Review of fundamentals in thermodynamics, heat transfer, fluid mechanics, economics, non-linear equation solving, optimization. Analysis of building heating and cooling requirements for design and annual energy use. Design and selection of equipment. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 42100 - Heating and Air Conditioning I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of fluid flow and heat transfer. Comfort conditions.Psychometrics. Solar radiation. Design conditions. Heating and cooling loads. Ventilation. Air distribution. Fans and pumps. Duct design. Pipe sizing. Refrigeration. Air conditioning systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 42300 - Acoustics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. One degree of freedom oscillations. Wave motion in strings, bars, and membranes. Free, froced, and transient response. The acoustic wave equation, acoustic energy density, intensity, and impedance. Inhomogeneous wave equation. Simple acoustic sources. Waveguides and room acoustics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 42400 - Design And Optimization Of Thermal Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of the principles of thermodynamics, fluid mechanics, and heat transfer to the design of thermal systems with an emphasis on modeling, simulation, economic analysis, and optimization. Systems to be studied include heat exchangers, thermal storage devices, fluid machinery, pipes and ducts, and electronics cooling devices. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 42500 - Intermediate Heat Transfer: Theory And Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analytical study of conduction; energy and momentum equations in convective heat transfer and review of empirical relations; boiling and condensation; applications in heat transfer such as heat exchangers, refrigeration, and freezing of foods, cooling of electronic equipment, and heating and cooling of buildings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 42600 - Heating And Air Conditioning Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Psychometrics, air conditioning systems, equipment selection, duct design and piping design. Heating and cooling loads, solar radiation and heat transmission in buildings. Heat pumps. Application of air conditioning to residences, computer rooms, light commercial and high-rise buildings. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ME 42700 - Sustainable Energy Sources And Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to energy sources and energy systems with an emphasis on sustainability. Students will apply material from thermodynamics, fluid mechanics, and heat transfer to analyze and design energy systems that utilize non-renewable energy sources such as fossil fuels, nuclear fission and fusion, and hydrogen, as well as renewable energy sources such as solar, wind, biofuels, geothermal, and oceans. Economic, environmental, social, and political issues related to energy are also considered. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Evaluate and compare non-renewable and renewable energy sources for energy content and environmental impact.
2. Perform thermal, environmental, and economic analyses of energy systems.
3. Design energy systems (including economic analysis) and communicate results either orally and/or in writing.
4. Understand some of the ethical, economic, environmental, social, and political issues associated with energy and energy systems.
|
| ME 42900 - Senior Engineering Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ECE 42900, CE 42900). The senior engineering design courses I and II constitute a two-semester sequence of an interdisciplinary activity. The objective of these courses is to provide engineering students with supervised experience in the process and practice of engineering design. Projects are chosen by the students or the faculty. Students working in teams pursue an idea from conception to realistic design. The course concludes with a substantial written and oral design review before a faculty team. Class discussions will include the ethical responsibility of engineers, the impact of engineering solution in a global/societal context, and small-group interactions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn material needed for a project that was not taught in courses taken.
2. Identify goal(s), the necessary activities, and the key problems.
3. Prioritize tasks, manage time, control expenses, and prepare plans to complete a project on schedule and within budget.
4. Work cooperatively as part of a team (interdisciplinary as in industry).
5. Communicate effectively, both orally and in writing.
6. Design (and build and test) a system, process, or components related to a project.
7. Demonstrate the multiple engineering skills necessary for a 21st century engineer.
8. Formulate and solve engineering problems, recognize relevant parameters, identify principles, and make appropriate and reasonable simplifying assumptions and approximations.
|
| ME 43000 - Power Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Rankine cycle analysis, fossil-fuel steam generators, energy balances, fans, pumps, cooling towers, steam turbines, availability (second law) analysis of power systems, energy management systems, and rate analysis. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| ME 43200 - Manufacturing Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides students in the Mechanical Engineering program with an opportunity of learning the fundamentals of modern manufacturing processes. The course introduces the fundamentals of different manufacturing processes, and it also introduces the machine tools and systems for manufacturing processes. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. To gain an understanding and appreciation of the breadth and depth of the field of manufacturing.
2. To recognize the strong interrelationships between material properties and manufacturing processes.
3. To become familiar with some of the basic casting, forming, metal cutting, welding, and polymer processes.
4. To learn and apply the basic terminology associated with these fields.
5. To increase the student's knowledge and broaden their perspective of the manufacturing world in which many of you will contribute your talents and leadership.
|
| ME 43300 - Principles Of Turbomachinery |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Unified treatment of principles underlying fluid mechanic design of hydraulic pumps, turbines and gas compressors. Similarity and scaling laws. Cavitation. Analysis of radial and axial flow machines. Blade element performance. Radial equilibrium theory. Centrifugal pump design. Axial compressor design. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| ME 43800 - Gas Turbine Engines |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic operating principles and analysis of performance characteristics of gas turbine engines for aircraft and vehicular propulsion and stationary power. Turbojet, turbofan, turboshaft cycle analysis. Analysis of flow through compressors, turbines, combustors, inlets, nozzles, and regenerators. Component matching and off-design performance. Coursework in thermodynamics and fluid mechanics. Not open to students with credit in A&AE 37200. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 43900 - Senior Engineering Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The senior engineering design courses I and II constitute a two-semester sequence of an interdisciplinary activity. The objective of these courses is to provide engineering students with supervised experience in the process and practice of engineering design. Projects are chosen by the students or the faculty. Students working in teams pursue an idea from conception to realistic design. The course is climaxed by the presentation of a substantial written report and a formal oral presentation before faculty and students. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ME 44000 - Automotive Prime Movers: Green Engines And Clean Fuel |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Internal combustion engines (ICE), hybrid engines (HE), fuel-cell engines (FCE), and alternative/renewable fuels. ICEs topics- engines with advanced combustion systems such as clean diesels, direct-injection spark-ignition engines (DISI), and low-temperature combustion (LTC) compression-ignition. HE topics- different components of hybrid engines and the powertrain design. FCE topics- fundamentals of fuel cells and automotive applications. Clean fuel topics- biofuels, hydrogen, and natural gas, as well as, other cleaner fossil fuels for automotive applications. Well-to-wheel energy and cost analysis of prime mover designs/fuels. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Relate processes in automotive prime movers to engineering fundamentals.
2. Study low-carbon emitting, and LEV, ULEV, SULEV, PZEV, and ZEV prime mover designs.
3. Study prime mover designs that are alternative to conventional combustion engines.
4. Study cleaner alternatives to conventional fossil fuels.
5. Carry out analysis of prime mover designs and fuel alternatives to identify cost and energy tradeoffs.
|
| ME 44400 - Computer-Aided Design And Prototyping |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to advanced computer-aided design (CAD) for product design, modeling, and prototyping. Individual use and team-based environment to design and prototype a functional and marketable product. Projects include use of the advanced design tools to produce a working prototype that is manufacturable. Application to design, manufacturing, and analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 44600 - CAD/CAM Theory and Application |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. . Introduction to computer-aided design (CAD) and computer-aided manufacturing (CAM) theory and applications. Topics include CAD/CAM systems and integration, geometric modeling, process planning, and tool path generation, CAD/CAM interfacing with CNC (computer numerically controlled) machines, machining, and CNC programming. Projects involve CAD/CAM-based product development cycle. Hands-on experience is attained through laboratory experiment and actual CNC manufacturing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ME 45000 - Introduction to Computer-Aided Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the use of finite element methods for analysis and design. Applications involving stress analysis and heat transfer of solids. The use of existing software and hardware for computer-aided engineering. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ME 45100 - Computational Methods in Thermal Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Mathematical description of heat transfer and fluid flow problems, discretization methods, heat convection, convection and diffusion, incompressible flows, high speed flow. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ME 45101 - Machine Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design and analysis of mechanical systems, for fluctuating loading. Fatigue analysis. Application of design fundamentals to mechanical components, and integration of components to form systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| ME 45200 - Machine Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design and analysis of mechanical systems, for fluctuating loading. Fatigue analysis. Application of design fundamentals to mechanical components, and integration of components to form systems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 45300 - Experimental Stress Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to experimental methods in stress analysis with application to practical engineering problems. Electrical-resistance strain gages, strain gage circuits, transducer applications, and recording instruments. Two-dimensional photoelasticity with emphasis on birefringent coatings. Intoduction to the method of caustics. Selected Laboratory experiments. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 45400 - Intermediate Dynamics With Computer Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the advanced theories of dynamics and application of the digital computer as a tool in engineering design and analysis of structural members and machine in motion. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 45500 - Vehicle Design And Fabrication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Open-ended project course to design and build competitive prototype vehicles. Integration of design concept formulation, engineering analysis and testing, and prototype fabrication. Product development activities in a hands-on setting. Design constraints imposed by manufacturing limitations, funding constraints and market competition. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply the design process to the design of a vehicle.
2. Apply engineering fundamentals to evaluate the design of a vehicle.
3. Apply team-work skills to management of the Mini-Baja or Formula SAE teams.
4. Learn the effect of design choices by building and testing students’ designs.
|
| ME 45600 - Kinematics And Dynamics Of Machinery |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a continuation of Basic Mechanics II. Topic will include kinematics and dynamics of machinery, synthesis, and analysis if mechanisms and machines, and computer applications in the design of mechanisms and machines. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Student will be able to analysis the kinetics of a linkage to determine position. Velocity and acceleration variation throughout its range of motion.
2. Student will be able to synthesize a planar linkage to provide a desired motion.
3. Student will be able to design a cam or gear train to produce a desired motion.
4. Student will be able to determine the static and dynamic forces acting on a moving linkage.
|
| ME 45700 - Vibration Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to simple vibratory motions such as damped and undamped free and forced vibrations, resonance, vibratory systems with more than one degree of freedom. Topics will include Coulomb and hysteric damping, transverse vibration of beams, torsional vibration, computation of natural frequencies and mode shapes, applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn how to model discrete single-degree and multiple-degree vibratory systems.
2. Demonstrate how to model continuous vibratory systems and be able to calculate mode shapes and frequencies.
|
| ME 45800 - Composite Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Potential applications of composite materials. Basic concepts of fiber reinforced composites, manufacturing, micro and macro-mechanics, and static analysis of composite laminates. Performance (fatigue and fracture) and their application to engineering design. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ME 46000 - Design Strength Reliability |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Design synthesis and methods. Strength design of mechanical structures and components. Optimization and reliability principles. Computer-aided design techniques. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 46100 - Machine Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Application of mechanics and mechanics of materials to the analysis and design of machine elements. Stress and deflection analysis, statistical considerations under steady and variable loading, stress principles applied to fasteners, springs, welded joints, and general machanical elements. Fits and tolerances. Antifriction bearings. Spur gears. Introduction to finite element analysis. Laboratory includes projects, solutions of design problems, and experiments. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply concepts of mechanical design through the medium of structural design and machine elements.
2. Expand knowledge of strength of material and utilize it in strength and stiffness design using finite element analysis.
3. Apply consideration in design strength for variable loading regime.
4. Develop habits of computer usage for design considerations.
5. Expand awareness of design components and their potential use.
|
| ME 46200 - Capstone Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Concurrent engineering design concept is introduced. Application of the design is emphasized. Design problems from all areas of mechanical engineering are considered. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the design process.
2. Identify design tasks and their objectives.
3. Establish a project schedule.
4. Develop design specifications by completion of a house of quality.
5. Generate design ideas based on functional decomposition.
6. Evaluate the ideas based on customer requirement.
7. Creatively generate product designs.
8. Validate the final design.
9. Give technical presentations in the forms of weekly progress report, proposal, final report, and oral presentation.
10. Document the design activities and outcomes (product development file, drawings, period minutes, and personal design notebook).
11. Work as team player by demonstrating his/her participation record in the personal design notebook.
12. Work effectively in a multidisciplinary project team.
|
| ME 46300 - Engineering Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of the design process to the design of various engineering components and systems. Mathematical modeling in design is emphasized. Design problems from all areas of mechanical engineering are considered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 46600 - Machine Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Comprehensive study in the design and analysis of gearing, and journal bearings, clutches and brakes, and flexible mechanical elements. Introduction to reliability engineering. Introduction to finite element analysis. Laboratory includes projects and solution of design problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| ME 46800 - Thermal Systems Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of thermodynamics, fluid mechanics, and heat transfer fundamentals to the design of energy engineering systems with an emphasis on modeling, simulation, economic analysis and optimization. Application include thermal regulation in buildings, heat exchangers, electronic cooling devices, manufacturing processing of primary metals and plastics, fluid machinery, pipes and ducts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn fundamentals of thermodynamics, fluid mechanics and heat transfer.
2. Demonstrate how to model and analyze thermal systems.
|
| ME 46900 - Advanced Mechanics And Behavior Of Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Studies of stress and strain in three-dimensional problems. Theories of failure and energy methods. Unsymmetrical bending, curved beans, cross stress, shear center, torsion of thin-walled noncircular sections, thick-wall cylinders. Introduction to fracture mechanics, plates, and contractr stresses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 47000 - Design Of Machine Element |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Applications of mechanics of materials and dynamics in the design of machines and their components. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 47100 - Vibration Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to simple vibratory motions such as damped and undamped free and forced vibrations, resonance, vibratory systems with more than one degree of freedom, Coulomb and hysteretic damping, transverse vibration of beams, torsional vibration, computation of natural frequencies and mode shapes, applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 47200 - Advanced Mechanics of Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Studies of stresses and strains in three-dimensional elastic problems. Failure theories and yield criteria. Bending of curved beams. Torsion of bars with noncircular cross sections. Beams on elastic foundation. Energy methods. Selected topics. Students may not receive credit for both ME 472 and ME 550. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ME 47300 - Engineering Design Using Modern Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Interdisciplinary approach to design with modern materials including metals, ceramics, polymers, and composites. Fundamentals of mechanics of materials, failure theories, and fracture mechanics applied to different materials; basic material properties and design with metals and ceramics; microstructure, chemistry, and bonding in polymers; material properties and design with polymers; composite materials. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 47400 - Vibration Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to simple vibratory motions such as damped and undamped free and forced vibrations, vibratory systems with more than one degree of freedom, Coulomb damping, transverse vibration of beams, torsional vibration, critical speed of shafts, and applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| ME 47500 - Automatic Control Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Controller design in frequency domain with introduction to digital systems and control. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 47700 - Machine Design II Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Case studies and design projects on detailed design of mechanical components or systems. Computer-aided design techniques. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| ME 47800 - Introduction To Numerical Methods In Mechanical Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The solution of problems arising in mechanical engineering using numerical methods. Topics include solution methods for nonlinear algebraic equations, sets of linear and nonlinear algebraic equations, eigenvalue problems, interpolation and curve fitting, numerical differentiation and integration, and techniques to solve ordinary and partial differential equations. Applications include fluid mechanics, heat and mass transfer, thermodynamics, kinematics, and design. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| ME 47900 - Solar Engineering Systems |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of heat transfer, thermodynamics and photovoltaics to the design and analysis of solar energy collectors and systems. Theory, economics and practice of solar energy application. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn how to apply heat transfer, thermodynamics and photovoltaics to solar energy collectors and storage energy balances.
2. Analyze radiant energy transfer and understand its application to solar exchangers.
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| ME 48000 - Finite Element Analysis |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (C E 480) Introduction to the finite-element method through applications to problems in elasticity and heat transfer. Emphasis on one- and two-dimensional problems. Computer implementation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| ME 48100 - Introduction to Numerical Methods in Mechanical Engineering |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The solution of problems arising in mechanical engineering using numerical methods. Topics include solution methods for nonlinear algebraic equations, sets of linear algebraic equations, eigne value problems, interpolation and curve fitting, numerical integration, numerical differentiation, and ordinary differential equations. Applications include fluid mechanics, heat and mass transfer, thermodynamics, automatic control systems, kinematics, and design. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| ME 48200 - Control System Analysis and Design |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (MSTE 36000) Classical feedback concepts, root locus, Bode and Nyquist techniques, state-space formulation, stability, design applications. Students may not receive credit for both ECE 38200 and ME 48200. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| ME 48400 - Engineering Industrial Practice IV |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. For engineering students on cooperative assignment only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| ME 48500 - Linear Control Systems |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. (ECE 38400). Introduction to classical control theory. Transfer functions, block diagram manipulation, and signal flow graphs. Transient and steady state responses; characteristics, and design. Sensitivity analysis and disturbance rejection. System stability. Root locus analysis and design . Frequency response analysis using Bode and polar plots. Nyquist criterion and Nichols chart. Controller design using Bode plots. Laboratory will include design, simulation of topics covered, and a number of practical experiments. Credit not allowed for both ECE 38400 and ME 48500. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand major components involved in the analyses and design of control system.
2. Model systems in the frequency domain and to obtain a block diagram.
3. Model systems in the time domain and to obtain a block diagram.
4. Analyze time responses for the first and second order systems.
5. Analyze and design of feedback systems.
6. Reduce multiple blocks to a single block or closed-loop system.
7. Perform system stability analysis.
8. Calculate system steady-state errors.
9. Sketch root locus and use it to find the poles of a closed-loop system.
10. Use root locus to describe qualitatively the changes in transient response and stability.
11. Design control systems via root locus.
12. Design control systems via frequency domain.
13. Use Matlab and Matlab control toolbox to solve control system problems.
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| ME 48600 - Introduction To Manufacturing Engineering |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Modern manufacturing processes and methods including forming, shaping, machining, and joining. Productivity, quality improvement, material and energy conservation, automatic processing and inspection, process planning, manufacturing control, robotics, CAD, CAM, and computer integrated manufacturing. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| ME 48700 - Mechanical Engineering Design I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The first of a two-semester sequence of senior capstone design. Provides students with experience in the process and practice of mechanical component/system design from concept through final design. Emphasis on teamwork, project management, oral and written communication. General lectures on issues important to the engineering profession, such as professional and ethical responsibility, the impact of engineering solutions in a global and societal context, and other contemporary issues. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| ME 48800 - Mechanical Engineering Design II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of 487. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| ME 49000 - Directed Readings in Mechanical Engineering |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ME 49100 - Engineering Projects |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. The student selects an engineering design project and works under the direction of the faculty sponsor. Suitable projects may be from the local industrial, municipal, state, and educational communities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times or for a maximum of 9 credits
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| ME 49200 - Technology And Values |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The impact of science and technology on personal and societal value systems. The special responsibility of engineers. Practical methods for using human values to guide future technological developments. Societal problems considered: warfare, energy, overpopulation, resource depletion, and environmental degradation. Interdisciplinary approaches stressed. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ME 49400 - Power Plant Engineering |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Thermodynamic analysis of power plant systems for the generation of electric power. Power cycles and design of equipment for the generation of power. Gas and steam turbines and generators. Waste heat recovery and application. Plant operations, economics and environmental impact. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Analyze the basic elements of electric-generating power plant engineering.
2. Learn the environmental effects of fossil-fueled and nuclear power plants.
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| ME 49500 - Special Topic Minicourses |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
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| ME 49700 - Mechanical Engineering Projects |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Projects or special topics of contemporary importance or of special interest outside the scope of the standard undergraduate curriculum. Interested students seek a faculty advisor in their area of special interest and together prepare a brief description of the work to be undertaken. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ME 49800 - Research In Mechanical Engineering I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Individual research projects for students with honors classification. Requires prior approval of, and arrangement with, a faculty research advisor. Honors classification. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Research
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
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| ME 49900 - Research In Mechanical Engineering II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of ME 49800. Requires submission of a written thesis, public presentation, and oral defense of the research project. Honors Classification. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Research
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
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| ME 50000 - Advanced Thermodynamics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The empirical, physical basis of the laws of thermodynamics. Availability/exergy concepts and applications. Properties and relations between properties in homogeneous and heterogeneous systems. The criteria of equilibrium. Application to a variety of systems and problems, including phase and reaction equilibrium. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| ME 50100 - Statistical Thermodynamics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The molecular intepretation of thermodynamic equilibrium. Development of the partition function. Introduction to quantum mechanics and molecular spectroscopy. The Maxwell-Boltzmann formulation of statistical mechanics and applications to ideal gases, solids, radiation, and laser diagnostics. The Gibbs formulation of statistical mechanics and application to real gases. Kinetic theory and applications to transport properties and chemical kinetics. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Provide a fundamental microscopic understanding of thermodynamics, temperature, radiation and transport phenomena.
2. Apply concepts and calculate thermodynamic and transport properties of ideal gases.
3. Evaluate properties in reacting and non-reacting flow fields from laser spectroscopic measurements.
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| ME 50101 - Energy Assessment Of Industrial Processes |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The course provides and analyzes methodologies for improving energy efficiency in the manufacturing sector. The manufacturing equipment and processes will be analyzed in terms of energy consumption and optimization. It provides the technical and analytical foundation for students on assessing industrial processes to evaluate measures for optimizing energy efficiency in industrial, electrical, motor drive, compressed air, process heating, process cooling, lighting, space conditioning, combined heat and power systems. This course is designed for students who are interested in energy efficiency. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Analyze the common industrial processes and evaluate them in terms of energy consumption.
2. Apply engineering principles on various energy sources and their industrial applications.
3. Design the energy assessment process for various energy systems.
4. Determine the key measurable parameters for each system analysis and provide adequate measurements using basic metrology equipment.
5. Analyze the energy systems, identify alternatives, and optimize the energy consumptions.
6. Provide recommendations for energy optimization.
7. Quantify energy savings based on the optimization recommendation.
8. Produce professional technical reports and presentations.
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| ME 50102 - Energy Management Principles |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides energy management principles for industrial applications. Various energy management methods, commitments, and strategies for continuous improvement as well as international standards will be analyzed and integrated. This course emphasizes real world applications including: critiquing utility rates structure and assessing costs; characterizing and quantifying energy saving opportunities at industrial facilities; determining investment payback scenarios and considerations. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Master energy management principles.
2. Evaluate energy management and environment standards.
3. Apply energy management principles to synthesis energy management strategies.
4. Design energy baselines for continuous energy efficiency optimization and life cycle cost.
5. Manage and define the role and responsibility of the individuals for an effective energy audit.
6. Apply the energy management principles on energy system assessment.
7. Analyze the economic and environmental impacts of various energy management strategies.
8. Optimize the energy investment in terms of minimizing cost and/or payback time.
9. Develop energy management strategies for selected companies.
10.Produce professional technical reports and presentations.
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| ME 50103 - Industrial Energy Assessment: Tools And Applications |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course synthesizes advanced energy efficiency, energy auditing, and energy assessment methods and practices. Several types of industrial audits will be analyzed with respect to the methods, tools (hand and software), and industrial application. Topics include: the audit process for energy, industrial productivity, and waste stream audits; audit components: energy bill analysis and economic analysis: audit system mechanics related to building envelop, electrical system, HVAC system, waste heat recovery, lighting, cogeneration, and other prevalent industrial systems; and measurement instrumentation issues for each industrial system. Students will enhance learning from a class project, which requires completion of an industrial scale energy audit. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Synthesize the concepts, terminology, and industrial applications of various energy sources.
2. Analyze utility data and deduce energy usage.
3. Evaluate key parameters representing the energy usage and determine appropriate energy assessment focus areas.
4. Justify appropriate and accurate measurement techniques using portable metrology equipment.
5. Create process flow and energy resource diagrams.
6. Calculate energy usage and cost from different industrial systems and convert or translate the values of different forms of energy into a common unit for comparison.
7. Justify calculations of existing energy use and propose energy efficiency optimization measures using engineering principles.
8. Interpret the need for safety in the workplace in various situations.
9. Work alone and in teams to investigate topics, research optimized efficiency designs, write reports, and make presentations on specified energy topics.
10.Utilize statistical methods and/or software packages to determine/predict inefficient energy use and to design/develop energy/environment/cost effective solutions.
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| ME 50104 - Powertrain Integration |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The holistic view of powertrain development that includes engine, transmission, and driveline is now well accepted. Current trends indicate an increasing range of engines and transmissions in the future with, consequently, a greater diversity of combinations. This course discusses engines, transmissions, and drivelines in relation to their interfaces with chassis systems. This course also explores various aspects of powertrain integration. Novel concepts relating, for example, to continuously variable transmissions (CVTs) and hybridization as well as approaches to modeling, analysis, and simulation will be discussed. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply basic knowledge of powertrain integration to design improved engine mounts.
2. Apply basic concepts of vehicle performance requirements and fuel economy to optimally determine powertrain components sizes.
3. Apply mathematical methodologies to analyze vehicle data to evaluate vehicle performance.
4. Explain various architectures associated with hybrid electric veh9cle design.
5. Analyze fundamental requirements of engine intake and exhaust system for optimal performance.
6. Apply basic concepts in of control to engine, driveline, and traction control.
7. Solve engineering problems presented in class and homework; orally communicate some results in class discussions.
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| ME 50105 - Hybrid And Electric Transportation |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will cover fundamentals of hybrid electric and battery electric transportation systems with particular emphasis on automotive vehicles. It will cover powertrain configurations of Hybrid Electric Vehicle (HEV), Plug-in Hybrid Electric Vehicle (PHEV), and Battery Electric Vehicle (BEV). The principal element of the powertrain of these vehicles will be discussed: Battery, Electric Motor, Engine, Transmission. This course will cover design concepts for HEV / PHEV and BEV powertrain. Optimal methods of component sizing via appropriate modeling and analysis methodologies will also be introduced. An introduction to power electronic components and microprocessor based controllers for these powertrains will also be given. An in-depth coverage, including optimal energy management, will be given on the energy and power management of HEV / PHEV and BEV powertrain once the design is complete. Introduction of various concepts and terminologies, the state of the art development, energy conversion and storage options, modeling, analysis, system integration and basic principles of vehicle controls will be covered as well. Upon completion of this course, students should be able to follow the literature on these subjects and perform modeling, design, analysis and development work in this field. A field demonstration of a PHEV will be used to further enhance the learning experience in this course. Permission of department reqjuired. Prerequisite: ME 48200/ECE 38200. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply knowledge of electric and hybrid electric powertrain to estimate vehicle fuel economy and emissions.
2. Apply concepts of vehicle performance requirements and fuel economy to optimally determine component sizing of electric and hybrid electric powertrain.
3. Apply mathematical methodologies to analyze vehicle data to evaluate vehicle performance.
4. Analyze various architectures associated with hybrid electric vehicle design.
5. Analyze fundamental requirements for an electric propulsion system.
6. Apply concepts in hybrid electric energy management to design algorithms for regenerative braking.
7. Solve engineering problems presented in class textbook and homework; orally communicate some results in class discussions.
8. Analyze various types of energy storage devices in relation to their impact on electrified transportation.
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| ME 50200 - Numerical Heat And Mass Transfer |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is to introduce students with basic concepts and techniques in computational heat transfer and fluid dynamics, and to prepare students for development and application of computer codes for engineering design and scientific research. The topics will include finite volume methods (FVM), discrete modeling of Navier-Stokes equations and energy equations, iterative solution algorithms, grid generation, boundary conditions, convergence and accuracy, applicability and pitfalls of commercial codes, and hand-on projects. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand and apply the mathematical description of physical phenomena equations.
2. Understand and apply the discretization methods to partial differential equations.
3. Implement of boundary conditions to different engineering interested problems.
4. Apply Finite Volume Methods for solving unsteady diffusion problems, steady state convection and diffusion problems, unsteady state convection and diffusion problems.
5. Understand the basic concept and theory for grid generation.
6. Understand and apply SIMPLE algorithm for solving fluid flow and heat and mass transfer problems in both steady state and unsteady state.
7. Understand the proper usage of commercial codes, their strengths and limitations to help engineering design and troubleshooting.
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| ME 50300 - Micro-And-Nano-Scale Energy Transfer Processes |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Transport of energy in natural and fabricated micro- and nano-scale structures. Physical nature of energy transport by three carriers – electrons, phonons, and photons. Bulk material properties (e.g., thermal/electrical conductivity) are derived from statistical particle transport theories. Effects of spatial confinement on bulk properties are quantified. Contemporary interdisciplinary engineering applications. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Gain an understanding of the fundamental elements of solid-state physics.
2. Develop skills to derive continuum physical properties from sub-continuum principles.
3. Apply statistical and physical principles to describe energy transport in modern small-scale materials and devices.
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| ME 50400 - Automotive Control |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic engine operation; lambda control, speed control, knock control, fuel injection timing control, ignition control of SI engines; driveline modeling, automatic transmission control, clutch phasing control; wheel model, complete vehicle model; observers, friction coefficient estimators, tire contact patch force estimators; anti-lock brake control, traction control, yaw stability control; drive-by-wire systems. The distance offering of this course originates from the IUPUI campus, is offered through streaming video via ProEd, and may be made available at the West Lafayette campus. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
IUPUI
West Lafayette
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| ME 50500 - Intermediate Heat Transfer |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Heat and mass transfer by diffusion in one-dimensional, two-dimensional, transient, periodic, and phase change systems. Convective heat transfer for external and internal flows. Similarity and integral solution methods. Heat, mass, and momentum analogies. Turbulence. Buoyancy-driven flows. Convection with phase change. Radiation exchange between surfaces and radiation transfer in absorbing-emitting media. Multimode heat transfer problems. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| ME 50600 - Two-Phase Flow And Heat Transfer |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic two-phase flow equaitons, homogeneous model, drift-flux model, flow regimes, pressure drop in two-phase flow. Nucleation and bubble dynamics, pool boiling, subcooled boinling, forced convection boiling, critical heat flux in pool boiling, critical heat flux in forced convection goiling, miminum heat flux, film boiling, post dryout heat transfer. Flow instabilities, choking in two-phase flow, film and dropwise condensation. Applications to heat exchangers. Special boinling and two-phase flow problems. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ME 50700 - Laser Processing |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces background knowledge in laser science and laser technology and fundamentals involved in laser processing and manufacturing. The following topics are discussed: laser fundamentals, industrial laser systems and processes, and the laser-induced thermal, thermo-mechanical, and thermo-acoustic effects. The course also discusses emerging areas of laser applications, such as microscale laser processing, ultrafast laser processing, and the related energy transport analyses. Laboratory and video demonstration sessions are used to enhance the overall understanding of the course materials. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ME 50800 - Heat Trans In Biological Systems |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to applications of heat transfer in living systems to students who have general interests in biomedical engineering. Fundamental concepts of biology and engineering involved in these applications are introduced. Regulation of blood flow under external thermal stimuli and its effect on heat transfer are discussed. Clinical applications of heat transfer, including cancer therapy and gene therapy. Prerequisite: first course in fluid or aerodynamics. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| ME 50900 - Intermediate Fluid Mechanics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Fluid properties. Basic laws for a control volume. Kinematics of fluid flow. Dynamics of frictionless incompressible flow and basic hydrodynamics. Equations of motion for viscous flow, viscous flow applications, boundary layer theory. Wall turbulence, lift and drag of immersed bodies. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
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| ME 51000 - Gas Dynamics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Flow of compressible fluids. One-dimensional flows including basic concepts, isentropic flow, normal and oblique shock waves, Rayleigh line, Fanno line, and simple waves. Multidimensional flows including general concepts, small perturbation theory for linearized flows and method of characteristics for nonlinear flows. Prerequisite: first course in fluid or aerodynamics. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
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| ME 51100 - Heat Transfer In Electronic Systems |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers both traditional and more innovative methods for heat extraction in electronic systems and the effectiveness and applicability of these methods over a wide range of scales. Special emphasis is given to industry-related applications with experts often attending and presenting material as part of class instruction. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To introduce concepts in thermal management of electronics to senior undergraduate and graduate students and practicing engineers.
2. To provide an appreciation for the applications of first principles to electronics cooling and packaging problems in industry.
3. To provide students with sound tools to approach existing packaging and cooling applications, while also raising awareness of novel techniques at the cutting edge.
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| ME 51300 - Engineering Acoustics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The simple oscillator. Lumped acoustical elements. Electro-mechanical-acoustical analogies. Wave motion in strings and membranes. Introduction to linear acoustics through derivation of the wave equation and simple solutions. Plane and spherical waves. Acoustic intensity. Plane wave transmission through fluid layers and simple barriers. Sound absorption. Modeling of acoustical sources: monopoles, dipoles, quadrupoles. Mechanisms of sound generation and directionality. Sound propagation in one-dimensional systems (e.g., ducts and mufflers). Introduction to room acoustics. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| ME 51400 - Fundamentals Of Wind Energy |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic operating principles and analysis of performance characteristics of gas turbine engines for aircraft and vehicular propulsion and stationary power. Turbojet, turbofan, turboshaft cycle analysis. Analysis of flow through compressors, turbines, combustors, inlets, nozzles, and regenerators. Component machine and off-design performance. Inspection trip to industrial plan required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Introduce students to the technology and economics of converting wind energy to electricity.
2. Inform students to the environmental concerns of wind energy.
3. Understand principles of wind turbine aerodynamics.
4. Develop the ability to design optimum blading.
5. Develop the ability to evaluate a potential site in terms of wind energy.
6. Understand wind turbine structural dynamics issues.
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| ME 51500 - Quality Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ECE 51801). This course examines the design in order to acquire a better product/process quality. Other aspects of design included are robust design, parameter design, or Taguchi Techniques. This course also gives students a current understanding of the techniques and applications of design of experiments in quality engineering design. The students will learn design of quality control systems in manufacturing, use of advanced statistical process controls, sampling inspection techniques, process capability, and other statistical tools. Also included are vendor sourcing and control tools, methods for establishing specifications and tolerances, quality function deployment, and other quality control techniques. In addition, Six Sigma will be included. The course is aimed primarily to engineering graduate students interested in project management. Prerequisite: Basic Statistics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the design of quality into products and processes using design of experiments including robust/parameter design and tolerance design techniques.
2. Learn that design of experiments is a systematic and efficient method of design optimization for performance, quality, and cost in quality engineering.
3. Be able to use statistical quality control to improve the product and/or process quality for a given design.
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| ME 51600 - Advanced Engineering Project Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ECE 51600). Overview and concepts of project management (principles, body of knowledge, strategies); planning successful projects (defining, specifying, deliver options, scheduling, budgeting); implementing (organizing the team, work assignments, team building, team launch, effective leadership); risk analysis; executing (performance measurement, maintaining the schedule, adjustments/mid-course corrections, record keeping, status reporting, communications, managing conflict, time management); and closeout (performance measurement, maintaining the schedule, adjustments/ midcourse corrections, record keeping, status reporting, communications, managing conflict, time management). The course is aimed primarily to engineering graduate students interested in project management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. The student will understand the basics of project management including the importance and interrelationship of all the components.
2. They will be fluent in the Project Management Institute's process group functions (initiating, planning, executing, controlling, and closing) and the project knowledge areas (integration, scope, time, cost, quality, human resources, communications, risk, and procurement) and its roll in delivering a project on time and in budget.
3. The students will learn to analyze engineering costs and capital investments, and the ability to compare and select individual projects.
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| ME 51700 - Micro/Nanoscale Physical Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (CHE 51700) Study of physical processes encountered in small scale systems like Micro-Electromechanical Systems (MEMS) and nanotechnology. Introduction of tools for micron to molecular scale analysis of statics, dynamics, electricity and magnetism, surface phenomena, fluid dynamics, heat transfer, and mass transfer. Quantitative analysis of specific MEMS devices using finite element analysis. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| ME 51800 - Analysis Of Thermal Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Modeling and optimization of thermal systems with a focus on heat-pumping equipment, such as vapor compression, absorption, and some advanced heat-pumping cycles. Students combine the use of thermodynamics, heat transfer, fluid mechanics, and numerical methods to develop and apply mathematical models for the analysis and optimization of specific equipment. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 51900 - Introduction To Wind Energy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is intended for the undergraduate and graduate engineer or scientist who is interested in the wind energy technology; introduce the students to the technology and economics of converting wind energy to electricity and the environmental concerns of wind energy. Topics include: Introduction to renewable energy; Wind characteristics; Wind resource estimation; Wind Turbine aerodynamics; Wind energy system economics, Wind turbine sitting and Environmental aspect and impact. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Specify the features for different kind of renewable energy, which includes solar, wind, geothermal, ocean, hydro and biomass.
2. Based on the given raw wind data, students can calculate the wind power density, the wind turbine power and Torque. Can analysis the economics of wind energy.
3. Can tell the local effects to wind characteristics by comparing different given local conditions, students will be able to calculate wind shear and various turbulent parameters in problems assigned in homework or project.
4. Based on the given raw wind data, students can do the preliminary wind energy assessment, which will eventually generate the wind power density map for a selected location.
5. Apply wind turbine aerodynamics analysis the flow fields around wind turbine blade for a given test case.
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| ME 52100 - Air Quality Modeling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is intended for the undergraduate and graduate engineer or scientist who is interested in the modeling of air pollution: the basic concepts of air quality and air pollution modeling; overview of practical and advanced approaches to air pollution modeling; evaluation and applications to air pollution related modeling. In order to obtain accurate assessments and forecasts of the effects of air contaminant dispersion, modeling based on solution of the nonlinear equations of fluid motion using Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) is a good choice. In this course, problems of engineering interest will be examined, related to both indoor and outdoor contaminant dispersion. Some of the homework problems will require use of a CFD code – several source codes will be provided as well as access to commercial CFD codes.
Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the methods used for air pollution measurements and the air pollution and meteorology concepts.
2. Understand the fundamentals of air quality modeling and transport theory, particle dynamics theory.
3. Apply transport theory to analyze or modeling air pollution problems.
4. Understand and Apply Air Pollution Concentration models for solving contaminant transport problem.
5. Understand and apply the contaminant transport models for solving contaminant transport problems.
6. Understand the theory and apply those for indoor-outdoor air pollution modeling.
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| ME 52200 - Indoor Environmental Analysis And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of current trend of building and indoor environment design. Theory of thermal comfort, indoor air quality, visual comfort, and acoustic comfort. Introduction of experimental techniques and advanced computer tools for indoor environment analysis and design. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Provide an introduction into and practical examples of indoor environment.
2. Present the basic theory of thermal comfort, indoor air quality, visual comfort, acoustics comfort and HVAC systems.
3. Introduce advanced tool to analyze and design indoor environment and energy use in buildings.
4. Conduct indoor environment analysis and design for a challenging problem.
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| ME 52300 - Electronics System Cooling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an introduction to thermal analysis and management of electronic equipment with focus on cooling of electronic devices. The emphasis of this course is on the application of fundamental heat transfer principles to predict thermal load, temperature distribution, and hot-spot in electronics. Topics include: Introduction to various modes of heat transfer; Fins and heat sinks- design, analysis, and optimization; thermoelectric and refrigeration cooling; nanofluids, liquid cooling, boiling heat transfer and phase change thermal storage system; heat pipes; Analysis and design studies for chip modules, printed circuit boards; and trends in thermal packaging. The course is aimed primarily to ME graduate students specializing in thermal and fluid science area. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand thermal/fluid issues in electronics manufacturing and assembly.
2. Analyze conduction in printed circuit boards and chip packages.
3. Analyze convection cooling in electronics.
4. Understand solid-liquid thermal storage systems.
5. Design and optimization of heat sinks.
6. Perform thermal analysis on compact models of chip packages and heat sinks.
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| ME 52400 - Design And Analysis-Heating Ventilation And Air Conditioning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to analysis and design of HVAC&R system. The emphasis is on the application of fundamental heat transfer and fluid mechanics principles to analyze HVAC systems. The topics covered includes: Introduction and basic concepts, Psychometrics, air conditioning systems, equipment selection, duct design and piping design. Heating and cooling loads, solar radiation and heat transmission in buildings. Heat pumps. Application of air conditioning to residences, computer rooms, light commercial and high-rise buildings. The course is aimed primarily to ME graduate students specializing in thermal and fluid science area. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand thermal/fluid issues in HVAC&R system.
2. Solve HVAC&R problems using psychometric charts.
3. Perform load calculations.
4. Apply basic heat transfer concepts to determine heating and cooling load requirements.
5. Gain basic understanding of the duct design and analysis.
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| ME 52500 - Combustion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Physical and chemical aspects of basic combustion phenomena. Chemical energetics and equilibrium. Basic chemical kinetics, chain reactions, and explosions. Chain and thermal ignition. Homogeneous combustion models. Detonations and deflagrations. Laminar flame speed and flame extinction. The Shvab-Zeldovich formulation of the multicomponent conservation equations. Diffusion flames and droplet combustion. Introduction to turbulent combustion. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
|
| ME 52600 - Spray Applications And Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory of spray formation and evolution as well as treating a host of spray applications. Topics include drop size distributions, breakup of liquid sheets and ligaments, drop formation and breakup, drop motion and the interaction between a spray and its surroundings, drop evaporation, nozzle internal fluid mechanics, external spray characteristics, nozzle performance, and experimental techniques relevant to these subjects. Applications include: (1) agricultural sprays, (2) consumer products, (3) gas turbine combustion, (4) heat transfer, (5) internal combustion engines, (6) paints and coatings, (7) pharmaceutical and medicinal sprays, and (8) spray drying. Offered in alternate years. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 53200 - Statistical Concepts In Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ECE 52501). This course is directed toward the graduate student who has never had a statistics course or whose last statistics course was taken some time ago and a refresher course is required. The primary purpose of this course is to provide a basic understanding of fundamental probability and statistical principles, their underlying assumptions, and their use in data analysis using real-world engineering problems. The course is aimed primarily to engineering graduate students interested in project management. Prerequisite: Graduate standing and proficiency in Calculus. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Have knowledge of basic statistical algorithms and techniques applied to Engineering problems.
2. Possess abilities to use correctly several statistical tools applied to a real problem.
3. Be able to properly select and apply the statistical tools applied to Engineering fields and evaluate the derived consequences of their conclusions.
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| ME 53300 - Turbomachinery II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Aerodynamic analysis and design of axial flow and radial flow gas compressors and gas turbines. Blade element performance (deflection, profile and shock losses, etc.). Meridional flow analysis for general radial equilibrium. Secondary flow and end-wall boundary layer models. Centrifugal compressor modeling. Unsteady flow, rotating stall, and surge. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 53400 - System Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ECE 52701). In today’s environment, there is an ever-increasing need to develop and produce systems that are robust, reliable, high quality, supportable, cost-effective, and responsive to the needs of the customer or user. Reflecting these worldwide trends, System Engineering course introduces students to the full range of system engineering concepts, tools, and techniques, emphasizing the application of principles and concepts of system engineering and the way these principles aid in the development, utilization, and support of systems. The course covers systems engineering from both a technical and management perspective. The course is aimed primarily to engineering graduate students interested in project management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the design of quality into products and processes using design of experiments including robust/parameter design and tolerance design techniques.
2. Learn that design of experiments is a systematic and efficient method of design optimization for performance, quality, and cost in quality engineering.
3. Be able to use statistical quality control to improve the product and/or process quality for a given design.
|
| ME 53800 - Air Breathing Propulsion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (A&AE 53800) Analysis of operating characteristics of turbojet, turbofan, turboshaft, afterburning, and ramjet propulsion systems. Analysis and design of inlet, diffuser, combustor, compressor, turbine, and nozzle. Component matching and off-design performance. Inlet distortion, nozzle-afterbody, and installation losses. Mission analysis. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| ME 54000 - Internal Combustion Engines |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Spark-ignition and compression-ignition engine processes. Study of the fundamentals of turbulence, boundary, layers, liquid atomization, sprays, combustion, and pollutant formation as applied to engines. Engine after treatment. Modeling of engine flows, sprays, combustion, and pollutants. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Study the fundamentals of turbulence, boundary layers, liquid atomization, sprays, combustion, and pollutant formation as applied to internal combustion engines.
2. Study the modeling of engine flows, sprays, combustion, and pollutant formation in internal combustion engines.
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| ME 54200 - Introduction To Renewable Energy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course on renewable energy. Students will learn the fundamental principles of the various renewable energy options and their applications and costs. After taking this course, students will be familiar with the economic and societal impact of renewable energy systems, and be able to participate in the design or selection of renewable energy systems. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ME 54300 - Advanced Engineering Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Effective project managers have complete command of their project costs and a thorough understanding of the financial aspects of their business. This course reviews the fundamentals of accounting, examines project cost accounting principles, applications, and impact on profitability; examines the principles of project costing; covers the elements involved in cash management; introduces the framework for how projects are financed and the potential impact financing has on the projects; and a framework for using an effective project cost system. This course is aimed primarily to engineering graduate students interested in project management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand how the project cost system works and how it functions in the context of corporate accounting.
2. They will learn how to set fees to make a profit; how to read corporate financial statements and understand what the numbers mean; concepts of budgeting; and does that data tell a story.
3. Students will understand the basics they need to be effective project managers (and to some extent, firm managers) having full command of the project cost accounting system and its role in delivering a project on time and in budget.
4. Students will learn to analyze engineering costs and capital investments, and the ability to compare and select individual projects.
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| ME 54500 - Finite Element Analysis: Advanced Theory And Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory of the course covers various algorithms for non-linear and time-depended problems in two and three dimensions. Applications of the course cover the advanced topics with problems chosen from solid mechanics, heat transfer, and fluid dynamics. Commercial FEA packages such as ANSYS and/or Abaqus are applied to solve various engineering problems. Students must possess an appropriate level of mathematics and programming skills to understand, develop and problem solvers for finite element models. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. An ability to perform complete FE formulations for engineering analysis.
2. An ability to write computer codes for a finite element model.
3. An ability to use commercial FEA software to solve engineering problems.
4. An ability to apply finite element methods in design engineering components or systems.
5. An ability to write technical reports and convey engineering message efficiently.
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| ME 54600 - CAD/CAM Theory And Advanced Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory of CAD/CAM. Geometric modeling for seamless CAD/CAM integration. Solid modeling data structure design/manipulation. CAD and CAM tools with a focus on product development integration and automation. Machining theory, automated CNC machining, and process control. CAD/CAM applications using programming languages and open architecture kernel for modeling. Projects involve CAD/CAM aspects for advanced engineering. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ME 54900 - Practical Experience In Vibrations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and application of experimental structural dynamics. Experimental techniques in model analysis, impedance modeling, and basic nonlinear vibrations. Time, frequency, and spatial characteristics of vibrating systems. Virtual and real-time demonstrations and experiments. Vehicle vibrations in ride, machinery diagnostics, and health monitoring of structural materials and components. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Introduce/review the theory of linear mechanical vibrations.
2. Learn how to model and analyze single/multi-degree-of-freedom (SDOF/MDOF) systems in free and forced vibration.
3. Learn how to plan experiments/tests and interpret dynamic response data using modern technology.
4. Introduce basic experimental methods, vibration hardware and advanced analysis techniques like modal analysis, impedance modeling and experimental nonlinear dynamics.
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| ME 55000 - Advanced Stress Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Studies of stresses and strains in three-dimensional problems. Failure theories and yield criteria. Stress function approach to two-dimensional problems. Bending of nonhomogeneous asymmetric curved beams. Torsion of bars with noncircular cross sections. Energy methods. Elastic stability. Introduction to plates. Students may not receive credit for both ME 550 and ME 570. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ME 55100 - Finite Element Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the basic principles of finite element method. Weak variational form of boundary-value problems. Finite element formulation of one- and two-dimensional boundary-value problems. Time-dependent problems. Computer implementation. Examples are chosen from heat transfer, solid mechanics, and fluid mechanics areas. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ME 55200 - Advanced Applications of Finite Element Method |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Various algorithms for nonlinear and time-dependent problems in two and three dimensions. Emphasis on advanced applications with problems chosen from fluid dynamics, heat transfer, and solid mechanics areas. Independent project required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| ME 55300 - Product And Process Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental principles of product and process design to produce a marketable product, develop a preliminary business strategy, and construct an operational prototype. Overview of relevant principles related to product and process design. Market analysis, design parrameters, manufacturing prototype plan, production process plan, and a business strategy developed in teams. Broad overview of the entire product development process, including patents, commercialization of new technologies, and the higherly interdisciplinary nature of product design through industry guest lectures. Impact of information technologies and the Internet on product design, prototyping, marketing, and customization. Product prototype is required. Design and product software information technology service-type concepts. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
|
| ME 55400 - Intellectual Property For Engineers |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Survey of the law of patents, trade secrets, trademarks, and copyrights, with special emphasis on the process of defining inventions broadly and diversely. Obtaining, registering, licensing, and litigation of intellectual property. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 55600 - Lubrication, Friction & Wear |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Science, technology, and application of lubricated interacting surfaces in relative motion. Advanced analysis techniques and hands-on exposure to modern experimental methods provide an enhanced understanding of fundamental principles of lubrication, friction, and wear. Basics of design and analysis of machine components operating in the presence of air and liquid lubricants. Rolling fatigue, friction and wear models, and measurement techniques. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| ME 55700 - Design For Manufacturability |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to manufacturing concerns, such as efficient design, producibility, and quality, which must be considered early in the engineering design process. Topics include the product development cycle, manufacturing process selection, tolerancing, quality function deployment (QFD), design for assembly (DFA), quality control techniques, Taguchi's robust design methodology, life cycle engineering, and reliability. Laboratory projects in the area of tolerancing, assembly, and manufacturability are included along with a project from industry in which the students can disassemble, analyze, and redesign a product while obtaining feedback from industry concerning manufacturability. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
|
| ME 55800 - Composite Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Portential applications of composite materials. Basic concepts of fiber reinforced composites. Manufacturing, micro- and macro-mechanics, and static analysis of composite laminates. Performance (fatigue and fracture) and their application to engineering design. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ME 55900 - Micromechanics Of Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Prediction of the macroscopie behavior of materials from their microstructure and the design of new materials. Microstructure-property relationships between the macroscopie material behavior and microscopic structure. Application to traditional structure as well as to new engineering materials. Adapting emerging constitutive relations into structure analyses. Introduction of this new approach to materials, its applications in predictive analysis tools, and its importance in simulation-based engineering. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| ME 56000 - Kinematics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Geometry of constrained plane motion with applications to linkage design. Type and number synthesis, size synthesis. Path curvature, inflection circle, cubic of stationary curvature. Finite displacements, three and four separated positions. Graphical, analytical, and computer techniques. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ME 56100 - Optimal Design: Theory With Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Optimization as an element of engineering design process. Case studies which demonstrate the theory and application of nonlinear programming as a design tool. Comparative examination of unconstrained algorithms. Development and application of methods for the constrained case. Selected contemporary topics. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 56200 - Advanced Dynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Dynamics of multi-degrees-of-freedom mechanical systems. Holonomic and nonholonomic constraints. Lagrange's equations of motion. Hamilton's principle for holonomic systems. Kinematics and kinetics of rigid body motion, including momentum and energy methods. Linearized equations of motion. Classification of vibratory systems - gyroscopic, circulatory forces. Stability of linear systems - divergence and flutter. Applications to gyroscopes, satellite dynamics, etc. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| ME 56300 - Mechanical Vibrations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of systems with one degree for freedom. LaGrange's equations of motion for multiple degree of freedom systems. Introduction to matrix methods. Transfer functions for harmonic response, impulse response, and step response. Convolution integrals for response to arbitrary inputs. Principle frequencies and modes. Applications to critical speeds, meassuring instruments, isolation, torsional systems. Introduction to nonlinear problems. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ME 56400 - Vibrations Of Discretized Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory of small oscillations of discrete or discretized systems of high dimensionality. Formulation of equations of motion using Lagrange's equation and the influence coefficients. Finite element reductions of continuous systems. Natural frequencies and modes: numerical methods. Free vibrations and forced vibration characteristics; modal expansion; approximation techniques; damping. Assembly of large systems from subsystems concepts, impedance techniques. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 56500 - Vehicle Dynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Modeling of wheeled vehicles to predict performance, handling, and ride. Effects of vehicle center of mass, tire characteristics, traction and slip, engine characteristics, and gear ratios on performance. Suspension design. Steady state and transient handling models of four-wheeled vehicles and car-trailer systems to determine oversteer and understeer characteristics, critical speeds, and stability. Multi-degree-of-freedom ride models, including tire and suspension compliance. Computer simulations. Current research topics in vehicle vibration isolation. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
|
| ME 56900 - Mechanical Behavior Of Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of load and environmental conditions that influence the behavior of materials in service. Elastic and plastic behavior, fracture, fatigue, low and high temperature behavior. Fracture mechanics. Failure analysis case studies emphasis on design. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| ME 57000 - Machine Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of stresses and deflections due to complicated loading. Investigation of specific design problems through application of theory of elasticity, failure criteria, energy approach, and numerical methods. Individual design project. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| ME 57100 - Reliability Based Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic concepts of probability and random variables. Time-dependent reliability models. Strength-based reliability and interference theory. Weakest-link and fail-safe systems. Extremal distributions. Monte Carlo methods. Maintainability and availability. Fault tree analysis. Quality control and reliability. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
|
| ME 57200 - Analysis And Design Of Robotic Manipulators |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the analysis and design of robotic manipulators. Topics include: kinematic configurations, forward and inverse position solution, velocity and acceleration, path planning, workspace analysis, force and torque solutions, rigid body dynamics, motors and actuators, robot design, sensors and controls, computer simulation, and graphical animation. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| ME 57300 - Interactive Computer Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (C S 53500) The principles of computer graphics and interactive graphical methods for problem solving. Emphasis placed on both development and use of graphical tools for various display devices. Several classes of graphics hardware considered in detail. Topics include hardcopy plotting, refresh displays, dynamic techniques, three-dimensional transformations and hierarchical modeling, color, modeling of geometry, and hidden surface removal. Projects involve programming of interactive computer graphics applications. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 57500 - Theory And Design Of Control Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Covers the analysis and design of control systems from both a classical and modern viewpoint, with emphasis on design of controllers. Classical control design is reviewed, including both root locus and Bode domain design methodologies. The state space representation is introduced, along with notions of stability, controllability, and observability. State feedback controllers for pole placement and state observers are discussed with emphasis in their frequency domain implications. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ME 57600 - Computer Control Of Manufacturing Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental elements for manufacturing process control are presented with advanced control theories, modeling and analysis of actuators, controller architecture, interfacing and programming. Emphasis is on computer integrated manufacturing with computer numerical control of machine tools, automation via programmable logic controllers, motion control, process control examples, and manufacturing process monitoring. Hands-on experience is attained through laboratory experiments with state-of-the-art equipment. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| ME 57700 - Human Motion Kinetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of kinetics related to human motion. Review of human anatomy and anthropometric data. Planar and three-dimensional kinematic analysis of gross human motion. Detailed kinematic studies of human joints. Newton-Euler and Lagrangian methods for joint torques. Muscle force and power analysis. Studies on walking, jumping, cycling, and throwing exercises. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
|
| ME 57800 - Digital Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to, and overview of, the field of digital control. Prior knowledge of continuous control techniques is assumed. Topics include mathematical background from residue theory through integral transforms; sampled data systems, including A/D, D/A, and hold properties, aliasing, and Z transforms. Digital control design via continuous, discrete, and state space design techniques. Implementation considerations, including nonlinear effects. Mechanical engineering examples. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
|
| ME 57900 - Fourier Methods In Digital Signal Processing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of signal processing associated with Fourier analyzer systems are presented. Emphasis is on amplitude accuracy and frequency resolution properties necessary for reliable experimental methodologies in system identification, spectrum estimation, and correlation analysis. Deterministic, as well as random, data analyses are presented. Students are required to develop algorithms that significantly expand the utility of Fourier analyzer systems. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| ME 58000 - Nonlinear Engineering Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Methods of analysis for nonlinear ordinary differential equations arising in engineering systems. Review of linear systems. Stability concepts. Phase plane methods. Perturbation and averaging methods of analysis. Self-excited and parametrically-excited systems. Relaxation oscillations. Systems with more than one degree of freedom. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 58100 - Numerical Methods In Mechanical Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The solution of problems arising in mechanical engineering using numerical methods. Topics include nonlinear algebraic equations, sets of linear algebraic equations, eigenvalue problems, interpolation, curve fitting, ordinary differential equations, and partial differential equations. Applications include fluid mechanics, gas dynamics, heat and mass transfer, thermodynamics, vibrations, automatic control systems, kinematics, and design. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| ME 58300 - Design Of Heat Exchangers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the thermal design theory of heat exchangers in steady state and transient operation, and thermo-mechanical design challenges as applied to various heat exchanger configurations. Topics include: Classification of heat exchangers; Methods of analyzing various heat exchanger; Pressure drop analysis and flow distribution; Design considerations for regenerators, plate-fin, shell-and-tube heat exchangers; etc; Optimization of heat exchanger design; and methods od predicting heat exchangers fouling. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the thermal design theory of heat exchanger: ϵ - NTU method, Generalized effectiveness-NTU relation, LMTD method, P-NTU method, determine pressure drop across a heat exchanger, etc.
2. Design and evaluate the performance of a heat exchanger using appropriate design considerations and methodology; and optimize a heat exchanger design.
3. Understand and analyze Indirect-type heat exchanger, shell-and-tube, parallel-and-counter-floer, and compact heat exchanger, etc.
|
| ME 58500 - Instrumentation For Engineering Measurements |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental concepts of static and dynamic measurements are reviewed. Transducers, signal conditioning, data transmission, and digital data acquisition systems are discussed. Emphasis is on applications and dynamic measurements. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 58600 - Microprocessors In Electromechanical Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Architecture of microcomputers; operating systems, logic functions, logic circuit design; I/O structure and interfacing; assembly language, manual assembly; software and hardware interrupts; data acquisition, serial and parallel communications; the role of high level languages. Laboratory experiments on applications to electrical, mechanical, and thermofluid systems. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 58700 - Engineering Optics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of geometrical and physical optics as related to problems in engineering design and research. Characteristics of imaging systems; properties of light sources; optical properties of materials. Diffraction, interference, polarization, and scattering phenomena as related to optical measurement techniques. Introduction to lasers and holography. (Laboratory work can be undertaken for additional credit by special arrangement.). Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ME 58800 - Mechatronics - Integrated Design Of Electro-Mechanical Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Electronic and interfacing techniques for design and control of electro-mechanical systems. Basic digital and analog design with applications to electro-mechanical interfacing via hands-on laboratory experience. Commonly used actuators and sensors and corresponding interfacing techniques. Realistic and integrated product development experience provided through a comprehensive final project where working prototypes are built to defined specifications. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 59200 - Fundamentals Of Particle Image Velocimetry |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Measurement of fluids in motion using the particle image velocimetry technique and related techniques through computer programming, laboratory experiments, and independent research in experimental fluids journals. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the various scientific principles underlying the particle image velocimetry technique - fluid dynamics, particle dynamics, optics, etc.
2. Gain an in-depth understanding of the PIV technique including its advantages over competing techniques, its limitations, and its future potential.
3. An ability to analyze a particular flow and determine the optimal parameter space for investigating that flow: particle size, time between exposures, imaging format, magnification, etc.
4. Exposure to several of the commercial particle image velocimetry packages in addition to writing their own basic software.
|
| ME 59500 - Special-Topic Minicourses |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A series of one-credit-hour courses on special topics offered as ME 59500, 59500, etc. These special-topic minicourses will provide an opportunity for introducing students to topics of contemporary importance or special interest that fall outside the scope of the curriculum. Information about current offerings may be obtained from the schedule of classes or the mechanical engineering registration deputy. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ME 59700 - Advanced Mechanical Engineering Projects I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 6.00. Projects or special topics of contemporary importance or of special interest that are outside the scope of the standard graduate curriculum can be studied under the Mechanical Engineering Projects course. Interested students should seek a faculty advisor by meeting with individual faculty members who work in their area of special interest and prepare a brief description of the work to be undertaken in cooperation with their advisor. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ME 60500 - Convection Of Heat And Mass |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Heat and mass transfer in moving fluid media; free, forced, and mixed convection for internal and external flows; differential and integral treatments of boundary layer problems; convection analogies for heat, mass, and momentum transfer; combined heat and mass transfer with chemical reactions; special topics and applications to electronic cooling, materials processing, transpiration and film cooling. Prerequisite: ME 31500. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 60600 - Radiation Heat Transfer |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Thermodynamics and physics of radiation and its interaction with interfaces and matter; radiation characteristics of surfaces and radiation properties of solids, liquids, and gases; analysis of radiation exchange between real and idealized surfaces; fundamentals of radiation transfer in absorbing, emitting, and scattering media; interaction of radiation with conduction and convection; remote temperature sensing and applications to selected problems involving combined energy transfer mechanisms. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: ME 31500. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 60800 - Numerical Methods In Heat, Mass, And Momentum Transfer |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Governing conservation equations and their classification according to numerical properties. Discretization by Taylor series, weighted residual, and control volume methods. Solution of systems of algebraic equations. Discretization and solution of the convection-diffusion equation. Methods of solving the equations governing fluid flow. Mathematical modeling of turbulence, combustion, and radiation. Prerequisite: ME 50500, 58100. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| ME 61000 - Boundary Layer Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of continuum fluid mechanics; Navier-Stokes equations. Laminar flow; boundary-layer concept; similarity solutions; transformation methods; integral and finite difference solution techniques for general pressure gradients. Should be preceded by intermediate fluid mechanics. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 61100 - Principles Of Turbulence |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Methods of description and basic equations for turbulent flows. Isotropic and homogeneous turbulence, energy spectra, and correlations. Introduction to measurements. Transition theory and experimental evidence. Wall turbulence, engineering calculations of turbulent boundary layers. Free turbulent jets and wakes. Prerequisite: ME 61000. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 61200 - Continuum Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A unified and exact mathematical treatment of the mechanics of solids and fluids. Cartesian tensor algebra and calculus; stress tensor, principle stresses and invariants; material and spatial coordinates, deformation gradient, strain and stretch tensors; balance of mass, momentum, and energy; constitutive equations of elasticity, hyperelasticity, viscous fluids and viscoelasticity. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 61300 - Advanced Engineering Acoustics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An extension of M E 513. Sound transmission between two media. Acoustic resonators and application to muffler theory. Structural radiation and sound. Acoustical measurements and signal processing: sound intensity, surface intensity, coherence and cepstral techniques. Numerical acoustics: finite element analysis, boundary integral equation analysis and statistical energy analysis. Advanced topics. Prerequisite: ME 51300. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| ME 61400 - Computational Fluid Dynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of finite difference methods, finite element methods, and the method of characteristics for the numerical solution of fluid dynamics problems. Incompressible viscous flows: vorticity transport equation, stream function equation, and boundary conditions. Compressible flows: treatment of shocks, implicit and explicit artificial viscosity techniques, and boundary conditions. Computational grids. Prerequisite: ME 50900 or 51000 or 58100. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| ME 61500 - Aeroacoustics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (AAE 61500) Quantitative measures of sound (decibel scales, spectra, energetics of acoustic motions, and measurement techiques). The wave theory of sound (basic equations and properties, sound propagation in homogeneous and inhomogeneous media, one-, two- and three-dimensional sound fields and distributed sources). Effects of source movement. Aerodynamic noise generation - acoustic analogy (Lighthill's equation and fowcs Williams-Hawkings equation). Introduction to Computational Aeroacoustics (CAA). Noise from turbulent shear flows (jet noise, cavity noise, and noise from flow over objects). Noise from turbomachinery, propellers, and rotors. Prerequisite: ME 30900 or 51300 or AAE 51100. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| ME 62500 - Advanced Combustion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Coupling of the energy, species, and mass conservation equations with the momentum equation. Statistical treatment of turbulence and the problems of interactions of turbulence with chemistry, radiation, and two-phase flows. Critical study of at least 10 seminal and recent contributions in the combustion literature. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: ME 52500. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 64000 - Structural Acoustics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Waves in fluids and structures, dispersion relations, sound radiation from structures, radiation efficiency, radiation from concentrated forces, effect of fluid loading on wave propagation, transmission of sound through barriers, effect of panel lining, enclosures, acoustically induced vibration of structures and numerical calculation of fluid-structure interaction. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: ME 51300, 56300. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| ME 66400 - Vibrations Of Continuous Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory of small oscillations of continuous systems. Love's equations for thin shells, reduction to special cases of shallow shells, plates, beams, etc. Initial stresses; influence of shear; thermal excitation. Initial value problems; forced vibrations; structural damping. The dynamic Green's function, impedance concepts; variational approaches. Experimental procedures, scaling, composite, and stiffened shells. Prerequisite: knowledge of one degree of freedom system vibrations. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| ME 66700 - Advanced Dynamical Problems In Machine Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design of devices dependent upon velocity or acceleration-time relationships; differential equations of motion to obtain design data and operating characteristics; analytical solutions. Prerequisite: a first course in dynamics. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 67500 - Multivariable Control System Designs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of the frequency response loop shaping methodology for the analysis and design of robust multivariable control systems will be presented. Emphasis is on suitable extensions of the classical Bode-Nyquist design techniques to systems with not only uncertain parameters but also multiple inputs and outputs. Instrument and environmental signal level constraints on the performance of control systems will be critically evaluated. Students are required to develop ability to handle open-ended design issues involving significant multiobjective performance trade-offs. Prerequisite: ME 57500. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| ME 67700 - Nonlinear Feedback Controller Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Controller design and analysis of nonlinear feedback systems. Topics include the design of linear/nonlinear feedback controllers. Describing Function (DF) techniques for design, Popov and Generalized Circle Criterion for closed loop stability, functional analysis and Volterra series approaches, and introduction to existing nonlinear controller design tools. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: ME 67500. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 68000 - Bifurcations And Chaos |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic concepts in stability of systems, nonlinear dynamical systems, and bifurcation theory. Algebraic and geometric techniques for local bifurcation analysis. Models governed by difference, ordinary, and partical differential equations. Examples from mechanical, structural, chemical, and electrical systems. Models of chaotic behavior. Techniques for prediction of chaos. Routes to chaos. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: ME 58000. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ME 68100 - Finite And Boundary Element Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The solution of problems in mechanical engineering using the generalized numerical techniques; the finite element method and the boundary element method. Topics include reformulation of partial differential equations into appropriate form for each method. The development and implementation of code and solution of problems. Applications include: acoustics, fluid dynamics, heat transfer, design, mechanics and biomechanics. Prerequisite: ME 58100. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 68700 - Laser Diagnostics For Reacting Flows |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The principles of spectroscopic laser diagnostics including absorption, fluorescence, and Raman scattering techniques. Theory of the interaction of laser radiation with atomic and molecular resonances. Lasers and detectors for optical diagnostics. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: ME 50100. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| ME 68900 - Adaptive Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and application of adaptive control of linear systems in both continuous and discrete time domain. Real-time parameter estimation algorithms, direct and indirect adaptive methods, deterministic self-tuning regulators, Lyapunov stability theory, input-output stability, model-reference adaptive control, stability and convergence of adaptive algorithms, robustness, and implementation issues, with laboratory experiments and demonstrations. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: ME 57500. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ME 69000 - Individual Study In Mechanical Engineering |
|
Arrange Hours and Credit. Individual study in advanced areas not currently available through formal course offerings within the University. Course plan must be approved by professor in charge prior to registering for the course. Written report and presentation of a departmental seminar based on material studied are required at the end of the semester. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ME 69100 - Mechanical Engineering Graduate Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Acquaint graduate students with a broad spectrum of research in various areas of mechanical engineering. Weekly seminars by invitees/researchers from academia, national labs, or industry. Seminar topics provide a mix of subjects, areas and disciplines, and can involve considerable technical depth, a broad overview and/or historical perspectives. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop an understanding of the field of Mechanical Engineering in its widest possible applications.
2. Develop an appreciation of the various interdisciplinary research efforts being pursued where Mechanical Engineering has the potential to provide leadership.
|
| ME 69600 - Advanced Professional Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Advanced professional experience in mechanical engineering. The program is coordinated by the school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit a summary report. Prerequisite: Master's student standing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ME 69700 - Advanced Mechanical Engineering Projects II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Projects or special topics of contemporary importance or of special interest that are outside the scope of the standard graduate curriculum can be studied under the Mechanical Engineering Projects course. Interested students should seek a faculty advisor by meeting with individual faculty members who work in their area of special interest and prepare a brief description of the work to be undertaken in cooperation with their advisor. Prerequisite: Doctoral student standing. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ME 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ME 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
Department: Mechanical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ME C1840 - Cooperative Education Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's preparedness for an intended career with a business, industry, or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the internship practice is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ME C2840 - Cooperative Education Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's preparedness for an intended career with a business, industry, or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the internship practice is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ME C3840 - Cooperative Education Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's preparedness for an intended career with a business, industry, or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the internship practice is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ME C4830 - Cooperative Education Practice IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's preparedness for an intended career with a business, industry, or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the internship practice is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ME I1840 - Career Enrichment Internship I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's preparedness for entering an initial or second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ME I2840 - Career Enrichment Internship II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's preparedness for entering an initial or second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ME I3840 - Career Enrichment Internship III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's preparedness for entering an initial or second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| ME I4840 - Career Enrichment Internship V |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's preparedness for entering an initial or second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MED I2000 - Life-Health Sciences Internships |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. This undergraduate course is associated with the Life-Health Sciences Internship program. This is a zero credit hour course offered once a year in the spring semester of the internship. Only LHSI students may register for MED-I200. Successful completion of the course is dependent on completion of at least 240 work hours over the course of the internship period and the presentation of a poster at the end of year poster session. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Internship, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MEST M2010 - Medieval Encounters |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. MEST M2010 is a team-taught, interdisciplinary course which introduces students to the medieval world, circa 500-1500, through a examination of the History, Literature, Art, Philosophy, and Religion of the time period. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| MET 09000 - Industrial Applications Of Mechanical Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course includes specialized topics, skills, and applied problem solving associated with mechanical engineering technology. The level of coverage varies according to the audience. Varied topics may be offered under this title. Does not carry credit toward degree requirements in Mechanical Engineering Technology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
|
| MET 10000 - Production Drawing And Computer-Aided Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to technical graphics and computer-aided design. The course includes sketching, production drawing, and a significant amount of hands-on experience on a CAD system. The production drawing portion covers topics like multi-view drawings, section views, auxiliary views, and dimensioning. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| MET 10100 - Introduction To Mechanical Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course provides a general introduction to engineering and technology career perspectives. In addition, the course is designed to instill in a student the skills required to be successful in college. The primary objective is to retain first semester college students in the univeresity community by building a link from past educational experiences to current educational opportunities. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MET 10200 - Production Design And Specifications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The design, evaluation, and documentation of engineering specifications required of manufacturability and assembly are introduced. Emphasis is on CAD-based details, assemblies, design layouts, equipment installations, and related industrial practices. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Follow current American National Standards practices in generating a complete assembly/detail dimensioned set of drawings.
2. Use references to verify design intent by calculating and documenting via standard practices, allowable limits and multi-part fits.
3. Seek answers to questions on technical specification, company procedures, products or services.
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| MET 10400 - Technical Graphics Communications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the graphic language used to communicate design ideas using CAD. Topics include: sketching, multiview drawings, auxiliary views, pictorial views, working drawings, dimensioning practices, and section views. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MET 10500 - Introduction To Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides beginning engineering technology students with the basic tools necessary for success in their chosen technology degree program. Topics include survey of engineering technology careers, technology laboratories and report writing, use of calculators, engineering calculations, metrology, technology computer applications, use of spreadsheets for engineering calculations. Major emphasis on computer applications and QBASIC. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MET 10600 - Analytical And Computational Tools In MET |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to analytical and computational problem-solving techniques. The electronic calculator, the factor-label method of unit conversions, engineering graphs, and the computer are used to solve problems. Computer emphasis is on spreadsheet analysis, graphics, and generation of technical reports through the integrated use of software packages. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MET 11100 - Applied Statics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Force systems, resultants and equilibrium, trusses, frames, beams, and shear and moments in beams are studied. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Determine the resultant of several vectors.
2. Draw complete free-body diagrams.
3. Apply the equations of equilibrium to free-body diagrams.
4. Calculate the axial loads in truss members and the pin reactions for various mechanisms and frames.
5. Locate the centroid of a composite geometric quanity.
|
| MET 11200 - Applied Mechanisms |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of motions, displacements, velocities, instant centers, cams, linkages, and gears. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MET 11300 - Mechanics Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Concepts of mechanics are applied to structures, machine components, and frames. Stresses and deformations resulting from axial, shear, torsional, and flexural loads are considered. Kinematics and kinetics of motion are introduced. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Solve linear and rotational kinematics problems that are based on constant or linearly-varying acceleration.
2. Apply the principles of dynamic equilibrium to solve linear particle and rotational kinetics problems.
3. Calculate axial stress, shear stress, bearing stress, torsional stress, and flexural stress.
4. Use material properties and design factors to confirm simple loading of machines, frames, beams, and columns.
|
| MET 11800 - Applied Mechanics: Statics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of force systems, resultants and equilibrium, centroids of areas and centers of gravity of bodies, trusses, frames, beams, friction and moments of inertia of areas and bodies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the concept of a resultant force for systems of forces.
2. Calculate the resultant force for a system of forces acting on a body.
3. Understand the concept of components of a force.
4. Calculate the components of a resultant force.
5. Understand the principle of moments.
6. Solve for the moment caused by force acting about any point on a rigid body.
7. Understand the principle of transmissibility.
8. Demonstrate the use of the principle of transmissibility to solve for reaction or for forces causing stress in members of a truss.
9. Understand Varignon’s Theorem.
10. Demonstrate the use of Varignon’s Theorem to solve for the location of resultant forces and to locate the centroid of an area.
11. Solve for the reaction forces at the supports of a rigid body at rest.
12. Understand the Method of Joints.
13. Calculate the force in members of a truss using the Method of Joints.
14. Understand the Method of Sections.
15. Calculate the force in members of a truss using the Method of Sections.
16. Understand the process of Pin Reaction-Method of Members to calculate the pin reactions at joint of rigid frames which have 3-force members.
17. Calculate the force at the pins connecting frames using Pin Reaction-Method of members.
18. Understand the difference between Centroids and Centers of Gravity.
19. Be able to locate Centroids and Center of Gravity for rigid bodies at rest.
20. Understand the concept of Moment of Inertia.
21. Calculate the Moment of Inertia of a composite cross-sectional area.
22. Understand the concept of Radius of Gyration and how it’s used as a determinate of bending in compression members.
23. Calculate the Radius of Gyration for any given cross-sectional area.
|
| MET 12000 - Blueprint Reading And Sketching |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This introductory course will incorporate blueprint reading, freehand sketching, understanding orthographic projections, dimensioning and tolerancing, and the use of symbols in industrial drawings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| MET 13500 - Basic Machining |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comprehensive survey of machine tools as they are used in converting workpieces into finished products, with consideration of cost, quality, quantity, and interchangeability. Actual operation analysis of many machine tool setups will be provided for comparison studies. Not open to students who have credit in MET 280, MET 281.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MET 14100 - Materials I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of structures, properties, and applications of metals, polymers, ceramics, and composites commonly used in industry is presented. Problem-solving skills are developed in the areas of materials selection, evaluation, measurement, and testing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify, calculate and interpret a materials' microstructure and mechanical properties.
2. Interpret phase diagrams and understand the effects of various pre & post processes on material properties.
3. Use basic testing devices to collect data which will identify a given material based on known physical properties.
4. Communicate material properties and uses for various products.
5. Work in teams.
|
| MET 14200 - Manufacturing Processes I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic casting, forming, and joining processes are surveyed. The course emphasizes the selection and application of various processes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
|
| MET 14300 - Materials And Processes I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of structures, properties, processing, and applications of metals and ceramics commonly used in industry is presented. Problem solving skills are developed in the areas of materials selection, evaluation, measurement, and testing. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MET 14400 - Materials And Processes II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of structures, properties, processing, and applications of polymers, composites, laminates, biomaterials, green materials, nanomaterials, and pharmaceuticals commonly used in industry is presented. Problem solving skills are developed in the areas of material selection, evaluation, measurement, and testing. This course serves as the gateway for the MET and MFET programs. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the structure and characteristics of major polymers, and related industry terminology.
2. Conduct standard polymer material tests.
3. Describe key design considerations for polymer process equipment components.
4. Describe fibers, matrices, and fabrication techniques related to various composite materials.
5. Identify green materials and green manufacturing strategies.
6. Describe biomaterials and biomedical device manufacturing concepts.
|
| MET 15600 - Graphical Computations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. TG 110. P or C: MATH 153 or equivalent. Descriptive geometry principles applied to the solution of engineering problems; intersections and development of surfaces; layout of objects in space; and determination of clearances between objects in space.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MET 15700 - Electrical-Mechanical Drafting CAD |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A basic mechanical and electrical drafting course with an introduction to computer-aided drafting (CAD) for electrical and computer engineering technology students only. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| MET 16000 - Analytical And Computational Tools In MET |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The skills needed to solve technical problems in mechanical engineering technology are developed. Instruction is given in analytical and computational problem-solving techniques. The electronic calculator, the factor-label method of unit conversions, engineering graphs, and the computer are used to solve problems. Computer emphasis is on spreadsheet analysis, graphics, and generation of technical reports through the integrated use of software packages. Credit will not be granted for MET 16000 and MET 16200 or MET 16300. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MET 16100 - Introduction To Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will introduce engineering technology students to resources and skills that will help them to be successful in their studies and ultimately in their careers. This course will help students explore engineering technology by introducing campus, regional, and national resources such as professional societies in their chosen fields. It will also help students improve in areas important to becoming better students. These areas may include topics such as planning academic careers, mentoring, improving study skills, goal setting, and utilization of library resources. In addition, the course will focus on specific introductory concepts important to engineering technology students such as using campus computer resources and the TAC of ABET outcomes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| MET 16200 - Computational Analysis Tools In MET |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction is given in analytical and computational problem-solving techniques. The electronic calculator, the factor-label method of unit conversions, and engineering graphs are used to solve technical problems in mechanical engineering technology. Credit will not be granted for both MET 16000 and 16200. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MET 16300 - Computer Application Tools In MET |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The computer is used to solve technical problems in mechanical engineering technology. Emphasis is on spreadsheet analysis, graphics, and generation of technical reports through the integrated use of computer software packages. Credit will not be granted for both MET 16000 and 16300. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MET 18000 - Materials And Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application and characteristics, both physical and chemical, of the materials most commonly used in industry; the mechanical processes by which materials may be shaped or formed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MET 20000 - Power System |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of steam power plants, internal combustion engines, heat pumps, and refrigeration. Theory of thermodynamics and heat transfer. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MET 20400 - Production Drawing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of principles of engineering drawing to design layout, detail, and assembly. A 2D PC CAD-centered laboratory.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MET 20500 - Production Drawing And Cad II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of principles of engineering drawing to layout, assembly, and detail drawing. Other topics include: 3-D, solid modeling, rendering. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MET 20600 - Industrial Illustration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to illustration layouts using computer-aided methods. Topics include 2D layout, 3D wireframe, solid
modeling, and shaded rendering. Projects utilize primitive shapes to create 3D objects using Boolean operations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MET 20900 - Three Dimensional NURBS Modeling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to 3D geometric modeling using NURBS-based CAD modeling. Emphasis on creating, editing, manipulating and presenting 3D conceptual and production models. Efficient modeling strategies, data exchange and an overview of down-stream applications is included. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MET 21100 - Applied Strength Of Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The principles of strength, stiffness, and stability are introduced and applied primarily to mechanical components. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Find internal shear and internal bending moment within a structure due to the external loading.
2. Undertsand basic mechanical properties of materials and cross-sectional/area properties of structures and apply them.
3. Identify and calculate the stress present due to internal loads.
4. Identify potential maximum stress locations and calculate the principle stresses and the maximum shear stress.
5. Calculate deflection in statically determinate structures.
|
| MET 21200 - Applications Of Engineering Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Applications of engineering mechanics are introduced, based on an elementary expansion of Newtonian physics as applied to static and dynamic force systems. Internal stresses and strains produced by these forces in selected machine elements are considered. Work, energy, and power are discussed. Does not carry credit toward graduation in Mechanical Engineering Technology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MET 21300 - Dynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Kinematics and kinetics principles of rigid-body dynamics are introduced. Emphasis is on the analysis of bodies in plane motion. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MET 21400 - Machine Elements |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The methods developed in statics, dynamics, and strength of materials are applied to the selection of basic machine components. The fundamental principles required for the selection of individual elements that compose a machine are developed. Selected course topics are included as computer exercises. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply principles and methods from statics, dynamics, and strength of materials to the selection of machine components.
2. Develop skill in using, reading, and interpreting necessary materials such as tables, charts, graphs, and industrial catalogs as part of appropriate problem solution.
3. Use the underlying concepts and theories of machine elements to select appropriate solution methods for specific problem solutions.
|
| MET 21600 - Machine Elements |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The design and analysis of machine components with emphasis on safety factors based on various failure theories in consideration of fluctuating loads, stress concentration, and other factors affecting failure. A study of standard machine elements such as brakes, clutches, belts, chains, gears, screws, springs, and bearings; their application, operational behavior, efficiency, economy, and standardization. Typically offered Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MET 21900 - Applied Strength Of Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. MATH 151 or its equivalent and either MET 111 or MET 210.
Principles of applied strength of materials, primarily with reference to mechanical design. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MET 22000 - Heat And Power |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Heat/Power is an introduction to the principles of thermodynamics and heat transfer. Basic thermodynamic processes are used to evaluate the performance of energy-based systems such as internal combustion engines, power plants, and refrigeration equipment. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MET 22200 - Computer Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of hardware and procedures used to make graphic displays using digitizers, plotters, printers, and cathode ray tubes. Programs are written for several applications. The course may be supplemented by visits to local industries that use related equipment.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MET 22300 - IntroductionTo Computer-Aided Modeling And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to computer-aided modeling and design (CAMD) with hands-on experience in the operation of an interactive computer graphics system. Generation of 3-D computer models and preparation of working drawings including geometric dimensioning and tolerancing. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MET 22800 - Machine Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Practical applications in the design of machines and products using mechanical, pneumatic, hydraulic, and electrical operation and control.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MET 23000 - Fluid Power |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course consists of the study of compressible and incompressible fluid statics and dynamics as applied to hydraulic and pneumatic pumps, motors, transmissions, and controls. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MET 23200 - Dynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of dynamics: displacement, velocities, accelerations, work energy, power,
impulse, momentum, and impact.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MET 23500 - Production Machining |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intensive study of production processes, tools, setups, workpiece materials machinability, newer methods of
machining, and the economics of efficient materials machining. Not open to students who have credit in MET 280. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MET 24000 - Basic Foundry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Casting processes of the past, present, and future. Special emphasis on developing problem-solving skills in using cast parts in manufacturing. Lectures, reading assignments, audiovisual presentations, demonstrations, and field trips. Assignment sheets with study questions are used in preparing students for discussion sessions and tests. Each student must also research and write a five-page paper on some aspect of the foundry industry or give a demonstration in the laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MET 24200 - Manufacturing Processes II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course surveys the manufacturing processes and tools commonly used to convert cast, forged, molded, and wrought materials into finished products. It includes the basic mechanisms of material removal, measurement, quality control, assembly processes, cold forming, safety, process planning, and automated manufacturing. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
|
| MET 24500 - Manufacturing Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course surveys the manufacturing processes and tools commonly used to convert cast and molded, formed, and joined materials into finished products. It includes the fundamentals of material removal, measurement, statistical quality control, assembly processes, process planning and optimization, CNC programming and automated manufacturing. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Use common process documentation tools and techniques in the design of a manufacturing process.
2. Design a measuring process that complies with specification precision in a given environment.
3. Understand and utilize relationships involving material removal operations.
4. Participate in a team to execute a manufacturing process and accurately document the results.
|
| MET 24700 - Computer-Aided Tool And Fixture Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Tool design methods; tooling materials and heat treatment; design of cutting tools; gage design; design of drill jigs and fixtures; tool design for NE and CNC machines; tool design on the CAD system. Term projects using the CAD system are required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MET 25000 - Materials Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course deals with a survey of engineering materials, their properties and applications. Topics include metals, polymers and composites. Emphasis on metals. Not open to students who have credit in MET491.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MET 27100 - Programming For Numerical Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to manual, conversational, and computer-aided programming. Incremental and absolute programming systems. Machine-based conversational languages and computer-aided programming languages. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MET 27200 - Introduction To Motorsports |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (MSTE 27200) This course provides an introduction to the Motorsports Industry, including careers available, the organization and history of the industry, and technology development that has occurred due to the industry. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MET 27500 - Industrial Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Cooperative education students practice in industry and provide written reports of this practice. Admission to the cooperative education program is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MET 27600 - Industrial Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Cooperative education students practice in industry and provide written reports of this practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MET 28000 - Manufacturing Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course deals with the traditional manufacturing processes, material removal processes, and joining processes. Not open to students who have credit in MET 180 or MET 135.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MET 28100 - Manufacturing Process Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Course dealing with casting processes, material removal processes and joining processes.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MET 28200 - Introduction To Plastics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the plastics industry, including a study of materials with reference to their properties, processing, and uses. Fabrication, finishing, and fastening methods; plastic product design. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MET 28400 - Introduction To Industrial Controls |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the concepts, devices, and common practices associated with modern industrial control systems. Common industrial control devices are studied.Students learn how to wire, program, and troubleshoot programmable logic controller (PLC) based control systems. PLC applications focus on interfacing and controlling a variety of electromechanical devices such as motors and pneumatic actuators. Industrial safety practices and procedures are emphasized throughout the course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and explain the fundamental operation of various discrete input devices and output actuators that are commonly used with PLC-based control systems.
2. Identify, describe, and effectively use the core instructions contained in a PLC’s instruction set.
3. Demonstrate the ability to successfully use the PLC programming software to perform common programming tasks.
4. Read writing diagrams and wire I/O devices.
|
| MET 29000 - Special Topics In MET |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Hours, subject matter, and credit to be arranged by faculty. Group instruction in new or specialty areas of Mechanical Engineering Technology is provided by MET faculty, subject to MET curriculum subcommittee approval. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
|
| MET 29500 - Industrial Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. For full-time students who have completed one year of study. Practical problems in local industry limited to about 10 hours per week for which the student receives some remuneration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Practicum
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MET 29700 - Industrial Graphics Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Directed work on individual graphics projects for fourth-semester mechanical drafting-design technology students.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MET 29900 - Mechanical Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Independent project or laboratory work is conducted under the supervision of appropriate MET faculty. Hours and subject matter must be arranged by instructor and approved by MET curriculum subcommittee. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
|
| MET 30000 - Applied Thermodynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The fundamentals of thermodynamics including application of the first and second laws, enthalpy, entropy, reversible and irreversible processes. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MET 30200 - CAD In The Enterprise |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and practice of management, use and integration of computer-aided design systems, and related engineering tools and practices are studied as they are applied in the industrial enterprise. Emphasis is on course projects. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MET 30300 - Automotive sports |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is a one credit hour, per semester, course to be taken for up to three semesters. This course is designed to allow students to apply skills and knowledge learned, along with concurrent course material, to a defined project. The project can be chosen by the student or assigned by the instructor. The student will work on this project to develop and apply solutions to the project challenges or design and implement a new resolution. This course will allow students to explore new technologies that may not be covered in the MET program content. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Required design specifications as they relate to product development.
2. Application of CAD software in problem solving.
3. Application of reliability and quality techniques in design.
4. The importance of technical writing and presentation skills through various assignments.
5. Hands on exposure to advanced manufacturing processes.
6. Selection criteria for materials for a particular application.
|
| MET 30400 - Advanced Autocad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Extends the potential of AutoCad. Subjects include creation of menus, icons, macros, and libraries. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MET 30500 - Computer-Aided Design With Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an advanced study of computer-aided drafting and design utilizing current industrial computer-aided design systems. The course covers the use of these systems in three dimensional and parametric modeling applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MET 31000 - Computer-Aided Machine Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the use of specialized programs to analyze machine components such as shafts, linkages, springs, and cams. Use of finite element analysis to analyze mechanical systems. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MET 31100 - Experimental Strength Of Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected advanced topics from the areas of mechanics of materials, structures, stress analysis, and strain measurements are considered. Basic electronic strain gage circuits and instrumentation are presented, with emphasis on transducer applications. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Calculate principal stresses, maximum shear stress, and principal direction in a plane when given the loading condition.
2. Select, locate and mount strain gages for the measurement of strain in an experimental structure.
3. Analyze the stress in a structure based on the strain data when given appropriate material information.
4. Perform an open-ended experimental investigation in solid mechanics using strain gages or other experimental stress methods.
|
| MET 31200 - Dynamics And Mechanisms |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The slider crank, four-bar linkage and Scotch Yoke mechanisms along with cam and follower systems will be studied. Both the kinematics and dynamics of the mechanisms will be covered. Dynamic studies will include both Newton's Second Law and energy methods. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MET 31300 - Applied Fluid Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The fundamental principles of fluid mechanics are developed, including properties of fluid, pressure, hydrostatics, dynamics of fluid flow, friction losses, and sizing of pipes. Emphasis is on problem solving. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MET 31400 - Applications Of Machine Elements |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Machine element topics, including chain drives, spur gears, power screws, bevel gears, ball and roller bearings, journal bearings selection and lubrication, relevant microcomputer software, and other select topics are considered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply the principles of and methods from statics, dynamics, and strength of materials to the selection of machine components.
2. Understand machine elements concepts and theories sufficiently to select appropriate solution methods for specific problems.
3. Use application software to size and select machine elements.
4. Apply the knowledge of machine elements and computer software to solve an open ended design project.
|
| MET 31500 - Applied Mechanism Kinematics And Dynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Graphical and semigraphical methods are used to determine displacements, velocities, and accelerations in common mechanisms. Cam followers and basic motions; static and dynamic force analysis; static and dynamic shaft balancing; and relevant microcomputer software also are considered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply the principles of and methods from statics and dynamics to the analysis of linkages and mechanisms.
2. Formulate appropriate solutions to kinematic problems.
3. Use computer skills to solve an open ended design project.
|
| MET 31700 - Machine Diagnostics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A broad spectrum of equipment behavior is introduced through the study of four major operating parameters: vibration, noise, temperature, and lubrication. Emphasis is placed on measurement and analysis of data using diagnostic instrumentation and techniques found in modern process and manufacturing plants. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Determine the equation of motion for a single degree of freedom vibrating system.
2. Experimentally determine system vibration characteristics.
3. Understand and apply the principles for condition-based maintenance to diagnose machinery problems.
4. Develop and complete an open-ended diagnostics project.
|
| MET 32000 - Applied Thermodynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Following a review of fundamental concepts, advanced power and refrigeration cycles are analyzed. Applications such as gas mixtures, air-vapor mixtures, and chemical reactions of combustion processes are presented. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MET 32500 - Applied Thermodynamics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Applications of perfect gas laws, steam tables, principles of conservation of mass and energy, and heat transfer as they apply to power plants, engines, pumps, fans and refrigeration systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| MET 32800 - CAD/CAM For Mechanical Design Drafting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic operation of mechanical design-drafting. A PC CAD (2D and 3D) laboratory-centered course introducing the basic steps involved in the geometric design of mechanical parts. This class provides an overview and continues into a detailed investigation of parametric modeling. Parametric modeling concepts will be applied to problems using standard industrial practices. Students must possess a solid background in engineering or technical graphics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
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| MET 32900 - Applied Heat Transfer |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An applied approach to the introduction of basic vocabulary and concepts related to the steady state transfer (i.e. conduction, convection, radiation) will be covered. Additional topics will include heat exchangers, boilers and solar energy. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Define the terms conduction, convection, radiation and associated vocabulary.
2. Develop appropriate mathematical techniques and equations in heat transfer.
3. Apply the problem solving methodology to heat transfer situations.
4. Analyze the solutions to validate assumptions and other possible outcomes.
5. Apply the heat transfer principles in the design of heat transfer equipment.
6. Test the validity of theoretical concepts learned in selected laboratory experiments.
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| MET 33000 - Introduction To Fluid Power |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the development, transmission, and utilization of power through fluid power circuits and controls. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
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| MET 33400 - Advanced Fluid Power |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Hydraulic and pneumatic circuits and their steady state and time variant behavior as it affects the selection and design of components and systems used in fluid power transmission and motion control are studied. Emphasis is placed on industrial and mobile applications, but the principles also apply to aerospace, marine, and other fluid power systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| MET 33500 - Basic Machining |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A comprehensive survey of machine tools as they are used in converting work pieces into finished products with consideration of cost, quality, quantity, and interchangeability and safety requirements. Actual operation analysis of many machine tools set-ups will be provided for comparison studies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| MET 33800 - Manufacturing Processes |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. Course covers basic fabrication and material removal manufacturing processes. Areas studied include casting, forging, material joining, forming, basic metal removal mechanisms, automated manufacturing processes, dimensional metrology for quality control and manufacturing process planning. The course emphasizes the selection and application of the various manufacturing processes. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
Upon completion of this course, the students should be able to:
1. Identify welding processes by their AWS designation.
2. Describe the term HAZ in welding and relate this to the heat input of a welding process.
3. Explain the benefits and identify common applications of a given joining process.
4. Recognize the different joining mechanisms utilized in the various joining operations.
5. Distinguish between hot-working and cold-working processes.
6. List some advantages and disadvantages of various common forming operations.
7. Identify dependent and independent process variables and their relationships.
8. Explain the benefits and identify common applications for a given forming process.
9. Describe the difference between expendable and permanent mold casting processes.
10. Explain the benefits and identify common applications for a given casting process.
11. List some advantages and disadvantages of various common casting processes.
12. Identify the steps involved in producing powder metal parts.
13. Recognize the potential safety hazards of a given manufacturing process.
14. Understand the need for safety in the workplace.
15. Appreciate the diversity and complexity of all the available manufacturing processes.
16. Identify potential limitations of a given manufacturing process.
17. Select potential manufacturing processes suitable for making a specific product and explain.
18. Recognize the complexity of goods produced in the world today.
19. Work as a team to investigate topics, write reports, and make presentations on a specified manufacturing topic.
20. Provide accurate part measurements using basic metrology equipment.
21. Recognize the need for standardization, quality, precision, and accuracy in manufacturing processes and provide examples of products where this is currently being implemented.
22. Calculate speeds, feeds, depth of cut, material removal rate (MRR), cutting forces, and horsepower (hp) requirements for material removal processes covered in course.
23. Recognize the impact that changing speeds, feeds, or depth of cut has on the MRR, cutting forces, hp requirements, and the life of the cutting tools.
24. Identify advantages, disadvantages, and limitations of the various material removal processes.
25. Recognize machine tools, cutting tools, and workholding devices used in the various material removal processes.
26. Understand the evolution of automation in material removal processes and how new technology impacts the industry.
27. Calculate tool paths and develop G/M code for simple NC milling operations.
28. Identify safe and unsafe operation of basic material removal machine tools.
29. Develop a machining operation sequence for a specified part.
30. Provide basic cost estimation for material removal operations.
31. Work as a team to investigate topics, write reports, and make presentations on a specified material removal topic.
Laboratory Outcomes
1. Utilize equipment, similar to small industrial settings, to process materials using casting, forming, and joining operations.
2. Identify the importance and need for safety and awareness in processing materials.
3. Recognize the advantages and limitations of various manufacturing processes through hands-on experimentation.
4. Develop a better understanding of the concepts presented in lecture through hands-on experimentation.
5. Utilize basic metrology equipment to collect and analyze data on measurements.
6. Utilize various machine tools to produce manufactured parts of within specification.
7. Identify the importance of and need for safety at all times while in the presence of machine tools.
8. Present data in a concise, readable, and professional format.
9. Develop a better understanding of the concepts presented in lecture through hands-on experimentation.
10. Work with machine tools in a team environment for the completion of laboratory projects.
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| MET 34000 - Piping And Plumbing Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design of plumbing systems, including losses in pipes, fittings, nozzles, orifices, etc. Includes steam, water, and oil systems. Piping handbooks and catalogs are used in conjunction with the State of Indiana Plumbing Code. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| MET 34400 - Materials II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Metals and polymers are studied. Topics include the bonding of atoms; the structures of crystals and polymers; the coldworking, alloying, and heat treating of metals; and the physical behavior of plastics. Course emphasis is on the development and control of material properties to meet engineering requirements and specifications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
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| MET 34500 - Welding Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Welding processes, equipment, and weldments are studied. An in-depth look is taken into welding processes, welding problems, quality control, inspection methods, welding filler metals, welding equipment, and weldment design. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MET 34600 - Advanced Materials In Manufacturing |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Metals, polymers, ceramic, and composite materials are studied. Crystal structure, molecular behavior, and the effects of various processes on material properties are considered. Course emphasizes the development and control of material properties to meet engineering requirements and specifications. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe common materials and major manufacturing processes.
2. Udnerstand the process-property interaction for materials and manufacturing processes, including the major ways that can be strengthened.
3. Describe methods for measuring material properties.
4. Describe microstructure evolution of materials during casting, hot working, cold working, and heat treating processes.
5. Use appropriate tools for materials design and selection.
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| MET 34700 - Programming Of Automation Systems |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of fundamental concepts in computer numerical control (CNC) technology. Cutter centerline programming, cutter diameter compensation, tool nose radius (TNR) compensation, coordinate transformation, canned cycles, subprograms, user macros. The lab includes programming and operation of CNC turning and milling machines, CAD/CAM programming, and integration of design and manufacturing through computer network. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
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| MET 34800 - Engineering Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An overview of structures, properties and applications of metals, polymers, ceramics, and composite materials is presented. Problem-solving skills are developed in material selection, evaluation, measurement, and testing. Laboratory activities include testing various properties of different materials, and the selection of materials for engineering application. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain an understanding of how the elements are the building blocks for engineering materials and how engineering materials, such as metals, polymers, ceramics, and composites are related in origin and structural characteristics.
2. Through hands-on experimental activities, students will explore and test different physical, chemical and mechanical properties of various types of engineering materials.
3. Students will learn how polymerized organic materials form engineering materials, what the differences are between polymer families, how thermoplastic and thermoset plastics and polymer composites are shaped into parts.
4. Students will understand of how steels are made, how cold/heat treatment and alloy additions alter steel properties. Other metals, such as Cu, Al, Ni, Zn, Ti and their alloys will be studied to understand how alloy composition, metallurgy affect mechanical, physical/chemical properties.
5. Students will learn application of nano-materials for real-world technical and engineering applications and methods to fabricate nano-materials.
6. Students will learn basic selection criteria used for engineering materials during the design/production stages of a product.
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| MET 34900 - Stringed Instrument Design And Manufacture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Concepts, knowledge, and skills in experimental mechanics, production processes, and design are integrated to manufacture a working musical instrument. Production concerns such as fixture design, process variability, and validation testing comprise key course elements. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate understanding of the product development process.
2. Manage project and time to complete individual and team goals.
3. Synthesize design, manufacturing, and testing constraints, resulting in a working product.
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| MET 35000 - Applied Fluid Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The fundamentals of fluid mechanics including properties of fluid, pressure, hydrostatic force on submerged areas; kinematics and dynamics of fluid flow; friction losses and sizing of pipe. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
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| MET 35500 - Automation I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the design and applications of programmable controller systems. Topics include programming techniques, input/output devices, personal computer interface, system design, safety and applications for automation. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| MET 36000 - Heating, Ventilating, And Air-Conditioning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of heat losses, heat-producing equipment, and cooling equipment in addition to the design of the direct systems. Includes controls and cost estimating for commercial, industrial, and residential systems. Codes and standards are emphasized throughout the course. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
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| MET 36100 - Heating Vent Air Conditioning II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Air conditioning and refrigeration. Heat gain, psychometrics, cooling, load calculations, and equipment
selection; controls for commercial and industrial applications. Codes, standards, and manufacturers' literature are used throughout the course.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MET 36700 - Robotics Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of types of robots, drive systems, control systems, and control languages. The lab includes programming and operation of a table top robotic arm. Concepts of robotic use in computer integrated manufacturing (CIM) and flexible manufacturing systems (FMS) will be introduced. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| MET 37000 - Introduction To Heat Transfer |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces fundamental principles of heat transfer: conduction, natural convection, forced convection, and radiation, with an emphasis on practical applications (e.g. HVAC). Analytical solutions will be compared with measurements using in-class demonstrations. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| MET 37400 - Technical Sales |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the principles and practices of selling technical products and/or services. The course covers product knowledge, buying motives, the phases of a sale, ethical and legal aspects, synergistic selling, and career opportunities in technical sales. Utilizes role playing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| MET 37500 - Industrial Practice III |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Cooperative education students practice in industry and provide written reports of this practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MET 37600 - Industrial Practice IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Cooperative education students practice in industry and provide written reports of this practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| MET 38100 - Engineering Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Applications and characteristics of engineering materials used in industry with special emphasis on plastics and other nonferrous materials such as elastomers, composites, ceramics, and glass, including a survey of the processes involved. Also, metallurgy, failure analysis, corrosion resistance, and surface treatments of metallic and nonmetallic materials. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| MET 38200 - Controls And Instrumentation For Automation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the procedures and techniques essential to industrial measurement and transmission of data is provided in the areas of microprocessor control, process control, and automated testing. Concepts of hysteresis, repeatability, weighted signals, span, suppression, range, and closed loop control are emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Evaluate and select sensors for a given application based on relevant specifications.
2. Select a data acquisition system based on the requirements of a given application.
3. Explain how process gain, dead band, and lag affect the performance of a closed loop control system.
4. Tune a closed loop PID controller.
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| MET 38400 - Instrumentation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of measurement theory and principles, including temperature, pressure, level, flow and similar measurement used to control manufacturing processes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
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| MET 38800 - Thermodynamics And Heath Power |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Course provides the engineering technology student with an introduction to the principles of thermodynamics and heat transfer. Basic thermodynamic processes are used to evaluate the performance of energy-based systems such as internal combustion engines, power plants, and refrigeration equipment. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
After completion of this course, the students should be able to:
1. Identify and describe basic concepts, terminology, and industrial applications of thermodynamics and heat transfer. Provide accurate measurements using basic metrology equipment.
2. Determine basic properties of gases, steam, and refrigerants using equations, tables, charts, and graphs.
3. Apply the First Law of Thermodynamics and conservation of mass to analyze fixed mass (closed) and steady flow control volume (open) systems and devices.
4. Understand the fundamental concepts of the Second Law of Thermodynamics and their application to conversions between heat & work & to thermal efficiency.
5. Analyze thermodynamic systems involving multiple processes in ideal cycles such as Otto, Diesel, Rankine, and refrigeration cycles.
6. Understand basic steady and transient heat transfer principles and use them to analyze simple systems.
7. Apply basic conduction, convection, and radiation heat transfer concepts and equations to solve applied heat transfer problems.
8. Evaluate heat exchanger performance and specify heat exchanger requirements.
9. Identify basic components of complex thermal systems and the relevant thermodynamics and heat transfer principles needed to analyze such systems.
10. Identify and operate laboratory equipment typically used in measurement and analysis of thermal systems.
11. Use application software for analyzing, documenting, and presenting the results of technical work.
12. Understand professional, ethical, and social issues and responsibilities within the context of thermal systems applications.
13. Understand the need for safety in the workplace.
14. Identify potential limitations of a given thermal cycle.
15. Recognize the complexity, of Otto, Diesel, Rankin, and etc. cycles in the world today.
16. Work as a team to investigate topics, write reports, and make presentations on a specified manufacturing topic.
17. Calculate enthalpy, entropy, etc. required to fully define a state variable in the thermal processes covered in course.
18. Recognize the impact that changing state variables will have on the efficiency of the thermal process.
19. Provide basic cost estimation for energy savings in energy audit studies in various thermal processes.
20. Work as a team to investigate topics, write reports, and make presentations on a specified materials removal topic.
Laboratory Outcomes
1. Utilize the thermodynamic process equipment, similar to small industrial settings.
2. Identify the importance and need for safety and awareness in thermal processes.
3. Recognize the advantages and limitations of various thermal cycles through hands-on experimentation.
4. Develop a better understanding of the concepts presented in lecture through hands-on experimentation.
5. Provide accurate measurements using basic metrology equipment.
6. Utilize basic metrology equipment to collect and analyze data on measurements.
7. Identify the importance of and need for safety at all times while in the presence of thermal equipment.
8. Present data in a concise, readable, and professional format.
9. Work with equipment in a team environment for the completion of laboratory projects.
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| MET 40000 - Mechanical Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and practice in mechanical design are presented. Modern design methodologies will be studied. The integrative methods discussed in this course reflect the current industry trend to perform product design and development in cross-functional teams. Emphasis is on multiple open-ended projects. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the techniques and philosophies used in the modern industrial design process.
2. Prepare a conceptual design that is based upon defining a real need, conceptualizing ideas, developing these ideas into feasible configurations, evaluating the competing solutions, and then finalizing the detail design.
3. Develop and test a physical prototype or conduct a performance evaluation using a simulated model.
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| MET 41100 - Introduction To The Finite Element Method |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The finite element method is introduced, with emphasis on modeling and interpretation of results. Linear static problems are solved using commercial FEA software, and FEA results are verified through laboratory tests and/or theoretical calculations. Topics include trusses, frames, plane stress/strain, torsion, 3D structures, buckling, and natural frequency/mode shape analyses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Select and use the appropriate element type in the construction of FEA models for linear static, buckling, and frequency and mode shape analyses.
2. Demonstrate knowledge of meshing, symmetry, and the application of loads and constraints in the construction of FEA models.
3. Understand and demonstrate the use of mechanical testing, analytical calculation, and verification problems as a check on FEA solution accuracy.
4. Perform and open-ended design problem involving the application of FEA in a linear static or thermal problem.
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| MET 41400 - Design Of Mechanical Projects |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of the fundamental principles of mechanical, hydraulic, and electrical technology to the design of mechanical systems. Discussion of the design process and continuation of topics in the design of machine elements. A semester design project is required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
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| MET 42000 - Machine Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design of moving machinery in complex electro-mechanical systems. Several projects will be completed that include mechanical design and control design to obtain the desired specifications. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| MET 42100 - Air Conditioning And Refrigeration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Heat gains and losses, heat-producing equipment, cooling, and refrigeration equipment are studied. System design is presented, including controls and instrumentation for commercial, industrial, and residential systems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Recognize and explain the operation of common refrigeration and air conditioning equipment.
2. Evaluate the performance of refrigeration and air conditioning equipment.
3. Use appropriate instrumentation for accurate measurements of HVAC&R equipment performance.
4. Identify equipment, operating strategies, or management practices that encourage energy conservation and sustainable buildings.
5. Apply standard industry practices to the design of HVAC&R systems.
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| MET 42200 - Power Plants And Energy Conversion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The theories and skills learned from prerequisite coursework are applied to the analysis and design of power plants and their systems and to selected technologies of energy conversion. Industrial procedures and methods are emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify the efficiency of power cycles.
2. Detect and locate major components in power generation circuits and renewable power generating systems.
3. Evaluate turbines and cooling water systems.
4. Identify various types of fuel available in the utility industry and renewable energy sources.
5. Describe typical power plant pollutants.
6. Identify current technologies and policies that impact the development of new power plants.
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| MET 42300 - Advanced Computer-Aided Modeling and Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced Computer-Aided Modeling and Design (CAMD) including parametric solid modeling; modeling for manufacture, assembly, analysis and prototypes; implementation of design and animation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MET 42400 - Green Processes And Sustainability |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Green manufacturing and sustainability concepts are covered, including topics such as environmental regulations, recycle/reduce/reuse, energy reduction, and environmental management systems. Elucidating methodologies and strategies normally considered when creating strong sustainability programs in various industries receive special emphasis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate awareness of environmental health and safety regulations such as use of pollutant emission factors in the permit process.
2. Identify the major sources of environmental pollution, waste streams, and receptors.
3. Understand the use of various waste and energy-use minimization models.
4. Determine effective and efficient use of methods that enhance the probability of success in sustainability.
|
| MET 42600 - Internal Combustion Engines |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course deals with the fundamentals of internal combustion engines, with emphasis on performance, efficiency, and emissions. A comprehensive review of engine/vehicle operating systems is conducted. Related topics such as turbocharging, fuel oxygenates, lubrication, and computerized engine management are presented. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MET 42800 - Advanced CAD For Mechanical Design And Drafting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Mechanical and geometric modeling of complex surfaces, with manufacturing emphasis using wire-frame and shaded imaging techniques. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MET 43200 - Hydraulic Motion Control Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Hydraulic feedback motion control systems, types, and applications are studied. Simulation and performance of closed loop control systems with single and multiple signal paths are emphasized. Dynamic system performance is predicted and evaluated. System parameters including accuracy, response speed, fluid compressibility effects, load disturbances, and nonlinear behavior of the components are studied. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MET 43600 - Pneumatic Motion Control Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The application of pneumatic motion control systems to industrial motion control and robotics is studied. Circuit design with control logic of both fluid and electronic types is stressed, as applied to pneumatic point-to-point and proportional controls. Control designs are implemented, tested, and evaluated in the laboratory. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MET 44000 - Advanced CNC Machining |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced CNC Machining is a continuation of the basic machining and introductory CAD courses. Students learn additional concepts for manufacturing metal and plastic parts by developing CAD drawings, translating these drawings into CNC code, producing parts on a CNC lathe and a CNC machining center, and analyzing the process and results. Shop safety and preventative maintenance are also emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Knowledge of metal cutting, such as chip formation, cutting forces, power, and temperature.
2. Knowledge of fundamental concepts in machining such as tool selection and set-up, material machinability, and cutting fluids.
3. Knowledge of advanced machining concepts of processes (such as turning and milling) and equipment.
4. Knowledge of Computer Numerical Control.
5. The ability to take a project from concept to finished product.
6. The ability to maintain and service CNC machinery.
|
| MET 44200 - Plastics Manufacturing Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic control theory, heat transfer, machine design principles, and basic polymer science are applied to analysis and design of polymer manufacturing systems. Emphasis is placed on thermoplastics processes such as extrusion and injection molding. Projects include design of new machinery, major renovations of existing processes, and automation of processes. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MET 44301 - Joining Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics cover joining technologies such as fastening, welding, brazing/soldering, adhesive, and diffusion bonding processes of metals, ceramics, plastics, and composites. The materials, processes, destructive and non-destructive evaluation, and design aspects of these technologies as well as current production practices will be presented. Emphasis will be placed on identification and optimization of key processing parameters. Students will be exposed to commonly used technologies, equipment, and methods for joint design, formation, testing, and optimization to better understand key parameters and process variables, and their influence on optimum joint designs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the operating principles, advantages and limitations of commonly used joining processes, including application to optimize joint design.
2. Develop a solid understanding of the response of materials to joining processes and joint functionality.
3. Identify the key parameters of major joining processes and their optimization in various production and product design scenarios.
4. Apply common techniques for quality measurement and control to joining processes.
5. Recommend changes to product and/or process design for more efficient manufacturing.
|
| MET 44400 - Applied Metallurgy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Metals used in common engineering applications are studied to determine how their properties are achieved. Photomicrographic and other methods are employed to investigate the alloying, hotworking, coldworking, and heat treating processes of these metals. Detection, identification, and diagnosis of metal failure are included. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MET 44600 - Micro And Nano Manufacturing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Nanomanufacturing, silicon micromachining and fabrication, laser materials processing of microstructures, abrasive micromachining, mechanical micromaching, micro-scale rapid prototyping and sintering are introduced. Emphasis is on developing an understanding of how MEMS and non-electronic micro/nano devices are manufactured. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MET 45100 - Manufacturing Quality Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (MFET 45100) Quality control practices used in manufacturing industries; management, statistical control charts, reliability, sampling plans, economics, computer methods, and test equipment are presented and applied. Credit will not be granted for both MET 45100 and MFET 45100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MET 46000 - Design for "X" |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of methods and techniques used in engineering, combined with statistical methods to develop quality, customer driven product development. The course will include topics in Design for Six Sigma, Design for Manufacturability, Design for Serviceability and product life cycles. The course will require students to work in teams. 3D solid modeling will be used to generate ideas and complete product development. Course projects will be taken from industry recognized student design competitions. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| MET 46100 - Computer Integrated Design And Manufacturing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A combination of lecture and laboratory projects demonstrating the integration of all phases of a product's life cycle from conception through recycling. Laboratory projects include designing parts, graphical finite element analysis, rapid phototyping, computer controlled manufacturing, and testing all using a common, three dimensional graphical database. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| MET 46500 - Advanced Topics In Computer-Aided Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This covers solid modeling and animation. These topics are built upon a foundation in computer modeling or CAD to produce photo realistic images as used in technical presentations, video, or film. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| MET 47200 - Vehicle Dynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (MSTE 47200) This course will discuss the mechanical dynamics and aerodynamics of competition vehicles with an emphasis on performance necessary in the Motorsport Industry. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MET 47500 - Industrial Practice V |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Cooperative education students practice in industry and provide written reports of this practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MET 48200 - Mechatronics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers fundamental concepts and applications of practical mechatronics. Emphasis is placed on product design and systems integration. The course involves the functional relationships between mechanical structure, sensor data, precision actuators, power resources, embedded microcontrollers, control logic, and drives. Basic concepts in mechatronics and common elements of mechatronic systems are introduced, supported by hands-on experience with components and measurement equipment used in the design of mechatronic products. A final team-based project applies this knowledge and skill to design and build a mechatronics system. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the design and operation of mechatronics.
2. Demonstrate input/output characteristics of microcontroller and its interfacing.
3. Create a mechatronic system solution to a given problem.
4. Understand and explain programming and interfacing issues involved in the design of mechatronic system.
|
| MET 48600 - Fundamentals Of Motorsports |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental principles used in motorsports, with emphasis on applications involving high performance auto racing vehicles are presented. Primary course focus is in the areas of vehicle aerodynamics, racing engine performance, vehicle dynamics, race data acquisition and analysis, and in a general introduction to the broad range of technical challenges featured in the racing industry. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MET 48700 - Instrumentation And Automatic Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Instrumentation for pressure, temperature, velocity, rpm, strain, force, displacement, acceleration, counting and sound will be studied. Automatic control will be studied covering topics of on-off and proportional control, programmable controllers and computer control. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MET 49000 - Special Topics In MET |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Group instruction in new or specialty areas of mechanical engineering technology is provided by MET faculty, subject to MET curriculum subcommittee approval. Hours, subject matter, and credit to be arranged by faculty. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| MET 49100 - Applied Metallurgy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of ferrous and nonferrous metals and alloys. Includes atomic structure, bonding, and arrangements of atoms; phase diagrams; reactions within solid materials; and the interrelation of these to show how structure determines the properties of a material. Not open to students who have credit in MET 250.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MET 49400 - Senior Design And Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will focus on mechanical design; finite element analysis; environmental concerns; and/or ethical challenges. Technical reports will be written and one will involve an oral presentation. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| MET 49500 - Senior Project Survey |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will select several design projects and give written or oral reports on their proposed solutions. They will be encouraged to select and finalize one project proposal in preparation for MET 49700. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
|
| MET 49700 - Senior Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Directed work on individual projects for senior mechanical engineering technology students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MET 49900 - Mechanical Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Independent project or study of a special topic is conducted under the supervision of appropriate MET faculty. Hours and subject matter must be arranged with the instructor and approved by the MET curriculum subcommittee before enrolling in the course. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| MET 50300 - Applied Optimization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will introduce technology graduate students and senior undergraduates to the basic concepts of optimization methods with particular emphasis on applications in product and process design. Unconstrained nonlinear problems will be presented and solved using steepest descent and conjugate directions. Constrained problems will be solved using exterior penalty functions. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Recognize optimization problems and cast them in standard form.
2. Correctly identify objective functions and constraints.
3. Use commercial software to solve formal optimization problems.
4. Correctly identify global and local optimum solutions.
5. Use basic calculus concepts to calculate design sensitivities.
6. Understand the geometric concept of design space and be able to plot design space for a constrained problem with two design variables.
|
| MET 50700 - Organizational Environmental Quality |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The principles of organizational environmental quality characterization, regulatory management, and engineering control will be covered. The health effects realized by significant exposures to potential indoor and outdoor organizational environmental pollutants from all media types (water, soil, air, artifact) will be elucidated. A special emphasis will be placed on how to develop a sound foundation for designing appropriate engineering control technologies such as ventilation and filtration. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Determine the applicable environmental regulations to ensure site regulatory compliance.
2. Identify the major sources of indoor and outdoor pollution.
3. Manipulate normal and lognormal probability distribution functions.
4. Set up and solve energy and mass balance equations for different environments.
5. Estimate pollutant emission factors.
6. Determine the appropriate engineering control technologies to use in particular scenarios.
7. Properly use the commercially available environmental, health and safety sampling and monitoring instrumentation for site characterization.
8. Design and analyze the appropriate control technologies for reducing pollutant concentrations.
|
| MET 52700 - Technology From A Global Perspective |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the challenges faced by the practicing technologist when working and interacting with international technical personnel, both here and abroad, including history, standards, education, and practice of technology outside the United States. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Awareness and comprehension of cross-cultural factors necessary for international professional practice in technology.
2. Effective research strategies that access what is known about technology development, usage and impact from a global perspective.
3. Knowledge and skill in researching and reporting cultural factors affecting business practices in a variety of independent nation states.
4. Knowledge of procedures, regulations and practices regarding international business.
5. Research skills to identify the natural and technology resources of countries.
6. An ability to contrast the impact of technology infrastructure and use of technology in developed countries to what occurs in underdeveloped countries.
7. Knowledge of the concept and application of “Appropriate Technology”.
8. Knowledge of the historical development of technology in various modern nations.
9. Informed judgments regarding the influences of cultural and political environments of countries and their technological development.
10. Awareness of the major changes related to current and/or emerging technology in the leading industrial nations of the world.
11. Understanding of the methodologies employed for the effective introduction of technologies into new country or cultural settings.
12. Knowledge of selected International Technology Standards and organizations.
|
| MET 53000 - Facilities Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the application of the engineering sciences and technology to the solution of problems associated with mechanical and electrical systems in buildings. Emphasizes commercial and industrial facilities. Identifying energy conservation measures for both mechanical and electrical systems and evaluating their economic impact are an important focus of the course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MET 53300 - Nanotechnology And Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an insight to the underlying principles and applications of this emerging field of Nanotechnology. Participants will be introduced to the scientific principles and theory of nanoscale dimension and discusses the current and future Nanotechnology applications and research in different fields. Graduate student status or senior status with instructor approval. Graduate students with insufficient background may be required to take leveling courses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate a working knowledge of nanotechnology applications in industry.
2. Understand and explain nanoscale dimension and nanoscale models.
3. Apply multidisciplinary concepts to the nanotechnology field.
4. Analyze societal implications of nanoscale science, engineering and technology.
5. Identify with the trends of current research in nanotechnology.
|
| MET 53500 - Optimization Of Metalcasting Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course focuses on optimal design of metalcastings to fit structural requirements (applied loads) and to assure sound manufacturability (castability). Students are expected to learn the general principles of design optimization through hands-on laboratory exercises based on the application of finite element and computational fluid dynamics software. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MET 54600 - Industrial Applications Of Computer Integrated Manufacturing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the development of CIM (computer integrated manufacturing) from the application of basic automation to a fully integrated system for the operation of the business enterprise. Emphasis is placed on the technology, systems, and human resources, which are integrated to accomplish the objectives of the company. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MET 54900 - Micro And Nanomachining |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Micro and nanomachining introduces technology students of many disciplines to discover how machining processes enable the development of MEMS and NEMS products and services. The focus of this course is to develop an understanding of machining processes at the micro and nanoscales. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify the use of micro and nanomachining processes.
2. Use micro and nanomachining processes through the utilization of small scale machine tools.
3. Apply micro and nanomachining processes to solve product manufacturing problems.
4. Provide feedback to improve existing micro and nanomachining processes through the use of computational design software, experimental manufacturing designs, and through the application of known case studies.
5. Understand how case studies can be used to transfer technology to existing and new products and to justify using cost-benefit analyses.
6. Design, develop, innovated and invent new micro and nanomachining procedures and products.
|
| MET 58100 - Workshop In Mechanical Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. Advanced study of technical and professional topics. Emphasis is on new developments relating to technical, operational, and training aspects of industry and technology education. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MET 59000 - Special Problems In Mechanical Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Independent study of a special problem under the guidance of a member of the staff. Does not substitute for either M.S. thesis or M.S. project credit. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MET 59800 - Directed MS Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A formal investigation of a particular problem under the guidance of the advisory committee. Not applicable to a thesis option plan of study. Enrollment during at least two consecutive terms for a total of three credits is required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MET 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: School of Engineering Tech
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MET C1980 - Cooperative Education Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's academic program and intended career with a business, industry, or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the practice is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MET C2980 - Cooperative Education Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's academic program and intended career with a business, industry, or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the practice is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MET C3980 - Cooperative Education Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's academic program and intended career with a business, industry, or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the practice is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MET E2980 - Employment Enrichment Experience II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full or part-time, related employment enrichment experiences designed to enhance the student's academic program and intended career with a business, industry, or government agency. A comprehensive written report on the enrichment experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MET I1980 - Career Enrichment Internship I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's readiness for entering an initial or a second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MET I2980 - Career Enrichment Internship II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's readiness for entering an initial or a second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Internship, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MET I3980 - Career Enrichment Internship III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's readiness for entering an initial or a second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MET I4960 - Career Enrichment Internship IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's readiness for entering an initial or a second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MET I4980 - Career Enrichment Internship V |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's readiness for entering an initial or a second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MFET 10000 - Introduction To Computer Integrated Manufacturing Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Required. Manufacturing practices and the various issues related to the application of computer integrated manufacturing will be explored. Key areas of discussion will include the definition of CIM, the CIMT plan of study, and industrial case studies related to CIM implementation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MFET 22300 - Introduction To Cadd I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to computer-aided drafting and design (CADD) with hands-on experience using an interactive computer
graphics system. Generation of 3-D computer models and preparation of working drawings including dimensioning. Not open to students who have credit in MET 204.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MFET 22400 - Production Planning And Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Preproduction consideration of the most economical methods, operations, and materials for the manufacture of a product. Includes planning, scheduling, routing, and detailing of production control procedures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MFET 24300 - Automated Manufacturing I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The application of industrial control components (relays, motor starters, etc.) and programmable logic controllers (PLCs) in both discrete and continuous automated manufacturing environments. The theory of operation and selection of common industrial control components is explored. Students learn to design, program, and troubleshoot PLC systems. An introduction to closed loop control systems is included. Typically offered Spring Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Mechanical Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| MFET 24400 - Automated Manufacturing II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Shop floor components of computer-integrated manufacturing are introduced. Emphasis is focused on current applications and programming practices of various computer automated manufacturing processes and technologies. Topics include: CAD/CAM integration, computer-assisted numerical control programming, computer-assisted quality control, and automatic identification. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Mechanical Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| MFET 24500 - CAD Tool And Fixture Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Tool design methods; tooling materials and heat treatment; design of cutting tools; gage design; design of jigs and fixtures; design of tools for CNC machines; tool design using CAD systems. Tool design term projects using CAD systems required. Not open to students who have credit in MET 245. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MFET 24600 - High Performance Manufacturing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Manufacturing operations with an emphasis on the elimination of waste throughout the enterprise are the focus of this course. Topics include just-in-time manufacturing, lean production, formal planning and control systems, product data management and advanced manufacturing systems. Discrete manufacturing and process industry examples are considered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Mechanical Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MFET 24800 - Automated Manufacturing III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Industrial robots and general motion control systems as they apply to the automated manufacturing environment are addressed. Topics include: robot classifications and programming, end-of-arm tooling, operation simulation, safety considerations, and robot vision systems and sensors. Students are introduced to general motion control through the application of stepper motor technology, servo motor technology, and feedback devices.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Mechanical Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MFET 26000 - Robotics And Automated Material Handling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the types of industrial robots and their applications in manufacturing. Safety, application limitations, and economic justification will be considered. Automated material-handling equipment will be reviewed. Laboratory exercises will involve programming an educational robot using a teach pendant and microcomputers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MFET 29000 - Special Topics In Manufacturing Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Hours, subject matter, and credit to be arranged by faculty. Group instruction in new or specialty areas of Manufacturing Engineering Technology is provided by Technology faculty, subject to MFET curriculum subcommittee approval. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Mechanical Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| MFET 29900 - Manufacturing Engineering Technology Independent Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Hours and subject matter to be arranged by instructor and approved by the MFET curriculum committee. Primarily for third- and fourth-semester students with special interests. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Mechanical Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| MFET 30000 - Applications Of Automation In Manufacturing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic introduction to automation applications in manufacturing and the impact of computer-based systems on a manufacturing company. Coverage includes practices and the various issues related to the application of computer-integrated manufacturing. Emphasis placed on CAD, CAM, CNC, robotics, industrial control elements, PLCs, and computer-based process controls. Does not carry credit toward graduation in MFET. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Mechanical Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe basic elements of an automated manufacturing system.
2. Select appropriate software to accomplish a designed manufacturing task.
|
| MFET 31000 - Plant Layout And Material Handling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study and analysis of material flow in a manufacturing facility; material-handling equipment; plant layout principles for manufacturing service, storage, and office areas; and industrial packaging techniques. Emphasis is on application to manufacturing problems. Not open to students who have credit in IET 310. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MFET 34200 - Advanced Manufacturing Processes And Practices |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will address advanced manufacturing processes and practices. Topics include: the impact of product manufacturability upon manufacturing operations, concurrent engineering, rapid prototyping, nontraditional manufacturing processes, and design specifications for manufacturing tooling and machinery. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Mechanical Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Analyze a design for manufacturability.
2. Develop specifications for manufacturing tooling.
|
| MFET 34400 - Automated Manufacturing Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Shop floor components of computer-integrated manufacturing are explored. Emphasis is focused on current applications and programming practices of various computer automated manufacturing processes and technologies. Topics include CAD/CAM integration, computer-assisted numerical control programming for 2 ½ and 3 axis contouring, and CNC program verification. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Mechanical Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Effectively use integrated CAD/CAM tools in the successful manufacture of a product.
2. Program and execute CNC programs on a multi-axis milling machine or lathe.
|
| MFET 34500 - Automated Manufacturing Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of automatic turning machines, machining centers, punching machines, and transfer machines.
Machining processes such as laser beam machining, water jet cutting, electric discharge machining, electrochemical machining, plasma arc machining, etc.
. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MFET 34800 - Industrial Robotics And Motion Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Industrial robots and general motion control systems will be studied. Topics include: robot classifications and programming, end-of-arm tooling, operation simulation, safety considerations, robot vision systems and sensors. Students are introduced to general motion control through the application of stepper motor technology, servo motor technology, and feedback devices. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Mechanical Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Effectively develop a functional working program for an industrial robot.
2. Design and integrate a small manufacturing cell that uses a robot and at least one peripheral device.
|
| MFET 36000 - CIM In Electronics Manufacturing |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course covers the manufacture and assembly of electronic printed circuit boards from component selection and board layout to soldering and test. Special emphasis is placed on high volume manufacturing techniques and state-of-the-art processes, such as surface mount technology (SMT). Laboratory projects include CAD circuit board layout, using automatic placement and soldering equipment, investigating thermal characteristics of circuit boards, process design, and evaluation using SPC techniques. Effects of manufacturing processes on electrical characteristics are considered. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MFET 36500 - Robotics Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. CIMT 475, EET 302. Survey of various industrial applications for robots. Study of various types of robots and different
drive systems. Survey of various control systems and control languages. The laboratory part of the course will include programming and application of robots. Concepts of robotics use in computer integrated manufacturing (CIM)
and flexible manufacturing systems (FMS) will be introduced.
. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MFET 37400 - Manufacturing Integration I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The fundamentals of data communications and local area networks are taught in order to show students how to integrate modern manufacturing systems. Emphasis is on the various levels of communications between shop floor computers, PLCs, robots, and automatic identification equipment. Database technology is used as an integration tool. This course prepares students for the MFET capstone course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Mechanical Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Achieve communications between various types of controls and devices.
2. Interface various peripheral manufacturing devices using networking and serial communications.
|
| MFET 40000 - Computer Integrated Manufacturing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will study the technology associated with computer integrated manufacturing (CIM). Conventional manufacturing technologies and methods will be introduced, followed by computer automation and CIM. The course will include computer-aided design (CAD), automated manufacturing processes, integrated manufacturing processes, integrated manufacturing systems, and other related topics. Does not carry credit toward graduation in MET/CIMT. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Mechanical Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| MFET 42300 - Advanced Cadd II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced computer-aided drafting and design including three-dimensional constructions, using wireframe models, surface models, and solid models. Design analysis is included. Not open to students who have credit in MET 206, MET 304.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MFET 44600 - Advanced Manufacturing Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application and implementation of formal control systems for production and inventory control, advanced manufacturing planning, operations management, and related topics. Topics will include advanced software applications and the integration of planning and control systems for manufacturing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Mechanical Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Design effective material and information flows for manufacturing.
2. Implement effective material and information flows for manufacturing.
|
| MFET 44800 - Integrated Materials Handling And Facilities Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Integrated materials-handling systems and a systematic approach to facilities planning are introduced. Course topics will include automatic identification, common material handling equipment used in manufacturing, and simulation of material flows. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Mechanical Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate facilities planning on using a systematic approach.
2. Show how to integrate handling of materials into a production system.
|
| MFET 45100 - Manufacturing Quality Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (MET 45100) Quality control practices used in manufacturing industries; management, statistical control charts, reliability, sampling plans, economics, computer methods, and test equipment are presented and applied. Credit will not be granted for both MET 45100 and MFET 45100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Mechanical Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MFET 46000 - Motion And Time Study |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Techniques of motion and time study, process charts, operation charts, multiple activity charts, micromotion study, therbligs, and stopwatch time study. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MFET 46500 - Computer Aided Manufacturing Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Comprehensive technical survey of the important topics in production automation and related systems. These topics include flow line production, material handling, group technology, flexible manufacturing systems, automated inspection, process control, and computer integrated manufacturing. Laboratory gives students an opportunity to design, build, and apply automated manufacturing systems.
. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MFET 47400 - Manufacturing Integration II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of sensors, data acquisition systems, and the fundamentals of control system technology and theory of operation, including common industrial sensors. Interfacing of various sensors to data acquisition systems and collection and monitoring of process data using data acquisition systems. Open loop and closed loop control system fundamentals are addressed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Mechanical Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| MFET 47500 - Advanced Manufacturing Networks |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced topics in data communications and local area networks (LANs) are examined in the context of a fully integrated modern manufacturing facility. Topics include data communications hardware, LAN topologies, media, medium access control, common network protocols, and internetworking. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Mechanical Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| MFET 48000 - Project Planning For Integration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is the first of two courses that complete the capstone requirement. The course focus is on the project planning, system design and management activities necessary for the implementation of a successful manufacturing integration project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Mechanical Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MFET 48100 - Integration Of Manufacturing Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This capstone course emphasizes the integration of manufacturing activities into a complete system. The course brings together elements of prior courses including: production processes, planning systems, system integration, and manufacturing controls. Primary course activities are centered around a semester-long team project. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Mechanical Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Work effectively with a process development team.
2. Integrate manufacturing activities to develop and produce a product using an integrated manufacturing system.
|
| MFET 49000 - Special Topics In Manufacturing Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Hours, subject matter, and credit to be arranged by faculty. Group instruction in new or specialty areas of Manufacturing Engineering Technology is provided by Technology faculty, subject to MFET curriculum subcommittee approval. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Mechanical Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| MFET 49900 - Manufacturing Engineering Technology Independent Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Hours and subject matter to be arranged by instructor and approved by MFET curriculum committee. Primarily for seventh- and eighth-semester students with special interests. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Mechanical Engineering Tech
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| MGEN G7880 - Next Generation Sequencing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Next Generation Sequencing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MGEN Q5800 - Basic Human Genetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the genetics of human traits and heritable diseases. Emphasis will be on general aspects of eukaryote genetics as it applies to humans, but some prokaryote genetics will be included for comparison.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| MGEN Q6300 - Population Genetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic probability and Bayes theorem, as applied to genetic counseling. Effects of mutation and selection on the survival of alleles in a population; consequences of consanguinity and inbreeding; methods of analysis including segregation and linkage including nonparametric methds; quanittaive genetics such as twiin studies and heritability. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| MGEN Q6400 - Special Topics In Human Genetics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Required of pre-doctoral students to discuss advanced topics/literature, problem-based learning, and helpful skills as they advance through the PhD program (grant writing, examination preparation, etc.). Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| MGEN Q8000 - Medical Genetics Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.0 to 16.0. Medical Genetics Research
1.000 TO 16.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Research
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| MGMT 10000 - Management Lectures I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An introduction to and survey of the field of management. Exposure to the different functional areas of management will be stressed. Focus will be on the individual development of the student in regard not only to future professional employment but also to his or her educational planning. Required for freshman mangement students. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 17500 - Information Strategies For Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Designed to build and sharpen students' information-gathering skills. Guides students in developing systematic methods for finding, evaluating, and presenting information. Organization and use of electronic and print tools will be explained through discussion, hands-on exercises, and homework assignments. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, GTC-Information Literacy, UC-Information Literacy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Ability to access information and determine what different sources are needed for problem solving.
2. Develop a foundation in problem-solving to use discovered information effectively and efficiently.
3. Develop a knowledge base into the full array of information available (scholarly articles, market reports, quality websites, and other types of information).
4. Prioritize sources based on credibility and relevance.
5. Accurately cite the information you find.
6. Use retrieved information to accomplish a specific purpose and present information clearly and persuasively using a range of technology tools and media.
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| MGMT 19000 - Freshman Level Problems In Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Investigation into a specific topic area of Management. Arrange with instructor before enrolling. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MGMT 19100 - Cooperative Work Experience I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in business or other institutions. Admission to the cooperative program of education is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Coop, Credit By Exam, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 19200 - Cooperative Work Experience II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in business or other institutions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Coop, Credit By Exam, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 19300 - Cooperative Work Experience III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in business or other institutions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Coop, Credit By Exam, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 19400 - Cooperative Work Experience IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in business or other institutions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Coop, Credit By Exam, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MGMT 19500 - Cooperative Work Experience V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in business or other institutions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Coop, Credit By Exam, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 20000 - Introductory Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The objectives of the course are to help students: (1) understand what is in financial statements and what the statements say about a business, (2) identify the business activities that caused the amounts that appear in the statements, and (3) understand how, when, and at what amount the effects of manager and employee actions will appear in the statements. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:IPO 1801 Accounting I
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MGMT 20010 - Business Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The two primary objectives are to teach the skills to produce financial information-to send the relevant signals to decision makers; and to teach the skills to interpret the financial report-to receive the signals. To meet these objectives the students will gain an understanding of the reasoning behind the processes used to record financial information and the manner in which it is reported to external decision makers; gain an understanding of the four basic statements; and an understanding of the importance of financial statement information in interpreting the performance of organizations. (Not a prerequisite for MGMT 20100.)Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Teach basics of accounting to students as future business owners and employees.
2. Establish communications with accountants and financial advisors when entering the workkforce.
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| MGMT 20100 - Management Accounting I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to management's internal use of accounting information--for decision making, production management, product costing, motivating and evaluating performance, and budgeting. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. To understand how managerial accounting and financial accounting differ and the role of managerial accounting in costing a company’s products or services.
2. To understand how accounting information is used to make decisions for the firm, improving its operational efficiency and increasing its profits.
3. To understand how accounting information can be used to evaluate the performance of managers at all levels of an organization.
4. To understand concepts, and not rely on memorization, so that one can use the topics/information in new situations, in other courses and in one’s professional career.
|
| MGMT 24200 - Contemporary Problems In Personal Finance For Minorities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to allow students to make informed decisions regarding their current and future financial position. Utilizing basic tools such as financial statements and budgets, the students can learn how to plan effectively for continuous financial stability. Students also are able to acquire a basic understanding of different saving instruments, investments, and retirement planning methods, as well as the benefits of purchasing real assets and accumulating wealth to allow stability. Students also have the opportunity to explore other interesting topics of personal finance through presentations and voluntary participation in class discussion. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 24300 - Contemporary Thought Of Minorities In Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The basic goal of this course is to introduce the minority student to the vast opportunities that are available in the field of management. The logic of a business education for the minority student is a reflection of the phenomenon that many corporations today are actively seeking minorities for managerial positions. Each semester, approximately 15 Fortune 500 companies are invited to the class to give presentations about entry-level opportunities with their firms. Other topics include the interview, resume writing, dual-career couples, the work force, affirmative action, minorities in the corporate world, etc. Each student is required to give a class presentation covering a business area of interest followed by class discussion over the topic. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 28500 - Knowledge Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Practical, hands-on introduction to the major techniques of computer-based knowledge management including: text management, data base management, ad hoc inquiry, forms management, customized report generation, business graphics, spreadsheet analysis, and programming. These are examined from the standpoint of how they can be personally used by managers to solve typical problems. All are presented and illustrated within a unified conceptual framework and particular emphasis is given to the integration of techniques. The four major interface approaches are introduced. Students are also acquainted with the topics of business expert systems and remote communications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 29000 - Problems In Management |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 4.00. Arrange with instructor before enrolling. Investigation in a specific management field. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MGMT 30100 - Management Career Lectures |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Workshops and lectures involving students in the decision-making process for career planning. Visiting executives discuss career opportunities in their fields. Emphasis is on future academic planning, exploring careers, search strategy, interviewing, career progression, and other career and academic issues. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 30400 - Introduction To Financial Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory course providing a foundation in corporate finance and covering topics such as: discounted cash flow valuation, bond valuation, equity valuation, option valuation, factors influencing a firm’s cost of capital, and international finance issues. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Provide non-School of Management majors with a foundation in corporate finance.
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| MGMT 30500 - Business Statistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to business statistics as related to facilitating managerial decision making. Topics include descriptive statistics, probability models, estimation, hypothesis testing, and regression analysis. Students use software to do their own analyses. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn about business statistics as they relate to facilitating managerial decision making, through topics such as descriptive statistics, probability models, estimation, hypothesis testing, and regression analysis.
|
| MGMT 30600 - Management Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Use of optimization, simulation, and decision theory models to support management decision making. Emphasis on modeling and interpreting results for managerial applications of linear and integer programming models, network problems, simulation models, and decision analysis. Computer applications are stressed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn management decision making through optimization, simulation, and decision theory models, by modeling and interpreting results for managerial applications of linear and integer programming models, network problems, simulation models, and decision analysis.
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| MGMT 31000 - Financial Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Management of the financial affairs of the industrial enterprise. Working capital management, current asset management, capital budgeting, stock and bond valuation, and capital structure decisions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn about the management of financial affairs of the industrial enterprise, including working capital management, current asset management, capital budgeting, stock and bond valuation, and capital structure decisions.
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| MGMT 32300 - Introduction To Market Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This mixed lecture and case course provides an overview of the functional area of marketing. The course is taught from a managerial perspective; it focuses on inputs to the marketing decision-making process, the process itself, and its results. No credit for students in the School of Management, except economics majors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn about the functional area of marketing through the managerial perspective.
2. Students will learn about the marketing-decision making process.
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| MGMT 32400 - Marketing Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The objectives of this course are to expose students to the problems commonly faced by marketing managers and to develop skills in analyzing marketing problems and preparing implementable plans of action based on analyses of given business situations. Cases and a marketing simulation are used to focus the discussion and to reinforce learning of key marketing concepts. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 35000 - Intermediate Accounting I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Financial reporting for interested external parties. Emphasis on asset valuation, income measurement, and preparation of financial statements, and on appreciation of discretion available to preparers. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 35100 - Intermediate Accounting II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of Intermediate Accounting I. An examination of additional problems in financial reporting, including long-term assets, liabilities, owners' equity, income taxes, earnings per share, leases, and pensions. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn about the additional problems in financial reporting through the study of long-term assets, liabilities, owners’ equity, income taxes, earnings per share, leases and pensions.
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| MGMT 35400 - Legal Foundations Of Business I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination and study, for management students, of the nature and place of law in our society, both national and international, the social and moral bases of law enactment, regulation of business, legal liability, enforcement procedures, and the legal environment for managers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 36100 - Operations Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an understanding of the issues involved in designing and managing manufacturing and service systems. Topics include manufacturing strategy, quality management, inventory systems, aggregate planning, just-in-time manufacturing, and operations scheduling. Case studies and articles integrate these topics and highlight managerial implications. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Achieve depth of understanding and application of essential content in business functional areas.
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| MGMT 36500 - Logistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course analyses the elements of business logistics. the course will focus on the integration of real-time information technology to increase the effectiveness of production and distribution. Global competition and technology and channels of distribution will also be discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| MGMT 38199 - Professional Practice Co-Op I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The experience of participating in a Co-op.
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| MGMT 38200 - Management Information Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This case-oriented course is designed to familiarize students with existing and emerging technologies and their business applications. It also covers issues, problems, and opportunities that information systems (IS) executives and general managers face when managing IS resources in their organizations. Includes lectures, presentations, case analyses and discussions, and a World Wide Web project. Case discussions cover real situations and deal with the operational and strategic decisions that every IS manager has to make in managing and exploiting the available information technology. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn about existing and emerging technologies and their business applications.
2. Students will learn about issues, problems, and opportunities that information systems executives and general managers face through a variety of learning objectives, including lectures, case discussions, presentations, and projects.
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| MGMT 38299 - Professional Practice Co-Op II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Industrial Practice Fee is attached to this course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The experience of participating in a Co-op.
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| MGMT 38399 - Professional Practice Co-Op III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 or 1.00. Professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Industrial Practice Fee is attached to this course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The experience of participating in a Co-op.
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| MGMT 39000 - Junior Level Problems In Management |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 4.00. The Accounting Internship provides work experience in businesses or other institutions. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| MGMT 39010 - Accounting Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An Accounting, Economics, Industrial Management or Management related work experience. This internship experience is intended to complement the student's academic plan-of-study and help prepare him/her for his/her future role in Accounting, Economics, Industrial Management or Management. A letter from the prospective employer stating the period of employment, hours per week, job title, job qualifications, and job description may be requested before registration will be permitted. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MGMT 39020 - Management Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An Accounting, Economics, Industrial Management or Management related work experience. This internship experience is intended to complement the student's academic plan-of-study and help prepare him/her for his/her future role in Accounting, Economics, Industrial Management or Management. A letter from the prospective employer stating the period of employment, hours per week, job title, job qualifications, and job description may be requested before registration will be permitted. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MGMT 39030 - Industrial Management Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An Accounting, Economics, Industrial Management or Management related work experience. This internship experience is intended to complement the student's academic plan-of-study and help prepare him/her for his/her future role in Accounting, Economics, Industrial Management or Management. A letter from the prospective employer stating the period of employment, hours per week, job title, job qualifications, and job description may be requested before registration will be permitted. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MGMT 39040 - Economics Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An Accounting, Economics, Industrial Management or Management related work experience. This internship experience is intended to complement the student's academic plan-of-study and help prepare him/her for his/her future role in Accounting, Economics, Industrial Management or Management. A letter from the prospective employer stating the period of employment, hours per week, job title, job qualifications, and job description may be requested before registration will be permitted. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| MGMT 40100 - Krannert Executive Forum |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A lecture-discussion course featuring executives from business firms and other organizations. Emphasis is placed on the actual practice of management in corporate America, on career selection and mobility, on styles of management, and on other topics not normally covered in undergraduate courses. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
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| MGMT 40300 - Database Management Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive study of computer-based tools and methods for developing information systems for accounting and other managerial applications. The course concentrates on data base management techniques as the foundation for construction information systems. The coverage has a highly practical orientation. Specific topics include tool selection criteria, file management techniques, data base management concepts, comparative study of the major data models, schema design methodology, procedural and nonprocedural access languages, data security, data integrity, performance tuning, multiuser processing, and software integration. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 40500 - Six Sigma And Quality Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course is an undergraduate elective offered as part of the Center for Manufacturing Management Enterprises (CMME) quality initiatives. Provides an overview of various tools and methods for total quality management. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 41100 - Investment Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of investment alternatives relevant to the individual and/or family-unit investor. Operations of the markets in which securities are traded. Theory and application of security valuation, portfolio construction, capital markets, and performance evaluation. Particular attention given to fixed income securities, common stocks, options, investment companies, and other popular investment alternatives. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn about the investment alternatives relevant to the individual and/or family-unit investor by studying operations of the markets in which securities are traded, examining theory and application of security valuation, portfolio construction, capital markets, and performance evaluations.
2. Students will learn more in-depth information regarding fixed income securities, common stocks, options, investments companies, and other popular investment alternatives.
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| MGMT 41200 - Financial Markets And Institutions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to financial markets and management of financial institutions. Emphasis on determinants of interest rates, and measurement and management of financial risk. Concentration on management of depository firms such as banks and savings and loans. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be introduced to financial markets and management of financial institutions through learning about determinants of interest rates, and measurement and management of financial risk, with particular attention on management of depository firms such as banks and savings and loans.
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| MGMT 41300 - Advanced Corporate Financial Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course provides the theoretical and problem-solving tools needed in entry-level financial analysis positions in a corporate, commercial lending, or investment banking setting. Topics include corporate valuation, cash flow forecasting, project evaluation, capital structure, dividend policy, capital acquisition, and mergers/acquisition. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn the theoretical and problem-solving tools needed in entry-level financial analysis positions in a corporate, commercial lending or investment banking system through study of topics including corporate valuation, cash flow forecasting, project evaluation, capital structure, dividend policy, capital acquisition and mergers/acquisition.
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| MGMT 41500 - International Financial Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course explores financial decision making in an international framework from the perspective of the management of a multinational corporation. Topics covered include the international financial markets, the measurement and management of exchange risk and political risk, and the financial aspects of the decision to set up cross-border operations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn about financial decision making in an international framework from the perspective of the management of a multinational corporation through topics such as international financial markets, the measurement and management of exchange risk and political risk, and the financial aspects of the decision to set up cross-border operations.
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| MGMT 42300 - New Product Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides an overview of the new product development process. Detailed insights are provided in the "fuzzy front end" of this process. Targeting positioning, and product decisions are also covered. The second half of the course completes the marketing mix and covers various market testing and product launch issues. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 42500 - Marketing Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The purpose of this course is to develop skills in the planning and execution of market research studies designed to acquire useful information for marketing decisions. It aims to familiarize students with techniques of research design, data collection, and analysis. Emphasis is placed on evaluating the results obtained from such investigations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 44500 - Introduction To Investments And Portfolio Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to investments and portfolio management for non-management students. Covers characteristics of stock, bonds, portfolios, and financial markets. Includes introduction to interest rates and time value of money. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand financial markets and the types of securities available to investors.
2. Ability to calculate present values and interest rates.
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| MGMT 45100 - Strategic Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course focuses on understanding competitive forces and how organizations strive to build sustainable competitive advantages through business- and corporate-level strategies. It integrates and builds upon previous training in functional areas and presents new analytical tools for developing an understanding of the strategic decisions that determine future directions and effectiveness of the organization. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop effective written and oral communication skills.
2. Develop the leadership and teamwork skills to function effectively in a diverse, cross-functional environment.
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| MGMT 45200 - Manufacturing Strategy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the management challenges posed by the growth in worldwide manufacturing capabilities, markets, and competition and by rapid advances in technology and the concomitant decline in product life cycles. The manufacturing function is considered within a broader context encompassing design, engineering, purchasing, marketing, and customer service in an effort to assess the degree to which existing management structures successfully meet the challenges arising from the changing manufacturing environment. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 45300 - Labor And Employment Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the common law and statutory law affecting union-management relations, with emphasis on current labor legislation including such areas as the National Labor Relations Act and amendments, the Railway Labor Act, wage and hour legislation, workmen's compensation, unemployment compensation, Occupational Health and Safety Acts and social security laws. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 45500 - Legal Background For Business I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The nature and place of law in our society, national and international, social and moral bases of law enactment, regulation of business, legal liability, and enforcement procedures. Special emphasis on torts, contracts, and agency. No credit to students in the School of Management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn about the nature and place of law in our society, national and international, social and moral bases of law enactment, regulation of business, legal liability, and enforcement procedures.
2. Students will learn about torts, contracts and agency.
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| MGMT 45600 - Legal Foundations For Business II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of commercial law as prescribed by the Uniform Commercial Code, including the law of sales, documents of title, negotiable instruments, and the law relating to security interests. Additional material is presented covering the legal aspects of real estate transactions and personal property transfer. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 45700 - Legal Background For Business II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course content same as MGMT 456. No credit for students in the School of Management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 45800 - The Regulatory Process, Consumerism, And Public Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A legal analysis of the administrative process and regulatory agencies as they influence business decisions. Included will be a discussion of (1) concepts of the regulatory process from legal, economic, and social aspects; (2) administrative agencies and regulatory process; (3) legal and social implications of consumerism movement; and (4) impact of antitrust legislation on business decisions and conduct. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 45900 - International Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the challenges top managers face in developing strategies and management policies in multinational corporations (MNCs). Major topics usually covered include foreign market entry strategies, motivations and organizational challenges of internationalization, analyzing global industries, managing MNC/host government relations, building competitive advantage in global industries, international alliances and acquisitions, structuring and controlling MNCs, risk management, and the country manager role. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 46100 - Management Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course concerned with the management of production, distribution, and service system operations. The topics covered include facilities planning, job design, materials control, work foce planning, and product quality. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 46200 - Advanced Manufacturing Planning And Control Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intensive individual computer lab supplements lectures examining the role of computerized information and control systems in manufacturing. An elaborate series of case studies, enlivened by advanced computer simulations, bring together production planning, master scheduling, materials planning, short-range capacity planning, production floor execution, and quality control. Students plan and execute the production and purchasing of all parts, aided by an integrated MRP/capacity planning/shop-floor control system built into the computer simulation. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn the details of production planning, master scheduling, materials planning, short range capacity planning, production floor execution, and quality control.
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| MGMT 47000 - Transport Management I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic concepts and models for the transporting and distributing function. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 47100 - Transport Management II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of the trends in modern management to transportation, with emphasis on effective coordination and control. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 48000 - Elements Industrial Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analytical treatment of basic problems of general management in industrial organizations, combining lectures, case studies, and readings and building on earlier course work in economics, quanitative methods, industrial relations, and general management. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 48100 - Contemporary Management Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A lecture-discussion course which features presentations by outstanding business and government executives. Emphasis is placed on the basic problems faced by contemporary senior management and their effects upon the organization. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 48400 - Management New Entrepreneurship |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of problems and opportunities associated with starting and managing new and small firms. Topics include developing and appraising new business plans, raising capital, purchasing an established business, and dealing with problems of growth. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 48800 - Electronic Commerce And Information Strategies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discuss the new business models in electronic commerce that have been enabled by Internet technologies and analyze the impact these technologies and business models have on industries, firms and people. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Recognize proper e-commerce business models.
2. Understand the fundamental economic and marketing principles that drive the growth of e-commerce.
3. Understand the impact of e-commerce on industry structure and business strategy.
4. Understand the role of pricing and competition, maintaining profit margins, product selection, “Long Tail’ marketing, search engine advertising, online marketing, online auctions and social media as impacted by e-commerce.
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| MGMT 49000 - Problems In Industrial Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Investigation in a specific management field. Arrange with instructor before enrolling. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| MGMT 50010 - Foundations Of Financial Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 2.00. The primary objective of this course is to provide a broad overview of financial accounting. The four basic financial statements are discussed which include balance sheet, income statement, statement of retained earnings, and statement of cash flows. The components that make up each statement will also be covered to include assets, liabilities, owner’s equity, revenue and expenses. Upon completion of this course, students will have an understanding of the fundamental accounting concepts and how financial information is used by various internal and external decision makers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Discuss purpose of each of the four financial statements.
2. Demonstrate understanding of the various components of the financial statements.
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| MGMT 50100 - Advanced Taxation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced course in federal income taxation, with an in-depth study of corporations and partnerships. Additional topics will include professional responsibility, tax planning, and basic tax research. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will demonstrate an understanding of the tax law governing formation and operation of corporations and partnerships.
2. Students will compare the tax attributes of flow-through entities and taxable entities.
3. Students will demonstrate basic skills in issue identification and tax research.
4. Students will evaluate alternative treatments for tax planning purposes.
5. Students will use professional standards to evaluate tax practice and ethical issues.
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| MGMT 50300 - Advanced Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced course in financial accounting. A range of contemporary issues in financial reporting, such as business combinations, investments, consolidations, inflation, multinationals, and tax allocation are covered. Both technical proficiency and user applications are emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture 1, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 50400 - Tax Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic tax course designed to provide an understanding of the various federal taxes, including income, gift, estate, excise, federal insurance contribution, self-employment, and unemployment taxes. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 50500 - Management Accounting II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The focus of the course is managerial decision making and the economic role of information. Topics covered include decentralized financial performance evaluation, cost analysis, and financial planning and control systems. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn the concepts and procedures of auditing, with an emphasis on independent certified public accountants as well as internal auditing.
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| MGMT 50600 - Auditing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the concepts and procedures of auditing, which is the systematic process of objectively obtaining and evaluating evidence regarding assertions about economic actions and events. Primary emphasis is on audits conducted by independent certified public accountants, but topics covered apply to internal auditing as well. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop an understanding of auditing concepts and procedures.
2. Demonstrate knowledge of ethical standards of the profession.
3. Understand the nature of an internal control system, its role in a business and its significance in the auditing process.
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| MGMT 50700 - Advanced Federal Income Taxes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced course in federal income taxes, with a brief study of gift and estate taxes. Some issues covered in MGMT 50400 are studied in more depth, particularly taxation of corporations and partnerships. The course, which is taught in seminar format, gives the student considerable practice in doing tax research and reporting conclusions. It is especially appropriate for the student entering a career in a tax environment. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 50800 - Accounting For Non-Profit Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An accounting course for non-profit organizations. Topics include accounting for non-profit hospitals, colleges, and universities, federal governmental accounting, and auditing concepts for governmental entities. Also covered is analysis of not-for-profit and governmental financial statements. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| MGMT 50900 - International Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides insight into and an understanding of the many accounting problems and issues faced in an international business environment. The material is approached from two compatible and overlapping perspectives: the perspective of accounting or financial management in a U.S. multinational corporation and the perspective of an investor interested in understanding the international business environment. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 51100 - Fixed Income Securities |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to fixed income securities. Discusses a variety of contracts-starting with pure discount bonds, coupon bonds, and callable bonds. Continues with options on bonds, caps, floors, and interest rate swaps. Introduces the theory of the term structure and present models for pricing fixed income securities. Topics include: spot and forward markets for debt instruments, simple models for interest rate risk management, duration, convexity, organized exchange-traded interest rate contracts, interest rate swaps, pricing relationships and the theory of the term structure, and single factor models for pricing interest rate claims. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 51200 - Financial Institutions And Markets |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of management policy of financial institutions, including liquidity management, liability management, asset management, and capital management; description of the legal, economic, and regulatory environments and their implications for management. Emphasis on commercial bank management. Not open to students with credit in MGMT 41200. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| MGMT 51500 - Fraud Investigation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Develops an understanding of how and why occupational fraud occurs. This course focuses upon how fraudulent conduct may be deterred and how allegations of fraud should be investigated. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an understanding of the Fraud Examination Process.
2. Demonstrate how allegations of fraud should be investigated.
3. Identify sources of fraud.
4. Demonstrate the ability to search for potential fraud.
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| MGMT 51600 - Investment Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Treatment of problems of portfolio analysis, capital markets, and securities investment selection. Theoretical development and practical applications at the level of the individual decision maker. Not open to students with credit in MGMT 44500. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| MGMT 51700 - Fraud Data Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Develops an understanding of various aspects of IT auditing and fraud data analysis. This course covers the IT audit process to identify sources of fraud and to identify risks associated with information technology assurance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an understanding of the IT audit process.
2. Demonstrate a proficiency in using three Computer Assisted Audit Tools, including ACL, EnCase and Access.
3. Identify sources of fraud, computer based crime and fraud schemes as found in the digital environment.
4. Demonstrate the ability to search for potential fraud in streams of data extracted from digital data.
5. Identify risks associated with information technology assurance and identify effective controls to mitigate against these risks.
6. Demonstrate an understanding of the forensic computing process.
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| MGMT 51800 - Criminology And Legal Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on the topics of psychological and sociological theories of behavior as they relate to white collar crime. Develops an understanding of techniques and legal procedures associated with interviewing individuals associated with cases to support investigations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understanding the investigative and legislative processes that are essential in detecting and circumventing illegal activity.
2. Recognizing the fundamentals of civil procedure and due process in the investigative process and beyond.
3. Understanding the basic rules of evidence.
4. Understanding through analyzing the profile of white collar criminals the ways in which they manipulate and deceive their victims.
5. Understanding the four elements of the interviewing process – questions, detecting, deception, and persuasion.
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| MGMT 51900 - Advanced Fraud Investigation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A capstone course in Fraud Investigation. The course covers major fraud case investigation, with an emphasis on forensic and litigation support aspects. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Provide students with knowledge of the field so that the student knows and can apply relevant philosophies related to the substantive areas of Criminal Justice. Students will be expected to recognize the fundamentals of civil procedure and due process in the investigative process and beyond.
2. Students will develop written communication skills in this specialized field and demonstrate the synthesis of theory and practice.
3. Students will gain critical thinking skills and should be able to apply the basic research methods used in criminal justice, as well as understand the relationship between academic knowledge and the practical application of that knowledge to the field.
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| MGMT 52000 - Pricing Strategy And Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Builds on the introductory courses in marketing management. Enables students to formulate a systematic framework for approaching the problem of pricing a product, and more generally, a product line. The concepts and analytical methods necessary to develop such a framework are explored and incorporate marketing, economic, psychological, and organizational factors that influence pricing decisions, as well as competitive and legal aspects. Topics covered include value pricing, dynamic pricing, segmented pricing and price discrimination, bundling and multi-part tariffs, sales promotions, and pricing to the distribution channel.
Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 52010 - Foundations Of Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 2.00. The objectives of this course are to expose students to the problems commonly found by marketing managers and develop skills in analyzing marketing problems and prepare implementable plans of action based on the analyses of the given business situations. Marketing decision-making will explore the product, price, promotion, and distribution of ideas, goods, and services to create exchanges that satisfy individual and organizational objectives. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. To discuss strategic planning and elements of the situation analysis and marketing plan.
2. To discuss and analyze the elements of the marketing mix.
3. To discuss marketing’s role in the overall business environment, competitive responses utilized by marketers, and the consumer’s importance in the overall process.
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| MGMT 52100 - Brand Management |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Designed to provide an understanding of how to manage a brand, product, or product category. The course focuses on issues related to customer behavior and customer decision making, with an emphasis on how to utilize such customer-oriented knowledge, especially as it relates to developing ideal forms of advertising and communications, product and/or service adjustments or extensions, and appropriate decisions related to distribution and pricing, all of which must be concerned both with customer acquisition and retention. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 52200 - New Product Development |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Provides students with state-of-the-art management techniques to identify markets, develop new product ideas, measure customer benefits, and de-sign profitable new products. In addition, students will be taught techniques that will allow them to successfully interact in cross-functional teams that include members from marketing, R&D, engineering, and manufacturing. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 52500 - Marketing Analytics |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Deals with concepts, methods, and applications of decision modeling to address such marketing issues as segmentation, target market selection, new product forecasting, positioning, and resource allocation. Provides skills to translate conceptual understanding into specific operational plans-a skill in increasing demand in organizations today. Using market simulations and related exercises tied to PC-based computer software, students will develop marketing strategy and plans in various decision contexts. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Enable students to articulate analytical process and logic for selecting a particular marketing strategy/plan
2. Enable students to do (and also evaluate/critique) good marketing research in their respective careers
3. Marketing knowledge and critical thinking
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| MGMT 52600 - Commercial Law |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses primarily on the law of ownership, forms of business organizations, the uniform commercial code as it relates to sales, commercial paper and secured transactions, governmental regulation of business, and accountant's liability. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the nature, classification, and sources of law.
2. Learn to use electronic resources for conducting legal research.
3. Develop critical thinking, interpersonal negotiation, and written communication skills.
4. Understand the sources of contract law and requirements for valid contracts, including the essential elements, classifications, methods of discharge, and remedies.
5. Demonstrate competency in recognizing which article of the UCC governs a specific set of facts.
6. Develop a deeper understanding of secured transactions, negotiable instruments, and sales.
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| MGMT 52700 - Accounting Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Important accounting constructs (such as assets, liabilities, cost) are defined, and measurement issues are discussed. Generally accepted accounting principle concepts, principles, and assumptions are examined. The value of information via an examination of various theories of information and decision making, including psychological theories and theories of ethical decision making are considered. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an understanding of the concepts, principles, and practices of financial accounting.
2. Understand why these principles and practices are adopted and how they are justified by underlying theoretical concepts.
3. Provide the general rationale and specific methods for producing and disclosing useful financial information.
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| MGMT 53000 - Financial Statement Analysis |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The course is designed to help students: (a) understand the content of corporate financial reports and analyze the information therein, (b) use the information for evaluating the financial health, operating performance, and growth prospects of corporation-type companies, and (c) learn the various models available and estimate the value of such a company using those models and the information abstracted from the financial reports. The topics to be covered include the corporate financial statements and their relationships, ratio analysis for profitability and risk evaluation, assets/liabilities/owners’ equality analysis, intercompany investments, forecasting financial statements, and company valuation models. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: Dept of Management
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop analytical and quantitative skills to analyze and formulate business decisions: Students will be able to demonstrate their ability to incorporate financial statement information into commonly used firm valuation models that are widely used in business decision-making.
2. Develop current business technologies and use common business technology and software in essential tasks: Students will be able to demonstrate their ability to use spreadsheet in developing valuation models and will demonstrate their ability to retrieve financial information from Internet and evaluate its quality.
3. Students will develop effective written and oral communication skills: Students will be able to demonstrate effective oral and written communication skills through class assignments and the writing and presentation of a group project.
4. Develop the leadership and teamwork skills to function effectively in a diverse cross-functional environment. Students will demonstrate their leadership and teamwork skills by effectively working as a team to produce and present a group project.
5. Develop awareness and understanding of global issues relating to financial reporting, tax accounting and business decisions. Students will demonstrate their ability to value multinational corporations and interpret their financial statements through homework assignments, examinations and a group project.
6. Achieve depth of understanding applications of financial reporting. Students will demonstrate their ability to understand and interpret financial statements and accounting choices through homework assignments, examinations and a group project.
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| MGMT 53010 - Foundations Of Business Law |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 2.00. A review of the operation of our legal system and its significance in managerial decision making. Topics may include: legal heritage, courts and jurisdiction, liability, contracts, forms of business organization and investor protections, negotiable instruments and Uniform Commercial Code. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Define the purpose of law and the development of the legal system.
2. Recognize legal issues within the business environment.
3. Explain the purpose of various types of business forms.
4. Develop legal reasoning skills.
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| MGMT 53100 - Government/Not-For-Profit Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide students with a solid understanding of the financial reporting and accounting principles used in the preparation of governmental and not-for-profit entities. Topics include, but are not limited to, fund accounting, city government accounting, state government accounting, special funds, budgetary accounting for the general and special revenue funds, fiduciary funds and government-wide statements, university accounting, accounting for community foundations, not-for-profit accounting, and auditing not-for-profit entities. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: Dept of Management
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop analytical and quantitative skills to analyze and formulate business decisions: Students will be able to demonstrate their understanding of generally accepted accounting Principles for government and not-for-profit entities and how accounting information is used in decision-making for those organizations through the completion of multiple projects.
2. Become familiar with the ethical issues that individuals face in organizations: Students will be able to demonstrate their understanding of ethics in reporting through team projects that analyze a government or not-for-profit’s accounting system. They will also be able to demonstrate their understanding of how to properly account for fiduciary (trust) funds.
3. Students will develop effective written and oral communication skills: Students will be able to demonstrate oral and written communication skills through class participation and the writing and presentation of team projects.
4. Develop the leadership and teamwork skills to function effectively in a diverse cross-functional environmental: Students will demonstrate their leadership and teamwork skills by effectively working as a team to produce and present team projects.
5. Achieve their understanding of generally accepted accounting principles for government and not-for-profit entities through team projects and examination(s).
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| MGMT 53200 - Forensic Accounting And Fraud Examination |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to help students apply their accounting, auditing, information systems and communication skills to detect financial fraud and unauthorized reporting acts to prepare and present a fraud case for criminal proceedings or civil litigation. These skills are highly valued in the rapidly growing field of forensic accounting. Upon completing this course, students will understand the role of forensic accountants in examining financial records for fraud and detecting insurance fraud; in providing litigation support; and in capturing digital evidence. This course will also review material related to the Certified Fraud Examiner (CFE) exam. Throughout the course, students will have opportunities to improve their written and oral communication skills, particularly as they relate to communication in the legal settings associated with investigating accounting. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: Dept of Management
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Achieve depth of understanding and application of essential content in business functional areas: Students will be able to demonstrate their understanding of business functional areas through homework assignments, examinations and team projects that require analysis or development of fraud detection plans and litigation support.
2. Develop current business technologies and use common business technology and software in essential tasks: Students will be able to demonstrate their understanding of how people in organizations use common technology and software to commit fraud through homework assignments, examinations and team projects. They will also be able to demonstrate their ability to use software to detect fraud and other irregular transactions.
3. Become familiar with the ethical issues that individuals face in organizations: Ethical behavior is a key factor in preventing fraud. Students will be able to demonstrate their ability to identify signs of unethical behavior and how it manifests itself in financial fraud through homework assignments, examinations and team projects.
4. Students will develop effective written and oral communication skills: Students will be able to demonstrate effective oral and written communication skills through class participation and the writing and presentation of team projects.
5. Develop the leadership and teamwork skills to function effectively in a diverse cross-functional environment: Students will demonstrate their leadership and teamwork skills by effectively working as a team to produce and present team projects.
6. Achieve depth of understanding and applications of financial reporting. Students will demonstrate their understanding of accounting systems through homework assignments, examinations and team projects that require a deep understanding of accounting rules and procedures and the technology that individuals use to keep financial records.
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| MGMT 53400 - Accounting Practice |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. Presents a view of the various accounting, legal, and regulatory subjects expected to be tested on the uniform CPA exam. Topics covered include financial accounting and reporting, auditing, business environment and concepts, and business regulation. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| MGMT 54400 - Database Management Systems |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Covers the theory and practice of database design and usage. Students will learn the importance of data modeling concepts and how to use these effectively and how to plan and design a database, including issues such as data security and control. The following course is recommended: MGMT 29000 Programming for Business Applications or CS 15900 or CS 17700 or CNIT 17500, all with a C- or higher. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand why database management is important and what it entails.
2. Analyze the database requirements of a business scenario and represent these requirements by means of entity-relationship (ER) diagrams.
3. Translate an ER diagram into normalized relations for a relational DBMS.
4. Design and implement an Oracle database.
5. Write simple and relatively complex data retrieval and maintenance commands in the SQL language.
6. Use Microsoft Access as a front end to a server database in Oracle.
7. Appreciate major data administration tasks, including security control, backup and recovery, and concurrency control.
8. Be familiar with data warehousing and its basic conceptual design.
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| MGMT 54500 - Systems Development |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on information systems development theories, practices, and tools for rapid adaptation and management of leading-edge as well as emerging computing paradigms. The following courses are recommended: MGMT 38200, with a C- or higher; and MGMT 29000 Programming for Business Applications or CS 15900 or CS 17700 or CNIT 17500, all with a minimum grade of C-. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Define the essential processes involved in information systems development.
2. Analyze and represent business processes.
3. Develop and validate systems models and design specifications for an information system application.
4. Understand database concepts and design relational databases based on data models.
5. Effectively use and maintain databases through hands-on experience with Structured Query Language (SQL).
6. Work effectively on a team to successfully complete team projects.
7. Proficiently use various tools used in systems analysis and design.
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| MGMT 54600 - Decision Support And Expert Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Since a large percentage of societal and management problems can be characterized as relatively unstructured, this course explores how computers can be used to aid decision makers in dealing with unstructured, as well as structured, problems. Appropriate material from knowledge representation, artificial intelligence, and language theory is considered. Applications selected from environmental management and strategic planning in large organizations are used to illustrate theoretical ideas. Since the key computer software tool is database management, a development of the CODASYL approach to data management is presented. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 54700 - Computer Communications Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores the convergence of telecommunications and computer technology, framed in terms of their strategic impact in the business environment. Components of computer communication systems are surveyed. Major design and analysis issues in the development, implementation, and management of computer communication systems are examined. Relevant emerging trends are highlighted. The course is devoted to technical issues, applications, and case studies covering telecommunication systems used in business. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn the infrastructure of telecommunication systems.
2. Learn how telecommunications systems work.
3. Learn applications of telecommunication systems.
4. Learn how to create strategic advantage by using telecommunication systems.
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| MGMT 55100 - Unified Modeling Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to Unified Modeling Language (UML) modeling and major UML diagrams and how to apply them within object-oriented (OO) environments. Topics include UML basics, OO system analysis and design, development process, and UML diagrams. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the principles of UML modeling.
2. Understand general OO concepts and principles.
3. Apply appropriate UML diagrams for OO system analysis.
4. Apply appropriate UML diagrams for OO system design.
5. Apply appropriate UML diagrams for OO system development.
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| MGMT 56000 - Manufacturing Planning And Control |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. An advanced course in manufacturing planning and control systems, emphasizing the integration of demand forecasting, inventory control, production scheduling, and production control. Topics are linked through case studies and an elaborate manufacturing computer simulation game. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 56100 - Logistics |
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Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Examines the distribution and delivery functions in a manufacturing or service industry. Topics include inventory control in distribution, transportation planning, distribution requirements planning, analysis of waiting lines, distribution system design and facility location and layout analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 56200 - Project Management |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Emphasizes the use of PC-based project management software and its applications, particularly in manufacturing organizations and especially new product development projects. Extensive use is made of several case studies to illustrate the planning and monitoring of a project. Class is held in a computer lab. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 56400 - Management Of Service Operations |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Special characteristics of services require an interdisciplinary approach to analyzing operations. This course draws upon concepts from accounting, management science, and marketing. Differences and similarities between the service and manufacturing organizations are analyzed. Case studies of service organizations are used extensively. Prerequisite: MGMT 66000 (if Graduate student status) or else MGMT 36100 (if Undergraduate student status).Typically offered Spring Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 56500 - Strategic Sourcing And Procurement |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course will address the process of procurement including terminology, metric, and decision making. Additionally, we will investigate the best practices and processes for managing the relationships with suppliers and their performance. We will also explore the sourcing decision and the strategic ramifications of producing/providing goods and services internally or purchasing them from external organizations. Prerequisites: Students are expected to have taken a basic course on operations (such as the masters core class MGMT 66000: Introduction to Operations Management) and a basic course on supply chain management (such as the masters elective MGMT 66400: Supply Chain Management). Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop a good understanding of sourcing and procurement strategies and enhance the student's analytical skills to make optimal sourcing and procurement decisions. It requires critical thinking through the participation of games, case discussions and presentation of case assignments.
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| MGMT 56600 - Global Supply Chain Management |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. This course will integrate issues from marketing (channels of distribution), logistics, and operations management to develop a broad understanding of a supply chain in a global context. Students will learn how different factors, including exchange rate risk, custom duty and trading policies, geographic distribution of resources and demand, availability and reliability of local supplier, and characteristics of consumer, affect the design and execution of global supply chain strategies. Prerequisites: Students are expected to have taken a basic course on operations (such as the masters core class MGMT 66000: Introduction to Operations Management) and a basic course on supply chain management (such as the masters elective MGMT 66400: Supply Chain Management). Exposure to a course on optimization is also preferred, but not required. The course requires logical and analytical thinking. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Train the students to understand the issues in managing a global supply chain and to manage them and optimize their performance. It requires critical thinking through the participation of games, case discussions, and presentation of case assignments.
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| MGMT 57000 - Spreadsheet Modeling And Simulation |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Covers up-to-date and practical spreadsheet modeling tools, which can be applied to a wide variety of business problems in finance, marketing, and operations. Consists of simulation modeling techniques to analyze risk and uncertainties in business environment, optimization techniques to determine the best managerial actions under internally- and/or externally-imposed constraints, and real-world examples and cases to demonstrate broad applications of spreadsheet modeling and simulations in manufacturing and service operations, supply chain systems, yield management, asset dynamics, option pricing, etc. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 57100 - Data Mining |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduces the concepts, techniques, tools, and applications of data mining. The material is approached from the perspective of a business analyst, with an emphasis on supporting tactical and strategic decisions. Includes a variety of techniques to identify nuggets of information or decision-making knowledge in bodies of data, and extracting these in such a way that they can be put to use in the area, such as decision support, prediction, forecasting, and estimation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 57200 - Six Sigma And Quality Management |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Establishes the link between quality and productivity design and improvement and variance reduction. The course examines some of the more traditional views on quality, as well as those today, which are gaining greater credibility and influence under the umbrella of TQM. It also covers up-to-date and practical spreadsheet modeling tools that can be applied to a wide variety of business problems from finance, marketing, and operations.
Typically offered Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 57300 - Optimization Modeling With Spreadsheets |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. The course emphasizes applications of optimization through cases and computer exercises. The applications are chosen to provide insights into business and economics. Areas covered include linear, network, integer, and nonlinear optimization. At the end of the course, the students should have the ability to model optimization problems work with software to solve optimization problems relate to optimization theory in a variety of application settings develop optimization insights into applications in marketing, finance, and operations and get some basic exposure to EXCEL automation. Prerequisites: Students are expected to have taken a basic MBA (core) course in business analytics (such as the masters core MGMT 67000). Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Train the students to write mathematical formulations of business problems and use solvers in excel spreadsheets to solve the problems. It requires critical thinking via the presentation of case assignments.
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| MGMT 58010 - Foundations Of Information Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 2.00. An overview of the use of Information Systems in the modern, global corporate environment. Students will be introduced to software such as spreadsheets and data bases that will be utilized in subsequent courses in the MBA program. The ultimate goal is to bring all students up to the level of technological competency they need to succeed in this program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the basic technology of spreadsheets.
2. Understand the basic technology of relational databases.
3. Analyze the impact of information technology on the organization.
4. Understand the strategic use of information technology
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| MGMT 58200 - Management Of Organizational Data |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Provides the basic concepts and skills needed to analyze and organize business data, as well as to utilize the organized data to answer a variety of business queries. After successful completion, students will have an understanding of why database management is important and what it entails, how to analyze the data requirements of a business scenario and represent these requirements by means of entity-relationship (ER) diagrams, translate an ER diagram into normalized relations for a relational database management system, write simple and relatively complex data retrieval commands in the SQL language for an Oracle database, use Microsoft Access as a front end to a server database in Oracle, be familiar with several selected topics of current interest in the data management arena. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 59000 - Directed Readings In Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00 (West Lafayette, North Central) 2.00 to 4.00 (Calumet) Supervised reading and reports in various subjects. Open only to a limited number of seniors and graduate students.
. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| MGMT 60000 - Accounting For Managers |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00 (West Lafayette) 3.00 (Calumet, North Central) The two-course accounting sequence employs a user's perspective on the firm's database. First, the standard accounting model is developed into a working tool, as no prior study of accounting is assumed. Then illustrative business cases are discussed to show how external reports conform to financial contracts and public regulation. Public reports primarily directed to investors and creditors are analyzed to reconstruct the economic events and managerial decisions underlying generally accepted accounting standards. Prerequisite: Masters student standing and Management majors only. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 60100 - Managerial Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00 (West Lafayette) 3.00 (North Central) Oriented to managers, the course examines the firm's internal systems for costing products or services and their interpretation. A variety of manufacturing and service industries are studies to demonstrate design of flexible cost systems to match the firm's technological, competitive and/or multinational environments. Applications to budgeting, variance analysis, pricing models, performance evaluation and incentives are demonstrated. Case discussion and analytical "what if" modes of instruction are used to enhance managerial skills of students. Design and use of accounting data are linked to other subjects in the program core and to ethical aspects of accounting policy issues. Prerequisite: MGMT 60000. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Master basic service and product costing methods.
2. Develop analytic skills to help businesses use the different types of costing information to make better business decisions and to formulate better business models.
3. To understand and analyze the variety and the use of accounting performance evaluation methods and the role of incentives in a business environment.
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| MGMT 60200 - Valuation And Financial Statement Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Establishes how to use accounting information to make business and investment decisions. Internally, the information is used to assess performance of units, to evaluate performance of upper-level management, to monitor the firm's investment and financing decisions, and for comparison purposes with the firm's rivals. Externally, accounting information is used by financial analysts, investors and (potential) acquirers to assess the value of the firm, by creditors to assess its credit-worthiness, and by regulators. Prerequisite: MGMT 60000, 60100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate ability to understand financial statements and related information.
2. Practice communicating decisions and ideas through written and oral communication.
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| MGMT 60300 - Taxes And Business Strategy |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Provides a framework for analyzing tax planning. The framework offers an approach to tax planning and business strategy that remains useful long after the next revision of the tax code. It offers an approach that can be readily employed in an international setting. After developing the framework, it will be applied to a variety of business settings that integrate topics from accounting, finance, and economics in order to provide a more complete understanding of the role of taxes in business strategy. Two important concepts will be applied: the concept of implicit taxes (tax-induced differences in before tax rates of return) and the concept of tax clienteles (the effect of cross-sectional differences in tax rates). Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 60600 - Seminar In External Reporting I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Seminar examines research issues on the production, dissemination, and use of financial accounting information for economic decisions by external users. The materials covered are primarily empirically oriented. The aim is to expose students to these issues as they are covered in the accounting and related literature. Prerequisite: ECON 60000. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| MGMT 60700 - Seminar in Internal Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Development of a conceptual framework for evaluating information system alternatives. The seminar examines insights into information value provided by the literature. Both the decision-facilitating and contracting-facilitating roles of information are considered. Topics also include auditing issues. Prerequisite: ECON 60700, 61500. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| MGMT 60800 - Selected Research Topics In Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. (West Lafayette, North Central) Credit Hours: 3.00. (Calumet) Individual and group study of current research problems in accounting. A limited set of problem areas will be covered in any one offering. Emphasis will be placed on current substantive problems and the research methods employed. Prerequisite: MGMT 60100. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate research skills relative to both professional standards and business issues.
2. Demonstrate the ability to work in a team environment.
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| MGMT 60900 - Seminar in External Reporting II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Selective investigation of analytical research of informational and incentive issues in accounting. Emphasis is on the role of externally reported accounting information in asset pricing in financial markets. Prerequisite: ECON 60700, 61000, 61500. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| MGMT 61000 - Financial Management |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 4.00. Analysis of short-term working capital needs. Cash budgeting procedures, pro forma statements, major types of short-term loan arrangements, and short-term asset management. Prerequisite: MGMT 60000, Master's student standing or higher and Management and Computational Finance majors only. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 61100 - Advanced Corporate Finance |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4 .00 (West Lafayette, Calumet) 3.00 (North Central) Long-term capital structure planning, capital budgeting, treatment of uncertainty in investment decisions, security underwriting, dividend policies, and mergers. Prerequisite: MGMT 61000. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 61200 - Financial Management III |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00 (West Lafayette) 3.00 (Calumet, North Central) Further treatment of topics in the financial management of nonfinancial corporations, from the viewpoint of the internal financial officer. Topics include further coverage of cost of capital and financial planning, as well as cash management, working capital management, short-term financing, advanced capital budgeting, and leasing. Emphasis on applications. Continuation of MGMT 611 with additional depth and topic coverage. Prerequisite: MGMT 61000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 61400 - Investments |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Examination of the process of asset valuation. Emphasis on portfolio analysis, security selection, risk-return relationships, and performance evaluation. Additional topics considered include security analysis, option pricing and analysis, futures contracts, and security market operations. Typically offered Spring Fall.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop a sound foundation for the main concepts in investment management and portfolio theory.
2. Understand how stock, bond, and option prices are determined.
3. Learn the analytical tools and financial theory necessary to understand how financial assets are used for investment decisions.
4. Take a critical look at the process of investing and relate the topics covered to current real-world problems relevant to practitioners.
5. Prepare students for more advanced courses in investments, portfolio management, and corporate finance.
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| MGMT 61500 - International Financial Management |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00 (West Lafayette) 3.00 (Calumet) Integrative course dealing with the management of firms doing business internationally. Emphasis on decision making. Will draw upon, and adapt, managerial decision models developed for domestic operations, as well as cover appropriate international institutional material. Particular focus on finance and strategic management. Prerequisites: ECON 51500. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 61601 - Seminar In Capital Markets I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This is the first in a sequence of four PhD level finance courses that cover theoretical and empirical research in capital markets. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate ability to think creatively and critically while solving problems in capital markets.
2. Be able to show ability to conduct research in an ethical and responsible manner.
3. Be able to effectively communicate knowledge of capital markets.
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| MGMT 61602 - Seminar In Capital Markets II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This is the second in a sequence of four PhD level finance courses that cover theoretical and empirical research in capital markets. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: MGMT 61601. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Critical Thinking: Students demonstrate ability to think creatively and critically while solving problems in capital markets.
2. Ethical and Responsible Research: Students will be able to show ability to conduct research in an ethical and responsible manner.
3. Communication: Students will be able to effectively communicate knowledge of capital markets.
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| MGMT 61701 - Seminar In Capital Markets III |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This is the third in a sequence of four PhD level finance courses that cover theoretical empirical research in capital markets. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: MGMT 61602. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1.Critical Thinking: Students demonstrate ability to think creatively and critically while solving problems in capital markets.
2.Ethical and Responsible Research: students will be able to show ability to conduct research in an ethical and responsible manner.
3.Communication: Students will be able to effectively communicate knowledge of capital markets.
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| MGMT 61702 - Seminar In Capital Markets IV |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This is the fourth in a sequence of four PhD level finance courses that cover theoretical empirical research in capital markets. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: MGMT 61701. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1.Critical Thinking: Students demonstrate ability to think creatively and critically while solving problems in capital markets.
2.Ethical and Responsible Research: students will be able to show ability to conduct research in an ethical and responsible manner.
3.Communication: Students will be able to effectively communicate knowledge of capital markets.
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| MGMT 61801 - Seminar In Managerial Finance I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This is the first in a sequence of four PhD level finance courses that cover theoretical empirical research in managerial finance. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1.Critical Thinking: Students demonstrate ability to think creatively and critically while solving problems in managerial finance.
2.Ethical and Responsible Research: Students will be able to show ability to conduct research in an ethical and responsible manner.
3.Communication: Students will be able to effectively communicate knowledge of managerial markets.
|
| MGMT 61802 - Seminar In Managerial Finance II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This is the second in a sequence of four PhD level finance courses that cover theoretical empirical research in managerial finance. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: MGMT 61801. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1.Critical Thinking: Students demonstrate ability to think creatively and critically while solving problems in managerial finance.
2.Ethical and Responsible Research: Students will be able to show ability to conduct research in an ethical and responsible manner.
3.Communication: Students will be able to effectively communicate knowledge of managerial markets.
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| MGMT 61900 - Seminar In Managerial Finance II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Continuation of Seminar in Managerial Finance I. Treats the relationships between external capital market phenomena and internal financial decisions. Emphasis on empirical evidence as tests of the theories, including model formulation for testing. Selected topics in capital structure planning and asset valuation. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: MGMT 61800. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MGMT 61901 - Seminar In Managerial Finance III |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This is the third in a sequence of four PhD level finance courses that cover theoretical empirical research in managerial finance. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: MGMT 61802. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1.Critical Thinking: Students demonstrate ability to think creatively and critically while solving problems in managerial finance.
2.Ethical and Responsible Research: Students will be able to show ability to conduct research in an ethical and responsible manner.
3.Communication: Students will be able to effectively communicate knowledge of managerial markets.
|
| MGMT 61902 - Seminar In Managerial Finance IV |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This is the fourth in a sequence of four PhD level finance courses that cover theoretical and empirical research in managerial finance. Prerequisite: MGMT 61901. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: Dept of Management
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Critical Thinking: Students demonstrate ability to think creatively and critically while solving problems in managerial finance.
2. Ethical and Responsible Research: Students will be able to show ability to conduct research in an ethical and responsible manner.
3. Communication: Students will be able to effectively communicate knowledge of managerial finance.
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| MGMT 62000 - Marketing Management |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. to 4.00 (West Lafayette and Calumet) 3.00 (North Central) An integrated analysis of major marketing decisions, including product pricing, advertising, distribution, and sales force policies. Prerequisite: Master's student standing and Management majors only. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 62100 - Marketing Management II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Introduces students to the analytical, strategic, and tactical aspects of marketing management. Exposes students to the issues and challenges in the management of the marketing mix, including product policy, pricing, marketing communications, and distribution policy. Prerequisite: MGMT 62000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| MGMT 62200 - Marketing Strategy |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00 (West Lafayette) 3.00 or 4.00 (Calumet) 3.00 (North Central) Key aspects of marketing strategy formulation and implementation are covered, including customer needs assessment, targeting, and positioning strategies in a competitive market. A managerial perspective allows development of decision-making skills necessary for successful marketing strategies. Prerequisite: MGMT 62000, 62100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MGMT 62300 - Business Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Marketing of goods and services to businesses and other organizations for use in their production and further marketing of goods and services is studied. Emphasis is placed on management of the field sales force, industrial buying processes, distribution channel development and maintenance, development of new industrial products, pricing and promotion decisions. Prerequisite: MGMT 62000. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 62500 - Marketing Research |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00 (West Lafayette) 3.00 (Calumet) Application of statistical and other quantitative concepts to marketing management problems. Prerequisite: MGMT 67000. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 62600 - Seminar In Marketing Models |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Treatment of theoretical marketing models. Study of marketing models in research setting. Prerequisite: MGMT 62000, 67200. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MGMT 63000 - Legal And Social Foundations Of Management |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00 (West Lafayette) 3.00 (Calumet, North Central)
An examination of the nature of the legal environment from the viewpoint of the social and moral bases of law. Emphasis is given to the operation of our legal system and its significance in decision functions of management. Prerequisite: Master's student standing and Management majors only. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 63100 - The Legal And Social Foundations Of Management II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Covers the social and ethical dilemmas of business policy and decision making, often involving legal, social, and ethical considerations encountered by business managers. Prerequisite: MGMT 63000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 63400 - Business Law For Accountants |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is designed to help prepare students for their professional careers by familiarizing them with aspects of the law that are directly relevant to the practice of accounting. These topics are not only at work every day in business but are also tested on professional examinations such as the Uniform Certified Public Accounting (CPA) Exam. Specific topics include, but are not limited to, contract law, relevant provisions of the Uniform Commercial Code, bankruptcy, and the legal liability of accountants. The course will be taught through a mixture of lectures and class discussions. Students are expected to come to class having completed the assigned readings and ready to participate in class discussions. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Achieve depth of understanding and application of essential content in business functional areas: Students will be able to demonstrate the ability to apply legal rules and principles to business transactions and the accounting for them.
2. Become familiar with the ethical issues that individuals face in organizations: Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of business ethics and social responsibility as it relates to the legal aspects of business transactions and reporting.
3. Develop awareness and understanding of global issues relating to financial reporting, tax accounting and business decisions: Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of international business law and cyber law, both of which affect financial reporting and tax accounting.
4. Students will develop effective written and oral communication skills: Students will be able to demonstrate effective oral communication skills through class participation and effective written communication skills through the development and writing of a research paper.
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| MGMT 63401 - Communications For Accountants |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Accountants spend much of their time designing and writing reports, narratives, memos, etc. and explaining those communications to others. They communicate regularly with external investors and creditors, regulators, clients and fellow professionals. This course is designed to help accounting students prepare for their professional careers by helping them develop their written and oral communication skills. This course begins with an overview of the writing process and then moves to document organization and design and how to write with conciseness and clarity. The last half of the course focuses on specific forms of written communication (e.g., letters, memos, reports, email, and essays on professional exams) and oral presentations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: Dept of Management
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Become familiar with the ethical issues that individuals face in organizations: Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of ethical communication as it relates to accounting-related issues.
2. Develop current business technologies and use common business technology and software in software in essential tasks: Students will use study the appropriate and professional use of social media and electronic and written communication mediums in a business setting.
3. Students will develop effective written and oral communication skills: Students will be able to demonstrate effective oral and written communications skills through class assignments and the writing and presentation of a team paper.
4. Develop the leadership and teamwork skills to function effectively in a diverse cross-functional environment: Students will demonstrate their leadership and teamwork skills by effectively working as a team to produce and present a report on a pre-specified accounting topic.
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| MGMT 63410 - Communications For Accountants |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Accountants spend much of their time designing and writing reports, memos, etc. and explaining those communications to others. They communicate regularly with external investors and creditors, regulators, clients and fellow professionals. This course is designed to help accounting students prepare for their professional careers by helping them develop their written and oral communication skills. The course begins with an overview of the writing process and then moves to document organization and design and how to write with conciseness and clarity. The last half of the course focuses on specific forms of written communication (e.g., letters, memos, reports, email, essays on professional exams) and oral presentations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Become familiar with the ethical issues that individuals face in organizations: Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of ethical communication as it relates to accounting-related issues.
2. Develop current business technologies and use common business technology and software in essential tasks: Students will study the appropriate and professional use of social media and electronic and written communication mediums in a business setting.
3. Students will develop effective written and oral communication skills: Students will be able to demonstrate effective oral and written communication skills through class assignments and the writing and presentation of a team paper.
4. Develop the leadership and teamwork skills to function effectively in a diverse cross-functional environment: Students will demonstrate their leadership and teamwork skills by effectively working as a team to produce and present a report on a pre-specifies accounting topic.
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| MGMT 63500 - Accounting Information Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Accounting information Systems is a course designed to provide students with a solid background in the information systems that accountants use. Topics include, but are not limited to, input, processing and output devices, data communications and networks, document and system flowcharts, organizing and manipulating data in databases, producing reports and forms, popular accounting software, enterprise-wide information systems, security, privacy and ethics for accounting information, and information technology auditing. The course will advance students’ abilities in the following areas. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: Dept of Management
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop analytical and quantitative skills to analyze and formulate business decisions: Students will be able to demonstrate their ability to design and use information systems, build models, design and complete data-mining tasks, and evaluate internal control systems.
2. Develop current technologies and use common business technology and software in essential tasks: Students will be able to demonstrate their ability to use and evaluate popular accounting software and enterprise-wide software. They will also be able to incorporate XBRL into financial reports and perform complex tasks using spreadsheets. Students will demonstrate their ability to effectively use PowerPoint in class presentations.
3. Students will develop effective written and oral communication skills: Students will be able to demonstrate effective oral and written communication skills through class participation and the writing and presentation of team projects.
4. Develop the leadership and teamwork skills to function effectively in a diverse cross-functional environment: Students will demonstrate their leadership and teamwork skills by effectively working as a team to produce and present team projects.
5. Achieve depth of understanding and applications of financial reporting. Student will demonstrate their understanding of accounting systems through team projects that require hands-on experience with accounting software.
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| MGMT 63900 - Advanced Auditing And Professional Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to help students prepare for their professional careers by strengthening their understanding of the CPA’s attest function and familiarizing them with current assurance issues. After finishing the course, students should understand the current state of the Enterprise Risk Management and tools for risk evaluation, be able to identify best practices related to external audit, be prepared to manage an audit group, understand the key aspects of being an audit consultant and be able to work with all levels of internal and external audit professionals. Throughout the course, students will have opportunities to improve their written and oral communication skills, particularly as they relate to communication in the audit setting. The course will also emphasize the impact of recent and current regulatory actions, including the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, on the audit profession. Prerequisite: MGMT 50600 with a minumum grade of C. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Achieve depth of understanding and application of essential content in business functional areas: Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of how U.S. audit and securities market regulations affect an audit. They will also use their statistical training in audit planning and evaluation as well as risk assessment.
2. Become familiar with the ethical issues that individuals face in organizations: Students will be able to demonstrate an understanding of ethics as it relates to audit and external reporting.
3. Develop current business technologies and use common business technology and software in essential tasks: Students will use spreadsheets and auditing software in case analyses and assignments.
4. Students will develop effective written and oral communication skills: Students will be able to demonstrate effective oral and written communication skills through class participation and the writing and presentation of a team paper. They will also demonstrate effective written communication skills through case write-ups.
5. Achieve depth of understanding and applications of financial reporting: By deepening their understanding of the audit process and techniques and by working through case studies focused on particular reporting and auditing issues, students will develop and demonstrate a deep understanding of reporting regulations and rules.
6. Develop the leadership and teamwork skills to function effectively in a diverse cross-functional environment: Students will demonstrate their leadership and teamwork skills by effectively working as a team to produce and present a research paper on business and audit risks in a specific sector.
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| MGMT 64100 - Options And Futures |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Rigorous and applied coverage of the pricing and hedging of options and futures contracts with applications. Prerequisite: MGMT 61000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 64200 - Portfolio Management II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Methods of analysis of common stocks and bonds for individual and institutional portfolios. Review of the empirical evidence of security market efficiency, and implications of that evidence for various methods of security analysis. Team projects to analyze the economy, the particular industry or sector, and selected firms within the industry or sector, and to make specific buy-hold-sell recommendations for the stocks and bonds of those firms. Prerequisite: MGMT 61000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 64300 - Financial Risk Management |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Provides a foundation for understanding ways in which financial institutions and industrial firms can optimally manage financial risks. Concentrates on various "functional" risk measurement problems related to interest rate risk, default risk, exchange rates, and commodity prices. Prerequisite: MGMT 61000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| MGMT 64400 - Venture Capital And Investment Banking |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Examines the process of corporate value creation through financial policy choices. The sequence of topics roughly parallels the life cycle of a typical corporation. Begins by studying the financing of entrepreneurial companies. Then studies the investment banking and capital acquisition process employed for public securities issues. Also examines capital acquisition and reorganization decisions, such as the use of hybrid securities like convertible debt and PIPEs, project financing bankruptcy reorganizations, and equity structurings. Prerequisite: MGMT 61000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| MGMT 64500 - Mergers, Acquisitions, And Corporate Control |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Focuses on firms' internal governance structures and on pressure from the external market for corporate control, including executive compensation, board of directors' composition, shareholder activism, mergers, and takeovers. Prerequisite: MGMT 61000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| MGMT 64900 - Global Marketing Management |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. A seminar using lecture-discussions, cases, and projects. Designed to cover the global marketing environment, market-entry strategy, global marketing programs, organization and control of global marketing operations, and the future of global marketing. Prerequisite: MGMT 62000, 62100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| MGMT 65000 - Strategic Management I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Concepts and methods that integrate previous training in functional areas of management. The perspective is that of the general manager charged with directing the total enterprise. Emphasis is given to formulation and implementation of strategy. Prerequisite: MGMT 61000, 62000, Master's student standing and Management majors only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MGMT 65200 - Management Of New And Small Firms |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Examines entrepreneurship with a focus on the start-up process for high growth new ventures. Cases will be used, and students will conduct a feasibility analysis of a new venture concept. Prerequisites: MGMT 61000 and MGMT 62000. Concurrent Prerequisites: MGMT 65000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| MGMT 65500 - Competitive Strategy |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Examines how firms obtain and sustain superior returns through the development and implementation of a competitive strategy at the business-unit level. Focus is on strategies that develop and exploit two sources of superior returns: unique value-creating resources (e.g., patents, brand equity, operational capabilities), and powerful positions in markets and supply chains. Participants are expected to be familiar with basic competitive strategy concepts and tools, such as “five-forces analysis”, the value chain, and generic strategies. Presents a more analytical perspective of strategy, drawing from game theory. Prerequisites: MGMT 65000. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MGMT 65700 - Manufacturing Strategy |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. In recent years many firms have rediscovered manufacturing and operations as a potential source of strategic advantage. In general, these firms have sought to develop capabilities in operations which provide a sustainable advantage in the marketplace. In addition, successful firms have developed processes for understanding the cross-functional implications of product and process choices. In this course, we will seek to understand the circumstances under which particular operating capabilities are most beneficial and how such capabilities can be developed so that operations can be exploited for competitive advantage. Concurrent Prerequisite: MGMT 61000, 65000, 66000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| MGMT 65900 - Strategic Management II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Further emphasis on understanding how organizations might achieve advantage relative to competitors. Focus is on corporate strategy: the decisions of a multi-business firm. Such decisions include: What range of businesses is appropriate within a single firm? What mode of expansion, e.g. alliance vs. acquisition, is appropriate? How should a firm’s administrative systems and structure be organized across multiple businesses or markets to achieve maximum value? What is needed to foster innovation in the organization? Introduces a variety of analytical frameworks to help students qualitatively and quantitatively appraise corporate-level strategies given a firm’s unique resource profile and the environment in which it competes. Prerequisite: MGMT 60000, 61000, 62000 and 65000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| MGMT 66000 - Introduction To Operations Management |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00 (West Lafayette) 3.00 (Calumet, North Central) As goods and services are produced and distributed, they move through a set of inter-related operations or processes in order to match supply with demand. The design of these operations for strategic advantage, investment in improving their efficiency and effectiveness, and controlling these operations to meet performance objectives is the domain of Operations Management. The primary objective of the course is to provide an overview of this important functional area of business. Prerequisite: MGMT 67000, 67100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MGMT 66100 - Management Of Operating Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. A project course in which students are exposed to a variety of operations problems as they arise in a real world setting. The focus of the course is problem formulation, analysis, and proposal(s) of an implementable scheme for their resolution. Prerequisite: MGMT 66000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| MGMT 66400 - Supply Chain Management |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Continues the examination of the linkage between a firm's product-market strategy and the role of the operations (i.e., production) function initiated in MGMT 660. Topics include material requirements planning, production activity control, and just-in-time systems. Prerequisite: MGMT 66000. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| MGMT 66700 - International Operations Management |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Emphasizes the role of operations in the making of strategic decisions of where to locate and how to coordinate facilities to optimize the performance of a multinational organization. The impact of trade regulations and foreign exchange risk is considered. Case studies of international manufacturing firms develop and illustrate key concepts. Prerequisite: MGMT 66000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| MGMT 66900 - Operations Management: Practice And Models |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A manufacturing laboratory course in which computer and visual information systems are applied to a small-scale replica of a manufacturing facility. Applications include material requirements planning, KANBAN systems, detailed scheduling, and simulation. The overriding objective is to experience how these information systems are implemented and used to improve the physical system. Concurrent Prerequisite: MGMT 66400. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| MGMT 67000 - Business Analytics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Introduction to quantitative decision procedures under uncertainty. Applications of descriptive statistics, probability models, simulation models, interval estimates, and hypothesis testing to management problems. Managerial-oriented cases are used in instruction. Prerequisite: Master's student standing and Management majors only. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MGMT 67100 - Quantitative Methods II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 (West Lafayette) 3.00 (Calumet, North Central). A continuation of Quantitative Methods I. Applications of regression procedure, forecasting technique, and statistical design of experiment method to management problems. Managerial-oriented cases are used throughout the course. Prerequisite: MGMT 67000. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MGMT 67200 - Advanced Business Analytics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Quantitative decision procedures under uncertainty applied to business problems. Basic concepts in econometrics and multivariate analysis are studied. Several managerial-oriented case studies are used to illustrate estimation, testing, and regression procedures. Prerequisite: MGMT 67100, Master's student standing and Management majors only. Typically offered Summer Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Review of Multiple Linear Regression.
2. Analysis of Variance (ANOVA): A Regression Approach.
3. Qualitative Independent Variables.
4. Qualitative or Discrete Dependent Variables.
5. Univariate Time Series Models for the Mean.
6. Univariate Time Series Models for Volatility.
|
| MGMT 67700 - Seminar In Quantitative Methods In Management Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Applications of quantitative methods of analysis to research problems in financial, marketing, and production management. Data processing and statistical inference in management research. Prerequisite: MGMT 67000, 67100, 67200. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MGMT 68000 - Introduction To Information Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 (West Lafayette) 3.00 (Calumet, North Central) An introduction to the capabilities, limitations, and applications of computers to the business environment. Addresses issues relating to computer hardware and software, data management, problem analysis, and other management information systems (MIS) topics. Students use the computer as programmers, as users of existing software systems, and in the role of managers within business decision-making contexts. Concurrent Prerequisite: MGMT 67000 or 67300. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MGMT 68300 - Management Information Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The important technological issues of computing are presented. The emphasis is on the impact of technology on the organization. Topics include problem organization and complexity, database management, operating systems, data communications, and privacy. Research projects on an assigned topic provide greater depth of coverage of certain topics. Typically offered Summer Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop analytical and quantitative skills to analyze and formulate business decisions.
2. Understand current business technologies and related knowledge to translate data into useful information for decision making.
3. Become familiar with the ethical issues that individuals face in organizations.
4. Develop effective written and oral communication skills.
5. Develop the leadership and teamwork skills to function effectively in a diverse, cross-functional environment.
6. Develop awareness of global and multicultural issues relating to business decisions.
|
| MGMT 68400 - Information Risk Management |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Explores the various issues pertinent to maintaining acceptable levels of information security within organizations. Topics include risk analysis, resource identification, a basic introduction to information security architecture and infrastructure, policy development and deployment, and legal and regulatory issues, including those pertaining to privacy. The course is intended to raise awareness of information security issues across organizations and will be targeted towards managers in all areas, not just information systems. Prerequisite: MGMT 68300. Typically offered Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MGMT 68500 - Enterprise Integration |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Investigates the issues and requirements of enterprise integration; specifically, the issues related to information delivery services to enable cross-functional integration within a distributed computing environment. Prerequisite: MGMT 68000 or 68300. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MGMT 68600 - Knowledge Management Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Discusses the fundamentals of knowledge management and the role of information technology and systems in supporting organizational knowledge management. With a growing emphasis toward managing intangible knowledge assets (compared to tangible physical assets), knowledge management has become an indispensable tool kit for managers. Prerequisite: MGMT 68300. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MGMT 68800 - Developing A Global Business Strategy |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Provides an introduction regarding the business and strategy challenges faced by managers in our global economy, regardless of whether the firm is a small domestic company or a large multi-national. Major topics for the course include motivations and challenges of internationalization, international business fundamentals, foreign market entry strategies, organizing across countries, analyzing global industries, building competitive advantage in global industries, and the influence of culture and institutions. Prerequisite: MGMT 65000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| MGMT 69000 - Advanced Problems In Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Advanced investigation in a specific management field at the graduate level. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MGMT 69100 - Special Problems In Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Advanced investigation in a specific management field at the graduate level. For students in the master's programs in management who are registered in the master's program summer session. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MGMT 69200 - Managerial Communication Skills |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Enhances student professionalism in managerial contexts by improving oral communication skills by developing strong oral presentation techniques. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| MGMT 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MGMT 90000 - Pre-Management Orient |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MGMT 97900 - Masters Orientation |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MGMT V1000 - Introduction To Business |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exposes the student to the many kinds of business activities and how they influence society. Deals with three basic areas of business: production, marketing, and finance. Covers the role of people in business, from the managerial functions to the non-managerial skills. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| MHHS M3010 - Perspectives On Health, Disease, And Healing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course utilizes the perspectives of the humanities and social science disciplines to provide students with a broader understanding of the many facets of health and disease, suffering and dying, as well as the art and science of healing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MHHS M4200 - The Culture Of Mental Illness: Representations Of Mental Illness In Literature And Film |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will consider how mental illness is represented in literature and film by exploring the following: is there a relationship between the way we understand and perceive mental illness, and the way it is portrayed through pop culture? Have literary and film portrayals of mental illness aided our construction of how we think about mental illness today? How has our understanding of mental illness changed in the last century? We will consider the ways certain understandings of mental illness are constructed, represented and proliferated throughout culture. What are the different representational strategies, in particular the representation of the therapeutic encounter between doctor and patient? Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop and improve upon analytical and writing skills.
2. Learn to address and raise new questions from the texts.
3. Learn to situate course content within a broader, cultural context.
|
| MHHS M4920 - Topics In Medical Humanities And Health Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Intensive study and analysis of selected issues and problems in Medical Humanities and Health Studies. Topics will vary but will ordinarily cut across fields and disciplines. May be repeated once for credit on a different topic. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| MHHS M4980 - Readings In Medical Humanities And Health Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individual readings and research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Research
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| MHHS M5920 - Grad Topics Medical Humanities |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| MICR J2000 - Microbiol & Immunology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. For students of the baccalaureate curricula in the School of Nursing and in the division of Allied Health Sciences; others by consent of instructor. Concurrent of previous registration in J201 Microbiology Laboratory is recommended.
Consideration of pathogenic bacteria, viruses, fungi and parasites in human disease; immunology and host-defense mechanisms.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MICR J2010 - Microbiology Lab |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Concurrent enrollment in J200. Bacteriological techniques: microscopy, asepsis, pure culture, identification. Biology of microorganisms; action of antimicrobial agents. Representative immunological reactions. Recognition of pathogenic fungi and animal parasites. Lab fee required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MICR J2100 - Microbiology & Immunology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. For prenursing, allied health sciences, and dental hygiene students; others by consent of instructor. Consideration of immunology and host-defense mechanisms, and pathogenic bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites in human disease. Laboratory exercises include microbial biology, microscopy, asepsis, pure culture, identification, antimicrobial agents, viral hemagglutination, representative immunological reactions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MICR J6010 - Medical Immunology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to natural and acquired immune mechanisms with consideration of their significance to medicine. Topics will include both normal and abnormal immune processes, including recovery from and prevention of disease, immune-mediated pathological processes, tumor immunology and immunodeficiency. Designed to precede and complement J602, Medical Microbiology.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MICR J8020 - Introduction To Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Introduction To Research. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MICR J8070 - Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Research. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MICR J8100 - Research In Microbiology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 12.00. Research In Microbiology. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MICR J8370 - DNA Repair, Mutation, and Recombination |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The molecular biology of genetic repair, mutation, and recombination; emphasis on functions, capabilities of the
processes that exist, how they were discerned, and their significance in the wider context of the molecular cell.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MICR M2500 - Microbial Cell Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to microorganisms: cytology, nutrition, reproduction, and physiology. Importance of microorganisms in infectious disease. Host defense mechanisms against disease. Credit not allowed toward a biology major.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MICR M3100 - Microbiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of fundamental biological principles to the study of microorganisms. Significance of microorganisms to humans and their environment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| MICR M3150 - Microbiology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Audio-tutorial laboratory of exercises and demonstrations to yield proficiency in principles and techniques of cultivation and utilization of microorganisms under aseptic conditions. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| MIL B1010 - Introduction To Military Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Studies the organization, history, and traditions of the United States Army and the characteristics and skills that future leaders will need to develop. Covers military skills such as first aid, rifle marksmanship, and land navigation. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Military
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MIL B2010 - Leader/Military Tactics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Examines light infantry tactics. Introduction to squad movement techniques, ambushes, reconnaissance, movement to contact, advanced land navigation, drill and ceremony, first aid, and weapons. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Military
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MIL G1010 - Leadership And Personal Development |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Introduction to personal challenges and competencies critical for effective leadership. Learn how the personal development of goals setting, time management, physical fitness and stress management relate to the Army profession. Leadership labs, physical training, and weekend field exercise are optional, but available to those for more out of their college experience.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Military, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MIL G1020 - Foundations In Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Overview leadership fundamentals such as setting direction, problem-solving, and oral and written communication. Explore leadership values, attributes, skills, and actions in practical hands-on, and interactive exercises. Leadership labs, physical training, and weekend field exercise are optional, but available to those for more out of their collage experience.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Military, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MIL G1120 - Basic Military Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A study of the functions, duties, and responsibilities of junior leaders. Operations of the basic military team.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Military
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MIL G1200 - Leadership Lab |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Must be enrolled in an Army ROTC class. Different roles assigned based on level in the program. Learn and practice basic soldiering skills. Build self-confidence, team building and leadership skills that can be applied throughout life. Course meets one Friday a month and one Saturday a semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Military
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
|
| MIL G1210 - Leader's Training Course |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. A rigorous five-week summer leadership training camp, similar to Army basic training, conducted at an Army post. Participating students are paid about $600, and the Army defrays the cost of travel, lodging, and most meals. Camp Challenge is open only to students who have not taken all four Basic Course classes- MIL G101, MIL G102, MIL G201, and MIL G202-and who pass a physical examination (paid for by ROTC). Completion of Camp Challenge qualifies a student for entry into the ROTC Advanced Course. The camp is offered several times during the summer, and the Army limits space in each camp. Candidates may apply for a space at any time during the academic year. The camp is graded on a pass/fail basis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Military
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MIL G2010 - Innovative Tactical Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Explore creative and innovative tactical strategies through case studies and interactive student exercises. Practice aspects of personal motivation and team building by planning, executing and assessing team exercises. Leadership labs, physical training, and a weekend field training exercise are optional, but available to those looking for more out of their college experience.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Military
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MIL G2020 - Leadership In Changing Environments |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Examine challenges of leading in complex contemporary operational environments. Dimensions of the cross-cultural challenges of leadership in a constantly changing world are applied to practical Army leadership tasks and situations. Leadership labs, physical training, and a weekend field training exercise are optional, but available to those looking for more out of their college experience.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Military
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MIL G2120 - Applied Leadership II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An examination of the Army's structure, staff organization, and function. An overview of current weapon systems and the modern battlefield.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Military
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MIL G3010 - Adaptive Team Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study, practice, evaluate and receive feedback on adaptive leadership skills as they are presented with the demands of the ROTC Leader Development Assessment Course. Challenging scenarios related to small unit tactical operations are used to develop self awareness and critical thinking skills. Leadership labs, physical training and a weekend field training exercise are mandatory course requirement.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Military, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MIL G3020 - Leadership Under Fire |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Use intense situational leadership challenges to prepare for the ROTC Leader Development Assessment Course, build awareness and skills in leading small units. Skills in decision-making, persuading, and motivating team members when "under fire" are explored, evaluated and developed. Leadership labs, physical training and a weekend field training exercise are mandatory course requirement.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Military, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MIL G3030 - Adaptive Team Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study, practice, evaluate and receive feedback on adaptive leadership skills as they are presented with the demands of the ROTC Leader Development Assessment Course. Challenging scenarios related to small unit tactical operations are used to develop self awareness and critical thinking skills. Leadership labs, physical training and a weekend field training exercise are mandatory course requirement. This is an arranged course for contracted cadets with class conflicts and requires departmental approval prior to registration.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Military, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MIL G3040 - Leadership Under Fire |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an arranged course for contracted cadets with class conflicts and requires departmental approval prior to registration. Learn to analyze tasks, prepare written or oral guidance for team members to accomplish tasks, delegate tasks, and supervise accomplishment of tasks. Develop ability to plan for and adapt to the unexpected in organizations under stress, examine and apply lessons from leadership case studies, and examine the importance of ethical decision making in setting a positive climate that enhances team performance. Students taking this course must attend Advanced Course Leadership Lab, which meets for one two-hour session each week and one weekend exercise during the semester. Two more weekend exercises will be offered for optional participation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Military, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MIL G4010 - Developing Adaptive Leaders |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Develop proficiency in planning, executing and assessing complex operations: functioning as staff member; and providing leadership performance feedback to subordinates. Cadets are given situational opportunities to assess risk make ethical decisions and provide coaching to follow ROTC Cadets. Leadership labs, physical training and a weekend field training exercise are mandatory requirements.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Military, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MIL G4020 - Leadership In A Complex World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explore the dynamics of leading in complex situations of current military operations. Examine military law, principles of war, rules of engagement and differences in customs and courtesies in the face of international terrorism. Leadership labs, physical training and a weekend field training exercise are mandatory course requirements.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Military, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MIL G4030 - Developing Adaptive Leaders |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Learn to plan, conduct, and evaluate activities of the ROTC cadet organization; articulate goals and enact plans to attain them; and assess organizational cohesion and develop strategies to improve it. Develop leadership and resource management skills. Learn and apply various Army policies and programs. Students taking this course must attend Advanced Course Leadership Laboratory, which meets for one two-hour session each week and one weekend exercise during the semester. One or two more weekend exercises may be offered for optional participation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Military, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| MIL G4040 - Leadership In A Complex World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explore the dynamics of leading in complex situations of current military operations. Examine military law, principles of war, rules of engagement and differences in customs and courtesies in the face of international terrorism. Leadership labs, physical training and a weekend field training exercise are mandatory requirements. This is an arranged course for contracted cadets with class conflicts and requires departmental approval prior to registration.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Military, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MIL G4140 - Army Physical Training III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Planning, coordination, and execution of a physical fitness program under the direct supervision of a master fitness trainer. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Military, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MIS 30100 - Systems Analysis And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The functions and components of database management systems and the role of databases in the Systems Development Life Cycle is the focus of this course. Database Management Systems are explored in general, with special emphasis on relational databases. Data modeling tools presented include enterprise models, entity relationship diagrams (ERDs), the data dictionary, object diagrams, and normalization techniques. Given user requirements, students will design, construct, and test a database-driven information system. Basic and advanced data queries are developed using a contemporary database management system. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| MIS 30500 - Database Analysis And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the procedural requirements of the systems development life cycle (SDLC). A case study approach introduces the student to the techniques of systems planning, design, documentation, implementation, and evaluation. Topics include requirements modeling, data and process modeling, and development strategies. Students will also learn about output and user interface design, data design, systems architecture and implementation, systems operation, support and security. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| MIS 31000 - Project Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course utilizes a holistic approach to introduce a strategic, system perspective on the management of projects. Its focus is on managing projects within an organizational context, including the processes related to initiating, planning, organizing, scheduling and controlling projects. Course topics include project definition and execution, risk assessment, estimating, planning, human factors and standard methods. Students gain practical experience using project management techniques, including software tools. Case studies, personal experience and real-world projects will be used to demonstrate tools and techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| MIS 31500 - Network And Telecommunications Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an in-depth study of the communication systems that enable businesses to survive in today¿s intensive business atmosphere. Fundamentals of telecommunication networks, network architectures, network protocols, telecommunication equipment, telecommunication capabilities and current technologies in use in telecommunication networks are discussed. Students will learn how to plan, implement and manage a business network. Emerging technologies will be discussed to that students can make informed decisions about corporate telecommunication systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| MIS 32000 - Managing Electronic Commerce |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on how Information Technology (IT) is changing the design and operations of organizations in the global economy. Traditional commerce is compared to e-commerce and the impact this has on the organization is explored. Business strategies and technologies as they apply to e-commerce are covered. Case studies as well as classroom discussion is used to explore the strategic, operational and technical issues associated with global electronic commerce. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| MKG 22100 - Principles Of Advertising |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of commercial persuasion from colonial times to the era of mass communication. The course examines the structure of advertising messages, how they are adapted to specific audiences, and the social settings in which they occur. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn how to more effectively communicate with stakeholders through mass media. The student will gain a broad introduction to advertising concepts and terminology, and be able to identify how these influence marketing decision-making.
|
| MKG 22400 - Principles Of Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the principles and concepts underlying marketing decisions. The topics covered include distribution channels, pricing, promotion, product, consumer behavior, and environmental influences on marketing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. This course provides a decision-oriented overview of marketing management in modern organizations. The most basic objectives of the course are to provide the student with a broad introduction to marketing concepts and terminology, the role of marketing in society within the firm, and the various factors that influence marketing decision-making.
|
| MKG 32400 - Marketing Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The objectives of this course are to expose students to the problems commonly faced by marketing managers and to develop skills in analyzing marketing problems and preparing implementable plans of action based on analyses of given business situations. Cases and a marketing simulation are used to focus the discussion and to reinforce learning of key marketing concepts. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Be exposed and learn the language of marketing.
2. Gain an understanding of the major decision areas under marketing.
3. Be knowledgeable of the step-by-step marketing research process.
4. Students will prepare and deliver effective business documents and presentations.
|
| MKG 42000 - Digital Marketing Campaigns |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Digital Marketing Campaigns focuses on the preparation of a measurable direct/interactive marketing campaign for a real-world corporate client. Students perform research, formulate strategic conclusions, develop a digital theme, design the creative, outline the media plans, and establish evaluation for the campaign. Finalized campaigns are then shared with the real-world client for review. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop a thorough understanding of how digital marketing campaigns work through an experiential learning approach.
2. Understand the relationship between market research (company, competition, industry, and target market) and formulating digital marketing strategies.
3. Have the ability to compile and develop a series of marketing tactics into the final Collegiate ECHO Challenge plans book for submission to the competition.
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| MKG 42100 - Integrated Marketing Communications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course integrates advertising, public relations, publicity, personal selling and sales promotion as the overall promotional mix. Various communication methods and tools are treated as variables for use alone or in combination to communicate attributes of products and services to the customer. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Achieve an understanding of the major elements comprising the marketing communications mix.
2. Fully comprehend the meaning and relevance to integrated marketing communications.
3. Appreciate the complexity of designing a complete IMC plan.
4. Achieve a high proficiency in locating, understanding, and using information sources for marketing communications program design, execution, and measurement.
|
| MKG 42200 - International Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the opportunities in global markets and examines the challenges of global marketing. Emphasis is placed on the strategic implications of competition in the markets of various countries. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. To describe the complex framework of organizations, laws and customs within which international marketing is practiced and to analyze the economic, political and cultural “profiles” of international markets; evaluate marketing opportunities and risks in different national/regional markets around the world.
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| MKG 42400 - Consumer Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of the environmental, social and psychological factors which influence an individual's buying decisions. The course covers how individual consumers are identified, motivated, and evaluated for use in various marketing activities. Emphasis is placed on the business approach for identifying the consumer's decision-making process. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to identify a) the stages in the consumer decision-making process and b) the internal and external factors that influence consumer behavior. Students will be able to describe, explain, and discuss how the major consumer behavior theories and concepts fit together and will learn to apply consumer behavior theories and concepts to various situations.
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| MKG 42500 - Marketing Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The purpose of this course is to develop skills in the planning and execution of market research studies designed to acquire useful information for marketing decisions. It aims to familiarize students with techniques of research design, data collection, and analysis. Emphasis is placed on evaluating the results obtained from such investigations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop understanding of the concepts and terminology of marketing research.
2. Develop practical skills to apply concepts to real-world market research cases.
3. Develop knowledge of the step-by-step marketing research process.
4. Experience the use of research findings for managerial/marketing decisions.
5. Develop skill as a business professional, such as presentations, teamwork and leadership.
|
| MKG 42600 - Marketing Channels |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Functions of a retail establishment are examined. The topics covered include retail operations planning; buyer behavior, store design, location, and layout; organizing and staffing the retail firm; merchandise management; pricing concepts and strategies; promotion; credit; financial management; and a discussion of the future of retailing. Emphasis is given to significant developments taking place in the major environments of retailing to include social, economic, technological, and legal aspects. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. To critically analyze the retailing process, the environment within which it operates, and the institutions and functions that are performed.
2. To develop the knowledge and analytical skills useful for retail decision making.
3. To learn key components of successful contemporary channel management strategy.
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| MKG 42700 - Sales Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Organization, management, and operation of the sales force. Examines the recruitment, selection, and processing of the sales force; motivation; forecasting; sales department budgeting; and performance evaluation. Emphasis is given to the management of an outside sales force and its activities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain how a manger should organize, staff, and train a sales force for maximum results. Provide guidelines and recommendations in the management, direction, and delegation of a sales force. Provide insights on how to effectively and efficiently develop a sales plan from forecasting and budgeting to creation of sales territories. Understand the guidelines to effectively evaluating the sales performance of the sales staff.
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| MKG 42800 - Advertising Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an understanding and evaluation of the advertising function within the modern business environment. The course covers history, advertising and the promotional mix, and advertising as a vital communication tool. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn about the dynamic world of online advertising.
2. Evaluate the quality of the client company's advertising program, summarize the evaluation and industry research and apply the findings to a pre-campaign report.
3. Create a digital integrated advertising campaign (via Google Adwords) for a company client and present the results in a written report and oral presentation with the focus on tangible results appreciated by the client and summarized in post-campaign report.
|
| MKG 42900 - Advertising Campaigns II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasizes the preparation of a complete advertising campaign for a business or non-profit organization. The student will be able to integrate marketing research and segmentation, media, and promotion plans, strategy, creative, and presentation in a unified campaign to serve a local or national organization. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop a thorough understanding of how agencies work through an experiential learning approach.
2. Understand the relationship between market research (company, competition, industry, and target market) and formulating advertising strategies.
3. Have the ability to formulate an advertising strategy based on research findings and execute the strategy into an advertising plans book for the client.
|
| MKG 43000 - Advertising Campaigns I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis on the management of marketing research, segmentation, analysis and campaign strategy for a business or non-profit organization as part of a local or national advertising campaign. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop a thorough understanding on how agencies work through a team agency approach.
2. Understand the relationship between market research (company, competition, industry, and target market) formulating advertising strategies.
3. Have the ability to develop and compile research findings into a detailed research based report that can be incorporated into the final NSAC plans book to be presented to a real-world client.
|
| MKG 43300 - Personal Selling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A detailed exposure to personal selling strategies and tactics. It examines effective selling in the consumer and industrial markets, including an analysis of consumers, motivation and communications, handling objections and closing techniques. The entire sales process is examined, with particular emphasis on relationship selling, planning and delivery of sales presentations, and trust-building techniques. The roles of professional salespeople within their organizations and economic systems are investigated, as are important dimensions of sales careers. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will effectively communicate their learning of personal selling skills and will also learn to apply the latest concepts concerning building and maintaining long-term professional relationships with clients. Furthermore, students will enhance their ability to work in the sales field by exercising personal selling skills both in class and off campus.
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| MKG 43400 - Digital Marketing Strategy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to electronic marketing and the dynamics of Internet marketing. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop a thorough understanding on how new technologies are changing the way companies do business and positioning consumers to drive change.
2. Understand the relationship between market research (company, competition, industry, target market, and social conversations) and formulating digital marketing strategies.
3. Have the ability to assess a company’s target market, develop a series of digital marketing objectives, develop strategies to complete those objectives, and determine the technology needed to accomplish the task.
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| MKG 43500 - Services Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Addresses the distinct needs and challenges of managing services and delivering quality service to customers. The primary focus of the course is on distinctive approaches to marketing strategy, both in its development and execution, for service organizations. This course also addresses the role of service in manufacturing businesses as the basis for attaining a sustained competitive advantage. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the role and importance of services in the global economy. Identify the unique characteristics of services. Identify and analyze the major challenges involved in marketing services. Understand importance of measurement and analysis of customers’ expectations and perceptions of service quality in effective management and marketing of services. Identify the major sources of the gap between customer expectations and perceived service quality. Gain knowledge of services marketing tools that help design and deliver quality services.
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| MKG 48000 - Marketing Strategy |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course integrates marketing concepts and applications from previous marketing courses. The emphasis is on the formulation of marketing strategy from the perspective of a marketing manager. This course should be taken only in the last year by all marketing students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify marketing strategies and their effects in various situations.
2. Analyze data and apply marketing knowledge to solve strategic problems.
3. Professionally communicate analyses and recommendations.
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| MKG 49500 - Internship In Marketing |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. A special course in selected areas of management, designed to provide practical field experience under professional supervision in selected situations. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Summer Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 12 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Gain practical experience in the field of marketing.
2. Apply prior course knowledge to real world situations.
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| MKG 49900 - Undergraduate Research In Marketing |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Student will work with a faculty member on a research project in their major. They will contribute to ongoing research while learning current research techniques in management. During this process, the students will develop critical thinking and oral and written communication skills. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Conduct research in the area of marketing.
2. Learn current research techniques in management and business.
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| MNEU N6110 - Fundamental Neuroscience-Introduction To Cell And Molecular Neurobiology |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. A lecture/discussion course to introduce the student to general principles of cell & molecular biology and to provide an overview of general neuroanatomy, electrical properties of neurons, and synaptic transmission. This course is designed as a primer for subsequent courses in the series. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| MNEU N6120 - Fundamental Neuroscience-Neurotransmitter Dynamics And Synaptic Plasticity |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. A lecture/discussion course to explore the fundamental mechanisms involved in neurotransmitter synthesis, release, storage, reuptake and general metabolism. Molecular mechanisms of synaptic plasticity as well as facilitation and depression of synaptic strength will also be explored. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| MNEU N6140 - Fundamental Neuroscience-Special Senses And Integrative Neurophysiology |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. A lecture/discussion course to explore fundamental concepts and mechanisms related to various sensory receptors (photo receptors, hair cells), spinal reflex circuits, central pattern generators, and the visual system as a complex integrative model. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| MNEU N6160 - Fundamental Neuroscience-Developmental Biology Of Neurons |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. A lecture/discussion course to explore concepts in basic neuroembryology including examination of molecular cues for axial patterning, axonal pathfinding and growth, developmental regulation of gene transcription, neuronal stem cells and glial cell precursors, and regionalization of nervous system function. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| MSCI M1310 - Disease And The Human Body |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Suitable for non-majors at all levels. Basic science knowledge is advantageous but not necessary. This course is team-taught by Medical Sciences faculty. Provided will be a descriptions of a disease or injury and a discussion of the normal anatomy and physiology of relevant body systems and the alterations that are due to the disease or injury. Included will be various drug and other medical interventions that can be used to diagnose and treat the diseases and injuries. The format consists primarily of lectures with some interactive demonstrations. Four objective exams are scheduled throughout the semester and standard grading policies are utilized. No text is required, and extensive handouts are provided. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| MSCI X4000 - Medical College Admission Test Preparation |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. An intense 10-week summer course to prepare students for the Medical College Admission Test. It includes sessions in problem-based learning, instruction, and full-length practice tests. Typically offered Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| MSE 19000 - Introduction To Materials Engineering |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. An introduction to materials science and engineering. Emphasis on the "processing, structure, properties, performance" relationships that lead to the development of materials for society's needs. Examples drawn from the major materials classes. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MSE 20000 - Materials Science |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course designed to provide a basic background in the broad field of materials science. Emphasis placed on the chemical and physical principles underlying the utilization and behavior of metals, alloys ceramics, composites, and aggregates in engineering. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| MSE 23000 - Structure And Properties Of Materials |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The relationship between the structure of materials and the resulting mechanical, thermal, electrical, and optical properties. Atomic structure, bonding, atomic arrangement; crystal symmetry, crystal structure, habit, lattices, defects, and the use of X-ray diffraction. Phase equilibria and microstructural development. Applications to design. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MSE 23500 - Materials Properties Laboratory |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Laboratory experiments involving usage of standard equipment in the measurement of mechanical, microstructural, thermal, electrical, and optical properties. Introduction to computer aided data analysis. Experiments are carried out with metal, ceramic, and polymeric materials to illustrate property-structure-processing relationships. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MSE 25000 - Physical Properties In Engineering Systems |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Class connects math, science and engineering practice and applications. Presents foundational aspects of engineering problem solving, use of computer math tools for engineering problem solving, basic engineering statics, dynamics and mechanics, group problem solving approaches, and introductory aspects of design and materials selection. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MSE 26000 - Thermodynamics Of Materials |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental laws of thermodynamics and their applications to material systems; criteria for equilibrium; reaction and phase equilibria; properties of solutions; thermodynamic origins of phase diagrams. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MSE 27000 - Atomistic Materials Science |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory course with an atomistic view point on material properties. Three primary class sections: bonding crystallography and statistical mechanics. Bonding topics include introduction to quantum mechanics, emphasis on understanding of metallic, ionic and covalent bonding. Crystallography topics include crystal descriptions and symmetry principles. Statistical mechanics development with application to electronic and thermodynamic properties. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MSE 29100 - Industrial Practice I |
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Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and comprehensive written reports of this practice. For cooperative program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MSE 29199 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op I |
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Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Materials Engineering. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will develop the ability to function on multi-disciplinary teams and receive the broad education necessary to understand the impact of engineering solutions in global, economics, environmental and societal context.
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| MSE 29200 - Industrial Practice II |
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Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and comprehensive written reports of this practice. For cooperative program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MSE 29299 - Professional Practice Extensive II |
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Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Materials Engineering. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will develop the ability to function on multi-disciplinary teams and receive the broad education necessary to understand the impact of engineering solutions in global, economics, environmental and societal context.
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| MSE 33000 - Processing And Properties Of Materials |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the relationships between the processing of materials and their properties. Heat treating, forming, casting, consolidation, and other more material-specific manufacturing processes. Elucidation of the role of phenomena such as heat flow, mass diffusion, nucleation, interfacial tension, elastic and plastic deformation, precipitation, grain growth. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MSE 33500 - Materials Characterization Laboratory |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The principles of analytical methods for characterization of materials for structure and composition; optical microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, X-ray spectroscopy and diffraction, atomic absorption, emission spectroscopy, and mass spectrometry. Laboratory experiments in X-ray spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, optical microscopy, and scanning electron microscopy. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MSE 34000 - Transport Phenomena |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Mechanism and rates of heat, mass, and momentum transfer. Macroscopic and differential energy, mass, and momentum balances. Application to systems with phase transformations and chemical reaction. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MSE 34400 - Materials In Engineering |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the structure and mechanical and physical properties of engineering materials. Selection of metals, alloys, plastics, ceramics, and composites for engineering applications. Strengthening methods and environmental effects. Analysis of the failure of materials under load. Laboratory experiments include mechanical testing, metallography, thermal treatment, and failure analysis. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| MSE 34500 - Introduction To Engineering Materials |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the mechanical properties of engineering materials. Selection of metals, alloys, polymers, ceramics, and composites for structural applications. Strengthening methods and environmental effects. Analysis of the failure of materials under load. Laboratory experiments include mechanical testing, thermal treatment, and failure analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| MSE 36700 - Materials Processing Laboratory |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This laboratory is intended as an intensive experience in processing techniques used for ceramics, metals, and polymers. Sintering of a ceramic, casting and post-processing (work hardening, heat treatment, etc.) of a metal, and preparation and extrusion of a polymer are the suggested processes. The measurements (e.g., powder size, compaction force, temperature, grain size, molecular weight) applicable to the successful processing of the material and the final properties (e.g., hardness, ductility, strength, stiffness) will be emphasized. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MSE 37000 - Electrical, Optical, And Magnetic Properties Of Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course to provide basic background on the behavior of materials; electronic band structure, electronic and ionic conduction, electronic processes in semiconductors, dielectric, optical, and magnetic properties, and superconductivity; emphasis is on the relation between the properties and the structural aspects of materials. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MSE 38200 - Mechanical Response Of Materials |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course encompasses deformation-based microscopic mechanisms, including dislocation motion, diffusion, and viscoplasticity. Macroscopic mechanical response of metals, ceramics, polymers, and composites will be related to elasticity and plasticity concepts for single crystal, polycrystalline, and amorphous materials. Practical design considerations for deformation will be included as well as an introduction to fracture mechanisms. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MSE 38500 - Nondestructive Testing |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic principles and common application of nondestructive testing methods. The laws of physics are used to evaluate mechanical and physical properties of materials. The NDT methods cover magnetic, penetrants, eddy current, ultrasonic, radiography, and specialized methods. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| MSE 39000 - Materials Engineering Seminar |
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Credit Hours: 0.00. Presentation and discussion of current topics in materials engineering. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| MSE 39300 - Industrial Practice III |
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Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and comprehensive written reports of this practice. For cooperative program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MSE 39399 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op III |
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Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Materials Engineering. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will develop the ability to function on multi-disciplinary teams and receive the broad education necessary to understand the impact of engineering solutions in global, economics, environmental and societal context.
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| MSE 39400 - Industrial Practice IV |
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Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and comprehensive written reports of this practice. For cooperative program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MSE 39499 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Materials Engineering. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will develop the ability to function on multi-disciplinary teams and receive the broad education necessary to understand the impact of engineering solutions in global, economics, environmental and societal context.
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| MSE 39500 - Industrial Practice V |
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Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and comprehensive written reports of this practice. For cooperative program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MSE 39599 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Materials Engineering. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will develop the ability to function on multi-disciplinary teams and receive the broad education necessary to understand the impact of engineering solutions in global, economics, environmental and societal context.
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| MSE 39600 - Professional Internship |
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Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in materials engineering. Program coordinated by the school with cooperation of participating employers. Proposed internships must be approved by the head of the school. Students submit a summary report. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| MSE 39699 - Professional Practice Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Materials Engineering. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will develop the ability to function on multi-disciplinary teams and receive the broad education necessary to understand the impact of engineering solutions in global, economics, environmental and societal context.
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| MSE 43000 - Materials Processing And Design I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Experience in the initiation and execution of a specific materials project or study involving research, processing, and design; a written proposal on the project prepared by the student under the supervision of an individual faculty member; oral progress report at the end of the semester. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Ability to apply knowledge of mathematics, science, & engineering to problems in materials engineering.
2. Ability to exhibit effective oral and written communication skills.
3. Recognition of the need for, and an ability to engage in life-long learning.
4. A knowledge of contemporary issues, particularly as they relate to materials engineering.
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| MSE 44000 - Materials Processing And Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation and completion of the materials project or study initiated in MSE 43000 and presentation of a written dissertation on the results and conclusions. Competence in technical writing is emphasized in the preparation of the dissertation. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MSE 44500 - Materials Engineering Systems Analysis And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Integration of materials engineering core coursework with statistical, economic and environmental considerations for analysis and design of systems. Analysis of primary materials processing operations using mathematical and statistical models for predicting interactive effects and process optimization. Specification of materials and processes for mechanical designs, incorporating properties assessment and tradeoffs, cost analysis, and performance optimization with multiple constraints. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MSE 49000 - Directed Studies In Materials Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Supplementary individual instruction for students from other engineering schools enrolled in 30000-50000 level MSE courses. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| MSE 49700 - Selected Topics In Materials Engineering |
|
Arrange Hours and Credit. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| MSE 49900 - Research In Materials Engineering |
|
Arrange Hours and Credit. Available upon prior approval of, and arrangement with, a faculty research advisor. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| MSE 50200 - Defects In Solids |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Structures and interactions of point, line, and planar defects in solids, with emphasis on properties of defects. Generic basis of defect energies and interactions, with reference to specific materials and material classes as examples. Types of point defects found in crystals, their origins, interactions, and motion. Overview of dislocation theory and point-defect/dislocation interactions. Structural aspects of surfaces and interfaces, including point and line defect interactions. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MSE 50500 - Modeling and Simulation of Materials Processing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Modeling of various materials processes using finite volume techniques, with an introduction to finite difference and finite element methods. Simulation of microstructural evolution using cellular automata. Links between microscopic and macroscopic modeling. Approximate modeling, uncertainty analysis, and sensitivity analysis as aids to numerical simulation. Limitations on numerical modeling in practical problems. Project work drawn from current problems in materials processing.Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| MSE 50800 - Phase Transformations In Solids |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Description of stress effects on transforming systems. Development of classical models for nucleation and growth and spinodal decomposition. Application of models to discontinuous precipitation, bainite formation, and martensitic transformations. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| MSE 51000 - Microstructural Characterization Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A broad variety of analytical tools will be presented. The intent is to allow the student to make an educated selection of characterization techniques, or critical analysis of published data, for materials and defect analysis. The techniques will be assessed in terms of the probe type and material response, of what device and specimen requirements are typical, and of what data can or cannot be derived from each type of analysis. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
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| MSE 51200 - Powder Processing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Processing of engineering materials from powders. Synthesis of metals, ceramics, and polymers in powder form. Characteristics of particulates. Behavior of collections of particles; surface forces, particle agglomeration and dispersion, gelation, particle packing. Consolidation of powders; mechanics of dry flow and compaction, slurry rheology, shaping processes. Densification and microstructural development; geometry, thermodynamics, and kinetics of sintering, liquid-phase sintering, reaction densification, infiltration. Powder processing of composites. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MSE 52300 - Physical Ceramics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Physical and chemical processes responsible for microstructure development in modern ceramic materials, and the relationship between microstructures and physical properties. The material covered is divided into three parts: solid state processes, including structural defects, diffusion, sintering and grain growth, reaction rates, nucleation and growth, and microstructure development; mechanical and thermal behavior, including deformation, strength, thermal properties, and thermal and compositional stresses; and electrical and magnetic behavior, including electrical conductivity, dielectric properties, and magnetic properties. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MSE 52500 - Struct-Property Relationships Of Engineering Polymers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Structure-property relationships developed for commodity and engineering resins. Focus on connecting bonding and polymer structure (i.e., molecular weight, tacticity, crystallinity as it regards spherulites) to mechanical (yield phenomena and fracture) and thermomechanical behavior (viscoelasticity). Thermal characterization techniques, including DSC, TGA, TMA, and DMTA. Flow of polymer melts related to common melt processing techniques (i.e., extrusion and injection molding). Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| MSE 53000 - Materials Processing In Manufacturing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of the production/synthesis of engineering materials and the subsequent processing steps required to obtain a desired shape and microstructure. The course covers four major categories of materials processing: primary processing or materials synthesis, solidification processing, deformation processing, and powder processing, and provides specific examples from the processing of polymers, metals, and ceramics. The goal is to connect fundamental principles of materials processing to manufacturing processes. Credit will not be given for both MSE 5300 and 36700. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| MSE 53100 - Quantitative Analysis Of Microstructure |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A review will be presented of basic probability theory and statistical analysis, with particular emphasis on terms and definitions of a microstructure. The properties accessible to quantification, the basic stereological relationships and the mathematical foundations, and the microstructural tools needed to quantify the structure will be emphasized. The last one-third of the course will cover applications of quantitative metallography to problems in failure analysis, solidification, heat treatment, phase equilibria, and deformation behavior. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MSE 53600 - Solidification Of Castings |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of solidification of metal in molds involving the characteristics of liquid-solid phase transformations, sand and metal thermal behavior, macroscopic structures, mechanical properties, and casting defects. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| MSE 54700 - Introduction To Surface Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Classical thermodynamics of surfaces: surface tension, surface excess properties, and surface segregation. Atomic structure of surfaces and surface reconstruction. Electronic structure of surfaces, surface states, and the electronic structure/properties of interfaces. Adsorption, surface diffusion, and clustering of adsorbates. Chemical reactions at surfaces. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MSE 54800 - Deposition Processing Of Thin Films And Coatings |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Processing and microstructural development of thin films and layered structures. Includes vapor, liquid, and reactive processing, as well as layer modification by annealing and beam techniques. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MSE 55000 - Properties Of Solids |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Critical examination of fundamental concepts of physical properties of solids and the relation of these properties to thermal and mechanical treatments. Approach is atomistic rather than electronic, and an emphasis is made to connect the fundamental knowledge of solid state physics to actual processing of materials and to a qualitative understanding of current research in the area of materials science. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MSE 55500 - Deformation Mechanisms In Crystalline Solids |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on the mechanisms for deformation and fracture of metal, intermetallic, and ceramic materials, with particular emphasis on high temperature properties. The industrial success of superalloys, dispersion-strengthened alloys, stainless steels, composites, and thermal barrier coatings will serve as the basis for exploring the relationship between composition, microstructure, and component application in high temperature performance. Topics included are alloying effects on dislocation climb and glide, grain boundary and lattice diffusion, and dynamic recrystallization. The interactions between environment and thermal and mechanical cycling also will be considered. Design tools for prediction and evaluation of component life will be investigated in detail, including an exploration of deformation mechanism maps. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MSE 55600 - Fracture Of Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The failure and fracture of materials under applied stress are the focal points of this course, with particular emphasis on the material characteristics that influence fracture. The initial subjects covered in this course will include introductions to linear elastic fracture mechanics (LEFM) and elastic plastic fracture mechanics (EPFM). Subsequently, the strength and toughness of metals, ceramics, and polymers will be explored with regard to processing property relationships and microstructure. Special topics will include racture mechanism maps, Weibull statistics, toughening mechanisms, and failure analysis. This course is distinct from a course on fracture mechanics in that the fundamental materials aspects of fracture are of paramount importance. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MSE 55900 - Phase Equilibria In Multicomponent Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A detailed examination of the thermodynamics of phase equilibria in multicomponent systems, experimental methods of determining these equilibria by measurements of thermodynamic activity and graphical method of representing the equilibria. This is followed by an examination of theoretical models of the behavior of solutions and an examination of the extent to which observed phenomena can be understood and predicted in terms of the models. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| MSE 56000 - The Production Of Inorganic Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of the production of inorganic materials of engineering importance (metals, ceramics, and glasses) from ore concentrates, raw materials, and recycled materials. Individual stages in the extraction, refining, and syntheses processes are examined from the viewpoints of thermodynamics and kinetics, and alternative production routes are compared and contrasted. Topics covered include carbothermic and metallothermic reduction of oxide concentrates, smelting and conversion of sulfide mattes, electrolysis and electrowinning from aqueous solutions and molten salts, distillation and vacuum refining, glass-forming, and the synthesis of carbide and nitride ceramics. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MSE 56700 - Polymer Synthesis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analyze properties of polymers and correlate them to chemical structure. Apply methods and mechanisms of polymer chemistry to industrial and laboratory synthesis. Examine the kinetic and design factors that control polymer structures. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Student will understand, predict and design polymer properties based on polymer structure and how and why certain reactions take place through mechanistic means.
2. Be able to produce a polymer structure based on known reactants and retrosynthetically design a chemical route to a variety of polymer structures.
3. Intuitively grasp the kinetic factors involved to predict such things as molecular weight, polydispersity, and others.
3. Understand polymer chemistry in relation to everyday materials and why industrial practice is as is.
|
| MSE 57500 - Transport Phenomena In Solids |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Energetics and kinetics of phase changes in metals and alloys. Nucleation and growth models, with special emphasis on the role of crystal defects. Selected topics in multicomponent diffusion. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| MSE 57600 - Corrosion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Rate-controlling steps in electrode processes; activation, ohmic, and concentration polarization; passivation; potentiostatic studies and alloy design; applications to engineering systems. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| MSE 58100 - Scanning Electron Microscopy Skills |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Components and operation of the scanning electron microscope (SEM). Limits to resolution; signals, detectors, and imaging modes; and interpretation of results. Laboratory sessions emphasize the practical operation of the instrument and culminate in a test of student skills. This course must be completed before undertaking any SEM research in the School of Materials Engineering. Weeks 1 - 5. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MSE 58200 - Transmission Electron Microscopy Skills |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Principal components and operation of the transmission electron microscope (TEM). Limits to resolution; imaging and diffraction modes; and interpretation of results. Laboratory sessions emphasize the practical operation of the instrument and culminate in a test of student skills. This course must be completed before undertaking any TEM research in the School of Materials Engineering. Weeks 6 - 10. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MSE 58300 - Energy-Dispersive X-Ray Microanalysis Skills |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Theory of X-ray generation, components and operation of the energy dispersive X-ray spectrometer (EDS); limits to resolution; qualitative, semi-quantitative and fully quantitative analysis; and interpretation of results. Laboratory sessions emphasize the practical operation of the instrument and culminate in a test of student skills. Weeks 11 - 15. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MSE 59700 - Selected Topics In Materials Engineering |
|
Arrange Hours and Credit. Hours and credits to be arranged. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MSE 64000 - Transmission Electron Microscopy And Crystal Imperfections |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and application of TEM to problems in materials science and engineering. Principles of electron diffraction and microscopy are reviewed with the emphasis on the relationship between real and reciprocal space. Diffraction theory of imperfect crystals will be introduced. A primary part of the course will be a discussion of image contrasts in terms of atomistic structures of key crystal imperfections, including dislocations and grain boundaries. Experimental applications and image simulations will be included to amplify theoretical concepts. Offered in alternate years. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture 1, Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MSE 69000 - Seminar In Materials Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Required of all MSE graduate students. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MSE 69700 - Selected Topics In Materials Engineering |
|
Arrange Hours and Credit. Hours and credits to be arranged. Prerequisite: two upper-division mathematics courses: one on linear algebra and one on abstract algebra. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MSE 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MSE 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
Department: Materials Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MSL 10100 - Foundations of Officership |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Examines the unique duties and responsibilities of officers. Discuss organization and role of the Army. Review basic life skills pertaining to fitness and communication. Analyze Army values and expected ethical behavior. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 TO 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Military Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Military
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MSL 10200 - Basic Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Presents fundamental leadership concepts and doctrine. Practice basic skills that underlie effective problem solving. Apply active listening and feedback skills. Examine factors that influence leader and group effectiveness. Examine the officer experience. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 TO 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Military Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Military
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MSL 12000 - Read Military Maps Survival Skills |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Fundamentals of reading and interpreting maps and aerial photographs, including marginal information, symbols, map orientation, military grid reference system, and terrain analysis. Application by planning movement of small groups, emphasizing problem solving and control. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Military
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| MSL 20100 - Individual Leadership Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Develops knowledge of self, self- confidence, and individual leadership skills. Develop problem solving and critical thinking skills. Apply communication, feedback, and conflict resolution skills. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Military Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Military
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MSL 20200 - Leadership And Teamwork |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Focuses on self-development guided by knowledge of self and group processes. Challenges current beliefs, knowledge, and skills. Provides equivalent preparation for the ROTC Advanced Course and the Leader's Training Course. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Military Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Military
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MSL 30100 - Leadership And Problem Solving |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Examines basic skills that underlie effective problem solving. Review the features and execution of the Leadership Development Program. Analyze military missions and plan military operations. Execute squad battle drills. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Military Science
Course Attributes: Military, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MSL 30200 - Leadership And Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Probes leader responsibilities that foster an ethical command climate. Develop cadet leadership competencies. Prepare for success at National Advanced Leadership Camp. Recognize leader responsibility to accommodate subordinate spiritual needs. Apply principles and techniques of effective written and oral communication. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Military Science
Course Attributes: Military, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MSL 40100 - Leadership And Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Builds on National Advanced Leadership Camp experience to solve organizational and staff problems. Discuss staff organization, functions, and processes. Examine principles of subordinate motivation and organizational change. Apply leadership and problem solving principles to a complex case study/simulation. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Military Science
Course Attributes: Military, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MSL 40200 - Officership |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Designed to explore topics relevant to second lieutenants entering the Army. Describe legal aspects of decision making and leadership. Analyze Army orgnaization for operations from the tactical to strategic level. Assess administrative and logistics management functions. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Military Science
Course Attributes: Military, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MSL 49000 - Directed Studies In Military Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individual readings, topics, or projects in military science appropriate for advanced undergraduate students. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Military Science
Course Attributes: Military, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MSL 49900 - Advanced Military Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Advanced study of technical and professional topics related to military history, leadership, tactics, team development, management, officership, or training. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Military, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MSPT Z1000 - Motorsports Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course designed to introduce students to the many different kinds of motorsports, their history and the motorsports industry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MSTD A4030 - Introduction to Museum Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This survey of museology introduces students to the history of museums and to debates on the philosophical nature of museums and their roles in society. The course covers the types and definitions of museums, traces the history of museums, discusses contemporary museum practice, and examines current issues in the museum profession.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MSTD A4050 - Museum Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This survey of museum practice introduces students to methods, skills, and resources in three areas of museum work: artifacts, interpretation, and organizational administration, as well as to the ethical
ramifications of these methods.
Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MSTD A4120 - Exhibit Planning And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course offers a survey of museum exhibit planning and design through an integration of theory and practice. The class introduces students to exhibit development, including exhibit administration, design, and evaluation, and to a variety of professional skills through hands-on exercises, exhibit critiques, museum observations, and in-museum classes.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MSTD A4160 - Collections Care and Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of techniques for the management and care of collections in museums. It covers documentation, management of collections, processes, administrative functions, risk management, and ethical and legal issues. The course also covers the physical care and conservation of objects.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MSTD A4600 - Current Topics In Museum Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study and analysis of selected topics in museum studies. Topics will vary from semester to semester. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MSV 56500 - High Performance Computing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to High Performance Computing (HPC), with an emphasis on the programming and analysis aspects of HPC for the practicing scientist, engineer or technologist. This course will prepare students to analyze, design, implement and evaluate parallel algorithms and computer codes. This course will cover the motivation for parallel programming, a description and analysis of Amdahl’s Law, and parallel-programming methodology. Shared-memory and distributed-memory concepts will be compared, and current programming application programming interfaces (APls) will be covered. General knowledge of undergraduate mathematics, science, engineering or technology required. Course may be offered in traditional classroom-based, distance, or blended formats. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to apply fundamental concepts in parallel computing: e.g. Amdahl’s Law, load balancing, domain decomposition, etc.
2. Students will gain experience with distributed-memory parallelism and programming skill with the Message-Passing Interface (MPI) programming API.
3. Students will gain experience with shared-memory parallelism and programming skill with the Pthreads and OpenMP programming APIs.
4. Students will learn to develop, analyze and optimize parallel algorithms for peak performance characteristics.
5. Students will gain research experience in the implementation of parallel programming techniques through unique projects individually designed by the student and instructor.
|
| MSV 56700 - Simulation Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An exploration of deterministic and stochastic simulation. Topics will include determining range of validity, boundary issues, managing complexity, optimization and parallelization of code, computational time management, adaptable meshes, fuzzy logic, and fidelity of simulation. Random number generation will also be covered for stochastic simulations. Examples and projects from a broad range of fields will be used. Course may be offered in classroom based, distance or hybrid formats. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Design a deterministic simulation, including evaluating the provided boundary conditions.
2. Design a stochastic simulation, including evaluating the random number generator used.
3. Display the intermediate and final results in various formats, including hard-copy, flat screen, and 3-D visualization, as appropriate.
|
| MSV 57500 - Software Project Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The factors influencing decision during the initiation, implementation, and termination of software projects are examined. Students work in project teams, using project management tools to develop implementation strategies, characterize contemporary technology projects, understand system perspective of projects, align projects with strategic objectives and learn advanced tools and techniques used in projects. Examples and case studies from a wide range of fields are utilized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. List and describe the knowledge areas of project management.
2. Describe the steps required to plan a project.
3. Describe the steps required to manage a project.
4. List and describe the primary planning documents for a project.
5. Define the characteristics of a project and its deliverables.
6. Describe the most common phases of a project life cycle and the typical project management tasks associated with each.
|
| MSV 57600 - Design And Analysis Of Simulation Experiments |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A review of currently accepted practices in design of simulation experiments, with validation and outcome analysis, and new techniques for model evaluation. Techniques covered may include methods for uncertainty quantification in deterministic models, design of experiments to match field experiments, data collection and sampling methods, data reduction methods, and imaging and statistical visualization. Course may be offered in classroom based, distance, or hybrid formats. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify problems to simulate.
2. Choose a simulation based model appropriate for a problem on the basis of current research.
3. Analyze the data from simulation results.
4. Compose and present a simulation or modeling project efficiently designed with clear visual presentation of outcomes and validation of results.
|
| MSV 57700 - Visualization Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this course graduate students in technology fields and related disciplines will learn how to convey salient information about underlying data and processes for work involving data visualization. Topics covered include various visualization techniques, issues in visual analytics, perceptions and cognition, and application of visualization techniques to problems in technical fields and related disciplines. Course may be offered in classroom based, distance or hybrid formats. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand various visualization techniques.
2. Understand the issues and techniques in visual analytics, visual perception and cognition.
3. Apply techniques to the visualization problems in information, science and medicine.
4. Evaluate technical and research papers.
|
| MT 11200 - Intermediate Algebra-ICN |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intermediate Algebra-ICN. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MT 30000 - Foundations Of Abstract Methods - U of I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Foundations of Abstract Methods - offered through University of Indianapolis Consortium. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MT 47100 - Senior Seminar - Franklin College |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a consortium course for Franklin College. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS 20300 - Music For Elementary Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An undergraduate methods course to provide future teachers in the elementary school with the knowledge, skills, and resources necessary to enhance the regular classroom situation with meaningful and varied musical experiences, and to execute the same with confidence, creativity, and enthusiasm. enthusiasm. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| MUS 25000 - Music Appreciation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The traditions, forms, and styles of classical music. Other types of music may be examined as well. (Students may register through the Continuing Education Student Learning Center at the Tech Statewide locations via distance education.) Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:IFA 1330 Music Appreciation
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS 26100 - Fundamentals Of Music |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of music notation, ear training, and music reading. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students should have a theoretical and practical understanding of music notation, rhythmic structure, meter, scales, blues form, chords, basic musicianship and ear training, and fundamentals of songwriting.
|
| MUS 29000 - Special Topics In Music |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics will vary.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS 32400 - Teaching Music In The Elementary School |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Develops basic musicianship through singing, playing instruments, reading and writing music, listening and moving to music. Surveys music teaching methods and materials. Includes lesson planning, experiences in teaching, and observation of children in music classes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| MUS 35500 - American Musical Theatre |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (THTR 355) A study of the origin, artistry, and unique qualities of the American musical theatre. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| MUS 36100 - Music Theory I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course comprises instruction in melodic and harmonic processes in tonal music; development of analytic, listening and piano techniques with musical equipment. Music reading ability is required, verified through Placement Exam. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Notate and identify (visually and aurally) keys, intervals, rhythms and meters, melodic and harmonic relationships, phrase structure, formal processes in diatonic tonal music.
2. Harmonize a melody, realize a figured bass and understand the three basic diatonic chord progressions.
3. Perform at the piano: diatonic chord progressions, melodies with chordal accompaniments, arpeggios.
4. Sing diatonic melodies in simple and compound meters.
|
| MUS 36200 - Music Theory II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A variety of styles and forms of music serve to exemplify melodic and harmonic processes and voice-leading practices in diatonic tonal music. Activities include analytic reading of musical scores, developing musical listening skills, and acquiring functional piano techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MUS 36300 - Music Theory III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analytic study of art music and popular music representative of diatonic and chromatic tonal processes. Activities include analytic reading of musical scores, developing musical listening skills, and acquiring functional piano techniques. Creative applications are encouraged. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MUS 36400 - Music Theory IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to twentieth-century music, emphasizing avant-garde explorations and connections to musical traditions. Analysis and research illuminate extensions of tonality, expanded chromatic vocabulary, new uses of traditional modes, exotic influences, atonality, serialism, chance music, electronic music, computer music, minimalism. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MUS 37400 - Contemporary Music |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the music of the 20th century and beyond. Class activities are focused on analysis of music representative of varous genres. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MUS 37500 - Selected Topics In Music |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of a specific genre in music (symphony, opera, chamber music, etc.) or the works of a single composer. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
TSW-Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS 37600 - World Music |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of musical traditions around the globe through lectures, readings, recordings, DVDs, and performances. Students will discover how cultural traditions, life rituals, arts, and other traditions influence each region's expression of music. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| MUS 37800 - Jazz History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A historical and stylistic study of jazz. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| MUS 38100 - Music History I: Antiquity To Mozart |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of the development of Western European music history from antiquity to Mozart. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to listen to a piece composed between antiquity to 1800 and compare it to other pieces, recognize its genre, describe its stylistic features, suggest possible composer and date, place it in historical context, describe its social function, describe performance practice, and describe composer, performer and audience for this piece.
|
| MUS 38200 - Music History II: Beethoven To The Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of the development of Western European music history from Beethoven to the present. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to listen to a piece composed between and the present day and compare it to other pieces, recognize its genre, describe its stylistic features, suggest possible composer and date, place it in historical context, describe its social function, describe performance practice, and describe composer, performer and audience for this piece.
|
| MUS 39000 - Special Topics In Music |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics will vary. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS 49000 - Guided Reading In Music |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. For students with specialized needs and interests in the field. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS 59000 - Special Problems In Music |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. An individualized and intensive study of any aspect of music required by the student's plan of study. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS A1010 - Introduction To Audio Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the equipment and techniques employed in audio recording and reinforcement.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS A1030 - Audio Recording I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic tools for working within the digital audio recording environment; the nature of sound, signal flow in audio systems, perception of sound, time/phase relationships, monitoring, microphones, pre-amplification, and digital recording principles (sampling rates, bit depth, transmission standards, digital/analog conversion, DAW Pro Tools). Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS A1040 - Recording Crew I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students will record Department of Music concerts and recitals in a variety of performance venues under the supervision of the Director of the IPFW/Sweetwater Music Techolology program. Typically offere Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS A1100 - Basic Musicianship And Technology I |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Musicianship and Technology I is the first component of a four-semester sequence in comprehensive musicianship. The courses in this sequence provide the major fundamentals of theory, history, and applied music skills while utilizing basic music technology. The semester is divided roughly into seven two-week units. Each unit shall focus on one broad topic and related skill set. All topics shall be explored form an analytical, historical, and hands-on perspective. Course material shall incorporate an array of styles, genres, and cultural influences. For music majors only. Prerequisite: Placement test taken one week prior to fall semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS A1200 - Basic Musicianship And Technology II |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Second of a four-semester sequence, this class explores concepts introduced in Basic Musicianship I in greater depth and includes new topics such as voice leading. All topics are examined from an analytical, historical and hands on perspective. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS A1900 - Exploring Musical Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is intended to introduce students to the materials of music - pitch, rhythm, melody, harmony, etc.; to the notational tools used by musicians to represent these materials; and to the processes and experiences of musical composition. By the end of the semester, each student will have used the tools and skills learned to compose several musical compositions in different musical styles. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS A2030 - Audio Recording II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The second step in the production process, mixing. Microphone design and techniques, metering schemes, monitoring scenarios, producer presentations, critical listening; dynamics, equalization, mix review, reverb/delay, effects processing, mastering, CD creation. An individual mixing project is required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS A2040 - Recording Crew II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Student will record Department of Music concerts and recitals in a variety of performance venues under the supervision of the Director of the IPFW/Sweetwater Music Technology program and advanced audio recording students. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS A2050 - Audio Recording III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design and maintenance of the project studio, studio acoustic design, recording strategies, advanced microphone techniques, advanced editing techniques, advanced sign processing, advanced mixing, mastering and audio software techniques. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS A2060 - Recording Crew III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.0. Students will record Department of Music concerts and recitals in a variety of performance venues under the supervision of the Director of the IPFW/Sweetwater Music Technology program and advanced audio recording students. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS A2070 - Synthesis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The history and programming fundamentals of music synthesis; exploration of the components of both hardware and virtual synthesizers with an emphasis on usign them to create desired sounds; programming of hardware and virtual instruments. Topics include the major synthesizer sections and parameters, historical and future users in sound creation. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS A2080 - Sampling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics include each of the major sampler sections and parameters; historical uses and future used in sound creation; the history of and programming fundamentals of music sampling, exploration of the components of both hardware and virtual samplers with an emphasis on creation of desired sounds; hands-on programming of both hardware and virtual instruments. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS A2100 - Advanced Musicianship And Technology I |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Musicianship and Technology III is the continuation of the four-semester sequence in comprehensive musicianship. Concepts introduced in Musicianship and Technology I-II shall be explored with greater depth and sophisticated application. Several new topics, such as counterpoint, mode mixture, and enharmonic transformation, shall be included. All topics shall be explored from an analytical, historical, and hands-on perspective. Course material shall incorporate an array of styles, genres, and cultural influences. For music majors only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS A2200 - Advanced Musicianship And Technology II |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. In this last of a four-semester sequence, the student will incorporate all of the concepts of Basic Musicianship I and II, and Advanced Musicianship I, as well as examine composition and cellular music organization at an analytic, historical and hands-on level utilizing technology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS A3000 - The Business Of Music |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focus on the history of the music business and current practice in the music industry. Topics included organization and operation of record labels, record deals and contracts, recording and studios, copyright and performance rights, music publishing, unions, agents and managers, touring and concerts, merchandising, website design, and distribution and promotion. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS A3030 - Sequencing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The practice of musical sequencing; using the computer sequencing interface to control virtual instruments in the performance of a MIDI recording of a piece of music. Various virtual instruments will be used; performance practices will be prioritized, from studio sequencing, to a film scoring, to partially electro-acoustic performance and live performance. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS A3040 - Live Sound Reinforcement |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and practice of audio amplification for live events, various facets of sound reinfocement, such as hardware, software, techniques, development of practical skills; signal flow, microphones, speakers, crossovers, amplifiers, mixers, signal processing, power requirements, cable interconnects, electrical engineering topics. Analog and digital equipment will be used. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS A3050 - Recording Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Supervised practice in audio and video recording and editing of live performances and studio recording sessions utilizing a Pro-Tools HDS system, advance plug-ins, and dedicated computer labs with professional video editors and plug-ins for individual work. Participation with College Access Television Production. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Individual Study, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS A3060 - Special Topics In Music Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Content defined by individual needs to provide research for students’ Final Project. Possibilities include but are not limited to: sequencing using orchestral sample libraries and/or hard/software, synthesizers and samplers; film scoring, advanced live sound reinforcement, advanced synthesis/sampling, live electronic performance and electro-acoustic composition. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS A4040 - Music Technology Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. One of two capstone experiences taking place near completion of coursework. Includes but is not limited to activities such as audio recording, video production, live sound reinforcement, web design, commercial applications, sales, marketing. Required adherence to internship provider’s workplace rules and regulations including dress code. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS A4050 - Final Project In Music Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Self-directed study of a specific area in the field, continuing work done in Special Topics in Music Technology. Possibilities include, but are not limited to: sequencing using orchestral sample libraries and/or hard/software synthesizers and samplers; film scoring, advanced live sound, advanced synthesis/sampling, live electro-acoustic composition. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS B1100 - French Horn |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Elective (100) level: Work for students will be outlined by the instructor to meet individual needs and aims, evaluation will be based upon quality and content of work covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS B1200 - Trumpet And Cornet |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Elective (100) level: Work for students will be outlined by the instructor to meet individual needs and aims, evaluation will be based upon quality and content of work covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-New Albany
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS B1300 - Trombone |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Elective (100) level: Work for students will be outlined by the instructor to meet individual needs and aims, evaluation will be based upon quality and content of work covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS B1400 - Baritone Horn |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Elective (100) level: Work for students will be outlined by the instructor to meet individual needs and aims, evaluation will be based upon quality and content of work covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS B1500 - Tuba |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Elective (100) level: Work for students will be outlined by the instructor to meet individual needs and aims, evaluation will be based upon quality and content of work covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS B1930 - Piano Pedagogy Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Observation and supervised teaching of piano. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS B2100 - French Horn |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Secondary (200) level: Designed to give the student certain proficiencies so that student may use this application as a tool rather than a medium for performance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS B2200 - Trumpet And Cornet |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Secondary (200) level: Designed to give the student certain proficiencies so that student may use this application as a tool rather than a medium for performance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS B2300 - Trombone |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Secondary (200) level: Designed to give the student certain proficiencies so that student may use this application as a tool rather than a medium for performance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS B2400 - Baritone Horn |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Secondary (200) level: Designed to give the student certain proficiencies so that student may use this application as a tool rather than a medium for performance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS B2500 - Tuba |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Secondary (200) level: Designed to give the student certain proficiencies so that student may use this application as a tool rather than a medium for performance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS B3100 - French Horn |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Concentration (300) level: A student concentrating in an applied music area is expected to show evidence of considerable prior study and to give a half-recital. By recital time the student is expected to have attained levels reached by applied music major at end of sophomore year. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS B3110 - French Horn Concentration Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS B3200 - Trumpet And Cornet |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Concentration (300) level: A student concentrating in a n applied music area is expected to show evidence of considerable prior study and to give a half-recital. By recital time the student is expected to have attained levels reached by applied music major at end of the sophomore year. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS B3210 - Trumpet And Cornet Concentration Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS B3300 - Trombone |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Concentration (300) level: A student concentrating in a n applied music area is expected to show evidence of considerable prior study and to give a half-recital. By recital time the student is expected to have attained levels reached by applied music major at end of the sophomore year. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS B3310 - Trombn Concentration Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS B3400 - Baritone Horn |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Concentration (300) level: A student concentrating in a n applied music area is expected to show evidence of considerable prior study and to give a half-recital. By recital time the student is expected to have attained levels reached by applied music major at end of the sophomore year. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS B3410 - Baritone Horn Concentration Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS B3500 - Tuba |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Concentration (300) level: A student concentrating in an applied music area is expected to show evidence of considerable prior study and to give a half-recital. By recital time the student is expected to have attained levels reached by applied music major at end of the sophomore year. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS B3510 - Tuba Concentration Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS B4100 - French Horn |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Major (400) level: A student majoring in applied music must show talent for solo performance before being admitted to the curriculum and must give a junior and senior recital. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS B4110 - French Horn Major Junior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS B4120 - French Horn Major Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS B4200 - Trumpet And Cornet |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Major (400) level: A student majoring in applied music must show talent for solo performance before being admitted to the curriculum and must give a junior and senior recital. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS B4210 - Trumpet And Cornet Major Junior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS B4220 - Trumpet And Cornet Major Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS B4300 - Trombone |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Major (400) level: A student majoring in applied music must show talent for solo performance before being admitted to the curriculum and must give a junior and senior recital. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS B4310 - Trombone Major Junior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS B4320 - Trombone Major Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS B4400 - Duphonium Undergraduate Major |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Major (400) level: A student majoring in applied music must show talent for solo performance before being admitted to the curriculum and must give a junior and senior recital. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS B4410 - Baritone Horn Major Junior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS B4420 - Baritone Horn Major Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS B4500 - Tuba |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Major (400) level: A student majoring in applied music must show talent for solo performance before being admitted to the curriculum and must give a junior and senior recital. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS B4510 - Tuba Major Junior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS B4520 - Tuba Major Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS D1000 - Percussion |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Elective (100) level: Work for students will be outlined by the instructor to meet individual needs and aims, evaluation will be based upon quality and content of work covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS D2000 - Percussion Instrument |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Secondary (200) level: Designed to give the student certain proficiencies so that student may use this application as a tool rather than a medium for performance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS D2600 - Percussion (Applied Music) |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Private studio instruction is offered at all levels. Levels may be repeated for credit (2 credit hours each semester). Applied music fee is required for all students. Those interested in studying instruments not listed as follows should consult the music department office. Students who complete two semesters of private study should consult with the music program coordinator for registration in a higher course level. Senior recital courses (402 numbers) should be arranged with the department before registration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS D3000 - Percussion |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Concentration (300) level: A student concentrating in an applied music area is expected to show evidence of considerable prior study and to give a half-recital. By recital time the student is expected to have attained levels reached by applied music major at end of sophomore year. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS D3010 - Percussion Concentration Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS D4000 - Percussion |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Major (400) level: A student majoring in applied music must show talent for solo performance before being admitted to the curriculum and must give a junior and senior recital. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS D4010 - Percussion Major Junior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS D4020 - Percussion Major Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS E1350 - First Year Seminar In Music Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Orientation for first year music education majors to the principles and practices of music education through readings, presentations, discussion, field experiences and professional growth activities. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS E1530 - Classroom Instrumental Skills |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Techniques for using Autoharp, soprano recorder, and baritone ukulele in therapy, recreation, and education settings. Includes group conducting, song leading skills, and recreational singing techniques for children and adults with and without special needs. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS E1930 - Piano Pedagogy I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Observation and assistance in piano classes for young students. Class discussion will involve evaluation of teaching; readings from pedagogical literature and on the business of music; survey of methods, teaching materials and literature. Both courses involve one hour of observation per week. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS E1940 - Piano Pedagogy Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Observation and assistance in piano classes for young students. Class discussion will involve evaluation of teaching; readings from pedagogical literature and on the business of music; survey of methods, teaching materials and literature. Both courses involve one hour of observation per week. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Practicum
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS E2410 - Introduction To Music Fundamentals |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Designed for, but not limited to, elementary education majors and others interested in using music as a learning tool. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS E2530 - Functional Music Skills |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Overview of musical skills based on AMTA Professional Competencies. Areas addressed will include use of keyboard, guitar, voice, autoharp, ukulele, and Q-chord in clinical applications. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS E2930 - Piano Pedagogy III |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Class meetings cover assigned readings, teaching techniques and materials, editions, and business practices. Students assist and teach in class piano labs, and teach three private students in the preparatory program. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS E2940 - Piano Pedagogy IV |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Class meetings cover assigned readings, teaching techniques and materials, editions, and business practices. Students assist and teach in class piano labs, and teach three private students in the preparatory program. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS E3530 - Improvisation Techniques For Music Therapy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Clinical improvisation techniques using instruments, voice and movement in group and individual situations. Overview of use of client improvisation for clinical assessment through Improvisation Assessment Profiles and exploration of various models using improvisation as intervention. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS E4590 - Instrumental Pedagogy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Pedagogy classes pertaining to the individual instruments. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS E4700 - Pedagogy Of Jazz |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Techniques and methods of teaching jazz studies including training of jazz bands. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS E4930 - Piano Pedagogy |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Methods and materials for teaching individuals and class on the intermediate and advanced levels. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS E4940 - Voice Pedagogy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey and analysis of various aspects of vocal pedagogy, including the physiology of the vocal mechanism, vocal terminology, teaching methods, vocal health, and the relationship of the singing process to vocal artistry. Class will include student presentations, teaching demonstrations, and lab experience. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS E5340 - Practicum In Music Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Practical or creative project, or investigation of problems and issues in music education. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Practicum
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS E5360 - Systematic Research In Arts Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Introduction to the underlying principles and concepts of technology-based studies in the arts. Emphasis on the integration of scientific methodology, descriptive and inferential techniques, and multimedia instrumentation in project development. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS E5940 - Vocal Pedagogy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the components of voice production-respiration, phonation, resonance, and articulation-along with practical methods to address voice classification, tonal quality, diction, registration, and other related topics. A major paper on a related subject and supervised teaching through assignment of students to members of the class will be required.Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain experience and learn the fundamentals of voice production in order to approach teaching private voice lessons and teaching in an academic setting.
|
| MUS E5950 - Seminar In Vocal Pedagogy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Practice in analyzing vocal problems of a selected group of students. Assignment of students to each member of the class for supervised teaching. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS F3210 - Jazz Improvization |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Theory and techniques of jazz improvisation with emphasis on functional harmony, melodic form, special scales, tune studies, ear training, and development of style. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS F4000 - Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS F4190 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A format intended to accommodate special content not necessarily appropriate to a fixed listing. Planned to utilize unique competencies of faculty and special interests of students. Topics such as musical instrument repair, composition, music education, music therapy, music technology and advanced conducting may be elected. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS F4200 - Topics In Performance Study |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics in Performance Study. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS F4510 - Chamber Ensemble |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. For majors. This is a performance class, designed to further skills on each individual instrument, learn diverse styles of music, and work in a group setting. Private coaching will be offered and a performance will be scheduled for the end of the semester. Advanced musicians are encouraged. The following instruments may be included in this course: Flute, oboe, bassoon, clarinet, strings, guitar, piano, French horn, and voice. Performance at the end of the semester is required. Only 1 credit per semester will count towards BMST degree. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS F4520 - Keyboard Chamber Music Ensemble |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Rehearsal and performance of chamber music involving piano, including but not limited to such ensembles as piano trio, quartet, quintet; or chamber ensembles involving harpsichord with various chamber ensemble instrumentations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS F4660 - Techniques In Marching Bands |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. For undergraduate and graduates majoring in music education. Techniques for organizing and training marching bands in public schools and at the college level. Planning and charting football shows; rehearsal problems. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS G2610 - String Class Techniques I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Class instruction and teaching methods for developing proficiency on violin, viola, violoncello and double bass. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS G2710 - Clarinet & Saxophone Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Class instruction for developing proficiency on clarinet and saxophone. Study of methods and materials for teaching thsee two instruments in class or private lessons. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS G2720 - Clarinet And Saxophone Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Class instruction for developing proficiency on clarinet and saxophone. Study of methods and materials for teaching these two instruments in class or private lessons. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS G2810 - Brass Instrument Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Class instruction for developing proficiency on trumpet, French horn, trombone, euphonium, and tuba. Study of methods and materials for teaching rass instruments in class or private lessons. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS G3000 - Piano Accompanying |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Study of the art and practice of accompanying singers and instrumentalists. Areas covered include sight-reading, ensemble playing, coaching techniques, style and interpretation, transposition and score reading. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS G3370 - Woodwind Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Class instruction and teaching methods for flute, oboe, bassoon, clarinet and saxophone. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS G3380 - Percussion Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Class instruction to learn the rudiments of snare drum, tympani, and mallet instruments. Study of methods and materials for teaching percussion instruments in class or private lessons. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS G3700 - Techniques For Conducting |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to fundamental techniques of conducting, score preparation, and reading. Baton and hand gestures for the right hand, and the fundamental usage of left hand movements. Philosophy and purpose of conducting. Establishing and maintaining time patterns, and conducting all basic and standard meters. Differences for conducting varying dynamics, accents, musical characteristics and styles. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS G3710 - Choral Conducting I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Further development of basic conducting technique with a concentration on choral concepts. Emphasis on period style elements, analytical listening, aspects of choral tone, text analysis, score preparation, rehearsal planning, vocal techniques, and other advanced problems in choral conducting. Conduct representative works from varying style periods. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS G3730 - Instrumental Conducting |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Further development of score reading and conducting techniques. Emphasis on experience conducting live instrumental ensembles. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS G4660 - Techniques For Marching Bands |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Organization and training of public school marching bands. Traditional and corps style marching. Specific topics include staffing, scheduling, marching percussion and other specialized marching instruments, auxilary, fund raising, band boosters, and competitions. Writing a show by hand and with a computer. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS H1000 - Harp |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Elective (100) level: Work for students will be outlined by the instructor to meet individual needs and aims, evaluation will be based upon quality and content of work covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS H2000 - Harp |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Secondary (200) level: Designed to give the student certain proficiencies so that student may use this application as a tool rather than a medium for performance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS H3000 - Harp |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Undergraduate music performance study course includes private lessons and recitals. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS H3010 - Harp Concentration Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS I5000 - Performance And Composition Masterclass |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Performance And Composition Masterclass. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS J2000 - Ballet |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. For students of the School of Arts wishing to study ballet as a related filed but not as a major. Beginners' sections open to all students. Intermediate and advanced section open to students with consent of instructor. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS K1000 - Composition Undergraduate Elective/ Secondary |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Individual lessons in composition. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS K1310 - Composition Workshop I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Elementary compositional procedures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS K1320 - Composition Workshop II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Elementary compositional procedures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS K3120 - Arranging For Instrumental And Vocal Groups |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Fundamentals of orchestration, arranging and scoring for orchestra, band and chorus. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS K3610 - Introduction To MIDI And Computer Music |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basics of the Music Instrument Digital Interface System, it’s software, and the instruments commonly used with desktop MIDI workstations (synthesizers, digital samplers) MIDI sequencing, digital audio editing, and principles of digital synthesis. The course is intended for those with little prior technical training. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Richmond
|
| MUS L1000 - Guitar |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Elective (100) level: Work for students will be outlined by the instructor to meet individual needs and aims, evaluation will be based upon quality and content of work covered. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS L1010 - Beginning Guitar Class |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Fundamentals of contemporary guitar playing, with emphasis on simple songs and chords; acoustic guitar required for class and practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS L1020 - Intermediate Guitar Class |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Builds on knowledge learned in MUS L1010; ability to reach chord notation, rhythms, and music notation necessary; acoustic guitar required for class and practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS L1030 - Advanced Guitar Class |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to Classical guitar music and techniques with expanding on music reading to the level of basic sight reading. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS L1530 - Introduction To Music Therapy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the influences of music on behavior, the healing properties of music, the use of music therapy with a variety of populations and the development of the music therapy profession. Includes an introduction to the clinical process and music therapy procedures as well as participation in experiential activities. Approved general education course in artistic expression. Fall, spring, summer. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| MUS L2000 - Guitar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Secondary (200) level: Designed to give the student certain proficiencies so that student may use this application as a tool rather than a medium for performance. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS L2530 - Music Therapy Observation Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Observation of professional music therapy sessions in a variety of settings with client populations of varying needs. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| MUS L2540 - Music Therapy Practicum I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students work with an MT-BC providing services to individual music therapy clients with developmental disabilities focusing on establishment of rapport and application of music experiences in clinical setting. Includes clinical hours and attendance at weekly seminar. May be repeated. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS L2600 - Guitar |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Private studio instruction in guitar. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS L3000 - Guitar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Concentration (300) level: A student concentrating in an applied music area is expected to show evidence of considerable prior study and to give a half-recital. By recital time the student is expected to have attained levels reached by applied music major at end of sophomore year. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS L3010 - Guitar Concentration Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS L3400 - Music Therapy In Healthcare |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of music therapy and music medicine in the assessment and treatment of children, adults and the elderly in healthcare settings. Includes stress management, pain management, illness management, terminal illness and wellness. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS L3530 - Music Therapy Practicum II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students work with an MT-BC to provide services to aging/elderly client groups focusing on the implementation of music therapy assessment. Includes clinical hours and attendance at weekly seminar. May be repeated. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS L3540 - Music Therapy Practicum III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students work with an MT-BC to provide services to physically or multiply-disabled clients with emphasis on the process of assessment, treatment and evaluation. Includes clinical hours and attendance at weekly seminar. May be repeated. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS L4100 - Administrative And Professional Issues In Music Therapy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of government and professional guidelines that influence music therapy practice. Includes review of the professional organization, Standards of Practice, Code of Ethics, Levels of Practice, corresponding competencies, certification requirements, internship requirements, and other professional issues. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS L4180 - Psychology Of Music |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the physical, psychological and physiological aspects of sound and music. Survey of the theories related to sound production, acoustics, music perception and learning, and the effects of sound and music on the behavior of humans. Overview of music psychology research, the scientific method and research techniques. (Offered in even years.). Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| MUS L4190 - Introduction to Music Therapy Research Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of current music therapy research including quantitative, qualitative, and historical literature with focus on underlying philosophies of research, research design, validity and reliability, and research ethics. Development of skills in defining research questions, reviewing literature, basic analysis and interpretation of data, and application of research to clinical practice. (Offered in odd years.). Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| MUS L4200 - Clinical Processes In Music Therapy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to processes, principles and concepts required to conduct music therapy with clients according to AMTA Standards of Clinical Practice. Includes the influence of music on behavior. Emphasis on assessment, documentation, outcomes measurement, treatment planning and evaluation. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS L4210 - Music Therapy Practicum IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students work with an MT-BC to provide services to psychiatric/mentally ill clients focusing on the process of treatment for assessment through evaluation and the development of therapeutic self. Involves clinical hours and attendance at weekly seminar. May be repeated. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS L4220 - Theoretical Foundation In Music Therapy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of music therapy theory, including underlying philosophies, imported and indigenous schools of thought, and related methods of clinical practice. Students will development a personal philosophy of music therapy. Even years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS L4230 - Advanced Music Therapy Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An advanced, intensive field-work course in clinical music therapy. May involve program planning, techniques development, and/or a research project. Development of a learning contract is required. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS L4240 - Music Therapy Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A six-month internship completed under the supervision of a professional and credentialed music therapist at an AMTA-approved clinical site. Course must be completed within two years of the completion of all course work. Internship must be completed before conferring of the degree. Liability insurance required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS M1100 - Special Topics in Music |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Introductory courses in a variety of musical areas, such as jazz, Afro-American music, contemporary, popular styles, improvisation, etc. No prior musical study required. Open to all students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS M1740 - Music For The Listener |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey course covering traditional and modern music styles of the last 1,000 years. Learn how to listen to music, instruments, and musical forms. No prior music experience required. (on campus and WWW). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS M1750 - Music For The Listener II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Music of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. More intensive coverage than M174. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS M1760 - Auditorium Series I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Attendance at local cultural events as specified by arts faculty. These classes may not be taken concurrently with any other course requiring cultural event attendance. It may be necessary for the student to purchase tickets to some of the required events. For non-music majors only. Two credit hours regular semester; one credit hour in summer session.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS M1770 - Auditorium Series II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Attendance at local cultural events as specified by arts faculty. These classes may not be taken concurrently with any other course requiring cultural event attendance. It may be necessary for the student to purchase tickets to some of the required events. For non-music majors only. Two credit hours regular semester; one credit hour in summer session.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS M2010 - Music Literature I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Survey of music from classical antiquity to 1750. Designed to develop a perspective on the evolution of music in its sociocultural milieu, a repertoire of representative compositions, and a technique for listening analytically. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS M2020 - Music Literature II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Survey of music from the classical era to the present. Designed to develop a perspective on the evolution of music in its socio-cultural milieu, a repertoire of representative compositions, and a technique for listening analytically. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
|
| MUS M2160 - Music Education Laboratory and Field Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Field experiences and observations in vocal and instrumental music program K-12. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS M2360 - Introduction To Music Education K-12 |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An overview of the music education profession, including the study of philosophical and historical foundations of music teaching and learning. Includes examinations of curriculum and current issues in music education. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS M3170 - Music Education Laboratory and Field Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Field experiences and observations in instrumental music education. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS M3180 - Music Education Laboratory and Field Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Field experiences and observations in choral music education. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS M3190 - Music Education Laboratory and Field Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Field experiences and observations in elementary general music. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS M3350 - Methods And Materials For Teaching General Music 6-12 |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The study of curriculum, methods and materials for teaching secondary general music. Exploration of contemporary topics and active music-making approaches outside of the performance setting. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS M3370 - Methods and Materials For Teaching Instrumental Music |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Development and organization of instrumental music programs, including methods and materials, rehearsal techniques, and a survey of band and orchestra literature. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS M3380 - Methods And Materials For Teaching Choral Music |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Development and organization of administration of choral music programs in the middle and secondary school. Emphasis on auditioning and placement, vocal production, rehearsal techniques, and appropriate choral literature. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS M3390 - General Music Methods K-8 |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The study of curriculum, methods and materials for the elementary general music program. Includes sequential planning of lessons, introduction to important methodologies, and directing the elementary-age choir. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS M3750 - Survey Of Ethnic And Popular Musics Of The World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Covers musics of other nations and Native American musics for the general student. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS M3930 - History Of Jazz |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis on jazz as a means to better understand the history and culture of America through examining the periods, major performers and composers, trends, influences, stylistic features, and related materials. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
|
| MUS M3940 - Black Music In America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey and exploration of black music from its African origin to the present, with special emphasis on its social, economic, and political impact. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS M4000 - Undergraduate Readings Musicology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Guided reading in selected topics in music history and research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS M4030 - History Of Music I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of music from the beginnings of Western Civilization to 1700. Analysis of representative compositions; relationship or music to the socio-cultural background of each epoch. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS M4040 - History Of Music II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of music from 1700 to the present. Analysis of representative compositions; relationship of music to the socio-cultural background of each epoch. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS M4310 - Song Literature I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Musical, historical, and interpretive study of songs and arias from the western art tradition with emphasis on Italian Baroque and Classical arias and German lieder. Class will consist of lecture, listening, and in-class performances. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS M4430 - Survey Of Keyboard Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Study of keyboard literature from its beginning to the present era, including a survey of works originally composed for piano, organ harpsichord and various early instruments. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS M4450 - Instrumental Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Survey of symphonic literature from the Classic Era to the present and Chamber literature from the Baroque Era to the present. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS M4460 - Survey Of Keyboard Literature II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of keyboard literature from its beginnings through the 21st century. Emphasis on works originally composed for piano during the 19th and 20th centuries, with some study of works written for other keyboard instruments and transcribed for piano; references to works of earlier periods for earlier keyboard instruments. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS M5000 - Special Seminar In Music History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of performance practices--the styles of solo and ensemble performance of instrumental and vocal music: medium, dynamics, tempo, phrasing, ornamentation, improvisation, temperament.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS N1010 - Music For The Listener: Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey course designed to introduce non-music major to materials, history, and literature of Western art music from the earliest times to present. Emphasis upon developing listening skills and an awareness of different musical styles through study of major works of outstanding composers of each historical era/style period. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS N3100 - Music Technology I |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. This is the foundation course to the music technology sequence. It is intended to provide the student with a conceptual understanding of basic hardware and software tools for creating, editing, and recording music. It will also acquaint the student with the nomenclature and techniques of music production. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS N5120 - Foundations Of Music Productions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines foundations and principles of music production. Topics include publishing, print media, music composition, methods, textbooks, multimedia, computer and electronic transmission of computer imaging, sound, and video. Other aspects covered are broadcast media; televideo graphics; background audio; script credit approval; clearances; recording; CD audio; sampling and reproduction of sound and images; multimedia; and computer applications, including network and broadband transmission of media. Business affairs, arts management, live performance, and legal aspects of the commercial music industry are assessed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS N5130 - Principles Of Multimedia Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines theories and research in the use of computer technology with special focus on curriculum design and implementation of technology, learning and training theory paradigms, technology selection and assessment for learner-centered, individualized instruction and training. Implementation and assessment of designs for specific instructional models are included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS N5140 - Music Technology Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Applies sequencing and music notation technology to current and emerging digital arts technologies, multimedia techniques applied to sound-based stimuli and MIDI applications for video graphics and storyboard techniques. This course explores the development of “Music Instrument Digital Interface” (MIDI) and related uses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS N5150 - Multimedia Design Application In The Arts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Presents the principles and fundamentals of instructional design and design techniques using authoring tools on PC, Macintosh, and emerging computer platforms. Included are storyboarding, planning, and organization of scripts; the use of current technology, computers, video, and digital arts equipment; computer-assisted design and project planner software tools; and management of design team concepts. Also included design parameters for CD-ROM and videodisc production. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS N5160 - Advance Interaction Design Application In Arts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advance Interaction Design Application In Arts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS N5170 - Internship In Arts Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Internship In Arts Technology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS N5180 - Arts Technology Development Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students create and orally present a multimedia teaching/training project that combines one or more of several elements of music technology including CD-ROM, videodisc, digital audio and video, and MIDI. Requirements include technology project proposal development, oral presentation of proposal, research and development of project, project final report, and oral and media presentation of project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS N5190 - Digital Sound Design For Multimedia I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Digital sound design and multimedia applications result in use of advanced Digital Audio Workstations and advanced software systems. Digital software-based sampling, synthesis, and multitrack recording systems will be mastered, including Pro-Tools, CuBase, and experimental music systems. Lab time in Digital Sound Design Studio required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS N5200 - Digital Sound Design/Multimedia II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Digital Sound Design/Multimedia II. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS N5320 - Music In Medicine |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of literature describing medical applications of music. Students collaborate with healthcare professionals caring for various client populations. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS P1000 - Piano Elective/Secondary |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Elective (100) level: Work for students will be outlined by the instructor to meet individual needs and aims, evaluation will be based upon quality and content of work covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS P1010 - Piano Class I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Group instruction in piano fundamentals for elective and secondary students. Emphasis on elementary keyboard harmony, scales, arpeggios, transposition, and easier literature. Typicall offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
|
| MUS P1100 - Beginning Piano Class For Non-Music Majors |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Class piano for beginning piano students who are not music majors. Typically offered Spring Fall.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS P1110 - Piano Class Music Majors I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Preparation of non-keyboard concentrations/majors in the skills necessary for the Keyboard Proficiency Examination. Six sequential components provide sequential presentation of fundamental skills. Three performance examinations during the semester evaluate poise, facility, and general musicianship at the keyboard. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS P1200 - Beginning Piano Class II For Non-Music Majors |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Builds on skills acquired in MUS P110. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS P1210 - Piano Class Music Majors II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Preparation of students other than keyboard concentrations/majors for the Keyboard Proficiency Examination. Six sequential components provide sequential presentation of fundamental skills. Three performance examinations during the semester evaluate poise, facility, and general musicianship at the keyboard. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS P1300 - Beginning Piano Class III Nonmusic Majors |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Class piano (third semester level) for students who are not music majors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS P1310 - Piano Class Music Majors III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Continuation of preparation of keyboard proficiency with pass-off of individual components of the examination during the semester. Three performance examinations during the semester evaluate poise, facility, and general musicianship at the keyboard. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS P1410 - Piano Class Music Majors IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Directed study of remaining components of keyboard profiviency examination. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS P2000 - Piano |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Secondary (200) level: Designed to give the student certain proficiencies so that student may use this application as a tool rather than a medium for performance. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS P2100 - Keyboard Skills |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. For music education and music therapy students. Extended study in materials and effective performance skills for these professions. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS P2110 - Keyboard Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Preparation of the functional skills necessary on the keyboard proficiency examination. Keyboard concentrations and Majors only. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS P2600 - Piano (Applied Music) |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Private studio instruction in piano as a performing emphasis for students in the B.A. in Music program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| MUS P3000 - Piano |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Concentration (300) level: A student concentrating in an applied music area is expected to show evidence of considerable prior study and to give a half-recital. By recital time the student is expected to have attained levels reached by applied music major at end of sophomore year. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS P3010 - Piano Concentration Seniorr Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS P4000 - Piano |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Major (400) level: A student majoring in applied music must show talent for solo performance before being admitted to the curriculum and must give a junior and senior recital. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS P4010 - Piano Major Junior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS P4020 - Piano Major Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS Q1000 - Organ |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Elective (100) level: Work for students will be outlined by the instructor to meet individual needs and aims, evaluation will be based upon quality and content of work covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS Q2000 - Organ |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Secondary (200) level: Designed to give the student certain proficiencies so that student may use this application as a tool rather than a medium for performance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS Q3000 - Organ |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Concentration (300) level: A student concentrating in an applied music area is expected to show evidence of considerable prior study and to give a half-recital. By recital time the student is expected to have attained levels reached by applied music major at end of sophomore year. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS Q3010 - Organ Concentration Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS Q4000 - Organ |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Major (400) level: A student majoring in applied music must show talent for solo performance before being admitted to the curriculum and must give a junior and senior recital. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS Q4010 - Organ Major Junior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS Q4020 - Organ Major Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS R1510 - Introduction To Musical Theatre |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Study of music theatre from beginning to present. Basic skills in all areas for production of a musical in high school, community, and college. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS R2510 - Workshop in Opera Acting I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Aspects of opera as a performer. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS S1100 - Violin |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Elective (100) level: Work for students will be outlined by the instructor to meet individual needs and aims, evaluation will be based upon quality and content of work covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-New Albany
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS S1200 - Viola |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Elective (100) level: Work for students will be outlined by the instructor to meet individual needs and aims, evaluation will be based upon quality and content of work covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS S1300 - Cello |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Elective (100) level: Work for students will be outlined by the instructor to meet individual needs and aims, evaluation will be based upon quality and content of work covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS S1400 - String Bass |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Elective (100) level: Work for students will be outlined by the instructor to meet individual needs and aims, evaluation will be based upon quality and content of work covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS S2100 - Violin |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Secondary (200) level: Designed to give the student certain proficiencies so that student may use this application as a tool rather than a medium for performance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS S2200 - Viola |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Secondary (200) level: Designed to give the student certain proficiencies so that student may use this application as a tool rather than a medium for performance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS S2300 - Cello |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Secondary (200) level: Designed to give the student certain proficiencies so that student may use this application as a tool rather than a medium for performance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS S2400 - String Bass |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Secondary (200) level: Designed to give the student certain proficiencies so that student may use this application as a tool rather than a medium for performance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS S2900 - Bass Applied Music |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Applied Music courses: Private studio instruction is offered at all levels. Levels may be repeated for credit (2 credit hours each semester). Applied music fee is required for all students. The Music S290 is private instruction in Bass. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS S3100 - Violin |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Concentration (300) level: A student concentrating in an applied music area is expected to show evidence of considerable prior study and to give a half-recital. By recital time the student is expected to have attained levels reached by applied music major at end of sophomore year. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS S3110 - Violin Concentration Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS S3200 - Viola |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Concentration (300) level: A student concentrating in an applied music area is expected to show evidence of considerable prior study and to give a half-recital. By recital time the student is expected to have attained levels reached by applied music major at end of sophomore year. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS S3210 - Viola Concentration Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS S3300 - Cello |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Concentration (300) level: A student concentrating in an applied music area is expected to show evidence of considerable prior study and to give a half-recital. By recital time the student is expected to have attained levels reached by applied music major at end of sophomore year. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS S3310 - Cello Concentration Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS S3400 - String Bass |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Concentration (300) level: A student concentrating in an applied music area is expected to show evidence of considerable prior study and to give a half-recital. By recital time the student is expected to have attained levels reached by applied music major at end of sophomore year. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS S3410 - String Bass Concentration Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS S4100 - Violin |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Major (400) level: A student majoring in applied music must show talent for solo performance before being admitted to the curriculum and must give a junior and senior recital. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS S4110 - Violin Major Junior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS S4120 - Violin Major Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS S4200 - Viola |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Major (400) level: A student majoring in applied music must show talent for solo performance before being admitted to the curriculum and must give a junior and senior recital. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS S4210 - Viola Major Junior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital ; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS S4220 - Viola Major Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS S4300 - Cello |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Major (400) level: A student majoring in applied music must show talent for solo performance before being admitted to the curriculum and must give a junior and senior recital. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS S4310 - Cello Major Junior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS S4320 - Cello Major Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS S4400 - String Bass |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Major (400) level: A student majoring in applied music must show talent for solo performance before being admitted to the curriculum and must give a junior and senior recital. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS S4410 - String Brass Major Junior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS S4420 - String Bass Major Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS T1090 - Rudiments Of Music I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Fundamentals of notation, ear training, music reading. Grade of B or better required for admission into T113 and T115. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS T1130 - Music Theory I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the elements of basic musicianship; intervals, scales, triads, rhythm and meter, music nomenclature; rudiments of two-part writing and diatonic harmony. Required for all music majors. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS T1140 - Music Theory II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Required for all music majors. Continuation of the study of harmony in context with four-part writing, diatonic harmony, secondary functions and modulation. Examination of musical forms and structures. Emphasis on musical analysis and compositional applications. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
|
| MUS T1150 - Sightsinging And Aural Perception I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Required of all music majors. Introduction to solfeggio. Development of basic music dictation and sight-singing skills through the use of diatonic melodic and harmonic examples. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS T1160 - Sightsinging And Aural Perception II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Required of all music majors. Further development of music dictation and sight-singing skills through the use of more extended melodic and harmonic examples. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS T1200 - Computer Skills For Musicians |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of the techniques necessary for the use of the computer in generating musical compositions. For music majors.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS T1510 - Music Theory and Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the literature and analysis of music. Introduction to diatonic harmony. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS T1900 - Literary And Intellectual Traditions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores, in an interdisciplinary way, one of the great humanistic traditions of inquiry regarding one of the following themes: ideas of self, truth, beauty, community, nature, or conflict. Writing intensive, discussion-focused.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS T2130 - Music Theory III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Required of all music majors. Historical survey of the elements, forms, and aesthetics of musical styles through written analysis, listening examples, and structured composition activities. Medieval through classical sonatas, including the entire harmonic vocabulary of the Common Practice Era. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS T2140 - Music Theory IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Required of all music majors. Historical survey of the elements, forms, and aesthetics of musical styles through written analysis, listening examples, and structured composition activities. Classical through 20th century. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS T2150 - Sightsinging And Aural Perception III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Required of all music majors. Music dictation and sight-signing of chromatic melodic and harmonic materials and modulation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS T2160 - Sightsinging And Aural Perception IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Required of all music majors. Music dictation and sight-singing of extended examples as well as 20th century melodic and harmonic elements. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS T3150 - Analysis Of Musical Form |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of formal and harmonic structure of representative Baroque, Classical, and early Romantic compositions. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS U1090 - Computer Skills For Musicians |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Computer music notation systems and the use of word processing, graphics, database and other computer programs in music research and teaching. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS U2330 - Applied French Diction For Singers |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Drill on phonetics and application to song and opera. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS U2430 - Applied German Diction For Singers |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Drill on phonetics and application to song and opera. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS U2530 - Applied Italian Diction For Singers |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Drill on phonetics and application to song and opera. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS U3100 - Performance Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Performance experience for applied music majors and concentrations enrolled in studio courses. Each student will perform several times per semester, receiving commentary from faculty and students.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS U3200 - Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS U3550 - Music And Exceptionality |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Basic accompaniment skills on the Autoharp, guitar, or piano are desirable prerequisites. Focus on designing , planning , and implementing music based interventions for individuals with diverse abilities with diverse abilities with an emphasis on music-leadership, instructional and facilitation skills. Incorporates a wide variety of music therapy applications for children and adolescent, and covers the role of music in special education including historical and legal precedents, learning styles and the IEP process. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| MUS U3560 - Creative Arts And Early Childhood |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of the use of creative arts and action-oriented activities in early childhood and special education settings. Includes practice in creating, planning and leading arts-based activities on the enhancement of communication, academic, motor and social-emotional skills. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS U3570 - Music In Special Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to teaching music to special needs students including those with cognitive, physical, behavioral and emotional disabilities. Development of skills in planning and structuring experiences to facilitate appropriate participation of students in the K-12 classroom. Overview of various disabilities and historical, cultural and ethical issues. Participation in experiential music lessions and simulations; field observations of special needs students in music education. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS U3610 - English Diction For Singers |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Drill on phonetics with application to song and opera. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS U4100 - Creative Arts, Health, And Wellness |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of the use of creative arts and action-oriented experiences throughout the lifespan. Involves the study of creativity and applications designed to facilitate healthy living practices, wellness, and personal growth from a humanistic perspective. Students will create, design, and lead creative arts experiences by semester's end. No artistic performances required. (Offered in odd years.)
. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS U4120 - Music Theatre Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Techniques in production, staging, advertising and financing musical theatre productions. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS V1000 - Voice Elective/Secondary |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Elective (100) level: Work for students will be outlined by the instructor to meet individual needs and aims, evaluation will be based upon quality and content of work covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS V1010 - Voice Class |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The objective of this course is to familiarize participants with the basic skills needed for successful performance: vocal technique, music reading skills, and artistic presentation. This course will also assist participants in developing beneficial habits for successful performances including topics such as practicing techniques, tools for analyzing music, vocal health, research, and repertoire choices, to name a few. Students will be required to perform three songs for memory during the course of the semester. The final performance will likely take place the last week of classes in conjunction with the other sections of V101. The individual teacher will determine additional coursework. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS V2000 - Voice |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Secondary (200) level: Designed to give the student certain proficiencies so that student may use this application as a tool rather than a medium for performance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS V2010 - Voice Class |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Class instruction in vocal production and vocal hygiene. A repertoire of patriotic, religious, folk, musical, theatre and art songs will be developed. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| MUS V2020 - Voice Class II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Builds on the correct signing technique and good vocal habits acquired in V201. Primarily for music education majors, students will gain insight into methods for teaching young students to sing properly in solo and ensemble situations. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS V2180 - Music Appreciation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to music stressing the art of listening with discussions of prominent composers, their works and their styles. No previous knowledge of music is required. Tyically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| MUS V2260 - English Diction For Singers |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to the International Phonetic Alphabet; study of phonetics with application to vocal literature in the English language. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS V2270 - German Diction For Singers |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Review of International Phonetic Alphabet; study of phonetics with application to vocal literature in the German language. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS V2280 - French Diction For Singers |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Review of International Phonetic Alphabet; study of phonetics with application to vocal literature in the French language. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS V2290 - Italian Diction For Singers |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Review of International Phonetic Alphabet; study of phonetics with application to vocal literature in the Italian language. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS V3000 - Voice |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Concentration (300) level: A student concentrating in an applied music area is expected to show evidence of considerable prior study and to give a half-recital. By recital time the student is expected to have attained levels reached by applied music major at end of sophomore year. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS V3010 - Voice Concentration Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS V4000 - Voice |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Major (400) level: A student majoring in applied music must show talent for solo performance before being admitted to the curriculum and must give a junior and senior recital. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS V4010 - Voice Major Junior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS V4020 - Voice Major Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS W1100 - Flute/Piccolo Elective/Secondary |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Elective (100) level: Work for students will be outlined by the instructor to meet individual needs and aims, evaluation will be based upon quality and content of work covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS W1200 - Oboe And English Horn |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Elective (100) level: Work for students will be outlined by the instructor to meet individual needs and aims, evaluation will be based upon quality and content of work covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS W1300 - Clarinet |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Elective (100) level: Work for students will be outlined by the instructor to meet individual needs and aims, evaluation will be based upon quality and content of work covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS W1400 - Bassoon |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Elective (100) level: Work for students will be outlined by the instructor to meet individual needs and aims, evaluation will be based upon quality and content of work covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS W1500 - Saxophone Elective/Secondary |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Elective (100) level: Work for students will be outlined by the instructor to meet individual needs and aims, evaluation will be based upon quality and content of work covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS W2100 - Flute And Piccolo |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Secondary (200) level: Designed to give the student certain proficiencies so that student may use this application as a tool rather than a medium for performance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS W2200 - Oboe And English Horn |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Secondary (200) level: Designed to give the student certain proficiencies so that student may use this application as a tool rather than a medium for performance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS W2300 - Clarinet |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Secondary (200) level: Designed to give the student certain proficiencies so that student may use this application as a tool rather than a medium for performance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS W2400 - Bassoon |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Secondary (200) level: Designed to give the student certain proficiencies so that student may use this application as a tool rather than a medium for performance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS W2500 - Saxophone |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Secondary (200) level: Designed to give the student certain proficiencies so that student may use this application as a tool rather than a medium for performance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS W3100 - Flute And Piccolo |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Concentration (300) level: A student concentrating in an applied music area is expected to show evidence of considerable prior study and to give a half-recital. By recital time the student is expected to have attained levels reached by applied music major at end of sophomore year. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS W3110 - Flute And Piccolo Concentration Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS W3200 - Oboe And English Horn |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Concentration (300) level: A student concentrating in an applied music area is expected to show evidence of considerable prior study and to give a half-recital. By recital time the student is expected to have attained levels reached by applied music major at end of sophomore year. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS W3210 - Oboe And English Horn Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS W3300 - Clarinet |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Concentration (300) level: A student concentrating in an applied music area is expected to show evidence of considerable prior study and to give a half-recital. By recital time the student is expected to have attained levels reached by applied music major at end of sophomore year. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS W3310 - Clarinet Concentration Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS W3400 - Bassoon |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Concentration (300) level: A student concentrating in an applied music area is expected to show evidence of considerable prior study and to give a half-recital. By recital time the student is expected to have attained levels reached by applied music major at end of sophomore year. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS W3410 - Bassoon Concentration Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS W3500 - Saxophone |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Concentration (300) level: A student concentrating in an applied music area is expected to show evidence of considerable prior study and to give a half-recital. By recital time the student is expected to have attained levels reached by applied music major at end of sophomore year. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS W3510 - Saxophone Concentration Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS W4100 - Flute And Piccolo Undergraduate Major |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Major (400) level: A student majoring in applied music must show talent for solo performance before being admitted to the curriculum and must give a junior and senior recital. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS W4110 - Flute And Piccolo Major Junior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS W4120 - Flute And Piccolo Major Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS W4200 - Oboe And English Horn |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Major (400) level: A student majoring in applied music must show talent for solo performance before being admitted to the curriculum and must give a junior and senior recital. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS W4210 - Oboe And English Horn Major Junior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS W4220 - Oboe And English Horn Major Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS W4300 - Clarinet Undergraduate Major |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Major (400) level: A student majoring in applied music must show talent for solo performance before being admitted to the curriculum and must give a junior and senior recital. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS W4310 - Clarinet Major Junior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS W4320 - Clarinet Major Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS W4400 - Bassoon |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Major (400) level: A student majoring in applied music must show talent for solo performance before being admitted to the curriculum and must give a junior and senior recital. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS W4410 - Bassoon Major Junior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS W4420 - Bassoon Major Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS W4500 - Saxophone |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Major (400) level: A student majoring in applied music must show talent for solo performance before being admitted to the curriculum and must give a junior and senior recital. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS W4510 - Saxophone Major Junior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS W4520 - Saxophone Major Senior Recital |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Public recital; pre-hearing required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS X0010 - All-Campus Ensemble |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 2.00. This course may be taken for up to 8 credit hours of elective credit towards an arts and sciences degree. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Remedial, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
|
| MUS X0020 - Piano Accompanying |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Study of the art and practice of accompanying singers and instrumentalists. Areas covered include sight-reading, ensemble playing. coaching techniques, style and interpretation, transposition and score reading. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS X0400 - University Instrumental Ensemble |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. All instrumental ensembles may perform on and off campus. Rehearsals consist of work on musical, instrumental, and aural techniques and stylistic nuances germane to the ensemble. Admittance by audition. Jazz Ensemble: Open to all IPFW students by audition. Rehearsal and performance of literature representing the various styles of the jazz ensemble repertoire. University Wind Ensemble: Open to all IPFW students by audition. Rehearsal and performance of literature representing the wind ensemble and concert band. Fort Wayne Area Community Band: Open to all IPFW students by audition. Personnel includes musicians from the Fort Wayne area. Rehearsal and performance of literature representing the concert band repertoire. IPFW/Community Symphony Orchestra: Open to all IPFW students by audition. Rehearsal and performance of orchestral literature. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 8 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Expose students to a wide variety of literature for full orchestra.
2. Develop critical listening and ensemble skills.
3. Play music from Baroque, Classical, Romantic, 20th Century and Contemporary periods.
4. Play different forms of music such as overtures, symphonies, suites and operas.
5. Gain performance experience and the sense of accomplishment of working as a team towards a common goal.
|
| MUS X0410 - Symphonic Wind Ensemble |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Open to all university students, contingent upon successful audition. Rehearsal and performance of literature representing the wind ensemble and concert band. Focus on musical, instrumental and aural techniques and stylistic nuances germane to the ensemble. Performances on and off campus. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS X0420 - Jazz Ensemble |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Open to all university students, contingent upon successful audition. Rehearsal and performance of literature representing various styles of the jazz ensemble repertoire. Focus on instrumental and aural techniques and stylistic nuances germane to the ensemble. Performances on and off campus. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS X0430 - Orchestra |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Open to all university students, contingent upon successful audition. Rehearsal and performance of orchestral literature. Focus on instrumental and aural techniques and stylistic nuances germane to the ensemble. Performances on and off campus. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS X0440 - Community Band |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Open to all university students, contingent upon successful audition. Rehearsal and performance of literature representing the various styles of the concert band. Focus on instrumental and aural techniques and stylistic nuances germane to the ensemble. Performances on and off campus. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS X0510 - Music Therapy Laboratory I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Observe music therapy sessions and develop skills in identifying problem behaviors. Students will develop basic music leadership skills with clients in IPFW Music Therapy Clinic. Requires successful completion of clinical skills test. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS X0520 - Music Therapy Laboratory II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Students develop strategies for teaching musical skills and adapting instruments for handicapped clients. Includes development of skills for assessment of clients. Liability insurance required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS X0530 - Music Therapy Laboratory III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Students develop skills in assessing client needs and create treatment procedures for one behavioral objective with a group or multiple objectives with an individual client. Requires completion of clinical skills test. Liability insurance required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS X0540 - Music Therapy Laboratory IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Students develop treatment procedures with individuals or a group. Emphasis on developing effective strategies for clients with multiple needs. Requires completion of clinical and musical skills exit examination. Successful completion of X054 is required for graduation and internship placement. Liability insurance is required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS X0550 - Musit Therapy Laboratory: Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 or 1.00. Optional Honors-level clinic experience. Students develop skills in planning generalization procedures and interaction with family members. Requires successful completion of clinical skills test or pre-arranged personal growth objectives. Liability insurance required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS X0700 - University Choral Ensembles |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. University Singers: A choral ensemble open to any student by audition. Repertoire ranges from plainsong to contemporary choral works, both accompanied and unaccompanied. Chamber Singers: A select, small vocal ensemble open to any student by audition. repertoire includes primarily pre-baroque and 20th century works for small vocal ensemble. Individual vocal musicianship is emphasized. Vocal Jazz Ensemble: Preparation and performance of vocal ensemble literature in the jazz tradition. Open to any student by audition. Typically offered Spring Fall.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 8 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn and publicly perform new music each semester.
2. Develop their individual voices and music litercay skills.
3. Enhance poise, stage presence and self-esteem.
|
| MUS X0710 - University Singers |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Open to all university students, contingent upon successful audition. Rehearsal and performance of choral literature from throughout music history. Performances on and off campus. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS X0720 - Chamber Singers |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Small, select choral ensemble rehearsing and performing accompanied and a Capella vocal chamber works from throughout music history. Performances on and off campus. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS X0730 - Choral Union |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Open to all university students contingent upon successful audition. Rehearsal and performance of choral literature through music history. Performances on and off campus. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS X0950 - Performance Class |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Performance laboratory. Students will attend concerts, recitals and other prescribed music events. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS X2960 - Applied Music Upper Divsional Jury Examination |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. A fifteen-minute performance of literature selected by the applied music instructor and presented for the applied music instructor and the resident faculty. Also required is an evaluative interview with a panel made up from the degree coordinator, advisor, and applied instructor. Successful completion of X296 is required to begin preparation for the senior recital. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS X2970 - Music Education Upper Divisional Skills Examination |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. An oral examination of knowledge of the foundations of education and a functional music skills examination for the purpose of evaluating progress toward the Bachelor of Music Education degree. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS X2980 - Music Therapy Upper Divisional Skills Examination |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. An assessment of vocal skills, accompaniment techniques, and functional music skills on autoharp, guitar, piano, Q-chord and basic percussion instruments. Required of all music therapy majors and equivalency students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS X2990 - Piano Proficiency Examination |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Requirements are passed individually; technique; sight reading of a hymn, a piano piece, and a rhythmic pattern; transposition of simple folk songs and accompaniment; sight reading of a lead sheet and a harmonized melody without chords notated; keyboard theory skills, including realization of Roman numeral progressions; improvisation; folk songs by ear with accompaniment. Complete information available in the Music Department office. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS X3010 - Recital: Concentration Level |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Public performance of 25-50 minutes of assigned literature with a minimum of 25 minutes being post-upper division. Recital requires approval of faculty committee at least 14 days prior to scheduled recital date. For complete guideline refer to department handbook. BSMT majors are required a minimum of one semester of post-upper division study. Concurrent enrollment in 3000-level applied study on instrument of concentration.
Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS X3410 - Guitar Ensemble |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Guitarists receive coaching in duet, trio and quartet ensembles. Provides students the opportunity to perform with other guitarists as well as other instrumentalists/vocalists. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS X3510 - Jazz Chamber Ensemble |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Jazz Combo. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS X4010 - Junior Recital: Performance Major |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Public performance of 30-50 minutes of assigned literature with a minimum of 20 minutes being post-upper division. Recital requires approval of faculty committee at least 14 days prior to scheduled recital date. For complete guidelines refer to department handbook. Concurrent enrollment in 400-level study of major instrument.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS X4020 - Senior Recital: Performance Major |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Public performance of 40-60 minutes of assigned literature prepared after junior recital. Recital requires approval of faculty committee at least 14 days prior to scheduled recital date. For complete guidelines, refer to department handbook. Concurrent enrollment in 400-level applied study on major instrument.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS X4200 - Brass Ensemble |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 or 1.00. The University Brass performs the best available literature for brass instruments; traditional and more diverse literature of recent decades included. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS X4230 - Chamber Music |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Chamber Music. Typically Offered Fall, Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS X4500 - String Instrument Ensembles |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students receive coaching in quartet, trio, and other string chamber groups. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS X4600 - Woodwind Ensembles |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Admission to the various woodwind ensembles by audition. Rehearsal and performance of literature from the appropriate chamber repertoire. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS X4700 - Opera Ensemble |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Musical and dramatic training for opera and musical theatre through movement, improvisation, analysis of emotional and psychological components of roles, and preparation of scenes and arias for public performance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS X4900 - Percussion Ensemble |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Provides an opportunity for students to perform on all percussion instruments in a variety of musical styles. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS Y1100 - Early Instruments, Early Voice |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Applied music lessons in early instruments or in early vocal performance techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS Z1000 - The Live Musical Performance |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Examines the approach to attending live performances of music (large ensembles, chamber ensembles, solo recitals, and other multimedia performances). Students attend live performances and discuss music performances by genre to develop critical listening skills. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS Z1010 - Music For The Listener |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the elements of music through the mode of listening and a historical survey of the way those elements have been used in various types of musical compositions. For non-music majors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS Z1030 - Music in Multimedia |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course focues on learning to use music creatively and effectively in multimedia. Each student will complete a project that combines music with another type of media ( i.e. animation, video, pictures). The software emphasis is on MacroMedia's Director. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS Z1050 - Traditions In World Music |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of non-Western music, concentrating on traditional Asian, Middle Eastern, and African styles. Students will learn how to listen to and understand music based on cultural context and technical characteristics. No previous musical experience is necessary. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS Z1110 - Introduction To Music Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of fundamentals of the language and notation of music: listening, music reading and writing, and the elements of music as used in a variety of genres. Open to all students interested in a general background in music. Recommended for singers, instrumentalists, and keyboard players. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS Z1400 - Introduction To Musical Expression |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the fundamentals of music and their appreciation in the process of writing and performing music. Students will learn to read musical notation, become familiar with the piano keyboard and its use in playing melodies, and develop skills in playing folk guitar as an accompaniment instrument. Students must provide their own guitar. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS Z2010 - History Of Rock And Roll Music |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the major trends, styles, and genres of rock music from the earliest recordings to the present day, focusing on the work of the artist and groups who have proven to be of the most enduring significance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS Z2020 - History Of Rock Music II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A history and appreciation of rock’s classic era. The course begins with the 1964 British Invasion, which signaled the arrival of rock’s second generation. Examines the major musical figures and social issues (civil rights struggle, the war in Vietnam) of the 1960s. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Richmond
|
| MUS Z2110 - Music Theory II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of part writing, musical form, harmonic analysis, and modulation. Intermediate aural skills including harmonic and melodic dictation. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS Z2410 - Introduction To Music Fundamentals |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to musical knowledge and skills, including music reading, singing, playing piano and recorder. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| MUS Z3010 - History Of Rock Music 70s And '80s |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of trends and styles in rock music of the '70s and '80s. Focusing on the artists and groups who have shaped the music of yesterday, today, and tomorrow. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS Z3110 - Music Theory III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of modulation, chromatic harmony, atonal composition, and serial composition. Advanced aural skills. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS Z3150 - Music For Film |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the music and sound of movie soundtracks. Class will feature film segments, which are analyzed to see how music textures, tempos, and structures affect the plot. No prerequisite required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| MUS Z3170 - Computer Music Composition I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Computer Music Composition I. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS Z3200 - Special Topics In Popular Music |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a variable topics class in popular music. At IUPUI, some of the topics could include the following: Business of Commercial Music, Contemporary Broadway Musicals, Women Musicians, American Popular Music, Electronic Music Composition, or Music of Jimi Hendrix. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| MUS Z3730 - The American Musical |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The origins of the American musical: its societal impact and its development from vaudeville and European operetta to the rock musicals of today.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
|
| MUS Z3740 - Contemporary Broadway Musicals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Contemporary Broadway Music. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS Z3850 - History Of The Blues |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. History Of The Blues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS Z3900 - Jazz For Listeners |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course focuses on how to listen to jazz and what to listen for in jazz. In addition, students will survey and learn how to recognize various historical styles of jazz and major figures who have contributed to the jazz tradition. Live examples and performances in and out of class are a regular part of classes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS Z3930 - History Of Jazz |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of periods, major performers and composers, trends, influences, stylistic features, and related materials in the history of jazz music. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Richmond
|
| MUS Z3960 - Introduction to MIDI and Computer Music |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course designed to teach both musicians and non-musicians about the basics of the MIDI (Musical Instrument Digital Interface) system, its software and hardware. Will include MIDI sequencing, digital sampling, principles of digital synthesis, digital audio editing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| MUS Z4010 - Music Of The Beatles |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Chronicles the meteoric rise of the group from Liverpool, England, that started the rock revolution heard around the world. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| MUS Z4030 - Music Of Jimi Hendrix |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A detailed look at the life, music, and career of rock music’s best and most influential guitarist. Audio and video performances document the meteoric rise of Hendrix from obscurity to master musician before his untimely death. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NELC A1000 - Elementary Arabic I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00 or 5.00. Modern standard Arabic as in contemporary literature, newspapers, and radio. Grammar, reading, dictation, composition, penmanship, conversation, and translation. Typically offered Summer Fall.
4.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| NELC A1170 - Basic Arabic I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory language course in modern standard Arabic as in contemporary literature, newspapers, and radio. Focus on grammar, reading, script, conversation, elementary composition, and culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NELC A1180 - Basic Arabic II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory language course in modern standard Arabic as in contemporary literature, newspapers, and radio. Focus on grammar, reading, script, conversation, elementary composition, and culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NELC A1190 - Basic Arabic III |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introductory language course in modern standard Arabic as in contemporary literature, newspapers, and radio. Focus on grammar, reading, script, conversation, elementary composition, and culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NELC A1310 - Beginning Arabic I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Modern standard Arabic as in contemporary literature, newspapers, and radio. Grammar, reading, dictation, composition, penmanship, conversation, translation.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| NELC A1320 - Beginning Arabic II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Modern standard Arabic as in contemporary literature, newspapers and radio. Grammar, reading, dictation, composition, penmanship, conversation, translation.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| NELC A1500 - Elementary Arabic II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00 or 5.00. Modern standard Arabic as in contemporary literature, newspapers, and radio. Grammar, reading, dictation, composition, penmanship, conversation, and translation. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
4.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| NELC A2000 - Intermediate Arabic I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Intermediate Arabic is a Continuation of Elementary Arabic. It will focus on the mastery of grammar, including more complex structures, acquisition and expansion of vocabulary, and the development of reading, writing, listening and speaking skills. These objectives are achieved through intensive oral/aural practice using audio and video materials. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| NELC A2500 - Intermediate Arabic II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Intermediate Arabic is a Continuation of Elementary Arabic. It will focus on the mastery of grammar, including more complex structures, acquisition and expansion of vocabulary, and the development of reading, writing, listening and speaking skills. These objectives are achieved through intensive oral/aural practice using audio and video materials. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| NELC A3000 - Advanced Arabic I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced Arabic is intended for students who are committed to mastering the Arabic language. It aims at providing students with a firm foundation in Arabic language and culture for students in both the Modern and Classical fields. It strives for a balanced approach to the full range of language skills: reading, writing, speaking and oral comprehension. Special attention is given to consolidating students¿ mastery of syntax and morphology with a view to developing accuracy in reading, translation, expression and comprehension, and expanding vocabulary. The course combines modern materials on a range of subjects with an introduction to selected classical Arabic and Islamic texts.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NELC A3500 - Advanced Arabic II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a continuation of Advanced Arabic I. Special
attention is given to consolidating students¿ mastery of syntax and morphology with a view to developing accuracy in reading, translation, expression and comprehension, and expanding vocabulary. The course combines modern materials on a range of subjects with an introduction to selected classical Arabic and Islamic texts. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NELC N2040 - Topics In Middle Eastern Culture And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of selected Middle Eastern cultural or social issues. Topics will vary. May be repeated with different topics for a maximum of 9 credit hours. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| NELC N3020 - Middle East History through Literature and Film |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to engage with major events and issues in the history of the Middle East through the reading of fiction and the viewing of films produced in or about the region. The course meets twice weekly. One meeting will be dedicated to screening films. The second meeting will be dedicated to a discussion of the historical issues raised in that week¿s film(s) and assigned readings. The latter will consist of a novel or collection of short stories and portions of a general historical narrative of Middle East history. Students will be responsible for ALL outside readings and will be graded on participation in the aforementioned discussions. While no previous course work or prior knowledge of
Middle East history is mandatory for enrollment in this class, students will be required to acquire and maintain familiarity with the relevant historical events and historiographical issues by completing each week's assigned readings in a general history text. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM A4500 - Digital Matte |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The combination of digital painting, perspective, and light used to create 2D backdrop. By bringing together existing footage, textures, and painting techniques, students will design environments and create atmosphere. Other topics covered include traditional painting techniques, advanced digital painting techniques, video effects, and green screen. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM A4510 - Advanced Video |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced course focusing on the creation and direction of a short narrative. This course will demonstrate mastery of editing and narrative skills culminating in a final project. Other topics covered include research/planning, marketing, preproduction, production, and postproduction. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM A4550 - Advanced Web |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced course focusing on the creation of media-rich Web experiences. This course will demonstrate mastery of design, interactivity, and animation for the Web, culminating in a final project. Other topics covered include research/planning, marketing, preproduction, production, and postproduction. Prerequisite: Completion of M track. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM A4600 - Advanced Interactive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced course focusing on the creation of interactive experience. This course will demonstrate mastery of design and interactivity culminating in a final project. Other topics covered include research/planning, marketing, preproduction, production, and postproduction. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM A4650 - Advanced Sequential Narrative |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced course focusing on the creation of a sequential narrative using 2-D animation. This course will demonstrate mastery of graphic and audio synchronization in a final project. This course will expand on the ideas of pacing, tempo, and sequence. Other topics covered include research/planning, marketing, preproduction, production, and postproduction. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM A4700 - Advanced 2D Animation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Traditional and digital animations converge to produce advanced broadcast quality projects. Students will further develop their understanding of preproduction and postproduction in service to the animated stories and characters created. Other topics include character and environment design, soundtrack, syncing, backgrounds and animation, and motion principles. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM A4750 - Advanced Animation For Integrated Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced course in the development of animated sequences. Using graphics and sound, students will develop title sequences for video and sound productions. Other topics will include scientific visualization, animation, video editing, and sound implementation.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM A4800 - Advanced 3-D Animation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced course focusing on the creation of high-end, broadcast-quality animations. This course will demonstrate mastery of narrative and animation skills culminating in a final project. Other topics covered include research/planning, marketing, preproduction, production, and postproduction. Prerequisite: Completion of S track. Typically offering Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM A4850 - Advanced Video Game Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced course focusing on the creation of an interactive simulation. This course will demonstrate mastery of modeling and conceptual skills culminating in a final project. Other topics covered include research/planning, marketing, preproduction, production, and postproduction
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM A4900 - Advanced Sound Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced course focusing on the creation of sound effects and soundtracks. This course will demonstrate mastery of composition and editing skills culminating in a final project. Other topics covered include research/planning, marketing, preproduction, production, and postproduction. Prerequisite: Completion of P track. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM I5530 - Independent Study In New Media |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Independent Study In New Media. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| NEWM M3550 - Web Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Creation, production, and management of online publications. By utilizing strategic thinking, information architecture, and principles of design, students will successfully launch a media-rich Web site. Other topics covered include file management, developing a target audience, interface design, and design deconstruction
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM M3600 - Interactive Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Synthesize static media, streaming media, and information organization to create an interactive project. By maximizing elements from various media including audio, video, and static sources, students will test and produce an interactive experience for a target-specific audience. Other topics covered include strategic thinking, audio development, developing assets, project management, and usability testing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer,
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM M3650 - Simulation For Integrated Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of new media, usability and design are combined to create a spatial environment and develop its content. Students will utilize their knowledge of interactivity to develop and exhibit a concept of their creation. Other topics covered include traffic flow management, spatial design, kiosk design, and exhibition design and graphics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM M3700 - Animation For Integrated Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Images and animation converge to develop an animated sequence. Using text, graphics, and sound, students will create animation and visualizations. Other topics include video editing and sound design. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N1000 - Foundations Of New Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An exploration of the characteristics of digital media, including interactivity, hypermedia, immersion, and storytelling. Includes an introduction to the practice, theory, and history of new media, from the viewpoint of technology, communication, and culture. There are readings, demonstrations, examples, hands-on projects, and written assignments. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| NEWM N1010 - Multimedia Authoring Tools |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A hands-on introduction to some of the fundamental tools used in industry to produce interactive media-rich Web pages. Case studies of sites that incorporate text, sounds, graphics, animations, and interactivity. Other topics include the design, development, and deployment of a personal Web site. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N1020 - Digital Media Imagery |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A hands-on introduction to the basic tools used in industry for the creation, editing, manipulation, and uses of 2D raster and vector graphics. Other topics include the integration of imagery into a personal Web site. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N1100 - Visualizing Information |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to visual thinking and concept generation. Students will examine solid solutions and develop ideas through sketches, roughs and written plans. These competencies will be developed through project bibles, storyboards, scriptwriting, and examples of new media concepts. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N1750 - Digital Media I: Vector Imaging |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Vector graphics are produced using traditional visualization (sketches) and computer methods. Color theory, geometric construction, and rendering techniques are utilized in vector-based graphic creation for use in new media applications (Illustrator). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N1800 - Digital Media II: Raster Imaging |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Raster graphics are produced using traditional visualization (sketches) and computer methods. Topics will include image composition, realistic representation, digital imaging for new media, color mode and palette usage, material and value representation (PhotoShop). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N1900 - Topics In Interactive Media |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Special topics in interactive media, with a focus on exploring concepts at the forefront of media arts. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| NEWM N1990 - Directed Study I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course introduces the new media student to the current job market as they begin their journey to understand this new and ever-expanding field. Students will explore various new media careers in business, education, entertainment, science, and other related fields. Students will research different career paths to see what is needed to be successful in the field of new media. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N2010 - Design Issues in Digital Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory course that will equip students with strategies in assembling visuals applicable to any medium. It will explore composition strategies; visual literacy and awareness; and principles of the visual display of quantitative information. The course will begin with traditional visual (print) media and move into digital forms to give the student an awareness and ability to work in any medium. Projects, lectures, discussion, and writing assignments serve as a survey of best practice. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N2020 - Digital Storytelling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of the principles of storytelling across a range of digital media formats, with attention to techniques for creating story-rich projects. Explores the role of agency, interactivity, story structure, and narrative, as well as the opportunities and challenges raised by emerging interactive and transmedia approaches to story-rich projects. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N2040 - Intro Interactive Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The creation of interactive multimedia products for multiplatform delivery. Topics include: the multimedia production process, audience analysis, hardware and software requirements, authoring tools, scripting, content development, interface design, distribution, and development strategies. Concentration will be on practical applications for interactive multimedia. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N2100 - Introduction To Digital Sound |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to digital sound creation and editing. Topics will focus on analog sound techniques and equipment, analog to digital conversion, basic editing, formats and conversions, digital to analog conversion, and basic sound effect techniques for new media (Soundforge and Cool Edit 16). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N2150 - Online Document Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the creation, publication, and management of documents, images, and other media types on the Web. Topics include Web publishing, asset preparation, document types, contemporary content management systems and their use in the organization. Hands-on experience with contemporary systems for content management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N2210 - Media Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces concepts and skills related to the design of interactive multimedia applications for the Web, the desktop, and mobile devices. Within the context of industry-standard application design tools, students will markup tags and scripting to create applications that emphasize graphics, animation, sounds, and interactivity. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N2220 - Media Applications II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces intermediate concepts and skills related to the design of interactive multimedia applications for the Web, the desktop, and mobile devices. Within the context of industry-standard application design tools, students use information modeling, markup tags, and scripting to create applications that emphasize graphics, animation, sounds, and interactivity. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N2300 - Introduction to Game Design and Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction course to "Video" game design and development for entertainment. Topics covered will be game theory, design and development of computer-based games, current game delivery systems and software, the commercial development cycle, case studies of current games, ethical issues including the current game rating system, and emerging technical developments in game development, and current game trends. Production will be in reference to developing new levels of existing games. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N2350 - Introduction To Computer Simulation/Animation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course covering applied three-dimensional computer graphic animation for students interested in the use of design, time, and motion study; surface texture mapping; lighting; color; and the technology required to produce computer animations for commercial applications in manufacturing design, marketing, training, gaming, Web creation, and entertainment (3D Studio Max). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N2380 - 2D Animation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to traditional techniques for 2D animation, and their application in digital media. An exploration of the 12 principles of animation and how to use them to create effective animations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N2400 - Introduction To Digital Video |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course covering video production techniques for digital media. The technology (hardware and software) along with techniques will be taught through lecture and projects. All phases of video production will be addressed: from pre-production to post-production with a focus on the digital media aspects. (Adobe Premiere). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| NEWM N2410 - Stop Motion Animation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Through lecture and hands-on practice, this class studies the production techniques of stop action animation. Topics include the study of pioneers in the field, evolution from analog to digital techniques, and the building of sets and characters. Students will produce a series of short frame-by-frame digital animations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N2430 - Introduction To 3D |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the concepts and production process of 3D graphics and animation. Students learn basic techniques and theories related to modeling, texturing, lighting, animation, and rendering. Students produce animated graphics and text within the context of various projects. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N2500 - Team Building In Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A methods course designed to help students improve their effectiveness in solving problems and expand critical thinking when working in groups of three or more people. This course is practical in orientation including the interpersonal process, decision-making styles, problem solving concepts and procedures, the creative effort, conflict resolution, leadership, and assessment. Projects will be developed with objectives, requirements, and constraints; client requests, and implementation of the design solution, executing the design plan, and evaluating the final project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NEWM N2530 - Introduction To Digital Video |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to video production techniques for digital media. Hardware, software, and technique are explored through lecture and projects. All phases of video production are addressed, from pre-production through production to post-production with a focus on the digital media aspects. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NEWM N2550 - Introduction To Digital Sound |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to role and function of sound in interactive media. Concepts, theory, and practice related to audio, including voice, music, and sound effects. Effective listening skills, and understanding how people listen and comprehend sound. Experience with tools and techniques for recording, editing, and reproduction. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NEWM N2600 - Scriptwriting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to writing for new media. Concentrating on developing ideas, concepts, plans and stories, students will generate scripts and analysis for numerous new media projects. Other topics covered include writing for scripts, grants, storyboards, and advertising and marketing plans. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NEWM N2610 - Storyboarding For Multimedia |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to story and production planning through traditional and digital techniques. Topics include the development of roughs, storyboards, and animatics as planning devices for digital storytelling and other new media products. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N2650 - Sound Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to digital sound creation and editing. Concentrating on sound effects, voice over, and composition, students will generate sound for various new media projects. Other topics covered include recording, formatting, effects, editing and conversion. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NEWM N2750 - Visual Practices |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to drawing and idea generation for new media projects. Students will develop control over spatial relationships and defining ideas through drawing and other visualization techniques. Other topics covered include perspective, life drawing, rendering, developing roughs and advanced storyboards. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NEWM N2800 - New Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course that will equip students with strategies in assembling visuals applicable to all new media. Students will explore composition strategies in raster and vector based problems. Other topics include typography, color theory, grids and layouts and style. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NEWM N2840 - Building Physical Prototypes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of concepts formulation for multimedia technology, including current, emerging, and future services and displays. Learn to build physical and digital prototypes to facilitate idea development and presentation. Students research ideas, develop prototypes evaluate, and present results. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NEWM N2950 - Career Enrichment Cooperative |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A semester of external career experiences designed to enrich the student's preparedness for entering the workforce. Periodic meetings with faculty advisors and a comprehensive written report on the experience detailing the intern's activities and reactions is required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NEWM N2990 - Directed Study II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course applies design and visualization information towards the development of a comprehensive portfolio and resume. The development of the portfolio and resume will provide students with a framework for display of personal growth and achievement. Students will develop a portfolio and resume to be used for future career opportunities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| NEWM N3000 - Digital Media Production |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an advanced course demanding innovational design and technical skills to meet systematic studio work on complex computational undertakings. From this base, students conceive, observe, and analyze multimedia and cyber-communication projects. Students learn digital skills and tools through lectures and hands-on experimentation, including creative process and evaluation. Combines the production of journalism, music composition, and animation/simulation, with computer transmission of imaging, sound, and video. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NEWM N3040 - Interactive Media Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Digital design methodology and techniques, control and timing, machine organization, instruction sequencing, and data flow control; control unit implementation by means of hardware and microprogramming; synchronization of input/output operations with interface design (Director 2). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NEWM N3150 - On-Line Document Development II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced creation, publication, and management of interactive publications for on-line distribution with the inclusion of emerging technologies for a media-rich experience. Interactive web site development, animations for the web, on-line interactive design, document conversion, file exchanges, and digital media development for on-line usage. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N3300 - Game Design, Development, and Production |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced game development by producing interactive computer-based games. The process learned in N230 will be put into practice by developing a story, characters, programming, and an interactive game based on current trends in game development. Use of actual game development systems for current console gaming systems.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NEWM N3350 - Character Modeling And Animation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intermediate course in designing characters, for a variety of applications. Topics include character modeling, locomotion, facial animation, and lip movement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N3400 - Digital Video Production |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced project based course covering applied techniques for digital video and media production. Additional apsects of creating, editing, and DVD production will be addressed along with additional media output types. (Adobe After Effects, DVD authoring software). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N3420 - 3D Animation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to 3D computer graphic animation for students interested in producing animations for product design, gaming, entertainment, marketing, training, and simulation. Topics include environment design, modeling, motion studies, camera movement, and composition.
Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N3430 - 3D Modeling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intermediate modeling course, aimed at achieving high-detail, professional quality 3D models for games, film, architecture, science, and other application areas. In-depth use of professional software packages. Possible topics include modeling high-resolution organic characters, modeling foliage and ornate structures, displacement mapping techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N3440 - 3D Production |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Team-based course focusing on the creation of high-end, broadcast-quality animations. Team members demonstrate mastery of narrative, modeling, lighting, effects, rendering, and animation skills culminating in a final team project. Other topics include planning, preproduction, production, and postproduction. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N3530 - Intermediate Video |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Video production techniques for digital media. Preproduction, production, and postproduction of digital video will be addressed and utilized for the completion of a short video project. Other topics covered include directing, editing, media optimization, and assembling assets. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N3550 - Intermediate Sound |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intermediate course in designing soundtracks and sound effects for various media applications. Topics include digital signal processing, digital sound techniques, sound recording using a variety of synthesizers and samplers, editing techniques, file formats and conversion techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N3560 - Lighting And Field Production |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theoretical and practical application of lighting, filming, and audio recording. Students will work in a variety of locations to encompass as many different environments as possible. Other topics covered include daytime shooting, nighttime shooting, studio shooting, and storytelling. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N3570 - Digital Effects |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Integration of computer-generated imagery and digital effects technique for video production. Students learn techniques for creating digital effects, shooting video for effects, and the use of effects to aid in storytelling. Other topics covered include programming/scripting, shooting raw footage, effects, and media integration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N3850 - Seeing Sideways: Experimental Approaches To New Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this non-traditional open format course students will explore a variety of methods for fostering creative exploration in new media. Discussion, readings, blogging, and directed exercises lead the student to find individual ways of exploring different areas of new media through a variety of output options. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N3990 - Directed Study III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will cover specific information relating to career development and provide instruction on the development of job promotional material. Students will create self-promotional documentation that will enable image branding and other assets needed for future careers in the field of new media. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N4200 - Multimedia Project Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Project design in new media. Topics include product planning and design, hardware and software selection, cost estimation, timelines, project management tools, feasibility studies, protyping, and product presentation. Students work individually or in small groups to develop a project plan suitable for a capstone experience. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N4310 - Game On! |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An exploration of the evolution, concepts, and impact of video games. Examines the role of games in popular culture, as well as the impact on contemporary notions of interactivity, learning, and storytelling. Includes discussion of console and online games, casual games, Alternate Reality Games, serious games, and others. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N4320 - Advanced Sequential Narrative |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced topics in the creation of sequential narrative using 2D animation. Topics include ideas of pacing, tempo, sequence, and synchronization of graphic and audio elements. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N4350 - Computer Simulation/Animation III Production |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced animation course focusing on the creation of high-end simulation productions. This course will focus in more depth on greater story development and on a commercially finished animation. Topics to be covered in lecture format include rigid body dynamics, soft bodies, track animation, nurbs modeling, and particle dynamics. Concept theories will discuss physics and gravity, incorporation of digital sound and music, quality story and character development, and outputting techniques for broadcast application. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NEWM N4400 - DV and CGI Digital Effects |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced course covering the integration of CGI (Computer Generated Imagery) and digital effect techniques for video production, as used in industry. Students learn the techniques for creating digital effects, shooting video for effects, and the use of effects to aid in the telling of a story. Topics include integration of text, graphics, sound, video, and 2D/3D animation into video productions. Advanced editing and composite techniques will be explored through projects (Adobe After Effects, DVD authoring software, Alias Wavefront Maya). Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N4420 - Advanced 3D Animation Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced techniques in computer animation, including character development and dynamics. Possible topics include story development, character facial animation and locomotion, dynamics, special effects, composites, fluid effects and particle systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N4430 - Advanced Lighting And Texturing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced course in creating 3D objects and environments with specialized texturing and lighting. Possible topics include an examination of state-of-the-art examples, reproduction of results, and production of individual portfolio-quality projects. Possible software includes use of Autodesk Maya, mental ray, Adobe Photoshop and Adobe AfterEffects. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N4440 - Stereoscopic Production And Display |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The production and display of stereoscopic imagery for various applications, including games, education, science, virtual reality, and marketing. Topics include human stereoscopic perception, types of stereoscopic displays, evolution of techniques, production issues for various types of stereoscopic media. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N4500 - Usability Principles For New Media Interfaces |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the principles of human-computer interaction. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N4530 - Advanced Video |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of technical and critical-thinking skills towards understanding the genre of documentary films. Students review, discuss, and analyze several exemplar films, as well as do the research, planning, production, editing, post-production, and evaluation of a short high-quality documentary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N4550 - Advanced Sound Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students design, record, and edit sound files, apply effects, and mix several audio projects using state of the art technology. Topics include acoustics, circuits, waveforms, digital signal processing (DSP), and studio design and equipment. Emphasis is on practical techniques for integrating sound with other media. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N4800 - Technology And The Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides students with a solid foundation on legal matters that affect new media and informatics, including intellectual property. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N4850 - Seminar in New Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Current trends, problems, best practices, and developments in new media. Students pursue a special interest and share information and experience with the group. This course is an in-depth exploration of topics and issues at the forefront of new media. Seminar format with research papers and class discussion/presentations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| NEWM N4900 - Independent Study |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Research and practical experience in various areas of new media as selected by the student prior to registration, outlined in consultation with the instructor and approved by the program advisor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| NEWM N4950 - Enrichment Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Industry, corporate, or similar experience in new media-oriented employment. Projects jointly arranged, coordinated, and evaluated by faculty and industrial supervisors. Apply during the semester prior to desired internship. Total credit of internship/ independent study shall not exceed nine 9 hours. Completion of 9 credit hours of new media electives at the 300-400 level is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| NEWM N4990 - Capstone Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The capstone experience is the culmination of the student's major in both knowledge and abilities of a particular area of interest in new media. The successful execution, individually or as a team, integrates student's learning across the field. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N5010 - Topics: Principles Of Multimedia Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines current practices in the use of digital media technology with special emphasis in computer technology, library science, computer science, music, journalism, and art and design. Paradigms of applied research; implementation and resource allocation; assessment designs for specific production models; assessment of database-backend; study of current applications and concepts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N5020 - Digital Media Motion And Simulation Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Applications in animation/ simulation design and creation using computer desktop tools. Examines the fundamentals of three-dimensional animation through storyboards and planning, modeling, texturing, lighting, rendering, and composite techniques. Topics will include nurbs design development, texture mapping for realism and stylistic output, keyframe and path animation, and cinematography lighting techniques. Skills will be developed through design and modeling of individual or team multidisciplinary projects. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N5030 - Digital Media Application Design Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Presents the principles and fundamentals of design techniques using authoring tools on PC, Macintosh, and emerging computer platforms. Included are storyboarding, planning and organization of scripts, use of current technology, computers, video and digital arts equipment; computer-assisted design and project planner software tools and management of design team concepts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N5040 - Advanced Interactive Design Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Incorporates extensive analysis and use of computer and multimedia authoring tools intended for character simulation design. The course will study the concepts of physics-based bipedal movement in relation to gravity, balance, anticipation, potential energy, personality constructs, and locomotion. Assessment modeling for character depiction and animation will be planned and storyboarded. Other topics include more advanced facets of computer animation including paint tube modeling, layered texture mapping, and track and block animation for cyclical actions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N5100 - Web-Database Concepts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Addresses diverse issues arising when designing World Wide Web interface. Basic database concepts will be presented, but the course will focus on discussion of interface issues specific to Web databases, technologies for linking databases to Web servers for delivery, discussion of various Web-database applications, case studies, and industry trends. Typically offered Fall, Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM N5530 - Independent Study In New Media |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course provides graduate students in the New Media Program an opportunity to work on a project that is beyond any other existing new media courses. The course focuses on developing graduate students’ evaluation, synthesis and analysis abilities through a project to obtain an in-depth knowledge of new media within a context of their choice. A graduate student could be engaged in a research project or a production project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| NEWM N5850 - Seminars in Media Arts and Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This seminar course focuses on several areas in digital media application design and development. Courses are cross-listed with undergraduate course in the program and align to multimedia application criteria identified in order to enhance student and professional skills. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Create media arts and science designs and systems.
2.. Use state-of-the-art development tools and techniques in media arts and science.
3. Assess and critique emerging trends in human-centered computing.
4. Discuss human-centered computing topics with industry experts.
|
| NEWM P3500 - Video |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Video production techniques for digital media. Preproduction, production, and postproduction of digital video will be addressed and utilized for the completion of a short video project. Other topics covered include directing, editing, media optimization, and assembling assets. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM P3550 - Intermediate Sound |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this sound design course students develope soundtracks and sound effects. Applying sound construction. Engineering students will produce aural solutions to promote storytelling and atmosphere. Other topics covered include advance sound effects, pacing issues, style, and soundtrack. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM P3600 - Lighting And Field Production |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theoretical and practical application of lighting, filming, and audio recording. Students will work in a variety of locations to encompass as many different environments as possible. Other topics covered include daytime shooting, nighttime shooting, studio shooting, and storytelling. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM P3700 - Digital Effects |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Covering the integration of CGI and digital effects technique for video production. Students learn the techniques for creating digital effects, shooting video for effects, and the use of effects to aid in storytelling. Other topics covered include programming/scripting, shooting raw footage, effects, and integrating all new media. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM S3500 - Sequential Narrative |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Digital techniques and traditional storytelling concepts produce a sequential narrative. Students investigate panel-to-panel and frame-to-frame sequential storytelling as foundational elements of animation. Other topics covered include previsualization, storyboards, and character design. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM S3550 - 2D Interactive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Concept, production, and development of video games. By developing motivational goals, programming events, and implementing story, students will successfully create a video game experience. Other topics covered include development, sound design, programming, basic animation, and playability testing. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM S3600 - 2-D Animation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intermediate course focusing on the creation of a narrative through 2-D principles. This course will demonstrate mastery of design and illustration skills culminating in a final project. Other topics covered include research/planning, marketing, preproduction, production, and postproduction. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM S3650 - 3D Interactive |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intermediate character, concepts, and level design will produce a mod-based game. Students will develop assets within an existing game engine to produce an original game concept. Other topics covered include advanced conceptual design, character modeling, digital painting, and level design. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NEWM S3700 - 3-D Animation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intermediate animation course developing high-end simulation productions. Applying construction/rendering techniques and applying physics and dynamics, students will produce a 3D animated narrative. Other topics include advanced character modeling, camera movement, backgrounds, textures and lighting. [Animation Program: Maya]. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NMCM N2000 - Digital Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to digital art will cover a variety of digital means for the creation of art work and design work. Photoshop, Illustrator, Flash, Dreamweaver and digital audio will be introduced and examined in projects designed to create a familiarity with the digital work flow, storage and output. This course is cross listed with FINA-U200. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| NMCM N2010 - Introduction To New Media Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to New Media Communication. Through readings and projects, students will learn basic principles of Web sites and other online communication, focusing on creating content, developing designs, and producing graphics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| NMCM N2100 - Visual Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course looks at the visual aspects of print and electronic communication. It deals with issues of page design, visuals and other graphics, from practical, historical, and theoretical perspectives. Students will produce visual designs, including flyers and brochures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| NMCM N2110 - Typography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to the aesthetics, mechanics, history, terminology, specifications, and use of type in design. Typefaces will be evaluated and rendered in a variety of studio assignments using both hand written and computer techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| NMCM N2130 - Web Site Design And Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to website design and development covering high-level concepts in addition to hands-on activities. Topics include internet infrastructure, client-side technologies, embedded media, page design, site design, usability and other topics. Technologies to be covered include XHTML, JavaScript, and cascading style sheets. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| NMCM N2150 - Studio In Digital Media I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory work in the use of digital media tools, including video, animation, image manipulation, and digital illustration, in the creation of art. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| NMCM N2200 - Introduction to Business Website Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This introductory course focuses on the design and creation of websites for small businesses and non-profit organizations. After finishing the course, students will have the knowledge to make their own basic business and non-profit websites. No prior web site creation experience is needed. This course is primarily intended for students other the New Media Communication majors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| NMCM N2310 - Introduction To Video Game Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces video game deign, including game concept, scripting, and development. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| NMCM N2450 - Introduction To Website Design Principles And Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course teaches basic principles of web design and gives students practice creating sites using these principles of web design and gives students practice creating sites using these principles and common web site creation tools. By the end of tis course, students should be comfortable using professional tools to create good web sites. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| NMCM N2500 - Graphic Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis on visual communication through the perceptive use of line, form, and color. Elementary study of letter forms and typography. Introduction to basic tools, drawing disciplines of graphic design, and computer graphics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| NMCM N2610 - Action Script Three Programming |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to Action Script programming for Flash. Students will use technology to create artwork, design, games, database interfaces, web interfaces, and others. Basic skills for further study of JAVA, Objective C, C++, and others. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| NMCM N3150 - Web Writing And Usability |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers designing professional web sites. It focuses on learning principles to make web sites both well structured and usable. Activities include web site analysis, design, and usability testing. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| NMCM N3200 - Video Production |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of the medium of video as an aesthetic expression. Time and sound are elements incorporated into visual composition's traditional concerns. Emphasis on technical command of video camera and digital editing procedures in conjunction with development of visual sensitivity. Readings and a research project are required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| NMCM N3420 - 3D Computer Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students explore basic principles of three-dimensional computer modeling using three-dimensional modeling software. Students have the opportunity to learn basic modeling and animation vocabulary, fundamental principles of computer modeling rendering and animation. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| NMCM N3450 - Intermediate Website Design Principles And Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course teaches intermediate principles of web design and gives students practice creating sites using these principles and common website creation tools. By the end of the course, students should be producing professional quality websites. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| NMCM N3510 - Cyberculture And Community |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The rise of new media communication technology has altered stretches of our social landscape. This course explores how emerging technologies form new types of social networks while also changing the rules of communication in existing social units. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| NMCM N3610 - Graphic Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Further studies exploring design principles. Students utilize both hand and digital methods to solve design problems creatively and effectively. Course includes typographic exploration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| NMCM N3620 - Server-Side Web Programming Using PHP |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course discusses server-side Web programming using the PHP programming language. Through a detailed discussion of PHP programming fundamentals, students will develop a comprehensive understanding of the server-side aspects of developing interactive Web applications using the PHP programming language. This course also offers an introductory overview of interfacing web applications with relational databases. Students are expected to develop real-world server-side Web applications with MySQL database connectivity. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| NMCM N3700 - Animation For Integrated Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Images and animation converge to develop an animated sequence. Using text, graphics, and sound, students will create animation and visualizations. Photoshop and illustrator plus Flash will be used in addition to traditional methods for creating animations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| NMCM N3720 - Graphic Design Prod & Prac |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the interaction graphic designers have with clients and printers. Professional Graphic Design Skills.Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| NMCM N3910 - Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics will be announced in the prior semester. Oriented toward current topics in New Media communication; readings, projects, and papers as indicated by the topic and instructor. May be repeated up to a total of 8 credit hours. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| NMCM N3980 - Internship In New Media Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. May be repeated once for credit. No more than 6 credits total may be earned in N3980. Internship focusing on producing and managing new media communication projects. Apply during semester prior to desired internship. Must represent a minimum of 45 hour of experience per credit hour. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| NMCM N4110 - New Media Communication Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines various theories of New Media Communication and its effects on the world. Theories of design, criticism and computer-mediated communication will be explored. After taking this course, students should be able to critique New Media Communication media and New Media works. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| NMCM N4120 - Advanced Computer Illustration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced techniques in computer illustration are explored through the completion of integrated design projects. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Laboratory, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| NRES 20000 - Introduction To Environmental Careers |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course offers an introduction to general developments and practices in the environmental arena. A presentation of environmental careers and aspects of those careers that may affect job satisfaction and commitment is the main focus of the course. Included is an overview of coursework that benefits particular careers. The course is designed to introduce students to the specialized environmental areas in which they may choose to work. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NRES 23000 - Survey Of Meteorology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EAPS 22100) An introductory course for both science and non-science students. A general study of the atmosphere, basic meteorological principles, and weather systems. Relationships of the changing atmosphere to climate, ozone depletion, and other contemporary issues. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NRES 25500 - Soil Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (AGRY 25500) Differences in soils; soils genesis; physical, chemical, and biological properties of soils; relation of soils to problems of land use and pollution; soil management relative to tillage, erosion, drainage, moisture supply, temperature, aeration, fertility, and plant nutrition. Introduction to fertilizer chemistry and use. Not available to students who have taken AGRY 27000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Travel Time, Recitation
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NRES 28000 - Hazardous Waste Handling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course satisfies the OSHA standards for completion of the 40-hour Hazardous Waste Operator/Emergency Response Technician certification, 29CFR1910.120. The course includes a 35 hours laboratory component that presents hands-on field exercises and a supervised environmental project. The environmental project provides the on-the-job experience required by OSHA for full certification. The course provides students with the information they need to protect themselves and others at the job site and gives students experience in making decisions, performing tasks, and using the equipment they will encounter in the environmental workplace. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NRES 29000 - Introduction To Environmental Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (EAPS 11300, AGRY 29000) An introduction to environmental science, including issues such as air and water pollution, toxic waste disposal, soil erosion, natural hazards, climate change, energy resources, and environmental planning. Includes extensive in-class discussion of case studies. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NRES 30500 - Environmental Decision Making |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will discuss alternative ways of looking at environmental problems and assist the student with incorporating good science into a decision-making framework. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NRES 38000 - Hazardous Waste Certification Renewal |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Meets OSHA requirements for the annual 8 hours Hazardous Waste Operator/Emergency Response Technician refresher course. Developed to update student's knowledge in making decisions, performing tasks, and using the equpiment they will encounter in the environmental work place. Students successfully completing the course objectives will earn the OSHA 8 hours HAZWOPER Annual Renewal certification. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| NRES 38500 - Environmental Soil Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. (AGRY 38500) Designed as an upper level introductory course covering environmental soil chemistry concepts in the framework most applicable to inorganic and organic chemical contamination of soil and water resources and intended for students in environmental science fields that may not have a strong chemistry and/or mathematics background. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NRES 40000 - Natural Resources And Environmental Science Study Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. Utilized to record credits earned through participation in Purdue study abroad programs with cooperating foreign universities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
|
| NRES 41000 - Research In Natural Resources And Environmental Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Supervised individual research. NRES 41000 provides the opportunity to participate in independent undergraduate research with the goal of learning how to design, execute, and report research. Students will properly and permanently record their information in a timely fashion and learn how to examine, analyze, and interpret their results. One credit hour corresponds to one how of laboratory preparation and three hours of laboratory research. Total credits in NRES 41000 and NRES 41100 may not exceed six credits. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop a basic understanding of plant, soil, environment, and climate principles.
2. Become capable in the implementation of strategies, which optimize the profitability, productivity, sustainability, and environmental stewardship as concurrently achievable goals.
3. Communicate effectively using electronic media.
4. Work effectively in a team situation either as leader or participant.
5. Possess and demonstrate high standards of achievement.
6. Given a situation, be able to define the problem, identify the resources needed to solve it and their repositories and propose and evaluate different solutions based on the resources of the client.
7. Analyze and interpret simple research data with an understanding of basic statistical principles such as the mean, SE, F ration, LSD, and significance levels. Calculate and interpret a simple ANOVA, linear regression, and correlation.
8. Perform mathematical calculations appropriate to the profession, and interpret graphical and tabular information.
|
| NRES 42000 - Environmental Internship Reporting |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Reporting on participation in government, industrial, or other internship program. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 5 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop a basic understanding of plant, soil, environment, and climate principles.
2. Become capable in the implementation of strategies, which optimize the profitability, productivity, sustainability, and environmental stewardship as concurrently achievable goals.
3. Communicate effectively using electronic media.
4. Work effectively in a team situation either as leader or participant.
5. Possess and demonstrate high standards of achievement.
6. Given a situation, be able to define the problem, identify the resources needed to solve it and their repositories and propose and evaluate different solutions based on the resources of the client.
7. Analyze and interpret simple research data with an understanding of basic statistical principles such as the mean, SE, F ration, LSD, and significance levels. Calculate and interpret a simple ANOVA, linear regression, and correlation.
8. Perform mathematical calculations appropriate to the profession, and interpret graphical and tabular information.
|
| NRES 45000 - Soil Conservation And Water Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (AGRY 45000) Principles of soil conservation with emphasis on control of soil erosion by wind and water; impact of soil management decisions on environment; soil-water-plant relations, includes agronomic aspects of water management for both irrigation and drainage. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NRES 49700 - Natural Resources And Environmental Science Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Weekly discussion on assigned topics in natural resources and environmental science, employment-related areas, and interviewing skills. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NRES 49800 - Individual Studies In Environmental Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An opportunity for upper-level undergraduates to focus their interests and knowledge on an environmentally related problem. Arrangements must be made with a Natural Resources and Environmental Science Program faculty member before registration. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Agronomy
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| NS 11000 - Introduction To Naval Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the Naval Service that emphasizes organizational structure of the DoN and DoD, assigned roles and missions of both the USN and USMC, specific warfare communities/ career paths, basic elements of leadership, and Navy Core Values. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Naval Science
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division, Military
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Provide a broad understanding of the United Sates Navy, its basic missions, organizations, customs, traditions, and duties of Naval Officers.
2. Develop your skills as a leader building from a base composed of the Navy core values, Naval regulations, and the UCMJ.
3. Know and recall the basic knowledge and information concerning shipboard procedures, safety, damage control, and shipboard organization needed for student’s summer first cruise aboard a Navy ship.
|
| NS 20200 - Naval Lab And Physical Training |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This lab is designed to develop students morally, mentally, and physically and to imbue in them the highest ideals of duty, honor, and loyalty. The lab deals with topics of general Navy service training, with an emphasis on leadership and physical fitness development. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Naval Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Military
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 7 times
Learning Objectives:
1. To develop the physical fitness of individuals so that they are able to pass the Marine Physical Fitness Test and Combat Fitness Test or the Naval Physical Readiness Test II.
2. Provide instruction and training on lifelong physical fitness skills.
3. Develop and enhance leadership and management skills in preparation for becoming a Naval Officer.
4. Develop general knowledge base in naval matters ranging from current events, historical contexts of current operations, duties as a future Naval Officer, and specific technical competencies.
5. Develop and enhance core professional competencies as defined by the Regulation for Officer Development.
6. Develop and maintain proficiency in Close Order Drill (COD).
|
| NS 21200 - Naval Weapons Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides a basic introduction to the principles underlying ballistics, the fire control problem, detection methods, and integrated weapons systems. The major naval weapons and weapons systems are examined by components and then evaluated in light of current threats and missions. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Naval Science
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division, Military
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NS 21300 - Sea Power And Maritime Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis through lectures, reading, and student discussion of the relationship of sea power to American history. Classical concepts and contemporary employment of sea power are examined by viewing historic and current naval and maritime developments. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Naval Science
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division, Military
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NS 21400 - Fundamentals Of Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to leadership, leadership theory, management, and communications as they relate to organizational hierarchy. Topics include leadership, management, values, ethics, goal setting, communications, and team interactions. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Naval Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Military
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NS 31000 - Navigation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comprehensive study of the theory, principles, and procedures of ship navigation, movements, and employment. The course examines celestial navigation, rules of teh nautical road, piloting, practical chartwork, tides, instruments, publications, records, and electronic navigation systems. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Naval Science
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Military, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NS 31100 - Naval Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An operational analysis approach to tactical informations and dispositions, fleet logistics and communications, relative motion and the maneuvering board, and tactical plots stressing force effectiveness and unity. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Naval Science
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Military, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NS 33000 - Evolution Of Warfare |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide a basic understanding of the art and concepts of warfare and its evolution from a warrior's perspective. This course will trace the evolution of warfare from ancient times through the present. The student will be familiarized with the concept of changing battlefields and forces that lead to changes in tactics and military developments. The student will also learn the basic terms and concepts of warfare. The student will conduct one instructional period in order to practice those skills applicable to NROTC development. During the course students will participate in class discussions designed to develop the application of principles and concepts that will be required on battlefields of today and the future. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Naval Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NS 35000 - Naval Ship Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course deals with application of thermodynamics and mechanics in the design and operation of major propulsion equipment. Topics on thermodynamics, steam propulsion, nuclear power, gas turbines, internal combustion engines, auxiliary systems, ship construction and stability, engineering documentation, and new developments in naval engineering. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Naval Science
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Military, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NS 41300 - Naval Leadership, Management, And Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course deals primarily with concepts of leadership and ethics in Navy and Marine Corps afloat and ashore. Case studies are extensively used to hone ethical decision making skills. Particular emphasis is placed upon the Human Resource Management System in the Navy to include an understanding of drugs and alcohol abuse, intercultural affairs, and minority affairs. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Naval Science
Course Attributes: Military, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NS 44000 - Amphibious Warfare And Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An in-depth discussion of the concept and history of amphibious warfare; introduction to the psychology of military leadership. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Naval Science
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Military, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 11000 - Introduction To Energy Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course, designed for first-semester freshmen, reviews and discusses the history of energy use by the world, the relation between energy usage and quality of life, the social impact of energy use, and the environmental constraints on energy usage. In particular, the role that engineering disciplines play in solving energy problems will be discussed. The full impact that the various energy alternatives have on economic and environmental issues will be reviewed in order to provide a rational basis for energy choices for the future. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 12000 - Freshman Research Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. In this course, the student performs a small independent project in nuclear engineering under direct faculty supervision. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 20000 - Introduction to Nuclear Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course designed to acquaint students with the field of nuclear engineering and design. Concepts of fission, fusion, radioactivity, and neutron physics are introduced. Nodern applications of nuclear technology, including nuclear medicine, food preservation, space reactors and propulsion. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Exempt, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 20500 - Nuclear Engineering Undergraduate Laboratory I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A laboratory course designed for the study of the properties of radiation, radioactive material, and radiation detectors. The hazards of radiation and safe handling techniques are emphasized. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 21100 - Fundamentals Of Nuclear Reactors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to nuclear energy, nuclear reactor principles, and nuclear power plants. Intended primarily for students in the School of Technology. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 27300 - Mechanics Of Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of stress and strain; equations of equilibrium and compatibility; stress-strain laws; extension, torsion, and bending of bars; membrane theory of pressure vessels; combined loading conditions; transformation of stresses and principal stresses; elastic stability, elected topics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 29100 - Industrial Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and comprehensive written reports of this practice. For cooperative program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 29199 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Nuclear Engineering. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 29200 - Industrial Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and comprehensive written reports of this practice. For cooperative program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 29299 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Nuclear Engineering. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 29800 - Sophomore Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Career areas in nuclear engineering, job opportunities, areas of related study, topics of current interest, orientation, professional ethics, and responsibility. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| NUCL 30000 - Nuclear Structure And Radiation Interactions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of atomic properties and introduction to nuclear models. Discussion of radioactive decay and the interaction of nuclear radiation and reaction products with matter. Energetics and cross-sections of nuclear reactions with applications to problems typical of nuclear engineering. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 30500 - Nuclear Engineering Undergraduate Laboratory II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Continuation of NUCL 20500. Experiments with scintillation detectors, multichannel analyzers, neutron detectors, the subcritical pile, and the reactor will be performed. Measurements will be made to demonstrate neutron activation analysis techniques, neutron slowing down, neutron flux distributions, and the effects of control rods on neutron fluxes. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 31000 - Introduction To Neutron Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of diffusion theory for neutrons. Neutron interactions and development of one-group neutron diffusion theory with point, plane, and fission sources. Application to one- and two-region reactors. Introduction to buckling, multiplication constants, critical size, neutron slowing down, and resonance capture. Applications using two-group theory. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 32000 - Introduction To Materials For Nuclear Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Nuclear environments and materials selection for nuclear applications, bonding, crystal structure and symmetry, defects and irradiation, chemical thermodynamics, phase equilibria, phase transformations, and corrosion in nuclear systems and design. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 32500 - Nuclear Materials Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Nuclear materials laboratory that evaluates various characterization techniques and technologies, tensile properties, hardness, fracture toughness, microstructures, X-ray diffraction, electron microscopy, mechanical properties of thin-films, NDE techniques and data acquisition in materials characterization techniques. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understanding of what materials are, and how they perform and fail.
2. Understand the conceptual tools dealing with materials phenomena.
3. Be able to communicate with professionals about materials problems.
4. Be able to address the limitations of materials in design, and improve them.
|
| NUCL 35000 - Nuclear Thermal-Hydraulics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The first of an integrated two-course sequence introducing the concepts of nuclear reactor thermal transport and associated hydraulics with applications to design and safety. Macroscopic balances, dimensional analysis, and flow measurement. Fluid behavior, momentum transfer, and applications to reactor systems and design. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 35100 - Nuclear Thermal-Hydraulics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis is given to the fluid transport of heat from reactor fuel elements. Heat transfer in fluids, analogies, and applications to reactor coolant channel analysis. Two-phase flow and convective boiling. Radiative heat transfer. Applications to safety analysis and reactor design. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 35500 - Nuclear Thermohydraulics Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Laboratory course corresponding to NUCL 35000 and NUCL 35100. Various fluid flow and heat transfer phenomena applied to nuclear reactor systems and design. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 38199 - Professional Practice Co-Op I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 38299 - Professional Practice Co-Op II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 38399 - Professional Practice Co-Op III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 39300 - Industrial Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and comprehensive written reports of this practice. For cooperative program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 39399 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Nuclear Engineering. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 39400 - Industrial Practice IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and comprehensive written reports of this practice. For cooperative program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 39499 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Nuclear Engineering. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 39500 - Industrial Practice V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Practice in industry and comprehensive written reports of this practice. For cooperative program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 39599 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Nuclear Engineering. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit summary report and company evaluation. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 39699 - Professional Practice Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| NUCL 39800 - Junior Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Continuation of NUCL 29800. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| NUCL 40200 - Engineering Of Nuclear Power Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles and practice of power plant systems with design applications; thermal cycles, heat transport, mechanical designs, control, safety analysis, shielding analysis, fuel cycles; resources, optimization, options, waste management. Fusion and alternate energy sources. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 42001 - Radiation Interaction With Materials And Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental of radiation interaction with materials and applications, types of radiation and radiation sources, physical mechanisms of radiation interaction with solids, radiation damage, ion mixing, applications in nuclear fission and fusion reactors, applications in materials synthesis. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn the types and sources of radiation.
2. Understand the physical mechanisms of radiation interaction with materials and model these interactions quantitatively.
3. Understand and model the phenomenon of radiation damage to bulk, surfaces and interfaces.
4. Relate the concepts of radiation damage to neutron interaction with solids in both fission and fusion reactors.
5. Understand the technological applications of radiation interaction with materials.
|
| NUCL 44900 - Senior Design Proposal |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The course outcome is the writing and presentation of a proposal for the senior design project, NUCL 45000. The tasks include the selection of project design topics (various nuclear engineering components and systems designs), the selection of teams, introduction to design process, team management, communication, and engineering ethics, literature and patents survey, initiation of design activities and familiarization with design tools (for example software). Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 45000 - Design In Nuclear Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of the design process to the project design topics identified in NUCL 44900. The design process usually includes, but not limited to, mathematical modeling in design, neutronic, thermal-hydraulics and safety studies, risk assessment, economics, policy and regulation, environmental impact. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 46000 - Introduction To Controlled Thermonuclear Fusion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Energy resources and the potential role of nuclear fusion. Ignition and breakeven conditions for fusion power plants. Particle and energy confinement in linear and toroidal magnetic fields. Review of magnetic and inertial confinement experiments and conceptual reactor configurations. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| NUCL 47000 - Fuel Cell Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The principles of electromechanical energy conversion for a single fuel cell, fuel cell stack, process engineering in the fuel and oxidizer supply systems. Principles, components, operation and performance for alkaline, phosphoric acid, solid polymer, molten carbonate and solid oxide fuel cells. Provides broad insight into science, technology, system design, and safety concerns in design and operation of fuel cells. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 48000 - Nuclear Engineering Technical Communications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course makes students aware of the importance of communication skills-written, oral, graphical and interpersonal-in a successful nuclear engineering career and gives them the opportunity to develop and practice those skills. Students will learn how to access, evaluate, use and synthesize relevant technical literature. In addition, through the writing and speaking assignments, students develop team work skills, gain an understanding of professional and ethical responsibilities of engineering, learn to write a simple propose and learn about selected contemporary global economic, social and political issues, particularly with respect to nuclear topics. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Ability to communicate effectively.
2. The ability to understand the impact of engineering solutions in a global and societal context.
3. A knowledge of contemporary issues, particulary with respect to nuclear topics.
4. An understanding of professional and ethical responsibility.
|
| NUCL 49500 - Professional Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Professional experience in Nuclear Engineering. Program coordinated by school with cooperation of participating employers. Students submit a summary report. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| NUCL 49700 - Selected Topics In Nuclear Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| NUCL 49800 - Senior Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Lectures to acquaint the senior students with professional ethics, job opportunities, graduate schools, continuing study, and services of professional societies. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| NUCL 50100 - Nuclear Engineering Principles |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A first course for graduate students desiring a nuclear engineering sequence and an elective for students in science or engineering. The course is structured in four parts: (1) Nuclear structure and radiation, biological effects and medical applications of radiation. (2) Basics of neutron and reactor physics, neutron diffusion and reactor criticality. (3) Nuclear materials and waste. (4) Reactor systems and safety. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 50300 - Radioactive Waste Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Will familiarize students with the nature of the risks associated with radioactive waste and the history, regulations, and worldwide status for the safe storage of various types of radioactive waste. The sources, characteristics, and magnitudes of radioactive wastes are described, and the current and proposed engineered waste management systems are examined along with the analysis of their associated risks. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 50400 - Nuclear Engineering Experiments |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A laboratory course that, when coupled with NUCL 50100, produces a sequence that contains both the theoretical and engineering aspects of nuclear engineering. Topics include radiation detection and analysis, neutronics, and nuclear reactor experiments. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 51000 - Nuclear Reactor Theory I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Methodologies of neutron flux calculations, diffusion and slowing down theory, flux separation, material buckling, resonance absorption, Doppler effect, 2-group and multi-group theories, and reactivity balances for design and operation. Introduction to reactor kinetics, delayed neutrons, point reactor kinetics, transient behavior, load changes, reactivity feedback, and safety implications. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 51100 - Reactor Theory And Kinetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced methodologies for neutron flux calculation, nodal methods, introduction to transport theory, transport correction, multigroup theory, and introduction to the generation of group constants. Reactor kinetics, perturbation theory, adjoint fluxes, reactivity calculation from perturbation theory, reactivity coefficients due to Doppler effect, temperature and density changes, void coefficient, and energy and power coefficients. Microkinetics, theory of reactivity measurements, approximate methods: prompt jump approximation, and prompt kinetics. Transients with feedback, safety implications, and spatial kinetics. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 51200 - Computers In Reactor Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The application of computational methods in reactor systems analysis. Theory behind modern numerical methods (e.g. SOR, Conugate Gradient, etc.) for solving large, sparse systems on linear equations that result from the discretization of elliptical and parabolic partial differential equations. Applications include the multigroup, multi-dimensional neutron transport equation and two-phase flow fluid dynamics. Extensive use of MATLAB, FORTRAN, and UNIX(tm). No written exams, and the majority of problem sets are performed as group projects. Knowledge of FORTRAN required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 52000 - Radiation Effects And Reactor Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to radiation effects in solids and a survey of nuclear reactor materials. Radiation interaction mechanisms and effects on properties. Reactor material characteristics, selection criteria, testing, and economic considerations. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 55100 - Mass, Momentum, And Energy Transfer In Energy Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Formulations for analyzing complicated thermal-hydraulic phenomena in energy systems. Derivation of two-phase flow field equations and constitutive relations. Thermal-hydraulic modeling of nuclear reactor systems. Analyses of nuclear reactor safety related phenomena based on conservation principles. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 55200 - Thermal-Hydraulics And Reactor Safety |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Applications of thermal-sciences to nuclear reactor safety design and risk assessment. Emphasis on illustrating the use of basic principles in quantitative safety assessments of practical and current interest. The basic topics revolve around multiphase transients and applications which include study of accident analysis and its applications to licensing for light water reactor systems and for liquid metal fast breeder reactor. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 55300 - Nano-Macro Scale Applications Of Nuclear Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction of the principles of nuclear science and engineering for addressing industrial and scientific issues ranging from sub nano-to-macro scales. Areas to be covered include: propulsion, high-energy density materials, supercooling, medical applications, sonoluminescence, novel detection systems for special nuclear and contraband materials, and advanced nuclear fusion power systems. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 56000 - Introduction To Fusion Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to electricity and magnetism, magneto-fluid-mechanics and plasma physics. Thermonuclear reactions, power balances, macroscopic and microscopic instabilities. Principles of operation and conceptual design of Tokamaks, Mirror, Theta-Pinch, and Laser-Driven fusion reactors. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 56300 - Direct Energy Conversion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of energy sources and study of the basic processes of direct energy conversion and their applications to energy utilization, based on both conventional and nuclear energy conversion schemes. Conventional schemes include thermoelectric, photovoltaic, thermionic, magnetohydrodynamic generators, fuel cell systems, etc.; and nuclear energy conversion schemes correspond to nuclear radiation and fusion energy conversion. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 57000 - Fuzzy Approaches In Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Presentation of the mathematical fundamentals of fuzzy logic theory and a survey of engineering applications. Fuzzy sets; the extension principle; fuzzy numbers; fuzzy relations and composition; linguistic descriptions; implication operators and fuzzy algorithms are formally developed. Applications emphasize the engineering utilization of approximate reasoning to diagnostics, control, safety, and decision-making problems. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 57500 - Neural Computing in Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Mathematical fundamentals of computing with neural networks. Survey of engineering applications. Computational metaphors from biological neurons. Artificial neural networks modeling of complex, nonlinear and ill-posed problems. Emphasizes engineering utilization of neural computing to diagnostics, control, safety, and decision-making problems. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 59700 - Nuclear Engineering Projects I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Development of individual research and study projects. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| NUCL 61200 - Applied Reactor Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reactor physics analysis of existing reactors and critical experiments through the use of digital computers and reactor programs. One-, two-, and three-dimensional solutions of the diffusion and transport equations. Calculation methods for lifetime effects on excess reactivity, power distribution, breeding ratio, and temperature, void, and Doppler coefficients of reactivity. Fuel shuffling and safety calculations for fuel handling and storage. Concurrent Prerequisite: NUCL 61000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 65000 - Thermal Hydraulics For Nuclear Reactor Safety |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Safety philosophy, levels and goals of safety. Approaches used for nuclear reactor safety for the protection of public health. Design basis accidents. Engineered safeguards and inherent safety features. Fundamentals of safety related thermal-hydraulic phenomena and their integration into a methodology for containment assessment. Prerequisite: ME 50500. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 65500 - Two-Phase Flow Computational Fluid Dynamics Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course guides the student to two-fluid model solutions using computational fluid dynamics (CFD). Topics include: review of the two-fluid model, review of elliptic and parabolic partial differential equations, description of numerical algorithms, and two-phase flow channel and jet flows. Prerequisite: NUCL 56000. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 66000 - Magnetic Confinement Fusion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Applications of plasma physics for analysis and design of plasma configurations in fusion reactors. Topics include beam-driven fusion systems, plasma heating and ignition via neutral beams and RF wave heating, plasma waves, kinetic and fluid descriptions of plasmas, and energy transport; blanket neutronics for tritium breeding, energy conversion, and reactor design considerations. Prerequisite: NUCL 56000. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUCL 69600 - Nuclear Engineering Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Discussion by graduate students and invited speakers of their research projects and topics of interest in nuclear engineering. Prerequisite: Master's student standing and Nuclear Engineering majors only. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| NUCL 69700 - Nuclear Engineering Projects II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Development of individual research and study projects. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| NUCL 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| NUCL 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
Department: Nuclear Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| NUPH 41200 - Diagnostic Imaging I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The overall objective of this course is to introduce the concepts of diagnostic imaging and clinical applications as relevant to the practice of pharmacy. Basic principles applicable to instrumentation, the design of diagnostic imaging drugs, and clinical concepts are emphasized. In addition to specific diagnostic drugs and therapeutic adjuncts used with various imaging modalities, the advantages and limitations of each modality are presented. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Coll of PNHS Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUPH 41300 - Diagnostic Imaging II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Continuation of information on diagnostic imaging modalities as relevant to pharmaceutical care as well as emphasis upon examples of nuclear medicine procedures of specific interest to pharmacy. Fundamental concepts of radiation effects on living systems are applied to medical applications of radioactivity. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Coll of PNHS Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUPH 41400 - Nuclear Pharmacy Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Instrumentation and procedures basic to radiopharmaceutical preparation and analysis; health physics and regulatory aspects essential to the practice of nuclear pharmacy. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Coll of PNHS Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUPH 41600 - Practicum In Nuclear Pharmacy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A structured, supervised practice experience in nuclear pharmacy. Typically offered Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Coll of PNHS Admin
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUPH 49000 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An honors course for superior students to be used in relation to, and to supplement, an existing course; an in-depth approach to topics of current interest utilizing the original literature as prime source material. A laboratory project may be included. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Coll of PNHS Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| NUPH 53000 - Applied Nuclear Pharmacy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Chemical, biological, and clinical perspectives on pharmaceutical products used in the practice of nuclear medicine. Duties and responsibilities of a pharmacist in the compounding and dispensing of radiopharmaceuticals. Laboratories complement the lecture presentations. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Coll of PNHS Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUPH 55000 - Introduction To Positron Emission Tomography |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to the principles and applications of positron emission tomography (PET). Topics include: instrumentation; radionuclide production; synthesis and applications of 15O, 11C, 13N, and 18F radiopharmaceuticals; quantitative tracer kinetic modeling; and regulatory issues in clinical PET. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Coll of PNHS Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUPH 56000 - Case Studies In Clinical Nuclear Medicine |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Introduction to the clinical applications of radiopharmaceutical drug products and the associated practice of nuclear medicine, through analysis of a series of current clinical case studies. Factors examined include: patient medical history, with emphasis on recent diagnostic procedures and pharmacotherapy; radiopharmaceutical selection, dosage, and preparation; possible contraindications for the nuclear medicine procedure and associated interventional agents; diagnostic findings; and the impact of study outcome on subsequent patient treatment. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Coll of PNHS Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| NUPH 69000 - Special Problems |
|
Arrange Hours and Credit. Individual investigations in the applications of radionuclides to research and nuclear pharmacy. Hours and credits to be arranged. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Coll of PNHS Admin
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| NUPH 69600 - Seminar In Nuclear Pharmacy |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 or 1.00. Selected topics in nuclear pharmacy, radiopharmaceutical chemistry, health physics, and radiation biology, presented by staff, students, and invited speakers. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Coll of PNHS Admin
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| NUPH 89500 - Clerkship In Nuclear Medicine |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Four-week Doctor of Pharmacy clinical rotation designed to develop the student's clinical knowledge and skills with regard to diagnostic and therapeutic nuclear medicine and associated nuclear pharmacy practice. The contributions of nuclear medicine and nuclear pharmacy to patient care will be evaluated through study of clinical cases and outcomes. NUPH 41600 and 55000 recommended. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic 1, Clinic 2, Clinic 3, Clinic 4, Clinic
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Coll of PNHS Admin
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| NUR 10000 - Guided Readings In Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. For nursing students with an interest related to nursing practice. Current literature and events related to nursing are explored. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 10300 - Professional Seminar I: Communications, Ethics And Diversity |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to the role of the registered nurse involving history of nursing, professionalism, code of ethics, cultural sensitivity, and therapeutic communication. Application of writing skills to the discipline of nursing is emphasized. Professional portfolios are initiated.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 10600 - Medical Terminology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of the language of medicine, including word construction, definitions, spelling, and abbreviations; emphasis on speaking, reading and writing skills. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 10800 - Introduction To Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduce students entering the nursing profession to foundations of the baccalaureate nursing curriculum, including concepts, competencies, mandatory requirements and responsibilities within the profession. Students are introduced to the rigor of the curriculum and begin to build a sense of community within the Purdue School of Nursing. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the relationship between the Essentials of Baccalaureate Education for Professional Nursing Practice document and Purdue’s baccalaureate nursing curriculum.
2. Describe the roles of the professional nurse in the healthcare delivery system.
3. Describe individuals, families, communities, and populations as consumers of nursing care.
4. Reflect upon personal and professional responsibilities in relation to the nursing profession.
5. Communicate in oral and written form at a professional level.
6. Identify personal behaviors necessary for success in an academic and professional career.
7. Engage in student and/or nursing organizations as an aspect of professional growth and development.
|
| NUR 11300 - Communication In The Health Care Setting |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Provides the student with the skills necessary to communicate therapeutically with clients and effectively with coworkers. In addition, the student will gain an introductory knowledge of computer skills necessary function in the healthcare work setting. Study and test-taking skills will also be included. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 11500 - Nursing I: Introduction To Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Explores the concepts of health, illness, individuals' pursuit of wholeness, and nursing intervention through the use of the nursing process. Basic human needs, interpersonal relationships, and dynamics of behavior as they apply to the Neuman Systems Model are studied. Laboratory experience is provided in the clinical setting. Typically offered Spring Fall.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 11600 - Nursing II: Medical-Surgical Nursing Of Adults |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Applies the nursing process to the care of adults who experience problems related to selected basic human needs. Surgical intervention as a stress situation is studied. Laboratory experiences are provided in hospitals and other community agencies. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 11700 - LPN Nursing Mobility Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Associate Science Degree In Nursing Mobility Seminar is designed to meet the specific needs of the Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN) pursuing educational requirements necessary for an Associate of Science in nursing degree and for Registered Nurse (RN) licensure examination. The NUR 11700 Seminar course offers increased depth to the existent knowledge and experience of the LPN with emphasis on the Neuman Systems Model (NSM) and the nursing process. Therapeutic communication skills are reviewed. Information regarding intravenous therapy and blood product transfusion is included. Demonstration of computer skills and knowledge of pharmacology are also incorporated. Students may take NUR 22400 or NUR 33600 with NUR 11700
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 11800 - Perspectives In Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to contemporary nursing practice through exploration of nursing's historical development, legal and ethical aspects of the nurse/client relationship, and practice of the nursing role.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| NUR 11900 - Nursing Assessment |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Assessment techniques to establish a client data base are demonstrated and practiced. Techniques of interviewing, inspection, auscultation and selected palpation are presented as the methods used to determine client health status.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| NUR 12300 - Nursing Foundations |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. The nursing process is utilized as the framework for promotion of client health in the context of human needs maintenance/fulfillment. The concepts of holistic client care and client adaptation along the health-illness continuum are emphasized.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| NUR 12500 - Career Transition To Associate Degree Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The differences between the LPN and ADN roles are discussed. The nursing process is utilized to establish plans of care and the teaching/learning process is employed to develop teaching plans for clients. The role components of the associate degree are explored.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| NUR 13000 - Essential Clinical Skills |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to clinical skills and procedures required for safe nursing practice through the use of demonstration, return demonstration, "hands-on" practice, and critical thinking exercises. Independent practice time is required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 18100 - Introduction To Professional Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is designed to examine nursing within its professional context. The heritage and tradition of professional nursing is explored as a foundation to understanding contemporary nursing. Scholarly writing and research is introduced using APA format. Strategies are given to help students achieve academic success. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| NUR 18200 - Conceptual And Theoretical Thinking In Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course examines the concepts that form the philosophical and theoretical basis of nursing science and patient centered care. The content is leveled to provide undergraduate students a foundational understanding of nursing as a discipline and profession. The conceptual framework and philosophy of the school of nursing will be studied. Special emphasis will be placed on the relationship between nursing philosophy, knowledge, research, and practice. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| NUR 18800 - Foundations Of Physical Assessment |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Foundational principles of physical assessment are examined in the context of patient centered care. A systematic approach to physical assessment of individuals across the life span is introduced. Health promotion, evidence based practice, and critical thinking are presented as foundational to physical assessment. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| NUR 19200 - Foundations Of Nursing |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. The nursing process is introduced as a systematic approach to patient centered care. The concepts of basic human needs and evidence based nursing practice are presented as foundational to the curriculum. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| NUR 19600 - Foundations Of Psychosocial Nursing |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Foundational principles of psychosocial nursing are taught in the context of patient centered care. Emphasis is placed on concepts of life span development, basic human needs, therapeutic relationships and therapeutic communication. The elemental components of evidence based nursing practice are introduced. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| NUR 19700 - Practicum I |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is the foundational clinical practicum incorporating principles of assessment, psychosocial nursing and nursing fundamentals to the clinical setting. Critical thinking skills are developed as students learn to apply the nursing process to provide patient centered care in order to meet the basic human needs of adult individuals. Clinically appropriate psychomotor skills are learned and reinforced. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| NUR 20100 - Pathophysiology For Nursing Practice |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the pathophysiology of the major regulatory mechanisms of the body. Theory and evidence-based practices are emphasized. Diagnostic procedures and therapeutic regimens will be discussed. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| NUR 20200 - Nursing II: Medical-Surgical Nursing Of Adults |
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Credit Hours: 6.00. Applies the nursing process to the care of adults who experience problems related to selected basic human needs. Surgical intervention as a stress situation is studied. Laboratory experiences are provided in hospitals and other community agencies. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| NUR 20400 - Psychosocial Health Nursing |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. This course develops knowledge and skills required for psychosocial health nursing. Theory and evidence-based health care practices are emphasized. Nursing practice experiences are provided in a variety of settings. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Utilize a holistic approach to identify the psychosocial needs of individuals toward maximizing positive health outcomes.
2. Examine evolving social, cultural, and health care delivery trends in the provision of safe and quality psychosocial health care to individuals.
3. Apply theory guided, evidence-based practice used to provide quality psychosocial care to individuals.
4. Select appropriate outcomes in the provisions of safe quality psychosocial care in collaboration with individuals.
5. Demonstrate effective communication in collaboration with individuals, families, and the interdisciplinary team members.
6. Implement teaching-learning processes in the delivery of psychosocial care to individuals.
7. Demonstrate accountability for practice within the legal and ethical standards of the nursing profession in a variety of psychosocial settings.
8. Identify resources, technology, finance and personnel used in the delivery of psychosocial health care.
9. Give examples of continuous quality improvement processes that are essential to promote positive psychosocial health outcomes and quality of life.
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| NUR 20800 - Lifespan Human Development |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. A study of the continuity of development throughout the lifespan to gain an understanding of the influences of heredity, environment, and culture on individuals and families. Nursing implications of normative and non-normative patterns of growth are identified. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| NUR 21400 - Introduction To Pathophysiology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to pathophysiological alterations in major regulatory mechanisms of the body. Provides a foundation for understanding general nursing practice, various diagnostic procedures, and selected therapeutic regimens. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
West Lafayette
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| NUR 21800 - Human Development And Health Promotion |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course develops the knowledge required to effectively promote health throughout the lifespan. Theory and evidence-based developmental influences and challenges are addressed.
Corequisite: Admission to the Nursing Program. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Utilize a systematic, holistic approach to identify needs of individuals throughout the lifespan.
2. Describe evolving social, cultural, and health care delivery trends in the provision of optimal health care throughout the lifespan.
3. Identify theory-guided, evidence-based practice used to provide developmentally appropriate quality care across the lifespan.
4. Discuss health promotion outcomes in providing safe, quality care.
5. Demonstrate developmentally appropriate communication strategies throughout the lifespan.
6. Identify health promotion teaching-learning strategies in the delivery of health care.
7. Describe legal and ethical issues relevant to human development across the lifespan.
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| NUR 21801 - Health Assessment And Essentials Of Nursing Practice I |
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Credit Hours: 5.00. Focuses on the beginning concepts and principles for the professional nurse while developing fundamental skills in a nursing process framework. Through lecture and clinical learners begin to apply skills in communication and assessment. Emphasis is placed on developing physical examination skills, obtaining health histories and performing client centered safe nursing care to meet basic healthcare needs in diverse populations across the lifespan. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture, Travel Time
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply the nursing process to clients from the healthy to chronically ill populations.
2. Develop critical thinking skills relating to the practice of nursing in a variety of healthcare settings.
3. Discuss the impact of evidence based nursing research in guiding practice.
4. Identify the effect of personal values and beliefs on professional practice.
5. Develop basic physical and psychosocial clinical assessment skills for the client across the lifespan, including interviewing techniques, and comprehensive history and physical exam.
6. Employ basic principles of documentation to describe clinical findings.
7. Demonstrate ethical and legal accountability of professional nursing actions, including client confidentiality.
8. Use informatics appropriately in simulation and in the clinical setting.
9. Identify methods and resources for personal and professional growth.
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| NUR 21900 - Health Assessment |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course develops knowledge and skills required for health assessment in nursing practice. Current practice guidelines are emphasized. Interview and assessment skills are utilized to determine health status across the lifespan. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Utilize holistic assessment techniques to determine healthcare needs of the individual.
2. Describe social and cultural differences in the health assessment of individuals.
3. Demonstrate assessment skills using current practice guidelines.
4. Utilize accurate communication terminology during the health assessment.
5. Recognize variations in health assessment findings.
6. Describe the legal and ethical standards of the nursing professional in the performance of health assessment.
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| NUR 21901 - Pathopharmacology I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the study of underlying changes in primary physiologic regulatory mechanisms affecting homeostasis, metabolic processes, immune response, circulation, renal elimination, fluid/electrolyte and acid/base balance, sensory perception and alteration in comfort and the pharmacotherapies utilized as treatment for alterations and disease states. This introductory knowledge provides the foundation for the understanding and practice of general nursing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe primary regulatory mechanisms affecting homeostasis, metabolic processes, immune response, circulation, renal elimination, fluid/electrolyte and acid/base balance, sensory perception and alteration in comfort.
2. Recognize the clinical manifestations of disease resulting from genetic/genomic and physiologic alterations in body structure and function affecting homeostasis; metabolic processes; immune response; circulation; renal elimination; fluid/electrolyte and acid/base balance; sensory perception and comfort.
3. Describe selected diagnostic, therapeutic and pharmacologic interventions in the prevention and treatment of alterations affecting homeostasis, metabolic processes, immune response, circulation, renal elimination, fluid/electrolyte and acid/base balance, sensory perception and comfort.
4. Idenify major drug classifications and pharmacokinetic processes utilized in the prevention and treatment of disease with emphasis on selected, frequently prescribed medications.
5. Identify primary indications, contraindications, mechanism of action, potential side effects and adverse reactions of frequently prescribed medications in order to integrate pharmacologic knowledge into overall therapeutic plan for restoring or maintaining homeostasis.
6. Identify factors which contribute to safe medication practice, risk reduction and prevention of misuse or abuse of pharmacotherapy.
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| NUR 22001 - Essentials Of Nursing Practice II |
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Credit Hours: 5.00. Continues to expand on the professional nursing role supported by fundamental concepts and principles of the nursing process in lecture and clinical settings. Learners apply communication, assessment and nursing skills while caring for the needs of clients in diverse populations across the lifespan. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture, Travel Time
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Use beginning critical thinking and clinical judgment when providing safe, quality nursing care to patients in the clinical setting.
2. Apply culturally sensitive clinical interventions using evidence-based-practice (EBP).
3. Apply principles of physical assessment and history taking to develop plans of care using the nursing process for clients across the lifespan.
4. Evaluate the effectiveness of nursing interventions on short-term and long-term client goals.
5. Develop appropriate evaluation criteria to determine clinical outcomes that meet professional standards of care.
6. Identify client adaption and coping strategies when adjusting to changes along the health-wellness continuum.
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| NUR 22101 - Pathopharmocology II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the study of underlying changes in primary physiologic regulatory mechanisms affecting respiratory, hematologic, endocrine, neurologic, neuromuscular, gastrointestinal and reproductive function and the pharmacotherapies utilized as treatment for alterations and disease states. This course builds on the learning objectives from Pathopharmacology I to provide the foundation for the understanding and practice of general nursing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the primary regulatory mechanisms affecting respiratory, hematologic, endocrine, neurologic, neuromuscular, gastrointestinal and reproductive function.
2. Recognize the clinical manifestations of disease resulting from genetic/genomic and physiologic alterations affecting respiratory, hematologic, endocrine, neurologic, neuromuscular, gastrointestinal and reproductive function.
3. Describe selected diagnostic, therapeutic and pharmacologic interventions in the prevention and treatment of alterations affecting respiratory, hematologic, endocrine, neurologic, neuromuscular, gastrointestinal and reproductive function.
4. Identify major drug classifications and pharmacokinetic processes utilized in the prevention and treatment of disease with emphasis on selected, frequently prescribed medications.
5. Identify primary indications, contradictions, mechanism of action, potential side effects and adverse reactions of frequently prescribed medications in order to integrate pharmacologic knowledge into the overall therapeutic plan for restoring or maintaining homeostasis.
6. Identify factors which contribute to safe medication practice, risk reduction and prevention of misuse or abuse of pharmacotherapy.
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| NUR 22200 - Foundations Of Holistic Health And Wellness |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the foundations of health and wellness from a holistic perspective. Theoretical foundations and modality techniques of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) will be discussed and practiced o attain optimal well-being. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Discuss concepts of holism, holistic health, and wellness.
2. Articulate the theoretical foundations and techniques of selected CAM modalities.
3. Practice CAM modalities for promoting and managing health.
4. Utilize research and evidence-based practice in the delivery of holistic health and wellness interventions.
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| NUR 22201 - Population Health |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. A comprehensive introduction to population health concepts and practices through examination of philosophy, purpose, functions, activities and tools. Multiple determinants (genetics, cultural, social, and behavioral factors) that influence population health and illness are explored including the contribution of these factors to health disparities. Population-focused initiatives for health promotion and disease prevention are examined within the context of local to global public health systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the context and scope of public health from a historical and modern perspective.
2. Describe the methodology used by public health to define and address population health issues.
3. Identify public health’s interprofessional nature and the contributions of different disciplines to improving population health.
4. Describe the ethical, legal, organizational, financial, and structural aspects of the current US and selected global health care delivery systems.
5. Discuss the contribution that biostatistics, epidemiology, information technology, and evidence-based practice make in improving health and preventing, detecting and minimizing the impact of disease and injuries.
6. Explain how multiple determinants (genetics/genomics, social, behavioral, environmental factors) contribute to specific population health outcomes from a local to global perspective.
7. Describe the principles needed to understand population health issues including planning, implementing and evaluating interventions across the lifespan.
8. Identify public health’s roles in addressing the needs of vulnerable populations and eliminating health disparities across the lifespan.
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| NUR 22210 - Foundations Of Nursing |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. This course provides an introduction to basic concepts related to foundational nursing practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify a systematic holistic approach to determine needs of individuals
2. Recognize evolving social, cultural, and health care delivery trends.
3. Describe strategies used to develop outcome measures in the delivery of safe, quality health care.
4. Utilize effective communication skills to elicit information from individuals.
5. Discuss teaching-learning strategies important in the delivery of safe, quality health care.
6. Develop initial goals for professional development in nursing.
7. Discuss the legal and ethical standards of the nursing profession.
8. Identify health care resources utilized in the delivery of care.
9. Recognize that continuous quality improvement promotes positive health outcomes.
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| NUR 22300 - Foundations Of Nursing Practice |
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Credit Hours: 5.00. This course develops foundational nursing knowledge and skills. Theory and evidence-based health care practices are emphasized. Nursing practice experiences are provided in a variety of settings. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify a systematic holistic approach to determine needs of individuals.
2. Describe evolving social, cultural and health care delivery trends in the provision of safe, quality health care to individuals.
3. Identify theory guided, evidence-based practice to provide safe, quality care.
4. Select outcomes to provide safe, quality care in collaboration with individuals.
5. Demonstrate effective communication in collaboration with individuals and interdisciplinary team members.
6. Discuss teaching-learning strategies important in the delivery of health care.
7. Apply the legal and ethical standards of the nursing profession.
8. Identify health care resources and technology used in the delivery of care.
9. Recognize that continuous quality improvement promotes positive health outcomes.
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| NUR 22301 - Foundations Of Research And Evidence-Based Practice |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. Students gain foundational competencies for evidence-based practice (EBP), including computer literacy, information literacy, and professional communication. Students learn the principles of research process and identify strengths and limitations of research articles in relation to EBP in nursing and healthcare. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Information Literacy, UC-Information Literacy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the principles of research and the process of EBP in relation to nursing and healthcare.
2. Use information and information technologies ethically, legally, and proficiently to Information Literacy Competency Standards for Higher Education.
3. Explain the purpose and methodology of various types of quantitative and qualitative research designs in nursing and healthcare.
4. Evaluate the quality of research evidence to determine scientific merit, strengths and limitations relevant to clinical practice.
5. Examine economic, legal and ethical issues related to conducting research.
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| NUR 22400 - Nursing IIIA:Medical-Surgical Nursing Of Adults |
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Credit Hours: 8.00. Utilizes the nursing process in caring for adults who experience complex problems related to selected basic human needs. Laboratory experiences are provided in hospitals and other community agencies. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| NUR 22500 - Maternity Nursing A |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Applies the nursing process and an eclectic nursing theory model in caring for the emerging family group throughout the maternal cycle. Laboratory experiences are provided in hospitals. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| NUR 23000 - Personal Expression In Nursing |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Personal expression through verbal and nonverbal communications is explored. The process of communicating thoughts and information effectively is emphasized.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| NUR 23100 - Nursing Care Of Developing Families |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The nursing process is utilized to assist individual members of childbearing and childrearing families toward the promotion of optimal health. Health promotion and protective measures related to childbearing, childrearing and family dynamics are emphasized. Clinical experiences are provided in a variety of settings.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| NUR 23200 - Nursing Care Of Infants, Children & Adolescents |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The nursing process is utilized to assist individual clients toward the promotion of optimal health during the periods of infancy, childhood, and adolescence. Health promotion and supportive measures are emphasized. Clinical experiences are provided in a variety of settings.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| NUR 23300 - Nursing Care Of Adults |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. The nursing process is utilized to assist individual adult clients toward the promotion of optimal health. Health needs/problems of adulthood are emphasized. Experiences in a variety of clinical settings are provided.
Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| NUR 23400 - Psychosocial Nursing Care |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The nursing process is utilized to assist individuals experiencing dysfunctional interactions in order to achieve optimal health. Therapeutic modalities that reduce dysfunctional thoughts, feeling, or behaviors are emphasized. Clinical experiences are provided in a variety of settings.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| NUR 23500 - Nursing Issues |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Nursing, health care, and societal issues are explored. Legal and ethical problems confronting contemporary nursing practice are examined.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| NUR 23600 - Transition To Nursing Practice |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. The role transition from nursing student to graduate nurse is explored in relation to employment expectations and role responsibilities. Personal accountability as a practicing member within the discipline of nursing is emphasized.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| NUR 23700 - Nursing Synthesis |
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Credit Hours: 6.00. Nursing process is utilized to assist clients toward the promotion of optimal health within their contextual environment. Nursing care and client care management of adults with complex health care needs/problems are emphasized. Clinical experiences are provided in a variety of settings.
Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| NUR 24000 - Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing A |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. This didactic and clinical nursing course introduces concepts specific to the care of patients/clients experiencing alterations with mental health. The study of personality development, psychology, and sociologic concepts from previous social science and nursing courses are integrated throughout the course. The assessment, application of the nursing process, and communication skills are emphasized specific to the related psychopathology. Clinical experiences are provided in hospitals and other community agencies. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| NUR 24100 - Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing B |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. This didactic and clinical nursing course introduces concepts specific to the care of patients/clients experiencing alterations with mental health. The study of personality development, psychology, and sociologic concepts from previous social science and nursing courses are integrated throughout the course. The assessment, application of the nursing process, critical thinking, communication skills, and therapeutic use of self are emphasized specific to the related psychopathology. Clinical experiences are provided in hospitals and other community mental health agencies. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| NUR 24500 - Basic Cardiac Dysrhythmias |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is designed to educate the student in the theory and interpretation of cardiac monitor rhythms. Basic monitoring procedures and guidelines are taught. Emphasis is on the factors, which determine whether a cardiac rhythm is normal or abnormal (dysrythmia). Critical-thinking skills are utilized in identifying and prioritizing appropriate interventions related to the occurrence of dysrhythmias. This course is open to non-nursing students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| NUR 26500 - Health Issues In The Classroom |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for prospective elementary education teachers. Students will examine current health problems of school children, which they may encounter in the classroom. Concepts of first aid and emergency care will be taught. Interdisciplinary aproaches to classroom health problems will be incorporated. Students will be expected to apply course concepts in field experiences. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| NUR 27100 - Pathophysiology And Pharmacology I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces theory guided evidence-based pathophysiological and pharmacological aspects of illness and disease in the systems of neurological, musculoskeletal, metabolic, endocrine, fluid and electrolyte, gastrointestinal, hematologic, and immunologic. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Illustrate the interrelationship between specific nursing problems, pathophysiology, pharmacology, diagnostic tests, lab values, and interventions.
2. Identify expected pharmacologic and non-pharmacologic interventions and outcomes for specific illnesses and diseases.
3. Describe the expected and unexpected outcomes for specific medications and the implications for the nurse.
4. Recognize selected major drug classifications based upon both drug actions and the effect on the body system.
5. Explain the role and responsibilities of the nurse in monitoring drug therapies.
6. Demonstrate competency in medication calculations.
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| NUR 27200 - Pathophysiology And Pharmacology II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces theory guided evidence-based pathophysiological and pharmacological aspects of illness and disease in the systems of integumentary, respiratory, cardiovascular, renal, sensorineural, and oncologic. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Illustrate the interrelationship between specific nursing problems, pathophysiology, pharmacology, diagnostic tests, lab values, and interventions.
2. Identify expected pharmacologic and non-pharmacologic interventions and outcomes for specific illnesses and diseases.
3. Describe the expected and unexpected outcomes for specific medications and the implications for the nurse.
4. Recognize selected major drug classifications based upon both drug actions and the effect on the body system.
5. Explain the role and responsibilities of the nurse in monitoring drug therapies.
6. Demonstrate competency in medication calculations.
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| NUR 27400 - Essential Pharmacokinetics For Nursing |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. The nursing process is utilized as a systematic approach to the safe and accurate administration of medications: Dosage calculations, basic pharmacokinetics, safety implications, and use of critical thinking are emphasized. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| NUR 27500 - Alternative Therapies For Nursing Practice |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. This course focuses on a range of options that complement Western biomedical health care. Ancient and contemporary practices throughout the world are explored in the context of culture, understanding that other cultures and countries have valid ways of preventing and curing diseases. Emphasis is placed on the integration and balance of body, mind, and spirit. The evidence basis of complimentary and alternative therapies is incorporated into the course. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| NUR 27900 - Caring For Children And Families A |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasizes the role of the nurse in assisting children and families of all cultural backgrounds in health promotion, maintenance, and restoration. Utilizes critical thinking, culturally sensitive age-appropriate communication, technical skills, leadership/management skills, growth and development concepts, and the nursing process to care for children with diseases unique to childhood. Laboratory experiences are provided in hospitals and other community agencies. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| NUR 28100 - Nursing Issues And Manager Of Care |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Provides opportunity to acquire understanding essential for making an effective transition to the role of a registered nurse. Emphasis is placed upon contemporary nursing issues and manager of care concepts. Laboratory experience incorporates concentration of clinical hours with a preceptor. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| NUR 28200 - Adult Nursing I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course builds on the foundational nursing courses. Concepts of health promotion, maintenance, restoration and palliation will be utilized to focus on patient centered care in the adult population. Evidence based practice will guide the nursing process to address basic human needs. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| NUR 28300 - Practicum II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Practicum II is the second clinical course in a series of three practica. Clinical lab experiences emphasize application of the nursing process in the direct care of adult individuals with an emphasis on health promotion, health restoration, health maintenance, and palliation. Patient centered care related to basic human needs is implemented utilizing critical thinking and evidence based nursing practice. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| NUR 28400 - Nursing Of Women And Children |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Building on the foundational core, the nursing process is utilized as a systematic approach to promote adaptation of women and children to stimuli. Evidence based intervention, specific to each developmental stage of the evolving family are taught. Emphasis is placed on health promotion across the lifespan which supports the needs of women and children. Typically offered Fall Spring.
5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| NUR 28500 - Maternal Child Nursing Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Clinical lab experience for the application of nursing process in the direct care of childbearing and childrearing families are provided in a structured setting. Therapeutic intervention aimed at supporting adaptation in psyiological, self-concept, role function, and interdependence modes are practiced. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| NUR 28600 - Mental Health Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Building on the foundations of psychosocial nursing, this course advocates for autonomy of clients in the least restrictive environment. A commitment to social justice for those who experience discrimination on the basis of their mental illness is emphasized. Evidence based nursing practice provides the structure for supporting clients' and families' strengths and adaptation when faced with pathology and dysfunction. The focus is on interpersonal and communication skills critical to every area of nursing practice. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| NUR 28700 - Mental Health Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Building on the theoretical knowledge of Mental Health Nursing, this course provides both structured and unstructured clinical experiences with individuals and families experiencing mental disorders. The focus is on mental health promotion, mental health restoration, and mental health maintenance. Using current evidence, patient centered care is based on the analysis of individual clients' psychodynamics and psychoeducational needs. Interpersonal and communication skills are utilized to help clients attain their personally defined quality of life. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| NUR 28800 - Essentials Of Management And Leadership In Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected management and leadership principles are introduced. Specific strategies for effective time management, priority setting, decision making, career planning and delegation are introduced. Foundational ethical and legal principles are discussed as they relate to standards of care. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| NUR 28900 - Associate Degree In Nursing Capstone Course |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This capstone course incorporates the application of the nursing process and critical thinking skills in direct patient care. Emphasis is on prioritization, delegation, and collaboration as students synthesize increasing difficult concepts in a structured setting. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| NUR 29000 - Guided Study in Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Designed to provide core curriculum requirements in nursing for individual students enrolled in the nursing programs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| NUR 29200 - Adult Nursing II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Building on the foundational core, the nursing process is utilized as a systematic approach to therapeutic intervention with adult individuals adapting to stimuli. Concepts relative to physiological integrity are emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| NUR 29400 - Essential Pharmacotherapeutics For Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A systematic approach is used to examine the pharmacotherapeutics and the administration of common prescription and non-prescription medications across the lifespan. Emphasis is placed on nursing responsibilities related to ongoing assessment of drug effects, analysis of corresponding diagnostic data, and evidence based interventions with individuals receiving drug therapy. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| NUR 29500 - Concepts In Critical Thinking |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This one-hour course will help students apply advanced concepts in critical thinking. It is taken the semester in which the student will graduate. Teaching strategies challenging the learner to apply critical thinking include the use of scenarios, integration of computer assisted learning, and exploration of effective healthcare delivery. Must be taken during the last semester of associate degree program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| NUR 29900 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| NUR 30900 - Transcultural Health Care |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Transcultural Healthcare focuses on diverse cultural perspectives in health and illness. Culturally competent care that is humanistic, holistic, and respectful of diverse values, beliefs, and practices is examined. Similarities and differences that influence health promotion, maintenance, and restoration across the lifespan are reviewed on select cultural and religious groups. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| NUR 31100 - Intravenous Therapy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Intravenous Therapy is designed to prepare the Associate Degree nursing student to provide quality care to patients with infusion therapy. NUR 31100 offers in depth information on infusion therapy to compliment learning in science and nursing courses in the nursing program. The student is able to experience infusion therapy during proctored laboratory and precepted clinical experiences. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| NUR 31401 - Health Alterations In Adults I |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. One of two courses focusing on providing nursing care to adults with an emphasis on the application of the nursing process to assist diverse populations reach their optimal level of wellbeing as they experience health care across the delivery system continuum. Emphasis will be on promoting clinical reasoning skills, integrating best practices, and ensuring patient safety. The course concentrates on adults experiencing alterations in tissue integrity related to surgical interventions, cellular division, reproductive function, elimination, nutrition and sensoryfunction that typically result in hospitalization. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 6.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture, Travel Time
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Integrate theory and evidence from the sciences and humanities to inform practice and influence clinical decision- making when caring for diverse populations of adults experiencing selected illnesses.
2. Utilize the nursing process to assist diverse populations of adults to optimize wellness and compensate for self-care deficits.
3. Integrate standards of practice, current clinical research findings, knowledge of genomics and age-related (including gerontologic) pathophysiology when providing care to diverse populations of adults experiencing health alterations.
4. Collaborate with members of the health care team in the promotion of wellness and self-care in diverse populations of adults.
5. Demonstrate personal and professional growth, and skill development when providing evidence- based, legal, ethical, compassionate, and culturally sensitive nursing care to adult clients.
6. Communicate transition of care needs of adult clients to client, client's family, and other members of the healthcare team.
7. Utilize principles of teaching and learning to educate adults across the continuum of care.
8. Monitor client outcomes to evaluate the effectiveness of psychobiological interventions.
9. Revise plans of care based on an ongoing evaluation of patient outcomes.
10. Utilize patient care technologies, information systems, and communication devices to access, retrieve, organize and communicate information in a professional manner.
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| NUR 31501 - Nursing Of Childbearing Families |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Promotes the development of nursing skills when caring for families and their newborns during uncomplicated and/or complicated childbearing experiences within a variety of clinical settings. Emphasizes the study and application of the nursing process, integrating evidence based practice while meeting the health and safety needs of diverse childbearing families. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture, Travel Time
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Integrate theory and evidence to guide practice and influence clinical decision making when caring for childbearing families across a variety of settings.
2. Apply the nursing process when prioritizing care of the childbearing family to maximize family participation in health promotion and disease prevention.
3. Recognize the impact of developmental and physiological variations in the care of the maternal fetal dyad.
4. Evaluate actual and potential physiological and psychological risk factors during the childbearing cycle.
5. Assess the impact of sociocultural influences on the delivery and utilization of health-care services for childbearing families.
6. Design a plan of care integrating professional organizations and institutional standards.
7. Recognize the professional nursing role when communicating and collaborating within the intra- and inter-professional teams when partnering with clients to provide safe, quality nursing care.
8. Provide ethical, legal, compassionate and culturally appropriate nursing care to the childbearing family.
9. Assess self-awareness of professional growth.
10. Utilize information technology to enhance learning, practice and communication.
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| NUR 31601 - Integration Seminar I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. In this course, students will be challenged to identify appropriate nursing interventions for patients with a combination of medical and obstetrical diagnoses. Through the course activities the students will be challenged to look at healthcare from a patient perspective. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Discuss the application of communication strategies in relationships with dynamic and complex patient populations.
2. Evaluate the use of critical thinking processes in one's nursing practice with medical-surgical and obstetrical populations.
3. Discuss effectiveness and efficiencies of implementation of health promotion strategies with assigned patients.
4. Apply ethical nursing principles to clinical practice experiences
5 Examine patient advocacy opportunities from clinical practice experiences.
6. Incorporate research evidence when discussing selected clinical nursing practice problems.
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| NUR 31700 - Nursing Care Of Women Through The Lifespan |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Building on previous curricular concepts this course focuses on principles of health promotion, health maintenance, health restoration and palliation, specifically applied to the female patient. Students further develop critical thinking skills by planning developmentally appropriate patient and family centered care. Students utilize best available evidence when implementing the nursing process with female patients and their families. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| NUR 31701 - Health Alterations In Adults II |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. One of two courses focusing on providing nursing care to adults with an emphasis on the application of the nursing process to assist diverse populations reach their optimal level of wellbeing as they experience health care across the delivery system continuum. Emphasis will be on promoting clinical reasoning skills, integrating best practices, and ensuring patient safety. The course concentrates on adults experiencing alterations in health related to oxygenation, circulatory dynamics, endocrine regulation, neurological regulation, immune regulation and musculoskeletal dynamics that typically result in hospitalization. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 6.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture, Travel Time
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Integrate theory and evidence from the sciences and humanities to inform practice and influence clinical decision- making when caring for diverse populations of adults experiencing selected illnesses.
2. Demonstrate appropriate use of the nursing process to assist diverse populations of adults to optimize wellness and compensate for self-care deficits.
3. Integrate standards of practice, current clinical research findings, knowledge of genomics and age-related pathophysiology when providing care to adults experiencing health alterations.
4. Collaborate with members of the health care team in the promotion ofwellness and self
care in diverse populations of adults.
5. Demonstrate personal and professional growth, and skill development when providing evidence- based, legal, ethical, compassionate, and culturally sensitive nursing care to adult clients.
6. Communicate transition of care needs of adult clients to the client, client's family, and other members of the health care team
7. Utilize principles of teaching and learning to educate adults across the continuum of care.
8. Monitor client outcomes to evaluate the effectiveness of psychobiological interventions.
9. Revise plans of care based on an ongoing evaluation of patient outcomes that emphasize client safety and evidence based practice.
10. Use patient care technologies, information systems, and communication devices to access, retrieve, organize and communicate information in a professional manner.
|
| NUR 31800 - Maternity Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Building on the theoretical knowledge of Nursing Care of Women Throughout the Lifespan this provides structured clinical experiences with women and their families during the childbearing experience. Evidence based nursing practice is utilized to assist families as they progress through the childbearing experience. The teaching learning process is used to assist childbearing families meet basic needs of the developing family. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| NUR 31801 - Psychosocial Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Focuses on providing nursing care that supports mental health and the care of persons with mental illness while providing a conceptual integration of the nursing process, theories, and research from the biopsychosocial sciences and humanities. Demonstrates the relevance of psychiatric-mental health nursing concepts to all areas of professional practice. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture, Travel Time
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Examine the effects of myths, stereotypes, stigma, values, beliefs and culture on the practice of psychiatric nursing.
2. Compare past, current, and projected systems in delivery of evidence based mental health care and its social implications.
3. Identify legal and ethical implications involved in the practice of psychiatric mental health nursing.
4. Utilize the nursing process in the phases ofthe therapeutic nurse-client relationship to delineate the complex needs of clients with psychiatric disorders..
5. Identify the principles of communication and therapeutic relationships in the care of clients with psychiatric disorders.
6. Determine specific nursing care interventions for acute and serious behavioral health issues that demonstrate developmentally and culturally appropriate strategies.
7. Utilize the ANA Standards of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing Practice as a basis for safe and competent care.
8. Incorporate theory, research and evidence from the psychobiological sciences, biological sciences, and humanities into an evidenced based practice approach to psychiatric nursing care.
9. Utilize client care technologies, information systems, and communication resources to access, organize and communicate information in a professional manner.
10. Establish therapeutic, collaborative relationships with members of the interdisciplinary treatment team.
11. Demonstrate personal and professional growth and skill development when providing evidence based nursing care to clients with psychiatric disorders.
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| NUR 31900 - Integrated Health Perspectives |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This survey course examines the principles, practices and outcomes of select alternative healing and complementary therapies The influences of diverse cultural groups, from both the West and East, are examined in relationship to healing practices. Students will apply evidence-based criteria, including research findings from the National Institutes of Health (NIH)- National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine, to evaluate the risks end benefits of selected modalities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 31901 - Integration Seminar II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. In this course, students will be challenged to identify appropriate nursing interventions for patients with a combination of medical and psychiatric diagnoses. Through the course activities, the students will be challenged to look at healthcare from a patient perspective. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Discuss the application of communication strategies in relationships with dynamic and complex patient populations.
2. Evaluate the use of critical thinking processes in one's nursing practice with medically and psychologically unstable populations.
3. Discuss effectiveness and efficiencies of implementation of health promotion strategies with assigned patients.
4. Apply ethical nursing principles to clinical practice experiences
5 Examine patient advocacy opportunities from clinical practice experiences.
6. Incorporate research evidence when discussing selected clinical nursing practice problems.
|
| NUR 32201 - International Nursing: A Cultural Immersion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will actively participate in an international cultural immersion experience providing nursing care, as well as studying the cultural and economic influences on healthcare. The students' focus is three-fold. The first is the role of service to a select international population through a variety of activities. Secondly, the students will incorporate prior nursing skills and knowledge learned in fundamental nursing courses in a variety of experiential nursing experiences. Finally, students will be expected to become immersed in the culture of the land through a multitude of activities, such as currency exchange, open market negotiations, meal preparation, and daily interactions with local peoples. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify the historical influences on nursing and health care in a select country.
2. Experience nursing care in an international setting recognizing the cultural and economic impact on healthcare.
3. Identify common health and related problems in the country of study.
4. Compare the nurse's role in the United States with that of another health care system.
5. Engage in the economics of living in a country outside of the United States.
|
| NUR 32500 - Philosophy And Theory Of Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Philosophical assumptions and values, nursing theories, ethical frameworks, legal principles, and nursing traditions are synthesized, culminating in the articulation of a personal philosophy of nursing by students. Methodologies that foster analysis and critical thinking, encourage dialectic, and promote self-evaluation are utilized. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| NUR 32510 - Eastern Energy Healing And Spirituality |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explore energy healing and spirituality concepts based on eastern philosophies or religions. Develop and practice energy healing and spirituality modalities to enhance well being by promoting health, reducing stress, and achieving harmony in life. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Discuss concepts of energy, energy healing, and spirituality.
2. Examine the Buddhism and Taoism relationship to energy healing and spirituality.
3. Practice various energy healing and spirituality modalities that enhance well being.
4. Integrate healing and spirituality in life to achieve harmony.
5. Utilize energy healing and spirituality research and evidence-based practice studies to augment practice.
|
| NUR 32700 - Gerontology: Healthcare Concepts |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Course focuses on normal aging. Relevant findings from the gerontology literature are discussed as they apply to older adults. Ethical/legal issues related to older adults are discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| NUR 32800 - Clinical Applications Of Pathophysiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course organizes physiological principles into a rationale for commonly encountered signs, symptoms, and therapy of selected disorders and diseases. Students are encouraged to synthesize these principles into a basis for formulating and evaluating the nursing care of clients. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUR 32900 - Health Law and Finance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of case and statutory law, which relates to the access, structure, and operation of healthcare organizations. An overview of the liability and legal responsibility, as well as legal recourse healthcare facilities may exercise. This course will discuss policies and standards relating to health facility administration. Also included is a discussion of financial aspects unique to the hospital/healthcare facility environment, such as third-party payments and federal assistance. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 33000 - Human Sexuality Nursing Implications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Human Sexuality Nursing Implications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| NUR 33100 - RN Transition To Professional Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides for the discussion of practice roles, responsibilities, and involvement in baccalaureate nursing. Conceptual frameworks, critical components of professional nursing practice, and issues pertinent to the changing health care environment are explored. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| NUR 33300 - Adult Health Nursing I |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. This course develops knowledge and skills required for adult health nursing roles. Theory and evidence-based health care practices are emphasized. Nursing practice experiences are provided in a variety of settings. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Utilize a systematic, holistic approach to identify health promotion and therapeutic needs of adults with altered health functions.
2. Examine evolving social, cultural, and health care delivery trends in the provisions of safe, quality health care to adults with altered health functions.
3. Apply theory guided, evidence-based practice to provide safe, quality care to adults with altered health functions.
4. Select appropriate outcomes for the provision of safe, quality care of adults with altered health functions.
5. Demonstrate effective communication in collaboration with individual adults, their families, and the interdisciplinary health care team.
6. Plan teaching-learning strategies in the delivery of health care to adults and their families.
7. Demonstrate accountability for health practice within the legal and ethical standards of the nursing profession.
8. Identify resources and technology used in the care of adults with altered health functions.
9. Provide examples of continuous quality improvement processes that promote positive health outcomes and quality of life for adults with altered health functions.
|
| NUR 33400 - Clinical Pathophysiology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A functional study of pathophysiology of major physiological systems of a human with special emphasis on clinical applications for baccalaureate nursing and allide health professionals. Major topics to the covered include fluid and electrolyte balance, medical genetics, and the pathophysiology of the cardiovascular, digestive, hepatic, endocrine, immune, renal, and neural systems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 33500 - Women And Newborn Health Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course develops the knowledge and skills required for women and newborn health nursing. Theory and evidence-based health care practices are emphasized. Nursing practice experiences are provided in a variety of settings. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Utilize a systematic, holistic approach to identify needs of women and newborns.
2. Examine evolving social, cultural, and health care delivery trends in the provisions of optimal health care to women and newborns.
3. Apply theory guided, evidence-based practice to provide safe, quality care to women and newborns.
4. Select appropriate outcomes for the provision of safe, quality care in collaboration with women and their families.
5. Demonstrate effective communication in collaboration with women, their families, and the interdisciplinary team members.
6. Plan teaching-learning strategies in the delivery of health care to women and newborns.
7. Demonstrate legal and ethical standards if the nursing care of women and newborns.
8. Identify resources and technology in the provision of care to women and newborns.
9. Provide examples of continuous quality improvement processes that promote positive women's health outcomes and their quality of life.
|
| NUR 33600 - Nursing IIIB: Medical-Surgical Nursing Of Adults |
|
Credit Hours: 7.00. This course utilizes the nursing process in caring for clients who experience complex problems related to selected basic human needs. Laboratory experiences are provided in hospitals and other community related agencies. Typically offered Spring Fall.
0.000 OR 7.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 33700 - Statistics and Data Management In Health Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Instruction in parametric and nonparametric statistics, their use in research and journal publications and interpretation of statistical tests in journal articles. Data management and statistical analysis using SPSS. Students will also learn how to present results of the statistical analysis for publication.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 33800 - Concepts In Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Builds upon previous knowledge of nursing while presenting concepts and processes derived from the philosophy and objectives of the baccalaureate nursing program. Current theories of nursing will be examined. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 33900 - Research In Healthcare |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides the opportunity to explore the methodology and significance of the research process relative to healthcare settings. Strategies are identified to analyze research reports and transfer relevant findings to research-based practice. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 34100 - Health Assessment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to increase nursing skills in the collection and interpretation of psychosocial, developmental, and physical health data. Through the data gathering process, the physical and psychosocial aspects of the individual's adaptive capacity are examined. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 34200 - Community Health Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Blends the profession of nursing with the science of public health. The primary focus of Community Health Nursing is healthcare for individuals, families, and groups in the community. The goals are to preserve, protect, and promote or maintain health. Epidemiology is applied in the community setting. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 34400 - Introduction Healthcare Informatics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course provides an introduction to healthcare informatics, exploring its past, present, and future impact on healthcare management and delivery. It includes discussion of the concepts of technology, information management, and information literacy. Technology based healthcare applications are explored. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 34500 - Trauma Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course provides a comprehensive overview of the trauma patient. Course content emphasizes the epidemiology of trauma, mechanisms of injury, anatomy and physiology of systems as they relate to trauma and the assessment and management of injuries. This course is designed to enhance the practitioner's knowledge, refine skills, and build a firm foundation of trauma nursing. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| NUR 34600 - Advanced Health Assessment |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is designed to increase nursing skills in the collection and interpretation of psychosocial, developmental, and physical health data. Through the data gathering process, the physical and psychosocial aspects of the individual's health status are examined. The skills of history taking and the performance of a basic physical assessment are emphasized. College laboratories provide opportunity for supervised practice with well adult peers. The course content and the course objectives from which they are derived include areas of history taking, communication techniques, recognition of the parameters of normal, psychomotor skills of physical examination, safe use of diagnostic equipment, identification of health problems, and the integration of the data gathering process into the total nursing process with the formulation of nursing diagnoses. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Using an evidence-based practice model, perform health assessments on individuals from diverse backgrounds.
2. Gather and analyze data concerning the individual’s health status as the initial step in the nursing process.
3. Utilize culturally sensitive interpersonal skills gathering health assessment data.
4. Analyze assessment data to promote quality patient outcomes.
5. Use evidence-based practice findings to support preventive health measures identified from the assessment.
6. Demonstrate critical thinking skills when analyzing health assessment data.
|
| NUR 34700 - Nursing Theory And Research I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course develops fundamental knowledge of theory and research in nursing. Various nursing theories will be presented. The research process will be reviewed. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| NUR 34800 - Spanish For Health Care Professionals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. To improve the ability of health care professionals to communicate with Spanish-speaking clients and families in health care settings. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUR 34900 - Contemporary Trends In Health Care Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an overview of the contemporary health care system in the United States. Cultural and ethnic diversity, and health beliefs and practices are emphasized. The influence of global health care systems on the US health care system is explored. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Discuss the historical development of health care systems in the US.
2. Discuss how changes in global health care impact health care systems and nursing practices in the US.
3. Compare philosophies and practices of conventional and holistic models of the US and global health care systems.
4. Explore current trends and management associated with global health care delivery systems.
5. Describe the influence of culture and ethnicity on health care delivery.
|
| NUR 35200 - Nursing Care Of Older Adults |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course examines concepts related to basic human needs specific to older adults. Evidence based health care practices that exhibit patient centered care related to health promotion, maintenance, restoration and palliation are examined. Ethical and legal dilemmas impacting the lifestyle of older adults are presented. Emphasis is placed on promoting positive attitudes of the professional nurse in caring for older adults. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| NUR 35300 - Health Care Informatics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comprehensive approach to information technology is examined. Major concepts in health care informatics, trends, innovative strategies, and applications are introduced. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify the legal and ethical implications of health care informatics.
2. Provide examples of how technology and information management are related to the quality and safety of patient care.
3. Discuss current trends in health care informatics.
4. Recognize communication technologies used in health care.
5. Describe the use of information management tools to monitor health care outcomes.
|
| NUR 35500 - Applied Thanatology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of the basic needs of the dying individual and the family. Identification of the appropriate and supportive nursing intervention within a social and cultural framework will enable students to better appreciate and apply various psychological therapeutic interventions for the client and the family resulting in better coping and/or adaptive behaviors within the system.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| NUR 35600 - Nursing Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Nursing Leadership. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| NUR 35700 - Nursing Theory And Research II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course develops critical thinking skills required for the application of theory and research in nursing. The contribution of theory and research in evidence-based practice will be discussed. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| NUR 35800 - Cultural Diversity Related To Illness |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Cultural Diversity Related To Illness. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| NUR 35900 - Disaster Healthcare |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to disaster preparedness and the predictors of the types of injuries and illnesses related to various disasters. Presents information on biological, chemical, and radiological weapons, bioterrorism, environmental disasters, mental health and traumatic events, and homeland security. Discusses the roles of healthcare workers in a hospital, medical facility and community agency at the time of a disaster and recovery period. Prepares healthcare workers to respond to a disaster by discussing community hazards and vulnerabilities. Course is based on the altered standards of care in mass causality events developed by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) and the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Public Health Emergency Preparedness, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 36100 - Pediatric Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Building on previous curricular concepts this course focuses on principles of health maintenance, health restoration and palliation specifically applied to the pediatric patient. Students further develop critical thinking skills by planning developmentally appropriate patient and family centered care. Students utilize best available evidence when implementing the nursing process with pediatric patients. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Discuss evidence based nursing interventions needed to strengthen a child’s resilience in both healthy and challenged states.
2. Identify responses that indicate children are meeting their basic human needs and achieving developmental milestones.
3. Utilize critical thinking to plan care for children that promotes, restores and maintains health.
4. Utilize palliation strategies to meet the end of life needs of diverse pediatric populations.
|
| NUR 36101 - RN To BS Transitional Course |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Provides guidance in standards of professional and scientific communication for Registered Nurses entering the R.N. to B.S. program. Includes the following topics: information literacy and informatics, American Psychological Association (APA) style, academic integrity, and e-portfolios. Prerequisite: Students must be licensed as a Registerd Nurse or have achieved academic requirements to be eligible to take the NCLEX with approval by the nursing department. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Recognize the need for information and articulate the problem within an Evidence Based Practice framework.
2. Understand the differences between specialized and general informational resources including but not limited to: CINAHL, Medline, PubMed, Google Scholar, and standard handbooks and manuals.
3. Recognize varying levels of credibility of information and primary research.
4. Generate a list of keywords for use in database searching with Boolean Operators and advanced search limiters.
5. Retrieve information using a variety of methods including but not limited to: FINDIT, Document Delivery Services, and PubMedCentral.
6. Apply APA writing style requirements in scholarly works.
7. Utilize Blackboard Learn to locate course information, content, assignments, and resources.
8. Employ a variety of technologies to facilitate learning and completion of course assignments including but not limited to: Word, PowerPoint, e-mail communication, and Adobe Reader.
9. Initiate the construction of a professional electronic portfolio.
10. Embrace institutional and professional policies on academic honesty and integrity.
|
| NUR 36710 - Nursing Theory And Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course develops critical thinking skills required for the application of theory and research in nursing. The contribution of theory and research in evidence-based practice will be discussed. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Analyze theoretical and philosophical approaches to nursing.
2. Incorporate social, cultural, and health related concepts in developing and evaluating nursing care.
3. Utilize theory guided, evidence-based practice in quality care.
4. Critique and apply theory and research to develop critical thinking skills.
5. Articulate personal goals for professional development in the application of nursing theory guided evidence-based practice.
|
| NUR 36800 - Maternity Nursing B |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Applies the nursing process and an eclectic nursing theory model in caring for the emerging family group throughout the maternal cycle. Laboratory experiences are provided in hospitals. The student will be involved with community agencies offering care to the pregnant family. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 37200 - Pediatric Nursing Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This clinical provides patient care experience that support the application of the nursing process in the provision of patient centered care to children and families. These experiences are provided in acute and chronic settings. Developmentally appropriate, evidence based nursing care is practiced. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| NUR 37700 - Professional Seminar II: Concepts And Trends In Healthcare Delivery |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this seminar course, students explore nursing concepts/theories, healthcare delivery systems, and contemporary nursing and healthcare issues. The Neuman Systems Model, as the guiding framework for the baccalaureate nursing program, will be emphasized. Special attention will focus on cultural diversity and the Nurse Practice Act. Application of writing skills to the discipline of nursing is emphasized. Professional portfolios are reviewed and further developed. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 37800 - Growing Old In A New Age |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Concepts and issues of aging are explored to enhance the understanding of the impact of aging on society. The processes of aging and old age as stages of life are identified.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| NUR 37900 - Caring For Children And Families B |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasizes the role of the nurse in assisting children and families of all cultural backgrounds in health promotion, maintenance, and restoration. Utilizes critical thinking, culturally sensitive age-appropriate communication, technical skills, leadership/management skills, growth and development concepts, and the nursing process to care for children with diseases unique to childhood. Laboratory experiences focus on pediatric healthcare in the community, as well as the acute care setting. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 38199 - Professional Practice Co-Op I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Program coordinated by Nursing with cooperation of participating employers and the Office of Professional Practice. Students will submit summary reports and company evaluations related to the experience. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply knowledge to identifying and solving problems in the professional nursing context.
2. Advance skills related to professional preparation, critical thinking, problem solving, communication, and teamwork.
3. Incorporate knowledge of the nursing profession and practice, basic nursing principles, and principles and practice of ethical responsibilities in professional work.
|
| NUR 38299 - Professional Practice Co-Op II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Program coordinated by Nursing with cooperation of participating employers and the Office of Professional Practice. Students will submit summary reports and company evaluations related to the experience. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply knowledge to identifying and solving problems in the professional nursing context.
2. Advance skills related to professional preparation, critical thinking, problem solving, communication, and teamwork.
3. Incorporate knowledge of the nursing profession and practice, basic nursing principles, and principles and practice of ethical responsibilities in professional work.
|
| NUR 38399 - Professional Practice Co-Op III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Program coordinated by Nursing with cooperation of participating employers and the Office of Professional Practice. Students will submit summary reports and company evaluations related to the experience. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply knowledge to identifying and solving problems in the professional nursing context.
2. Advance skills related to professional preparation, critical thinking, problem solving, communication, and teamwork.
3. Incorporate knowledge of the nursing profession and practice, basic nursing principles, and principles and practice of ethical responsibilities in professional work.
|
| NUR 38400 - Concepts Of Role Development In Professional Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines professional nursing roles and professional nursing standards of practice within the context of structured and unstructured settings. Concepts and issues pertinent to the current environmental of professional nursing practice are discussed. Personal and professional values that provide a focus for evolving professional socialization are explored. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| NUR 38500 - Application Of Principles Of ECG Monitoring |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. This course is designed to enable the nursing student to utilize electrocardiographic tracings in the management of adult patients with cardiac conduction abnormalities. Emphasis is placed on practical application of principles of cardiac monitoring, identification and interpretation of dysrhythmias, and related medical management and nursing intervention. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| NUR 38800 - Nursing Of Families And Groups |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theoretical frameworks and the nursing process are utilized to support the basic needs, promote the health of families and groups, and facilitate the development of group leadership skills. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| NUR 38900 - Family Health Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Community concepts and theories related to families and groups are introduced. Traditional therapeutic intervention and emerging community-nurse strategies to promote health and quality of life are explored. Families and groups experiencing disabilities and issues related to quality of life for elder adults are included. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Utilize a holistic approach to identify needs of families toward maximizing positive health outcomes.
2. Examine evolving social, cultural, and health care delivery trends in the provisions of safe, quality care to families.
3. Apply theory guided, evidence-based practice to provide safe, quality care to families.
4. Select outcomes to provide safe, quality care to families.
5. Demonstrate effective communication in collaboration with families and the interdisciplinary team members.
6. Develop teaching-learning strategies used in family centered health care education.
7. Demonstrate accountability for family nursing practice within the legal and ethical standards of the nursing profession.
8. Identify resources used in the delivery of care to families.
9. Provide examples for continuous improvement processes to promote positive family outcomes.
|
| NUR 39000 - Nursing Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the research process and use of research based evidence as a foundation for nursing. A review of both quantitative and qualitative methodologies will be incorporated. Distinguishing among non-research based primary and meta-sources of evidence will be emphasized. Critical thinking skills will be used to read and evaluate published research. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| NUR 39100 - Professional Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Theoretical and practical applications of ethical principles are applied to nursing and patient centered care. Particular attention is given to the ideas of advocacy, autonomy, and authority in beginning professional nursing practice. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| NUR 39200 - Adult Nursing II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuing to build on the core concepts introduced in Adult Nursing I evidence based nursing practice is utilized as an approach to patient centered care with adult individuals seeking health. Concepts relative to basic human needs are emphasized. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| NUR 39300 - Practicum III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Practicum III is the third clinical course in a series of three practica. Clinical lab experiences involve the provision of evidence based, patient centered, nursing care to individuals and small groups of adults with complex medical problems. Building on the complexity of the role of the nurse, the concepts of time management, prioritization, delegation, and collaboration are introduced with practical application in the clinical setting. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| NUR 39400 - Health Promotion And Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The role of the nurse as a health educator is implemented. Nursing and non-nursing theories related to health promotion and teaching-learning processes are examined. Principles of health literacy related to patient education are emphasized. Evidence-based nursing projects related to health education within a community environment are implemented. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| NUR 39500 - Children's Health Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course develops knowledge and skills required for child health nursing. Theory and evidence-based health care practices are emphasized. Nursing practice experiences are provided in a variety of settings. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Utilize a systematic, holistic approach to identify needs of children.
2. Examine evolving social, cultural, and health care delivery trends in the provisions of optimal health care to children.
3. Apply theory guided, evidence-based practice to provide safe, quality care to children.
4. Select outcomes to provide safe, quality care in collaboration with children and their families.
5. Demonstrate effective communication in collaboration with children, their families and the interdisciplinary team members.
6. Plan teaching-learning strategies in the delivery of health care to children and their families.
7. Demonstrate accountability for children's health practice within the legal and ethical standards of the nursing profession.
8. Identify health care and technology used in the delivery of safe, quality care to children.
9. Provide examples of continuous improvement processes that promote positive children's health outcomes and their quality of life.
|
| NUR 39699 - Professional Practice Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Program coordinated by Nursing with cooperation of participating employers and the Office of Professional Practice. Students will submit summary reports and company evaluations related to the experience. Professional Practice students only. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply knowledge to identifying and solving problems in the professional nursing context.
2. Advance skills related to professional preparation, critical thinking, problem solving, communication, and teamwork.
3. Incorporate knowledge of the nursing profession and practice, basic nursing principles, and principles and practice of ethical responsibilities in professional work.
|
| NUR 39700 - Nursing Care Of The Aged, Disabled and Chronically Ill |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic human needs of the aged, person's living with chronic health problems and/or disabilities are introduced. Principles of health promotion, health restoration and palliation are examined. Evidenced based nursing practice is emphasized within the context of patient centered care. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| NUR 39801 - International Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Course taken during an international experience that is recognized by the University. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Course outcomes will vary depending upon specific study abroad experience in which the student participates.
|
| NUR 39900 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Hours, credit, and subject matter to be arranged by faculty. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| NUR 40200 - Public Health Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Grounded in the historical tenets of public health nursing, this course builds on the knowledge from nursing and public health science to address the heath promotion and illness prevention of culturally diverse aggregates. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUR 40300 - Public Health Nursing Clinic |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is a synthesis of nursing practice and public health science. Health promotion, health maintenance, health teaching and counseling, and coordination of care are utilized in providing population-focused care to individuals, families, and groups in the community. A select caseload of clients, as well as special projects, are assigned to develop student skills in the practice of public health nursing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Travel Time
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUR 41200 - Pediatric Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the factors influencing health promotion, protection, and maintenance of infants, children, and adolescents. Family theory; growth and development; primary healthcare; and acute, chronic, and terminal conditions are examined. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUR 41300 - Pediatric Nursing - Clinic |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Experience is provided in caring for healthy, at risk, acutely, and chronically ill infants, children, and adolescents and their families. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Travel Time, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUR 41401 - Pediatric Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Explores factors influencing the health and wellness of children and families. Students will apply principles, concepts and research from the health and human sciences to the care of children and families across the health-illness continuum. A structured clinical component focuses on clinical reasoning and evidence based practice. Students will provide family centered care to healthy, at risk and ill children across a variety of clinical settings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Integrate family theories; growth and development; genomics; environmental and psychosocial factors in the care of children across the health-illness continuum.
2. Integrate nursing concepts into evidence based nursing practice for children and families across a variety of health care settings.
3. Apply knowledge of information technologies to improve health outcomes of children and families.
4. Evaluate environmental and psychosocial risk factors for children and families.
5. Adapt nursing care to families, recognizing their diverse needs, ethnicity, culture, and values.
6. Evaluate the collaborative role of the nurse with other health care disciplines in the provision of comprehensive nursing care for healthy, at risk, and ill children.
7. Demonstrate a spirit of inquiry, responsibility and accountability within legal, ethical, professional and organizational parameters.
|
| NUR 41500 - Pathophysiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The most common morbidity problems manifested throughout the lifespan are studied. Pathophysiologic concepts and physiologic responses are integrated with the nursing process. The application of evidence based nursing practice modalities provides a basis to address basic human needs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| NUR 41501 - Public Health Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Utilize health promotion, maintenance, education and disease prevention in coordinating and providing population-focused care to individuals, families and aggregates in the community. A variety of clinical settings are used to offer students a broad, comprehensive perspective of public health nursing, a field that synthesizes content from nursing, social and public health sciences. Collaboration with the community and implementation of population-focused interventions foster critical thinking and independent decision making in the delivery of nursing care. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Synthesize concepts, theories, knowledge and practice from nursing, social and public health sciences.
2. Examine the structure, function, and influence of historical, political, social, environmental, cultural, and ethical factors to the health of individuals, families, and communities.
3. Collaborate with interdisciplinary healthcare and human service providers to address the health needs of individuals, families, and communities.
4. Utilize principles, concepts, models, theories and research to guide culturally sensitive nursing care and public health practice of individuals, families, and communities.
5. Explore the delivery of public health nursing services to diverse and vulnerable populations.
6. Formulate client teaching strategies that address the principles of disease prevention and health promotion to clients across the lifespan.
7. Evaluate interventions implemented using community and family resources to address mutually identified health needs of clients.
8. Use principles of caseload management, in the delivery of safe, quality public health nursing services that reflect legal, ethical, and professional standards.
9. Apply national health objectives in planning interventions to meet the individual, system, and community level needs of diverse populations.
10.Utilize health care technology to improve health outcomes of individuals, families, and communities.
11.Integrate the role of advocacy into the delivery of care to individuals, families, and communities.
|
| NUR 41600 - Nursing Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explore the research process as a foundation for understanding, evaluating, and applying nursing research. An overview of research, its purpose, and approaches to solving research problems are examined. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| NUR 41601 - Management Of Clients With Complex Health Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Focuses on nursing care of adults, children, and families with complex healthcare needs. Challenges students to use critical thinking and clinical reasoning to identify, prioritize, and evaluate nursing care interventions for clients with complex healthcare issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Utilize the nursing process in multiple nursing roles when caring for clients with complex healthcare needs.
2. Address system barriers that affect delivery of quality healthcare to complex patients.
3. Evaluate the effectiveness of interprofessional collaboration in the provision of care and in transition of care.
4. Practice the skills of delegation and supervision with regard to other members of the healthcare team.
5. Critique the impact of professional and unprofessional behaviors on patient care.
6. Demonstrate sound clinical judgment, accountability, communication, and integration of best practices as a professional nurse.
|
| NUR 41701 - Leadership In Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Studies the components of nursing leadership and management functions with an emphasis on critical thinking, problem solving, communication, and team building within the context of experiential problem-based group projects. This course will provide specific practice and evaluation of strategic and financial planning, conflict management, delegation, and complex change. Competencies to be gained, at a novice level, include professional communication, sound ethical and legal judgments within personal and organizational frameworks, leadership skills in the management and evaluation of others, and an understanding of the drivers of healthcare change and finances. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Evaluate the interrelatedness of leadership and management functions in promoting quality care and a safe environment.
2. Effectively delegate, supervise, and evaluate members of the healthcare team with an awareness of ethical, professional, social, and legal issues implicit to nursing leadership and management.
3. Critically assess management process strategies for evaluating problems, exploring solutions, and promoting success within an organizational context.
4. Evaluate quality improvement initiatives, evidence-based practices, healthcare policies, and cultural factors which influence human behavior and healthcare delivery.
5. Relate basic organizational structure, mission, vision, philosophy, and values to organizational and systems leadership.
6. Evaluate the impact of professional and unprofessional behaviors, including written and oral communication, on healthcare delivery and professional interactions.
7. Participate in the development and implementation of inter-professional teams to support system and project development and change.
|
| NUR 41800 - Community/Public Health Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 5.00. Blends the profession of nursing with the science of public health. Nursing and other theories are applied in the community setting. Survey social and health trends which affect community health nursing practice. Emphasize preventive care across the life span using the nursing process in the community setting. Examine nursing of aggregates and epidemiology as a public health science. Home healthcare and case management as a component of community health nursing are examined. Assess environmental and other current community health issues; examine the community health nurse's role in working with these issues. Assess the importance of cultural differences, norms, and values when planning care for diverse populations in the community. Clinicals provide opportunities to deliver and/or supervise care in healthcare settings and community agencies. Aspects of community/public health and leadership are integrated in senior clinical courses. Only RN completion students may select variable credit for one of the three 40000 level clinical nursing courses (NUR 41800, NUR 41900, NUR 44200). The three credit variable option includes lecture hours and no clinical hours. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 41801 - Clinical Capstone And Issues In Professional Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Promotes the use of critical thinking, clinical reasoning, and active learning to analyze contemporary issues related to professional nursing practice. Issues surrounding political action, socio-legal concerns, cultural diversity and ethics in nursing practice are used as a framework. A supportive and structured clinical component in a real-world setting encourages the learner to focus on refining clinical, leadership, and time-management skills in the delivery of care to diverse groups of clients across the lifespan. The clinical component assists the learner to transition from the role of students to novice nurse. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Analyze standards of nursing care and regulations related to credentialing and certification.
2. Evaluate components of nursing history that impact contemporary nursing and healthcare systems.
3. Utilize inquiry, analysis and information literacy to address practice issues, ambiguity, and unpredictability in the healthcare system.
4. Demonstrate understanding of the impact of local, state, national and global regulations on healthcare trends and healthcare policy.
5. Articulate the value of pursuing practice excellence, life-long learning, and engagement in professional nursing practice.
6. Demonstrate appropriate use of critical thinking, clinical reasoning, time management, delegation, and coordination of care when providing quality nursing care to clients in the community or clinical setting under the supervision of a qualified, licensed registered nurse preceptor.
7. Integrate principles of evidence-based practice, ethical decision-making, interprofessional communication, and advocacy to answer questions within the practice setting.
8. Contribute to quality and patient safety initiatives that use comprehensive, sustained, integrative, data-driven approaches to assess and evaluate systems and aim toward continual improvement of client care.
|
| NUR 41900 - Advanced Acute Care Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 5.00. This course prepares the student for complex patient care utilizing advanced nursing concepts and theories. Evidence-based and theory-based practice is emphasized. Clinicals provide opportunities to deliver and/or supervise care in health care settings and community agencies. Aspects of community/public health and leadership are integrated in senior clinical courses. Must be taken in last semester prior to graduation. Only RN completion students may select variable credit for one of the three 40000 level clinical nursing courses (NUR 41800, NUR 41900, NUR 44200). The three credit variable option includes lecture hours and no clinical hours. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 42100 - Nursing Practicum: Community And Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course develops knowledge and skills required for nursing leadership and community health nursing. Theory and evidence-based health care practices are emphasized. Nursing leadership and community practice experiences are provided to populations in a variety of settings. Typically offered Fall, Spring, Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Utilize a holistic approach to identify needs of communities and organizations toward maximizing positive health outcomes.
2. Incorporate evolving social, cultural, and health care delivery trends in the provision of optimal health care to communities and organizations.
3. Apply theory guided, evidence-based practice to provide quality care to communities and organizations.
4. Evaluate outcomes to provide quality care in collaboration with communities and organizations.
5. Demonstrate effective communication in collaboration with communities, organizations, and the interdisciplinary team members.
6. Integrate teaching-learning processes in the delivery of health care to communities and organizations.
7. Articulate personal goals for professional development in community health nursing and nursing leadership.
8. Demonstrate as a nurse leader within the legal and ethical standards of the nursing profession.
9. Demonstrate leadership in coordination of health care and management of resources, technology, finance, and personnel.
10. Utilize continuous improvement processes to promote positive health outcomes and quality of life.
|
| NUR 42300 - Professional Seminar III: Healthcare Policies And Ethical Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This is a professional seminar course designed for the graduating nursing student. Seminar emphasis will focus on policy development, legislative process, and political influences which impact the practice of professional nursing. Professional nursing organizations, role transition, and lifelong learning are explored. Professional portfolio development is completed. Must be taken in the last semester prior to graduation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 42900 - Community Health Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. This course develops knowledge and skills required for community health nursing. Theory and evidence-based health care practices are emphasized. Nursing practice experiences are provided to populations in a variety of settings. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| NUR 43300 - Advanced Concepts In Critical Thinking |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will help students apply advanced concepts in critical thinking. Teaching strategies challenging the learner to apply critical thinking include the use of scenarios, integrations of computer-assisted learning, and exploration of effective healthcare delivery. Computerized testing is utilized to prepare students for NCLEX-RN examination. This course must be taken in the last semester of the baccalaureate degree program. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 43400 - Advanced Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Focus on assisting patients and families cope with acute and chronic illnesses using case management and disease management approaches. Emphasizes the nurse's use of critical thinking, nursing process, communication, research, and knowledge of community resources when working with clients through the continuum of illness toward optimum health. Typically offered Fall.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 43700 - Clinical Leadership Development |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Senior nursing students in collaboration with nursing faculty refine leadership behaviors in a clinical setting. Typically offered Spring Fall.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUR 43800 - Nursing Management And Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. This course provides students with the opportunity to synthesize previous learning and develop knowledge and skills required for management and leadership roles within a dynamic health care system. Evidence-based health care practices and organizational quality improvement models are discussed. Experiences are provided in a variety of health care settings. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| NUR 43900 - Nursing Management And Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course develops knowledge and skills required for nursing management and leadership roles. Theory and evidence-based health care practices are emphasized. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Synthesize leadership and management principles and concepts to support a holistic approach towards maximizing positive health outcomes.
2. Incorporate evolving social, cultural, and health care delivery trends in the provisions of optimal health care.
3. Examine theory guided, evidence-based leadership and management practice to provide quality care.
4. Evaluate leadership and management in the evaluation of cost-effective, quality care.
5. Employ effective communication in leadership experiences.
6. Discuss teaching-learning processes in the delivery of health care.
7. Articulate personal goals for professional development.
8. Examine accountability for practice within the legal and ethical standards of the nursing profession.
9. Apply leadership concepts in coordination of health care and management of resources and technology in health care.
10.Analyze continuous improvement processes.
|
| NUR 44100 - Advanced Health Assessment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Through didactic and clinical instruction, this course examines 1) a variety of processes and tools used to assess health status, 2) the interpretation of assessment data, and 3) the use of assessment data to guide nursing actions. Builds upon basic assessment skills. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 44200 - Leadership In Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 5.00. Concepts presented focus on leadership. Leadership is viewed as interpersonal action which influences group members, through the communication process, toward setting and attaining goals. Clinical experiences provide opportunities to apply leadership, organization, change, communication, teaching/learning, and nursing theories to practice. Conflict management strategies are examined and utilized. Clinicals provide opportunities to deliver and/or supervise care in healthcare settings and community agencies with clients from diverse backgrounds. Aspects of community/public health nursing and leadership are integrated in the senior clinical courses. Only RN completion students may select variable credit for one of the three 40000 level clinical nursing courses (NUR 41800, NUR 41900, NUR 44200). The 3 credit variable option includes lecture hours and no clinical hours
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 44300 - Adult Health Nursing II |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. This course continues the development of knowledge and skills required for adult health nursing roles. Theory and evidence-based health care practices are emphasized. Nursing practice experiences are provided in a variety of settings. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Utilize a systematic, holistic approach to identify health promotion and therapeutic needs of adults with altered health functions.
2. Examine evolving social, cultural, and health care delivery trends in the provisions of optimal health care to adults with altered health functions.
3. Apply theory guided, evidence-based practice to provide safe, quality care to adults with altered health functions.
4. Select outcomes to provide quality care to adults with altered health functions.
5. Demonstrate effective communication in collaboration with individual adults, their families, and the interdisciplinary health care team.
6. Plan teaching-learning strategies in the delivery of health care to adults and their families.
7. Demonstrate accountability for health practice within the legal and ethical standards of the nursing profession.
8. Identify resources in the care of adults with altered health functions.
9. Provide examples of continuous improvement processes to promote positive health outcomes and quality of life for adults with altered health functions.
|
| NUR 44500 - Seminar In Professional Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Current issues in professional nursing are analyzed in a seminar. Legal responsibilities and the professional role are emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 44700 - Capstone In Holistic Health And Wellness |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course serves as the culminating experience in holistic health and wellness. The course provides opportunities for students to integrate previous learning experiences with the program goals. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Articulate a personal philosophy of holistic health and wellness.
2. Implement holistic care processes.
3. Engage in culturally competent therapeutic communication and relationships.
4. Utilize research and evidenced-based practice to achieve holistic health and wellness.
5. Integrate healing concepts across the health-illness experience.
|
| NUR 44800 - Holistic Health And Wellness: Stress Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course uses Chen's "Conformity with Nature" theory as a theoretical foundation for developing and implementing stress management strategies. This theory is developed from Eastern philosophy, culture and medicine. Stress management techniques and skills will be practiced. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
Upon completion of this course, participants will be able to:
1. Explore health risk factors related to stress.
2. Discuss the theory "Conformity with Nature".
3. Articulate "Conformity with Nature" as a theoretical foundation to assess, plan, implement, and evaluate stress management strategies.
4. Utilize stress research and evidence-based practice for managing stress.
5. Practice holistic stress management techniques and skills.
|
| NUR 45100 - Nursing Informatics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides a basic understanding of nursing science, computer science, and information science to prepare students to effectively and efficiently use technology to identify, collect, process, and manage health care information. A focus on technology based health applications which support clinical, administrative, research, and educational decision-making to enhance the efficacy of nursing is provided. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| NUR 45200 - Quality And Safety In Professional Nursing Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Using a project-management focus, this course provides students the opportunity to synthesize and apply previous knowledge related to: patient-centered care, teamwork and collaboration, evidence-based practice, quality improvement, and safety in a professional leadership role. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be prepared to synthesize and apply knowledge related to patient-centered care, teamwork and collaboration, evidence-based practice, quality improvement, and safety in preparation for the Capstone Course in Nursing projects and future professional nursing practice.
|
| NUR 46100 - RN To BS Capstone Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Integrates a clinical-based project focusing on the Quality and Safety Education for Nurses (QSEN) concepts: patient centered care, interdisciplinary team work and collaboration, evidence-based practice, quality improvement, safety, and informatics. Targets the professional knowledge, skills, and attitudes required to deliver health care in complex environments. Students collaborate with faculty and nurse-leader preceptors in health care organizations to complete a mutually agreed-upon clinical capstone project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to apply multiple dimensions of patient centered care in completion of the capstone project.
2. Students will be able to collaborate with nursing and inter-professional teams fostering open communication, mutual respect, and shared decision-making to achieve quality patient care.
3. Integrate best current evidence with clinical expertise and patient/family preferences, values, and safety for delivery of optimal health care.
4. Evaluate effectiveness of the capstone project on quality improvement goals, processes, and outcomes in complex health care environments.
5. Students will be able to use informatics to communicate, manage knowledge, support decision making and mitigate error in the completion of the capstone project.
6. Students will demonstrate professional behaviors, leadership skills, and critical thinking in collaboration with assigned preceptor in the completion of a mutually agreed upon capstone project.
|
| NUR 46500 - Demystifying Diagnostics In Healthcare |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Gain an advanced understanding of diagnostic tests commonly used in health care settings, including laboratory values and radiographic studies. Includes both online and in-class experiences which includes simulation scenarios. The stimulation center provides students opportunities to apply knowledge and skills in the interactive, no-harm environments. Designed for registered nurses and students completing their last semester of pre-licensed curriculum. Registered nurses or nursing students with the following completed prerequisites: NUR 44200 and NUR 41800. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Critically analyze diagnostic information.
2. Correlate diagnostic results with health conditions.
3. Recognize the appropriateness and timeliness of reporting results.
4. Report diagnostic information to appropriate healthcare providers.
|
| NUR 48200 - Nursing Leadership And Management |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Theories and evidence related to leadership, organization and management are examined. Specific strategies for effective time management, priority setting, decision making, career planning and delegation are introduced. Approaches to the evaluation of quality nursing practice within a complex work environment are discussed. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| NUR 48300 - Community And Public Health Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Concepts of community and public health nursing are introduced. Community health nursing roles related to evidence based practice, leadership, collaboration, quality improvement and political activism are explored. Critical thinking skills are applied in the assessment of vulnerable populations existing within various communities. The reciprocal influence of the environment on the patient, family and community relative to human needs is emphasized. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Explore concepts related to community and community health nursing.
2. Apply critical thinking skills and public health concepts to analyze a community and its potential for meeting basic human needs.
3. Integrate evidence based practice strategies, epidemiological and biostatistical methodology in analyzing select community health problems.
4. Explore the reciprocal influence of the environment on the patient family and community relative to human needs.
|
| NUR 48500 - Community Health Nursing Practicum I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This community health practicum emphasizes integration of professional nursing roles and community health concepts. Evidence based nursing practice is utilized as an approach to patient centered care with patients throughout the lifespan. Emphasis is placed on health promotion, health restoration, health maintenance or palliation within community based settings. The reciprocal influence of the environment on the patient, family and community relative to human needs is emphasized. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| NUR 48600 - Community Health Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Concepts of community and community health nursing are introduced. Community health nursing roles related to evidence based practice, leadership, collaboration; quality improvement and political activism are explored. Critical thinking skills are applied in the assessment of a community and its potential for meeting the basic human needs of its constituents. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| NUR 48701 - Transitions Into Professional Nursing Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This two credit hour course prepares senior nursing students with the knowledge, skills and attitudes necessary to effectively prepare for transition from the role of student to entry level nurse. Specifically, test-taking strategies and practice, NCLEX preparation and licensure application will be addressed. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the NCLEX test plan.
2. Identify and practice test taking strategies.
3. Describe effective remediation strategies for ultimate NCLEX success.
4. Discuss the process of NCLEX and state board of nursing applications.
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| NUR 48800 - Capstone Course Preparation |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Under the guidance of faculty, students will plan a project-based practicum experience consistent with professional nursing roles. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| NUR 48900 - Community Health Nursing |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Concepts of community, community change, epidemiology, biostatistics and community health nursing are introduced. Nursing roles related to practice, teaching, research utilization, and leadership/management in the community are explored. Assessment of a community and its potential for facilitating health and quality of life is examined. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| NUR 49000 - Nursing Practicum |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Provides the student an opportunity to develop an individualized practicum experience in the specialty of geriatrics. Based on the student's goals, sites are selected through faculty and student collaboration. One credit hour requires 45 hours of clinical practicum. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| NUR 49300 - Advanced Adult Health Nursing |
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Credit Hours: 6.00. This course develops advanced knowledge and skills required for adult health nursing roles. Theory and evidence-based health care practices are emphasized, focusing on complex health needs. Nursing practice experiences are provided in a variety of settings. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 6.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Utilize a holistic approach to identify health promotion and therapeutic needs of individuals.
2. Incorporate evolving social, cultural, and health care delivery trends in the provision of optimal health care to adults.
3. Apply theory guided, evidence-based practice to provide quality care to adults.
4. Evaluate outcomes to provide quality care to adults.
5. Demonstrate effective communication in collaboration with individuals and the interdisciplinary health care team.
6. Integrate teaching-learning strategies in the delivery of health care to individuals and their families.
7. Articulate personal goals for professional development in the adult health nursing setting.
8. Demonstrate accountability for health practice within the legal and ethical standards of the nursing profession in the care of adults.
9. Demonstrate leadership in coordination of health care and management of resources, technology, finance and personnel in the care of adults.
10. Utilize continuous improvement processes to promote positive health outcomes and quality of life for adults.
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| NUR 49500 - Baccalaureate Nursing Capstone |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. This course synthesizes concepts, theories, and research from nursing and other disciplines. Students will transition to practice as a beginning baccalaureate nurse with a preceptor. A mandatory NCLEX-RN review course and satisfactory completion of a department exit exam is required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Utilize concepts, theories, and researches from nursing and other disciplines to support a holistic approach toward maximizing positive health outcomes.
2. Incorporate evolving social, cultural, and health care delivery trends in the provision of optimal health care.
3. Apply theory guided, evidence-based practice.
4. Demonstrate effective communication.
5. Articulate personal goals for professional development.
6. Analyze accountability for practice within the legal and ethical standards of the nursing profession.
7. Analyze leadership in the coordination of health care and management of resources, technology, finance and personnel.
8. Utlize continuous improvement processes to promote positive health outcomes and quality of life.
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| NUR 49600 - RN-BS Nursing Capstone |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides the opportunity to integrate concepts, theories, and research from nursing and other disciplines to develop and improve practice. There is a focus on concepts and roles of management and leadership within a health care system under the guidance of a practicing nurse leader. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
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| NUR 49800 - Capstone Course In Nursing |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. In collaboration with a nursing faculty and clinical liaison, students will plan and implement an evidence-based project consistent with the professional leadership role. Students will use critical thinking skills and evidence based practice to promote patient centered nursing in a health care environment of work complexities. This course will culminate with an evidence-based project that will be presented to peers and the academic community. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Engage in activities that promote the importance of nursing and professional nursing roles in creating change in health care environments.
2. Design an evidence based practice (EBP) project that assists individuals, families, groups, or the community meet basic human needs and promote quality of life.
3. Disseminate knowledge relevant to nursing in a complex health care environment.
4. Demonstrate accountability to the nursing code of ethics and legal standards of practice.
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| NUR 50000 - Theoretical Constructs In Nursing |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the integration of theory/conceptual relationships in the development of nursing knowledge. Students explore ways in which nurses in advanced practice incorporate theoretical knowledge in the implementation of the advanced practice in nursing role. Students analyze the clinical relevance of mid-range and practice theories. Students examine the relationship of theoretical constructs to research and praxis through concept analysis, theory evaluation, and discussion of the application of theory to practice. This course examines ways in which theoretical thought is embedded in evidence-based nursing practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| NUR 50100 - Foundations Of Advanced Practice In Nursing |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. This course builds on the knowledge and experiences that students possess when beginning their advanced practice in nursing education. Students explore their assumptions about advanced practice in nursing, its historical context and definitions of the various advanced practice roles, conceptual underpinnings and role competencies. Students develop an appreciation for how evidence based practice influences advanced practice in nursing. They develop skills that include using information communication technologies, identifying problems, posing questions that lead to evidence sources, searching and differentiating among various sources and types of evidence. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Analyze personal perspectives of advanced practice in nursing as they relate to accepted definitions and standards for advanced practice in nursing.
2. Discuss factors that have contributed to the definitions, conceptual underpinnings and role competencies of advanced practice in nursing.
3. Identify nursing practice problems and specify searchable questions using a systematic methodology.
4. Use information communication technologies to search, sort and organize sources of information and evidence.
5. Differentiate sources of information and types of evidence that are more likely to be of high quality.
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| NUR 50200 - Pharmacotherapeutics for Advanced Practice Nursing |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Course includes pharmacodynamics, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacotherapeutics of broad categories of pharmacologic agents. Students apply these principles and also consider the role of best available evidence and patient preferences as a basis for managing pharmacologic regimens. Students review regulations relevant to prescriptive authority for advanced practice nurses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| NUR 50300 - Advanced Health Assessment |
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Credit Hours: 3.00 (West Lafayette, Fort Wayne) 4.00 (Calumet) Students develop advanced, evidence-based health assessment skills that build on their current knowledge and abilities. Major concepts of the course include comprehensive and focused history taking and advanced physical assessment. Students relate underlying physiologic mechanisms with normal and abnormal findings from the history and physical assessment. The course provides a basis for designing a culturally sensitive and evidence-based plan of care within the situational context of the individual. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| NUR 50500 - Sociocultural Influences On Health |
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Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. This course examines the influences of cultural and sub-cultural variables on health and health care delivery. Students analyze and apply appropriate theoretical perspectives and current research to design evidence-based strategies that ground clinical decision making in advanced practice nursing. Students use the National Standards on Culturally and Linguistically Appropriate Services (CLAS) as the basis for providing culturally competent care. As students apply principles of culturally competent communication they are encouraged to develop insight and an attitude of resistance to stereotyping. Students gain an understanding of the context of vulnerable and marginalized populations through the analysis of social, cultural, and economic influences that impact health and illness. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| NUR 50700 - Physiologic Concepts For Advanced Practice Nursing |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. Students examine the principles of physiologic function at all levels of organization from cells to organ systems as they affect human function. The course uses homeostasis as a model to account for regulatory and compensatory functions in health. Students develop the necessary theoretical and empirical foundation for subsequent understanding of the diagnosis and management of human responses to disease and non-disease based etiologies. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| NUR 51000 - Research And Evidence Based Nursing Practice |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on both the generation of primary evidence through an in-depth examination of the research process and its critical use in evidence based practice. Students systematically search, appraise and interpret the best available evidence that informs advanced practice nursing and health related disciplines. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
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| NUR 51100 - Health Promotion For Advanced Practice In Nursing |
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Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Students analyze health promotion/disease prevention, and health education frameworks combined with best available evidence as a foundation for advanced practice in nursing. Students promote the health of diverse client populations by incorporating the Healthy People goals, clinical practice guidelines, risk assessment, epidemiological data and evidence based screening tools into nursing practice. In collaboration with selected clients and/or families, students implement health coaching/teaching through the integration of family, health promotion and health literacy theories. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| NUR 51200 - Clinical Applications In Pharmacotherapeutics |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This course applies information from NUR 50200 to the care of clients through the use of case studies. Emphasis is placed on incorporating information from pharmacology, physiology, and physical assessment. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| NUR 51300 - Health Promotion In Special Populations |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of wellness and health promotion issues unique to three special populations: clients in rural areas, women, and adolescents. Legal and ethical issues related to practice with special populations is addressed. Evidence-based standards will be utilized. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
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| NUR 51400 - Clinical Application In Pharmacotherapeutics For Pediatric Nurse Practitioners |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Applies information from NUR 50200, Pharmacotherapeutics in Primary Care, to the care of infants, children, and adolescents through the use of case studies. Emphasis is placed on incorporating information from pharmacology, physiology, and physical assessment. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| NUR 51500 - Health Promotion In Pediatric Populations |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines wellness and health promotion issues unique to children from birth through adolescence. Concepts of growth and development are integrated into health promotion activities. Legal and ethical issues related to practice with children and adolescents are addressed. Evidence-based practice standards will be utilized.
. Typically offered Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| NUR 52100 - Theoretical Constructs In Nursing |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Theoretical constructs in nursing and related theories from behavioral and natural sciences are examined in relation to theory development, historical perspectives, nursing research, and theory-based practice. The scholarship of discovery is emphasized as students identify philosophical bases for nursing's knowledge, review and critique appropriate literature, and consider nursing's nature of scientific explanation and inquiry. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| NUR 52300 - Nursing Research And Evidence-Based Practice |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Delves into the scientific methods of quantitative and qualitative research in nursing at an advanced practice level. Integrates nursing research as a systematic process to answer questions generated from theory or practice environments. Examines the principles of evidence-based practice and policy, practice guidelines, and information utilization. Provides the skills to critically appraise research findings. Prerequisite: 30000 level statistics and research course; NUR 52100 recommended. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| NUR 52500 - Informatics In Nursing |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Integrates nursing science with computer technology and information science to identify, gather, and manage information. Emphasis on technology based health applications with support clinical, administrative, research, and educational decision making enhancing the efficacy of nursing endeavors. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| NUR 52700 - Ethics For Nurses In Advanced Practice |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The focus of this course is on moral dilemmas and ethical implications occurring in a variety of contexts. Students explore both theoretical and pragmatic viewpoints of dilemmas as they relate to the role of nurses in advanced practice. Content includes the historical, theoretical, contextual and practical aspects of ethical nursing practice, as well as the application of ethical frameworks, concepts, and principles. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| NUR 52800 - Acute Illness: Pediatric Health Practice |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A developmentally organized course to provide knowledge and experience to care for acute episodic illnesses of children and adolescents in primary health-care settings. Examines pathophysiological alterations and clinical management. Students will synthesize knowledge of developmental, physiological, psychological, and sociocultural factors in the assessment and management of acute illness. The focus is on differential diagnosis, clinical management, and child and family education within the context of primary care. Health promotion models, and biopsychosocial, developmental, and cultural theories are integrated throughout the course. Individual, family, and group intervention strategies are addressed.
. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| NUR 52900 - Acute Illness: Pediatric Health Preceptorship |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Assists students to develop and broaden clinical judgment and skills. Content includes the study of primary health care of children and adolescents with acute conditions and the impact of those conditions on family members. The focus is on growth and development, assessment, differential diagnosis, clinical decision making, management, and patient and family education within the context of primary care. Professional issues, collaboration and scope of practice, and advocacy are emphasized. Clinical seminars focus on variations of child health in the context of health promotion and advanced assessment. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| NUR 53200 - Acute Illness: Adult Health Practice |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of pathophysiological alterations and clinical management of acute conditions in adolescents and adults. Students will synthesize knowledge of physiological, psychological, and sociocultural factors in the assessment and management of acute illness. Focus is on the differential diagnosis, clinical management, patient and family education within the context of primary care. Health promotion models, as well as biopsychosocial and cultural theories are integrated throughout the course. The adult nurse practitioner role is analyzed in the context of caring for persons with acute conditions. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
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| NUR 53300 - Acute Illness: Adult Health Preceptorship |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course assists students to develop and broaden clinical judgment and skills. Content includes the study of primary care of adolescents and adults with acute conditions and the impact of those conditions on family members. Focus is on assessment, deferential diagnosis, clinical decision making and management, as well as patient and family education within the context of primary care. The adult nurse practitioner role is analyzed in the context of caring for persons with acute conditions. Professional issues, collaboration and scope of practice, and advocacy are emphasized. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply epidemiology, family, community, and health promotion theories in the care of adolescents and adults with acute conditions.
2. Use appropriate diagnostic modalities in assessing the acute healthcare needs of adolescents and adults.
3. Synthesize clinical data to formulate, implement, and evaluate care for acutely ill clients and their families.
4. Develop culturally sensitive plans of care that reflect mutually derived health priorities, goals, and interventions for adolescents and adults with acute conditions.
5. Use appropriate standards of practice in the management of commonly occurring acute physical and mental health problems in adolescents and adults.
6. Implement interventions based on current theories and research to assist adolescents and adults with developmental changes, illness, and social/environmental problems.
7. Utilize community resources in the primary healthcare of individuals and families with acute conditions.
8. Analyze the collaborative role and scope of practice of the advanced practice nurse in the treatment of acute conditions.
9. Address the unique needs of the rural population in the provision of healthcare to adolescents and adults.
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| NUR 54200 - Chronic And Commonly Recurring Conditions: Adult Health Practice |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of pathophysiological alterations and clinical management of chronic conditions and illnesses in adolescents and adults. Students will synthesize knowledge of physiological, psychological, and sociocultural factors in the assessment and management of chronic conditions. Focus is on the differential diagnosis, clinical management, and patient and family education within the context of primary care. Chronic illness and health promotion models, as well as biopsychosocial and cultural theories are integrated throughout the course. Individual, family, and group intervention strategies are addressed. The adult nurse practitioner role is analyzed in the context of caring for persons with acute conditions. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
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| NUR 54300 - Chronic And Commonly Recurring Conditions: Adult Health Preceptorship |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course assists students to develop and broaden clinical judgment and skills. Content includes the study of chronic illness and recurring conditions in adolescents and adults and the impact of those conditions on family members. Focus is on the differential diagnosis, clinical decision making and management, as well as patient and family education within the context of primary care. The adult nurse practitioner role is analyzed in the context of caring for persons with chronic conditions. Professional issues, collaboration, scope of practice and advocacy are emphasized. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
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| NUR 55200 - Chronic Illness And Commonly Recurring Conditions: Pediatric Health Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines pathophysiological alterations and clinical management of chronic conditions and illnesses in children and adolescents. Students will synthesize knowledge of developmental, physiological, psychological, and sociocultural factors in the assessment and management of chronic conditions. The focus is on the differential diagnosis, clinical management, and child and family education within the context of primary health care. Chronic illness and health promotion models, as well as biopsychosocial, developmental, and cultural theories are integrated throughout the course. Individual, family, and group intervention strategies are addressed. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| NUR 55300 - Chronic Illness And Commonly Recurring Conditions: Pediatric Health Preceptorship |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Assists students to develop and broaden clinical judgment and skills. Content includes the study of chronic illness and recurring conditions in children and adolescents and the impact of those conditions on family members. The focus is on growth and development, differential diagnosis, clinical decision making and management, and child and family education within the context of primary care. The pediatric nurse practitioner role is analyzed in the context of caring for children with chronic conditions. Professional issues, collaboration, scope of practice, and advocacy are emphasized.
. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| NUR 55500 - Health Disparities: Care Of Vulnerable Populations |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Prepares the advanced practice nurse to address and find solutions for vulnerable populations and individuals in the health-care system. Students investigate and analyze current issues and health-care policies, focusing on health disparities that impact vulnerable people. The advanced practice nurse examines the legal and ethical aspects of managing the health care of disparate individuals, families, and groups. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
Upon successful completion of this course, the student is able to:
1. Analyze existing health disparities at a local, regional, national, and global level.
2. Formulate possible solutions to impact current health care policy to improve the health of disparate/disadvantaged/disenfranchised populations.
3. Evaluate organizational responses to ethical situations within the context of its structure and culture.
4. Develop comprehensive plans of care that address the health promotion and disease prevention needs of vulnerable populations.
5. Incorporate theories and research in developing teaching strategies to promote health related quality of life.
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| NUR 55700 - Curriculum Development |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on curriculum development in nursing, implementing principles of curriculum design, evaluating program outcomes, and discussing accreditation criteria. Students will distinguish among the curricular outcomes across various levels of nursing education. Students will integrate learner attributes in the process of curricular design. Must be a graduate of an accredited nursing program with a 3.0 GPA and licensed to practice in Indiana. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate knowledge of the history of curriculum development in nursing.
2. Identify components of a nursing curriculum.
3. Integrate accreditation requirements into program objectives and outcomes.
4. Compare competencies of various levels of nursing education.
5. Discuss how legal, ethical, social, economic, and institutional factors influence curriculum development.
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| NUR 55800 - Instructional Methods In Nursing Education |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Teaching and learning principles are discussed and applied to the discipline of nursing. Students are introduced to instructional methods that have been found to be effective with various learning styles and foster the cognitive, psychomotor, and affective development of learners. Must be a graduate of an accredited nursing program with a 3.0 GPA and licensed to practice in Indiana. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate teaching/learning principles foundational education theories.
2. Construct a variety of teaching strategies appropriate to learner needs and desired outcomes.
3. Develop critical thinking activities for a variety of learners.
4. Analyze instructional methods for both clinical and didactic experiences.
5. Describe the methods of valuation or assessment of student learning outcomes.
6. Identify methods of instruction.
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| NUR 55900 - Role Of The Nurse Educator |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the roles of the nurse educator in academic, clinical, and community settings. Students explore requirements for current certifications in nursing education. Students analyze the role of the nurse educator, based on current evidence-based practice in relation to case scenarios. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Analyze the role of the nurse educator.
2. Explore rank and tenure in the academic setting.
3. Compare and contrast the role of the educator in the institutional and community setting.
4. Create a plan for an effective learning environment based on current evidence-based practice.
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| NUR 56000 - Evaluation Of Learning Environments |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on evaluation of learning environments: student learners (didactic and clinical), program, and peer. Students will examine historical and contemporary literature regarding evaluation of learning environments. Construction of evaluation instruments and development of systematic plan of evaluation will be completed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Discuss the purpose of evaluation.
2. Construct an evaluation instrument of learner outcomes in a variety of settings.
3. Develop a systematic plan of evaluation utilizing current national standards.
4. Explore the evaluation of instructors by students, peers, and institutions.
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| NUR 56100 - Advanced Teaching Methods In Nursing Education |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on the incorporation of advanced multimedia instructional uses of technology in nursing education and professional development. Students explore newly emerging instructional methods. Evidence-based guidelines and best practices are used to design and evaluate interactive, collaborative, and student-centered instruction. Must be a graduate of an accredited nursing program with a 3.0 GPA and licensed to practice in Indiana. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Design instructional activities using a wide variety of technological resources and artifacts.
2. Utilize effective multimedia communications techniques based on learning principles.
3. Distinguish between the medium and the method in the instructional process.
4. Demonstrate the use of imaging devices such as scanners and digital and/or video cameras with complementary software.
5. Explore the use of a wide variety of the newly emerging electronic media available through the student and faculty studios.
6. Structure course materials appropriate for web-based delivery.
7. Evaluate instructional materials using best practice guidelines.
8. Select one item for inclusion in the e-portfolio accompanied by a reflection.
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| NUR 56300 - Oncology Screening And Health Promotion |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines screening and surveillance for the prevention and control of cancer. Emphasis is placed on gaining theoretical knowledge to support the evaluation of clients with a past, current, or potential diagnosis of cancer. Focus is on the holistic approach to care using state-of-the-art interventions that provide effective risk assessment, disease surveillance, health education and health promotion. Typically offered Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| NUR 56400 - Pharmacology For Advanced Practice Oncology Certificate |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. This course examines the clinical management of oncology care. Emphasis is placed on gaining theoretical knowledge to support oncology patients and their families. Focus is on the holistic approach to care using state-of-the-art interventions that provide effective pain and symptom management. Prerequisites: NUR 50200 or advanced pharmacology at an advanced practice level within the past five years. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| NUR 56500 - Women's Health I: Advanced Nursing Care Of The Well Woman |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on the gynecologic care of women from adolescence through the life span. Students examine the patho-physiological alterations and clinical management of preventative, acute, and chronic conditions of the adolescent and adult female. Students synthesize knowledge of physiological, psychological, socio-cultural, and ethical factors in the assessment and management of women including differential diagnosis, clinical management, and education within the context of the normal woman and minor deviations from normal. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply standards of advanced practice nursing practice to the delivery of primary healthcare of women, form adolescence throughout the lifespan.
2. Apply knowledge of gynecologic patho-physiology to the normal gynecologic client and the client with minor variations from normal.
3. Implement evidence-based practice standards in the primary care of women.
4. Examine the outcome of treatment regimes for women.
5. Revise the health care plan based on a systematic evaluation.
6. Integrate knowledge of altered pathology into healthcare planning.
7. Implement referrals based on scope of advanced nursing practice.
8. Incorporate strategies of risk analysis and reduction, screening, lifestyle change, disease detection, and prevention into all aspects of women’s healthcare.
9. Interpret the impact of legal, ethical, professional advanced practice nursing standards and sociocultural issues within a woman’s lifespan.
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| NUR 56600 - Women's Health Clinical Practicum I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Assists students to develop and broaden clinical judgments and skills in the primary care of women. Content includes the gynecologic care of women from adolescence throughout their life span, and the impact of those conditions on women and their family members. Focus is on assessment, differential diagnosis, clinical decision making, and management, as well as patient and family education within the context of family-centered care. Professional issues, collaboration, scope of practice, ethics, and advocacy are emphasized. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply appropriate diagnostic modalities in assessing the healthcare needs of women and adolescents.
2. Synthesize clinical data to formulate, implement, and evaluate care of clients incorporating National Patient Safety Goals.
3. Develop culturally sensitive plans of care that reflect mutually derived health priorities, goals, and interventions.
4. Employ appropriate standards of practice in the management of commonly occurring acute physical and mental health problems in women and adolescents.
5. Implement interventions based on evidence based research to assist adolescents and women with developmental changes, illnesses and social/environmental problems.
6. Utilize community resources in the primary healthcare of individuals and families.
7. Utilize therapeutic communication at the client and family’s level of comfort and understanding to explain conditions and treatments.
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| NUR 56700 - Women's Health II: Advanced Nursing Care Of Women With Health Alterations |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of NUR 56500. Focuses on the advanced nursing care of women with gynecologic and primary health alterations from adolescence through the life span. Students examine the patho-physiological alterations and clinical management of preventative, acute, and chronic conditions of the adolescent and adult female. Students synthesize knowledge of physiological, psychological, socio-cultural, and ethical factors in the assessment and management of acute illness related to women. The focal point is differential diagnosis, clinical management, and education within the context of abnormal gynecologic and primary care. The last part of the course begins to build a patho-physiological knowledge base for management of the low-risk obstetrical patient. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply standards of advanced practice nursing practice to the delivery of primary healthcare of women, from adolescence throughout the lifespan.
2. Apply knowledge of variations of normal patho-physiology to the gynecologic and primary care client.
3. Apply knowledge of obstetrical patho-physiology to the low risk pregnant woman.
4. Analyze evidence-based practice standards in the care of the woman with gynecologic and primary care disorders.
5. Examine commonly occurring mental health issues related to the health of adolescent girls and women in primary care.
6. Evaluate the outcome of treatment regimes for women.
7. Revises the health care plan based on a systematic approach using appropriate measures.
8. Integrate knowledge of altered pathology into healthcare planning.
9. Identify appropriate referrals based on scope of advanced nursing practice.
10. Incorporate strategies of risk analysis and reduction, screening, lifestyle change, and disease detection and prevention into all aspects of women’s healthcare.
11. Interpret the impact of legal, ethical, professional advanced practice nursing standards and socio-cultural issues within a woman’s lifespan.
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| NUR 56800 - The Role Of The Advanced Practice Nurse In Practice Management |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Prepares the graduate nursing student to explore and assume the role of the advanced nurse practitioner. The clinical component of the course allows the student to be in the practice setting to experience the skill set necessary for managing the office practice. Students learn the basics of running a successful nurse practitioner office, including equipment and supplies, business strategies, coding and billing, marketing, relationship building, and managing and negotiating client care. The student is guided to approach practice from an evidence-based practice perspective maintaining accountability for practice and always improving care. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Function in the role of a nurse practitioner in an existing practice setting.
2. Develop skill in negotiating a client plan of care while collaborating with other members of the health care team.
3. Analyze the organizational structure of the practice environment.
4. Demonstrate understanding of the impact that healthcare delivery has on the care of assigned clients.
5. Demonstrate ability to practice from an evidence-based perspective.
6. Assume responsibility for practice and quality of patient care.
7. Participate in community health programs.
8. Develop, implement, and evaluate a client education plan.
9. Write a collaborative agreement.
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| NUR 56900 - Women's Health III: Advanced Nursing Care Of The Low Risk Obstetrical Client |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on the care of the low-risk pregnant woman in ambulatory health settings. Emphasis is on the independent and collaborative functions of the nurse practitioner, delivering healthcare to the pregnant woman using differential diagnosis, clinical management, and education of the woman and her family. Infertility, contraception, and termination is examined. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply advanced practice nursing care to the low risk pregnant woman and her intimate support system.
2. Evaluate the outcomes of the treatment regimen for the pregnant woman.
3. Integrate evidence-based practice standards to the delivery of primary care to the pregnant woman.
4. Integrate knowledge altered pathology during prenatal care for the purpose of treatment and/or referral.
5. Use appropriate standards of practice in the management of commonly occurring acute physical and mental health problems in the adolescent female and adult women.
6. Implement interventions based on current theories and research to assist the female adolescent and adult women with developmental changes, illness, and social/environmental problems.
7. Utilize community resources in the primary healthcare of individuals and families with low risk pregnancy.
8. Analyze the collaborative role and scope of practice of the advanced practice nurse in the treatment of women.
9. Address the unique needs of the rural population in the provision of healthcare to adolescent females and adult women.
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| NUR 57000 - Women's Health Clinical Practicum II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Assists students to develop and broaden clinical judgment and skills in the care of low-risk pregnant women. Content includes the care of pregnant women in ambulatory health settings and the impact of the pregnancy on the woman’s intimate support system. Focus is on the differential diagnosis, clinical decision making, and management, as well as patient and family education. Professional issues, collaboration, scope of practice, ethics, and advocacy are emphasized. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply appropriate diagnostic modalities in assessing the healthcare needs of the pregnant woman and her child.
2. Synthesize clinical data to formulate, implement, and evaluate care of clients and their families.
3. Develop culturally; sensitive plans of care that reflect mutually derived health priorities, goals, and interventions.
4. Employ appropriate standards of practice in the management of the pregnant woman.
5. Implement evidence-based research interventions to assist the pregnant woman with developmental changes, illnesses, ethical and social/environmental problems.
6. Utilize community resources in the primary care of pregnant adolescents and women.
7. Integrate the teaching-coaching role into the management of pregnancy.
8. Analyze the collaborative role and scope of practice of the Adult Nurse practitioner in the management of pregnant adolescents and women.
9. Address the unique needs of the rural population in the provision of care to adolescents and adult women.
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| NUR 57200 - Acute Oncology Illness |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the clinical management of acute oncology care. Emphasis is placed on gaining theoretical knowledge to support the acute care of oncology patients and their families. Focus is on the holistic approach to care using state-of-the-art interventions that provide effective management of cancer comorbidities. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| NUR 57300 - Acute Oncology Illness Preceptorship |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course assists students to develop and broaden clinical judgment skills. Content includes the study of adults with acute oncology conditions and the impact of those conditions on family members. Focus is on the differential diagnosis, clinical decision making, and management, as well as patient and family education within the context of oncology care. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| NUR 58200 - Chronic Oncology Conditions And Palliative Care |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the clinical management of chronic and palliative oncology care. Emphasis is placed on gaining theoretical knowledge to support chronic and/or dying patients and their families. Focus is on the holistic approach to care using state-of-the-art interventions that provide effective pain and symptom management. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| NUR 58300 - Chronic Oncology/Palliative Care Preceptorship |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course assists students to develop and broaden clinical judgment skills. Content includes the study of adults with chronic oncology conditions and the impact of those conditions on family members. Focus is on the differential diagnosis, clinical decision making and management, as well as patient and family education within the context of oncology care. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| NUR 59800 - Master's Capstone |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 or 3.00. Students apply research principles through problem identification, proposal development, implementation, and evaluation of a clinical problem. Students synthesize principles of health assessment and advanced practice nursing through a clinical research project. The project may be an evaluation study or part of an ongoing faculty research project. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| NUR 59900 - Special Topics/Independent Study In Nursing |
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Credit Hours: 0.00 to 6.00 (West Lafayette, Calumet) 1.00 to 6.00 (Fort Wayne) Special topics in nursing are critically examined. Hours, credit, and subject matter are determined by the staff. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| NUR 60000 - Adult Health Clinical Nurse Specialist I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students analyze theory and research related to the patient/client sphere of influence in order to design care for patients with adult health disorders. Students use problem-solving and evidence-based practice methodologies to diagnose, plan, and evaluate interventions for select disease and nondisease-based phenomena. The focus is on understanding etiologies of symptoms and functional problems, the need for intervention, and associated outcomes of practice. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| NUR 60100 - Adult Health Clinical Nurse Specialist Practicum I |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Students apply advanced knowledge of theory and research to care for patients/clients with adult health disorders who require the care of a clinical nurse specialist. Students use problem-solving methodologies based on synthesis of theoretical and empirical evidence to advance nursing care of patients/clients. Students participate in direct and indirect care activities that impact nurse-sensitive patient/client outcomes. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| NUR 60200 - Critical Care Clinical Nurse Specialist I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students analyze theory and research related to the patient/client sphere of influence in order to design care for patients with critical illness. Students use problem-solving and evidence-based practice methodologies to diagnose, plan, and evaluate interventions for select disease and nondisease-based phenomena. The focus is on understanding etiologies of symptoms and functional problems, the need for intervention, and associated outcomes of practice. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| NUR 60300 - Critical Care Clinical Nurse Specialist Practicum I |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Students apply advanced knowledge of theory and research to care for patients/clients with critical illness who require the care of a clinical nurse specialist. Students use problem-solving methodologies based on synthesis of theoretical and empirical evidence to advance nursing care of patients/clients. Students participate in direct and indirect care activities that impact nurse-sensitive patient/client outcomes. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| NUR 61100 - Primary Care Of The Young Family |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Prepares family nurse practitioner students to assume responsibility for the coordination and delivery of culturally appropriate health services to childbearing and childrearing families. Students apply theory and research to the management of pregnancy, well-child care, stable chronic conditions, and acute episodic illnesses commonly encountered in primary care settings. The course emphasizes a sound conceptual basis for practice and an appreciation for evidence-based care. Students continue to integrate health promotion and health maintenance into the primary care of young families. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| NUR 61300 - Primary Care Of The Young Family Practicum |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students progress in their ability to master the competencies of the family nurse practitioner, using critical thinking and diagnostic reasoning skills. Students apply knowledge of clinical research, pharmacology, physiology, and conceptual frameworks to the primary care of childbearing and childrearing clients and families. Prerequisite: NUR 50000, 51100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| NUR 61800 - Adult Health Clinical Nurse Specialist II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students analyze theories and research related to adult health nursing personnel and organizational spheres of influence. Clinical nurse specialist competencies focused toward nursing personnel and other healthcare providers and organizations are addressed. The emphasis is on using problem-solving and evaluation methodologies that address nursing care and organizational issues. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| NUR 62000 - Adult Health Clinical Nurse Specialist Practicum II |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Students apply theories and research related to adult health nursing personnel and organizational spheres of influence. Students begin to develop professional role competencies related to nursing personnel and the healthcare organization. Students use systematic assessment and evaluation methodologies to identify problems and evaluate outcomes. Typically offered Fall Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Practicum
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| NUR 62200 - Primary Care Of The Aging Family |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Prepares family nurse practitioner students to assume responsibility for the coordination and delivery of culturally appropriate health services to middle-aged and older families. Students learn to manage stable chronic conditions and acute episodic illnesses commonly encountered in primary care settings. The course emphasizes the conceptual basis for practice and an appreciation for evidence-based care. Students continue to integrate health promotion and health maintenance into the primary care of older clients and their families. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| NUR 62300 - Primary Care Of The Aging Family Practicum |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students progress in their ability to master the competencies of the family nurse practitioner, using critical thinking and diagnostic reasoning skills. Students apply knowledge of clinical research, pharmacology, physiology, and conceptual frameworks to the primary care of middle-aged and older clients and families. Prerequisite: NUR 61300. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| NUR 62400 - Evidence-Based Practice |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on discovery and utilization of evidence-based care to produce the best outcomes for patients. The student develops a problem statement, performs a comprehensive literature search, and critically evaluates the evidence to determine best practice and formulate recommendations. The implementation of evidence-based practice (EBP) practical strategies, and analysis of components of EBP are examined throughout the course. Prerequisite: NUR 51000 and either an undergraduate or graduate statistics course within the last five years. NUR 62600 is recommended. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Produce a comprehensive research literature review on an identified healthcare question.
2. Critically analyze the literature to determine appropriate conclusions based on the research evidence.
3. Prepare a manuscript of publishable quality to present the conclusions based on the critical analysis of the evidence and appropriate recommendations for practice.
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| NUR 62500 - History, Ethics, And Innovations In Health-Care Delivery Systems |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Broadens and refines the student's view of the current health-care delivery system by providing an analysis from an historical perspective, of the forces that have shaped the system, including scientific discoveries, technological advances, social justice issues and the development of health professions and institutions. Nursing knowledge is influenced by these multiple factors; thus, the course provides students with tools to lead others in meeting the many challenges the health-care system brings. Achronological and topical format is used, which investigates policy and societal trends affecting health care, the nursing and medical professions, and professional practice. Changes in the roles of health-care providers and consumers are assessed from economic, social, organizational, political, ethical, legal, and technological perspectives. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| NUR 62600 - Applied Biostatistics For Outcome Evaluation |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course applied biostatistical methods commonly used in epidemiologic research to large data sets. Students learn to use statistical software to compute descriptive, bivariate, and multivariate statistics. Students translate statistical findings into conclusions relevant to the delivery of health care. Prerequisites: NUR 51000 and an undergraduate statistics course within the last five years. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify a research question relevant to healthcare and an existing data set appropriate to answer the question.
2. Utilize SPSS to formulate appropriate conclusions to the research question on the basis of the statistical results.
3. Develop a research manuscript that is appropriate for publication in a peer reviewed journal.
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| NUR 63000 - Critical Care Clinical Nurse Specialist II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students analyze theories and research related to critical care nursing personnel and organizational spheres of influence. Clinical nurse specialist competencies focused toward nursing personnel and other healthcare providers and organizations are addressed. The emphasis is on using problem-solving and evaluation methodologies that address nursing care and organizational issues. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| NUR 63200 - Health Policy: Local To Global |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides an overview of policy decisions related to the organization, financing, and delivery of health care in the global community. Social, ethical, cultural, economic, and political issues that affect the delivery of health care and nursing services are critically analyzed. International models for development of health policies will be examined. Roles of health-care providers and consumers of health-care services, as well as government and entrepreneurial interest are examined. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| NUR 63500 - Critical Care Clinical Nurse Specialist Practicum II |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Students apply theories and research related to critical care nursing personnel and organizational spheres of influence. Students begin to develop professional role competencies related to nursing personnel and the healthcare organization. Students use systematic assessment and evaluation methodologies to identify problems and evaluate outcomes. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| NUR 65000 - Concepts For The Nurse Executive Creating An Environment For Professional Practice |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines and applies the fundamental constructs of transformational leadership for the nurse executive. Focuses on attaining a thorough understanding and ability to operationalize ideas and concepts that will guide each student’s knowledge development, critical thinking related to leading and managing others. Prerequisites: NUR 52100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Analyze and apply the concepts of transformational leadership in the role of the nurse executive in the areas of critical thinking, change theory, conflict management, risk-taking, decision-making, managing errors, crisis management, emotional competence, coaching and creating an environment of creativity, innovation, and hopefulness.
2. Apply the concepts of self-reflection and personal growth in the development of a nurse executive role.
3. Analyze the concepts related to the role of the nurse executive in visioning, designing and implementing a professional nursing practice model.
4. Interpret the results of a self-assessment of leadership skills into an action plan for self-growth.
5. Develop effective problem solving strategies in the role of the nurse executive.
6. Develop, analyze, and apply in-depth, scholarly knowledge of leadership concepts to use in the role of the nurse executive.
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| NUR 65100 - Role Of The Nurse Executive In Creating An Environment For Professional Practice |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Building on the concepts learned in NUR 65000, examines processes by which the nurse executive creates an environment for professional nursing practice. Examines the technologies involved in an executive leadership role that includes, strategic planning, business planning, care delivery models, quality management, customer service models, team development, managing interdisciplinary relationships, evaluation systems, clinical promotion strategies, and nurse retention strategies. The role of the nurse executive in the management of regulatory agencies and risk management is analyzed. Prerequisites: NUR 52100 and 65000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Use critical thinking strategies to understand and solve nursing problems.
2. Develop understanding and strategies to promote nursing practice within a professional framework.
3. Use an evidence-based, scholarly approach to learning new ideas and models for leadership, problem solving, understanding, and promoting professional practice.
4. Determine methods of accountability for nursing practice in the provision of client care that promotes professional practice which includes: nursing sensitive outcomes, risk management, outcome measurement, and the theory and application of quality improvement strategies.
5. Develop a business plan for nursing program that evolves from visioning and strategic planning.
6. Explore customer service models and marketing principles to enhance nursing's image.
7. Critically analyzes the appreciative inquiry model to use in team building and development.
8. Analyze the role of the nurse executive in ensuring compliance with regulatory agencies.
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| NUR 65200 - Role Of The Nurse Executive In Managing Nursing Practice |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of administrative processes; business practices; and technologies in relation to the professional role of the nurse leader. Focuses on understanding and developing skills in patient safety, leading others, and problem solving. Processes and technologies addressed during the semester include: interpersonal skills, monitoring and addressing nursing concerns, recruiting, orienting and retaining nursing staff; work re-design and re-engineering to improve practice environments; monitoring and evaluating nursing practice; certification, working on teams, promoting a positive image of nursing, dealing with toxic individuals, coaching and mentoring, performing an investigation, evaluation, and corrective action. Prerequisites: NUR 65000 and NUR 65100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop the ability to assist others to use critical thinking skills in solving problems.
2. Demonstrates knowledge and skill in applying nursing scope of practice, standards, nurse practice act and other regulations to credential others.
3. Explain the advanced practice role and the role of the American Nurses Association in developing systems for credentialing and evaluating advanced practice.
4. Demonstrate skill in active listening to others.
5. Apply business and general medical-ethical concepts in leading others.
6. Demonstrates ability to identify potential risks and areas of improvement, gather data, analyze incidents, manage sentinel events, and develop programs to reduce the risk and maintain a low risk environment.
7. Identify tools and systems to provide continuous quality improvement (FEMA, PDAC).
8. Demonstrates ability to allocate resources and manage interdisciplinary teams.
9. Devise strategies and tools for implementing the philosophy of transformational leadership.
10. Demonstrates knowledge and skill involving community in the role of nurse leader.
11. Able to discuss and plan to maintain life balance to reduce the deleterious effects that may result from a high demand/high stress position.
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| NUR 65300 - Healthcare Financial Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the financial managtement responsibilities of the nurse administrator. Course content focuses on understanding and operationalizing the processes associated with cost accounting, cost volume, profit analysis, healthcare budgets, and financial informatics. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Constrast the major financial reports and explain how the nurse executive utilizes the reports.
2. Analyze the relationships among cost, volume and profit analysis with an overall focus on assessing programs and services for profitability.
3. Apply the principles of cost accounting to budget preparation and assessment.
4. Prepare a forecasting report utilizing both qualitative and quantitative approaches.
5. Outline the budget preparation process with a description of the activities included in each step.
6. Analyze the budgetary relationships among productivity, staffing mix, acuity and the re-engineering of manpower and services.
7. Critique an income statement for variances and focus on analyzing the variances for controllability, budgetary impact and possible managerial actions.
8. Analyze the relationship of the time value of money to the profitability of the organization.
|
| NUR 65500 - Advanced Practice In Nursing Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students analyze movements and trends that influence advanced practice in nursing. Students dialogue with peers on issues related to advanced practice, nursing as a profession and discipline, healthcare and other related topics of interest. Prerequisite: NUR 60100, 60300 or 61300. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Lead a professional seminar on a selected topic of interest.
2. Critically analyze current issues that impact advanced practice in nursing through discussion with peers and faculty.
|
| NUR 65600 - Healthcare Organization, Policy and Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students use theories to understand the various models that influence health care policy and organize health care delivery. Students investigate the processes of analyzing and forming health policy. The reciprocal relationship between evidence-based practice and health care policy is explored. Students examine health care economics from a micro and macro perspective and their impact on health care delivery systems. Students also explore issues such access to health care, health care quality, and cost. Prerequisite: NUR 50100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Analyze the historical and social/political processes and structures that influence the formation of health policy.
2. Utilize appropriate theories and evidence to influence and/or develop, analyze, implement, and evaluate health policy.
3. Assess the ethical dimensions of the impact of health policy on nursing practice and health care.
4. Evaluate the synergistic relationship between evidence and the formation of health policy.
5. Demonstrate a basic understanding of health care economics, fiscal management, and the financial impact of health policies.
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| NUR 65700 - FNP Practicum: Clinical Synthesis |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This is the final clinical capstone course in a sequence of clinical courses designed to prepare graduate nursing students for FNP practice. Students synthesize and apply theoretical and empirical knowledge in primary-care settings with culturally diverse clients and families. Emphasis is given to the clinical management of a wider spectrum of clients and to the more complex, co-morbid conditions seen in family practice. Prerequisite: NUR 62300, Corequisite: NUR 65500, 65600. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
Course Attributes: Practicum
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| NUR 65800 - Adult-Gerontology Clinical Nurse Specialist Practicum III: Clinical Synthesis |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Students further develop skill in applying theory and evidence related to managing the care of youngest to oldest adult patients across the wellness/illness continuum and influencing nursing personnel and healthcare systems. Students continue to expand professional role competencies related to all of the spheres of adult-gerontology clinical nurse specialist influence. Students continue to use systematic assessment and evaluation methodologies for the purpose of identifying problems and evaluating outcomes among youngest to oldest adult patients across the wellness/illness continuum. Typically Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Practicum
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Manage symptoms, illnesses, and diseases in the youngest to oldest patient across the wellness-illness continuum.
2. Influence care delivered to youngest to oldest adult patients at the nursing, system, and community levels, using selected theoretical frameworks and empirical evidence.
3. Refine assessment and diagnostic skills related to patient symptomatology, nursing personnel, and healthcare organizational issues.
4. Implement theory and evidence-based strategies to address youngest to oldest adult patient, nursing personnel and system problem/issues.
5. Demonstrate independence in the performance of adult-gerontology clinical nurse specialist role competencies with respect to adult-gerontology patients, nursing personnel, and systems.
6. Evaluate and disseminate the outcomes of adult-gerontology clinical nurse specialist patient care interventions, problem solving strategies and innovations.
7. Apply ethical principles to resolve concerns across all three spheres of influence related to adult-gerontology nursing.
|
| NUR 65900 - Critical Care Clinical Nurse Specialist Practicum III: Clinical Synthesis |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Students further develop skill in applying theories and research related to managing the care of critical care patients and influencing critical care nursing personnel and organizations. Students continue to expand professional role competencies related to all of the spheres of influence. Students identify problems and evaluate the outcomes of care with respect to patients, nursing personnel, and organizations, using systematic assessment and evaluation methodologies. Typically offered Summer Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Practicum
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| NUR 66000 - Curriculum Development In Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theories of learning, testing, and measurement are analyzed. Theory-based teaching strategies are applied in a precepted clinical practice field or academic setting. The effectiveness of teaching activities and instructional materials are evaluated. Typically offered Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| NUR 66200 - Teaching Strategies For Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Theories of curriculum development, instruction design, and evaluation of education programs are applied to the adult learner in nursing. Educational needs are analyzed, and objectives and content are designed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| NUR 66500 - Managed Care |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Examines the managed care aspect of delivering health care. Focuses on understanding and evaluating: (1) the component parts of the managed care system, (2) the financial goals, (3) strategies for success within the world of managed care and (4) Medicare and Medicaid. Typically offered Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| NUR 67000 - Practicum In Nursing Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. The student participates in nursing research projects under the guidance of a member of the faculty. This plan of individualized instruction may be used in any area of nursing specialization, education, or administration. Credit to be determined by nature and extent of assignment. Typically offered Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| NUR 67100 - Nurse Executive Practicum I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The first practicum experience is designed to integrate theory and knowledge learned in the program in the actual practice of the nurse executive role. The practicum provides an opportunity for the student to experience the nurse executive role while receiving on-going feedback, guidance, and support. In this first practicum for the student, the focus is on the professional and operational activities of the nurse executive, such as interviewing, hiring, quality improvement, relationship building, collaboration, and the budgeting process. The student will assess the role and responsibilities of the nurse executive in leading others in the provision of healthcare. In collaboration with the preceptor and the faculty, the student will design a project that will improve safety, quality of care, or the work environment for nurses. Prerequisites: NUR 65100, NUR 65300, and NUR 66500. Concurrent Prerequisites: NUR 65200. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate ability to function in the role of a masters prepared nurse executive.
2. Assess the organizational structure and culture to determine influence of the organization on the professional practice environment.
3. Analyze personal skill in performing the professional and operational activities involved in the nurse executive role and develop an action plan to acquire these skills.
4. Demonstrate ability to evaluate the work environment, measure outcomes, and develop plans to ensure a safe and functional unit/department/organization.
5. Promote an environment that supports professional practice including staff autonomy, decision-making, practice standards, sustainable care delivery model, team building, and relationship building with those outside the discipline of nursing.
6. Demonstrate ability to engage staff in quality patient care.
7. Practice within an evidence-based practice perspective.
8. Reflect on the areas (at least three) where significant growth has occurred during the semester.
9. Develop a plan for second practicum based on identified needs to meet the challenges of the nurse executive role in the community.
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| NUR 67200 - Nurse Executive Practicum II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The second practicum experience is designed to integrate theory and knowledge learned in the program in the actual practice of the nurse executive role. The practicum provides an opportunity for the student to experience the nurse executive role while receiving ongoing feedback, guidance, and support. In this second practicum, the focus continues to be on the professional and operation activities of the nurse executive while expanding on the role of the nurse executive in the community. The student will assess the role and responsibilities of the nurse executive in leading others in the provision of healthcare for the community. In collaboration with the preceptor and the faculty, the student will design a project that will improve access to care, safety and quality of care for the community, or the work environment of the nursing community. The student will be engaged in a local professional organization for nurse executives.Prerequisites: NUR 67100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate ability to function in the role of a masters prepared nurse executive.
2. Assess the organizational structure and culture to determine influence of the organization on the professional practice environment in the community at large.
3. Analyze personal skill in performing the professional and operational activities involved in the nurse executive role in the community and develop an action plan to acquire these skills.
4. Demonstrate ability to evaluate the work environment, measure outcomes, and develop plans to ensure a safe environment for the community.
5. Promote an environment that supports professional practice including staff autonomy, decision-making, practice standards, sustainable care delivery model, team building, and relationship building with leaders in the community.
6. Demonstrate ability to engage staff in quality patient care.
7. Practice within an evidence-based practice perspective.
8. Reflect on the areas (at least three) where significant growth has occurred during the semester.
|
| NUR 67300 - DNP Health Policy Residency |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This residency course provides an opportunity for students to gain greater understanding of how public policy affects state, national, and international health-care delivery systems and resources. Students will interact with top policy makers at the local, state, national, and/or international level to explore the many forces, including political, economic, social, and technological, that influence current policy and the policy-making process. Prerequisite: NUR 65600. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUR 67500 - Role Transition And Synthesis |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course provides an integration of core, cognate, and specialty knowledge, with an emphasis on role transition and synthesis. Focuses on internal and external healthcare organizational factors at the local, state, national, and international levels. Seminars explore role issues, licensure, credentialing, finances, legislation, healthcare policy, legal issues, ethics, cultural diversity, evidence-based practice, emerging trends in the management of acute and chronic conditions of adults, and independent and collaborative practice. Prerequisite: NUR 53200, 53300, Corequisite: NUR 54200, 54300, 59800. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUR 68000 - DNP Cognate Residency: Direct Practice/Systems Management I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is the first in a series of two courses that applies knowledge and skill to improve healthcare outcomes in systems. The emphasis is the application of engineering principles to health care including human factors, systems analysis and design, and optimal use of information technology and simulation. Residency activities provide students with opportunities to participate in professional service activities, attend institutes and conferences to expand their area of research or clinical interest and/or develop significant scholarly pursuits. The focus is on creating change in the healthcare system through analysis, synthesis, critique, and application of evidence-based practice to support accessible high quality, safe, efficient, and effective health care. Prerequisites: NUR 68700. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Due to the individualization of this course, the student and faculty member outline specific objectives to meet the course objectives, activities and deliverables that will be completed at the end of this course.
|
| NUR 68100 - DNP Cognate Residency: Direct Practice/Systems Management II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a second in a series of two courses that applies knowledge and skill to improve healthcare outcomes in systems. The emphasis is the advanced application of engineering principles to health care including human factors, systems analysis and design, and optimal use of information technology and simulation. Students assume a leadership role in the application process utilizing skills acquired in DNP Residency: Direct Practice Management I. Residency activities provide students with opportunities to participate in professional service activities, attend institutes and conferences to expand their area of research or clinical interest and/or develop significant scholarly pursuits. The focus is on providing leadership in creating change in the healthcare system through analysis, synthesis, critique, and application of evidence-based practice to support accessible high quality, safe, efficient, and effective health care and systematic evaluation of outcomes. Clinical sites for the DNP Residency may include collaboration with experts in local, state, national, and international healthcare agencies. Residency activities are selected by the student under the guidance of the faculty advisor and preceptor, DNP program director, and approved by the director of graduate programs in nursing. Prerequisite: NUR 68700. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Due to the individualization of this course, the student and faculty member outline specific objectives to meet the course objectives, activities and deliverables that will be completed at the end of this course.
|
| NUR 68200 - Synthesis And Application |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed as an independent study, with clinical preceptorship, wherein the student is expected to apply what has been learned in the graduate nursing program. This is a capstone course for the synthesis and application of advanced nursing knowledge, scholarship, and research in the area of specialization. The student's inquiry is focused in the area of specialty concentration. Emphasis is placed on the clinical application of evidence-based research methodology, scholarly writing, critical thinking, concurrent oral presentation, and responsive justification of ideas presented. Prerequisite: The student must be in the final semester of course work with all required courses in the graduate program curriculum completed but one (which must be taken as a co-requisite and approved by the graduate committee). Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Analyze evidence-based nursing research within the concentration domain that results in identification of a nursing problem for a group of clients.
2. Synthesize contemporary research to design a scholarly clinical project that addresses identified nursing problem(s).
3. Implement and evaluate the scholarly clinical project.
4. Present results of the evaluation and report implications for practice and future research.
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| NUR 68300 - DNP Cognate Residency: Public Health/Homeland Security Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is the first in a series of two courses that provides an opportunity to explore a public health topic of interest under the direction of a faculty member. The focus is on implementation of an evidence-based practice model and evaluation of their effectiveness in improving community health outcomes. Residency activities provide opportunities to utilize research and evidence-based practice to expand the knowledge base needed for the development, implementation, and evaluation of programs to meet the public health needs of specific communities with risk assessment analysis. Students will assess, plan, and evaluate the preparedness and response to mass casualty disasters or other public health concerns. Prerequisites: NUR 51000 and NUR 63200. Concurrent Prerequisites: NUR 62400 and NUR 62600. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Due to the individualization of this course, the student and faculty member outline specific objectives to meet the course objectives, activities and deliverables that will be completed at the end of this course.
|
| NUR 68400 - Nurse Educator Practicum I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis is placed on assessment, design, implantation, and evaluation of an evidence-based practice instructional unit incorporating instructional technology. Aided by preceptors, students assimilate nurse educator core competencies as defined by the National League for Nursing (NLN). Practicum experiences will reflect the student’s specific area of interest. Prerequisites: NUR 55800. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Practicum
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Design an evidence-based practice instructional unit utilizing advanced instructional technology.
2. Implement evidence-based assessment and evaluation strategies for the clinical setting.
3. Demonstrate skill in the design and use of tools for assessing clinical practice.
4. Recognize the influence of teaching styles and interpersonal interaction on learning outcomes.
5. Facilitate learners’ integration of strategies for quality improvement and assurance.
6. Appraise effectiveness of instructional teaching methodology.
|
| NUR 68500 - DNP Cognate Residence: Public Health/Homeland Security Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is the second in a series of two courses that provides an opportunity to further explore a public health topic of interest under the direction of a faculty member. The focus is on implementation of an evidence-based practice model and advanced application of evaluation techniques in establishing their effectiveness in improving community health outcomes. Residency activities provide ongoing opportunities to refine research and evidence-based practice to expand the knowledge base needed for the development, implementation, and evaluation of programs to meet the public health needs of the community and systems of care. Emphasis is on providing leadership in incorporating assessment of health needs of specific communities with risk assessment analysis to implement models to improve community outcomes. Students assume a leadership role as they assess, plan, and evaluate the preparedness and response to mass casualty disasters or other public health concerns. Residency sites may be local, state, national, and/or international settings. Residency activities are selected by the students under the guidance of the faculty advisor and preceptor, DNP program director, and approved by the director of graduate programs in Nursing. Prerequisite: NUR 68300. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Due to the individualization of this course, the student and faculty member outline specific objectives to meet the course objectives, activities and deliverables that will be completed at the end of this course.
|
| NUR 68600 - Nurse Educator Practicum II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Building on Practicum I, this course engages students in supervised instruction with a preceptor to assimilate National League for Nursing (NLN) nurse educator core competencies. Sites are determined by the student’s interest and may include classroom, individual, or community settings. Design, implement, and evaluate instructional practice unit, which incorporates advanced teaching strategies and instructional technology. The concepts of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (SoTL) are used to present the culmination of learning regarding teaching in nursing gained in NUR 68400 and NUR 68600. Prerequisites: NUR 68400. Concurrent Prerequisites: NUR 56100. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Practicum
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Provide resources to diverse learners that help meet their educational needs.
2. Promote innovative practices in educational environments.
3. Ground teaching strategies in instructional design theories and evidence-based practice using advanced technology.
4. Compare and contrast strategies to assess and evaluate learning in cognitive, psychomotor, and affective domains.
|
| NUR 68700 - Doctor Of Nursing Practice (DNP) Practice Inquiry: Evidence-Based Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is first of a two part series that provides the opportunity to develop, implement and evaluate an evidence-based inquiry project. Students gain competence in activities aimed at improving the healthcare practice and systems, outcome evaluations, translation of research into practice, participation in interdisciplinary and collaborative research, and dissemination of research results. Total clinic hours 192. Prerequisites: NUR 51000, NUR 62600, NUR 62400 and Cognate Residencies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Enhance the development of a research team that targets healthcare system improvement.
2. Use methods to critically analyze existing literature relevant to healthcare.
3. Propose an evidence-based practice project including problem identification, development and implementation.
4. Identify evaluation processes to determine and formulate best evidence for practice.
5. Design quality, cost-effective nursing interventions based on the knowledge of interrelationships among person, environment, health, and nursing.
6. Implement an evidence based project.
|
| NUR 68900 - Doctor Of Nursing Practice (DNP) Practice Inquiry: Evidence-Based Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is second in the series that provides the opportunity to develop, implement and evaluate an evidence-based inquiry project. Students gain competence in activities aimed at improving the healthcare practice and systems, outcome evaluations, translation of research into practice, participation in interdisciplinary and collaborative research, and dissemination of research results. Total clinic hours 192. Prerequisites: NUR 68700 and Cognate Residencies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Contribute to a research team that targets healthcare system improvement.
2. Use methods to critically analyze existing literature relevant to nursing practice.
3. Implement an evidence based project.
4. Evaluate evidence to determine and formulate best evidence for practice
5. Design quality, cost-effective nursing interventions based on the knowledge of interrelationships among person, environment, health, and nursing.
6. Disseminate evidence based practice inquiry results.
7. Deposition of final clinical inquiry project.
|
| NUR 90000 - Nursing Pre-Test |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUR 90100 - Freshman Orientation |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUR 90200 - Curric Testing - Sophs |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUR 90300 - Curric Testing - Jrs |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUR 90400 - Nursing Senior Tests |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nursing
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NURS A1000 - Nursing: Drug Dosage Calculation |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Provides a review of basic mathematics and presents a method of solving problems involving drug dosages. Course is open to those interested in nursing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| NURS A1110 - Nursing and Medical Terminology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is designed to enable the student to increase understanding of medical and nursing terminology through the analysis of Greek and Latin prefixes, suffixes, word roots, and combining terms.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| NURS A1900 - Special Topics In Nursing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Students will have an opportunity to pursue special topics of interest related to the professional practice of nursing. Topics will be offered on an as-needed basis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NURS A2860 - Care Of The Individual: Beginning And Evolving Families |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the study of individuals and families during the childbearing and child raising phases of development. Concepts of growth and development, health promotion, health maintenance, illness, and illness prevention are integrated. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| NURS A2870 - Nursing Practicum: Care Of The Individual-Beginning And Evolving Families |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will focus on care of individuals and families during the childbearing and child raising phases of development. Students will be expected to apply nursing skills and knowledge to promote family function and growth. Students will have opportunities to interact with children, adults, and families across the care continuum. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS A2880 - Care Of The Individual Within A Family And Community Context |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. This capstone course focuses on the integration of knowledge and its application in the provision of comprehensive nursing care. The role of the nurse in planning, collaborating, organizing, communicating, problem-solving, and evaluating care outcomes will be emphasized. Principles of care management and pharmacology will be synthesized into course content. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS A2890 - Nursing Practicum: Care Of The Individual Within The Family And Community Context |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will apply the nursing process in managing care for multiple individuals and their families in a variety of acute and community-focused settings where policies and procedures are specified and professional consultation is available. Students will also demonstrate their ability to synthesize pharmacology and the use of computers in their practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS A2900 - The Discipline Of Nursing: Role Transitioning |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. This course focuses on the transition from the role of student to graduate nurse. Emphasis is placed on the responsibilities and expectations of the professional nurse in the health care delivery system. Legal and ethical issues, professional development, group dynamics, risk management, quality assurance, political action, nursing organizations, and the use of research to inform nursing practice will be explored. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS B1040 - Power Up: Strategies For Academic Success |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on assisting students in gaining essential skills for academic success and in developing the ability to make use of university resources. Topics will include time management, stress management, critical thinking, development of networks of support, communication skills, learning styles, and academic responsibility. Teaching and learning strategies will incorporate campus technology and library resources as tools for completion of course requirements. First-year course for students who have declared nursing as a major. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS B1080 - Personal Health And Wellness |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Students will learn and apply a holistic approach to achieve an improved level of wellness. Physical, psychological, social, intellectual, and environmental wellness will be explored. Both traditional western and alternative views of health will be presented. This course will help students evaluate their personal level of health, examine successful strategies for changing health behaviors, and develop a plan for improving health based upon personal health risk. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
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| NURS B2300 - Developmental Issues And Health |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. This course focuses on the theoretical perspectives of growth stages, and usual patterns of aging. Students will make assessments of individuals in various stages of life to identify developmental issues of interest to nursing, and their impact on health phenomena.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS B2310 - Communication For Health Care Professionals |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students in this course will focus on basic communication skills essential for working with health care professionals and clients of various ages. Content includes interpersonal communications and group dynamics. Students will practice communication skills with individuals, within groups, and through electronic media. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS B2320 - Introduction To The Discipline Of Nursing: Theory, Practice, Research |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on core theoretical concepts of nursing practice: health, wellness, illness, wholism, caring, environment, self-care, uniqueness of persons, interpersonal relationships, and decision-making. Through integrating theory, research, and practice, this course helps the student understand nursing's unique contributions to meeting societal needs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS B2330 - Health And Wellness |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. This course focuses on the use of concepts from nursing, nutrition, pharmacology, and biopsychosocial sciences to critically examine the determinates of health, wellness, and illness across the life span. Environmental, sociocultural, and economic factors that influence health care practices are emphasized. Theories of health, wellness, and illness are related to health-promotion, disease-prevention, and illness-prevention nursing interventions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS B2440 - Comprehensive Health Assessment |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. This course focuses on helping students acquire skills to conduct a comprehensive health assessment, including the physical, psychological, social, functional, and environmental aspects of health. The process of data collection, interpretation, documentation, and dissemination of assessment data will be addressed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS B2450 - Comprehensive Health Assessment: Practicum |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Students will have the opportunity to use techniques of interview, observation, percussion, palpation, inspection, and auscultation in assessing clients across the life span in simulated and actual environments. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS B2480 - Science And Technology Of Nursing |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. This course focuses on the fundamentals of nursing from a theoretical research base. It provides an opportunity for basic care nursing skills development. Students will be challenged to use critical thinking and problem solving in developing the ability to apply an integrated nursing therapeutics approach for clients experiencing health alterations across the life span. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS B2490 - Science And Technology Of Nursing: Practicum |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Students will have the opportunity to demonstrate fundamental nursing skills in the application of nursing care for clients across the life span. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS B4040 - Professional Nursing Seminar II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the application of nursing theory and research findings in restoring and maintaining individual and family functioning or those dealing with multi-system alterations. Students will explore the ethical, legal, and moral implications of treatment options and identify tactics to maintain nursing effectiveness in their facilitation of individuals and families through the health care system. Students will complete a scholarly analysis as part of their
practicum experience.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS B4900 - RN MSN Transition II |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. Theories of community-based nursing and nursing leadership and management are analyzed in combination with related research and are applied to the nurse's evolving role in an era of health-care reform. Learning opportunities emphasize the knowledge and skills needed to provide nursing care to client systems in the community. Future trends for nursing's leadership and management role are examined, with particular emphasis placed on the impact of health-care reform. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS B4920 - RN MSN Transition I |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. This course is designed to provide students with learning opportunities to acquire knowledge and skills fundamental to advanced nursing roles including, but not limited to, research consumer, communication facilitator, advocate of nursing practice, and teacher of patients, their families, and colleagues. This course is constructed in three distinct but related modules: Research, Interpersonal and Group Communication, and Roles. Although modules are independent of each other, the information and skills students gain in one module will be used in application to others. Typically offered Fall, Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS D7510 - Advanced Topics In Nursing Science |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will pursue in-depth study of topics in nursing science related to their program of research in health systems or clinical nursing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| NURS H3510 - Alterations In Neuro-Psychological Health |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on individuals and small groups experiencing acute and chronic neuropsychological disorders. Content includes the effect of brain and body disturbances on health functioning. Other content areas are growth and development, stress, mental status, nurse-client relationships, psychopharmacology, and nursing approaches for clients experiencing DSM-IV neuropsychological disorders. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS H3520 - Alterations In Neuro-Psychological Health: Practicum |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Students will provide nursing care to individuals and small groups who are experiencing acute and chronic neuropsychological disturbances related to psychiatric disorders. Student experiences will be with individuals and small groups in supervised settings such as acute, community-based, transitional,and/or home care. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS H3530 - Alterations In Health I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the pathophysiology and holistic nursing care management of clients experiencing acute and chronic problems. Students will use critical thinking and problem-solving skills to plan interventions appropriate to health-care needs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS H3540 - Alterations In Health I:Practicum |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Students will apply the science and technology of nursing to perform all independent, dependent, and interdependent care functions. Students will engage clients in a variety of settings to address alterations in health functioning, identify health care needs, and determine the effectiveness of interventions given expected outcomes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS H3550 - Data Analysis In Clinical Practice And Health Care Research |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces nursing and other health sciences students to the basic concepts and techniques of data analysis needed in professional health care practice. Principles of measurement, data summarization, and univariate and bivariate statistics are examined. Differences in types of qualitative data and methods by which these types of data can be interpreted are also explored. Emphasis is placed on the application of fundamental concepts to real world situations in client care. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS H3610 - Alterations In Health II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (Traditional and Accelerated) P: All fifth-semester nursing courses. This course builds on Alterations in Health I, and continues to focus on pathophysiology and holistic nursing care management of the associated needs of clients experiencing acute and chronic health problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS H3620 - Alterations In Health II:Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. (Traditional and Accelerated) P: All fifth-semester nursing courses. Students will continue to apply the science and technology of nursing to perform all independent, dependent, and interdependent care functions. Students will engage clients in a variety of settings to address alterations in health functioning. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS H3630 - The Developing Family And Child |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. All fifth-semester nursing courses. (Traditional and Accelerated) This course focuses on the needs of individuals and their families who are facing the phenomena of growth and development during the childbearing and child-rearing phases of family development. Factors dealing with preserving, promoting, and restoring the healthy status of family members will be emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS H3640 - The Developing Family And Child:Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. P: All fifth-semester nursing courses. (Traditional and Accelerated) Students will have the opportunity to work with childbearing and child-rearing families, including those experiencing alterations in health. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS H3650 - Nursing Research |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. P: All fifth-semester nursing courses and H355 or its equivalent. (Traditional, Accelerated) This course focuses on development of students' skills in using the research process to define clinical research problems and to determine the usefulness of research in clinical decisions related to practice. The critique of nursing and nursing-related research studies will be emphasized in identifying applicability to nursing practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS H4980 - Nursing Honors Colloqium |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Specifically for students accepts to nursing honors study option. This course will cover various research topics in each semester of the nursing major helping prepare students to complete a senior thesis. Students will receive a grade of R until senior thesis is complete. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS J6920 - Independent Study In Nursing |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Individual assignments arranged.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| NURS K4970 - Mindfulness-Based Wellness |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is appropriate for all healthcare and social service related fields, including, but not limited to, pre-nursing and nursing student electives, pre-med, psychology, and social work students. This course will introduce mindfulness practice as a skillful approach to personal sustainability (care for the caregiver) and will expand one’s understanding of this practice in integrative patient care. This class is appropriate for both new and seasoned meditation practitioners. This class includes one full day meditation retreat on a weekend. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS L6500 - Data Analysis for Clinical & Administrative Decision Making |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on understanding, manipulating, and analyzing quantitative data in nursing and health care. Includes use of computer-based systems for data management and statistical analysis. Students learn application and interpretation of multivariate statistical models for decision making.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS M5600 - Teaching Strategies To Promote Client Functioning |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The course focuses on the development of advanced practice skills in patient/client education to promote optimal functioning. Theories of learning, decision making, and models for determining learning readiness, teaching method, and evaluation of patient teaching outcomes are critiqued along with related research. The course includes clinical experience in patient teaching. Typically offered Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS N5340 - Ethical And Legal Perspectives In Advanced Practice Nursing |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Major ethical theories are introduced and the principles underlying ethical health-care practice are analyzed. Students examine selected concepts and principles of ethics and law within a framework of ethical decision making for advanced nursing practice. Typically offered Summer, Fall, Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS R5050 - Measurement And Data Analysis |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles and applications of scientific measurement, data summarization, inferential statistics, and practical derivations of the general linear model. Considers the research purpose and the phenomenon under study as determinants of measurement techniques and data analysis.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS R6050 - Design And Applications Of Advanced Research Designs/Interventions |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Evaluates and applies issues relevant to intervention research and health services research. Content will include intervention dosage, sensitivity, mediators and moderators, and quality assurance and feasibility of intervention delivery. Translational research, multisite research, intent-to-treat, nested designs, and outcome designs will be discussed for application. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS R6110 - Advanced Qualitative Inquiry and Research Methods |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Elective course provides context for deeper analysis of selective qualitative methodologies. Critical skills include developing research questions appropriate for selected methodologies and defending methodological choice. Students refine and conduct a pilot research project, including IRB submission, data collection/analysis, application of quality criteria, and preparation of a publishable research report. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS S4700 - Restorative Health Related To Multi-System Failures |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the pathophysiology and nursing care management of clients experiencing multi-system alterations in health status. Correlations among complex system alterations and nursing interventions to maximize health potential are emphasized. Typically offerd Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS S4710 - Restorative Health Related To Multi-System Failures: Practicum |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Students will apply the nursing process to the care of clients experiencing acute multi-system alterations in health. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS S4720 - A Multisystem Approach To The Health Of The Community |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the complexity and diversity of groups or aggregates within communities and their corresponding health care needs. Through a community assessment of health trends, demographics, epidemiological data, and social/political-economics issues in local and global communities, the student will be able to determine effective interventions for community-centered care. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an understanding of the composition of the community, and how nurses work within the community setting.
2. Demonstrate an understanding of the history of nursing contribution to health delivery in a community setting, and gain insight into the different nursing roles within community health.
3. From a community health nursing perspective, develop an understanding of culturally-tied health beliefs and practices in health promotion and delivery of health care. Demonstrate ability to reflect upon culturally-tied health values by analyzing cross-cultural interaction and communication.
4. Develop a nursing knowledge base about health disparity and vulnerability within selected community populations.
5. Develop a fundamental understanding of epidemiology and evidence based practice.
6. From a community health nursing perspective, develop competence in working with families and providing health education to an aggregate.
7. Perform a review of the literature and demonstrate critical thinking about a selected health problem within an aggregate.
8. Perform an assessment on a selected community by completing a windshield survey, review and analysis of census tract data and Health People 2020 Focus Areas and Leading Health Indicators.
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| NURS S4730 - Health Of The Community: Practicum |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Students will have the opportunity to apply the concepts of community assessment, program planning, prevention and epidemiology to implement and evaluate interventions for community-centered care to groups or aggregates. Professional nursing will be practiced in collaboration with diverse groups within a community. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS S4740 - Applied Health Care Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to introduce the student to major ethical theory, principles, and models for the recognition, analysis, and resolution of ethical dilemmas in health care practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS S4810 - Nursing Management |
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Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. This course focuses on the development of management skills assumed by professional nurses, including delegation, networking, facilitating groups, conflict resolution, leadership and collaboration. Concepts addressed include patient safety, clinical judgment, complexity, change, managing quality and performance, workplace diversity, budgeting/resource allocation, delivery systems, and informatics application for today's nurse. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Present reasoned arguments to support stated views.
2. Guide own thinking processes towards positive personal and professional development.
3. Evaluate the influence of culturally-tied health beliefs and practices on care providers and recipients, abilities to maximize health potential.
4. Examine how the political arenas (government, workplace, professional organizations, and community) shape health care delivery.
5. Articulate personal beliefs and values and how they affect individual nursing practice.
6. Use a decision model to resolve ethical dilemmas.
7. Demonstrate effective writing skills consistent with the School of Nursing’s published writing expectations.
8. Use information technology when facilitating communication, managing information data sets, and seeking solutions to problems.
9. Evaluate the impact of human, fiscal, and material resources of health care.
10. Make decisions based on an analysis of costs and quality care outcomes.
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| NURS S4820 - Nursing Management: Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Students will have the opportunity to apply professional management skills in a variety of nursing leadership roles. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS S4830 - Clinical Nursing Practice Capstone |
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Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Students will have the opportunity to demonstrate competencies consistent with program outcomes and to refine their nursing care practice skills. Students will collaborate with faculty and a preceptor in choosing a care setting, planning and organizing a learning experience, and practicing professional nursing in a safe and effective manner. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS S4840 - Research Utilization Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. This course focuses on students' abilities to refine their critical/analytical skills in evaluating clinical research for applicability to nursing practice. Students will examine the role of evaluation, action research, and research findings in assuring quality of nursing care and in solving relevant problems arising from clinical practices. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS S4850 - Professional Growth And Empowerment |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. This course focuses on issues related to professional practice, career planning, personal goal setting, and empowerment of self and others. Students will discuss factors related to job performance, performance expectations and evaluations, reality orientation, and commitment to life-long learning. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| NURS Y5350 - Dynamics Of Family Health Care |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides students with opportunities to study families within the community context. Consideration is given to theories of family functioning and roles in family health care, using family assessment tools and other nursing intervention strategies. Typically offered Summer, Fall, Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| NURS Z4920 - Individual Study In Nursing |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Opportunity for independent study of topics related to nursing practice. Before enrolling in an independent study option, student must obtain permission from a faculty member who will supervise the study. Students must file appropriate forms prior to registration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| NUTR 10500 - Nutrition In The 21st Century |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Analysis of current nutrition controversies and food safety concerns. Not designed to meet CFS nutrition competency. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| NUTR 10600 - The Profession Of Dietetics |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Semester two offered only through videotapes and e-mail. Overview of the dietetics profession, including standards, ethics, educational and employment opportunities, and professional credentialing. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| NUTR 10700 - Introduction To Nutrition Science |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. An overview of professional opportunities for nutrition scientists. Introduces tolls and resources available for becoming a nutrition scientist. Typically offered in Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To identify and describe the current professional opportunities for nutrition scientists.
2. To comprehend the educational preparation necessary to pursue a career as a nutrition scientist.
3. To name and become knowledgeable about the functions of, and advantages of belonging to, major professional organizations in nutrition science such as the American Society of Nutrition.
4. To apply modern information technology to the problem of discovering scientifically valid nutrition science information.
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| NUTR 12500 - Food Safety Certification |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Training in ServSafe food safety certification program. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| NUTR 20200 - Principles Of Food Preparation And Nutrition |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. Chemical, physical, microbiological, and nutritional principles of food preparation. Functions and sources of nutrients, their relationship to a healthy lifestyle and incorporating the benefits into marketing of foodservice. Typically offered Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| NUTR 20201 - Experience In Food Preparation |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Application of chemical, physical, microbiological, and nutritional principles in food preparation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| NUTR 20500 - Food Science I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Chemical and physical composition of foods: their changes during processing, storage, and preparation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Gain a better understanding of food science and human nutrition.
2. Gain expertise in technical writing, research methodology, scientific literature searching, scientific methods, interpreting research, food technology, culinary techniques and terminology, food safety and sanitation, sensory evaluation, food ingredient functionality, and basic food preparation.
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| NUTR 29700 - Introduction To Honors Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduces students to the design and implementation of an honors research project. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| NUTR 30300 - Essentials Of Nutrition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic nutrition and its application in meeting nutritional needs of all ages. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:IHP 1402 Human Nutrition
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, GTC-Science, UC-Science, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify, describe, and explain the essential components of the diet and how they are used in the body to maintain health.
2. Identify, describe and explain the information and tools used for assessment of nutritional status.
3. Critically evaluate the quality of your own diet and identify how to improve for optimal health.
4. Identify and explain the link between chronic diseases and diet.
5. Identify and describe food safety guidelines and concerns.
6. Identify, describe, and explain specific nutritional needs throughout the life cycle.
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| NUTR 31500 - Fundamentals Of Nutrition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic principles of nutrition and their application in meeting nutritional needs during the life cycle. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Recognize the “fundamentals of nutrition”.
2. Discuss substances in foods needed in adequate amounts for energy, growth, reproduction and health and explain the identity, acquisition, utilization, and excretion of nutrients.
3. Explain the science of nutrition which includes the action, interaction, and balance of food, nutrients and other substances within food in relation to health and disease.
4. Describe nutrient ingestion, digestion, absorption, transport, metabolism, interaction, storage, and excretion.
5. Show appropriate diet selection under different circumstances such as: different states of the life cycle, disease states, and in the prevention of chronic diseases.
6. Develop the groundwork for future courses where information learned in this course will be applied to the design of diet therapies or diet prescriptions, design of diet recommendations for general audiences, selection of our own diets, and understanding the mechanisms of action and interactions of nutrients.
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| NUTR 33000 - Diet Selection And Planning |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Diet selection for health maintenance in culturally diverse populations based on current dietary guides with utilization of the computer for diet evaluation. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| NUTR 33200 - Nutrition Counseling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Develop communication skills and counseling techniques necessary to elicit nutrition-related behavior changes in individuals. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify the nutrition professional’s role and scope of practice in nutrition counseling.
2. Describe ethical considerations in nutrition counseling.
3. Describe the helping relationship and theories of behavior change.
4. Describe and apply counseling strategies to assist clients in behavior change.
5. Demonstrate understanding of the impact of age, gender, culture, literacy and personality on nutrition counseling.
6. Compare and contrast counseling skills best for the in-patient vs. the out-patient.
7. Describe and apply counseling strategies important to successful weight management, eating disorders, chronic disease and end of life.
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| NUTR 34000 - Field Experience In Nutrition, Fitness And Health |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Field experience in NFH-related setting that provides an opportunity for the application of the classroom experience. For NFH majors only. The student secures his/her own field experience, which must be approved by the NFH program coordinator in order to receive academic credit. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
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| NUTR 35000 - Practicum In Dietetics |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Supervised on-the-job experience related to the profession of dietetics in institutions, business, industry, community programs, etc. Student is responsible for arrangement and approval of the experience through the supervising dietitian and the course instructor. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply knowledge gained from coursework to actual work situations.
2. Develop skills related to dietetics.
3. Design a project or write a report relevant to the work experience.
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| NUTR 36500 - Physiology And Nutrition During The Life Cycle |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Physiology and Nutrition During the Life Cycle explores the life stages of pregnancy, childhood, adulthood and older adulthood from physiological, social, and behavioral perspectives, focusing on the biological underpinnings of special nutritional needs for each life stage for optimal growth and development, maturation, aging, and overall health and well-being. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe physiological, social and behavioral components involved with human growth and development, maturation, and aging, seen in the life stages of pregnancy, childhood, adulthood and older adulthood and the impact on nutrition and health.
2. Describe special nutritional needs and recommended guidelines of the life stages of pregnancy, childhood, adulthood, and older adulthood.
3. Locate, interpret, evaluate and use professional literature to make ethical evidence-based practice decisions.
4. Use current information technologies to locate and apply evidence-based guidelines and protocols.
5. Demonstrate the ability to apply knowledge of the role of environment, food, and lifestyle choices to develop interventions to affect change and enhance wellness in diverse individuals and groups throughout the life cycle.
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| NUTR 37500 - Foods And Nutrition Internship |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Food science or nutrition professionally related work experience in industry, institutions, or business. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
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| NUTR 39000 - Independent Undergraduate Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individual research projects undertaken with faculty supervision. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will improve their critical thinking skills in nutrition science.
2. Students will conduct hypothesis-driven research projects.
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| NUTR 39100 - Independent Study |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Independent scholarly activity undertaken with faculty supervision. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Increase knowledge base and/or application in nutrition science.
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| NUTR 39200 - Undergraduate Instruction Nutrition |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Problems dealing with various aspects of nutrition. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop extensive knowledge base and/or application in nutrition science.
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| NUTR 39700 - Directed Honors Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Directed independent honors research for CFS Honors Program students. Students must select a faculty advisor for the course. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will improve their critical thinking skills in nutrition science. Students will conduct hypothesis-driven research projects.
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| NUTR 39800 - International Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Course taken during an international experience that is recognized by the University. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 12 credits
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| NUTR 40000 - Executive In The Classroom |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Lecture and discussion, featuring industrial and business executives in food-related areas. Emphasis is placed on careers in the food industry. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| NUTR 41100 - Supervised Practice Preparation |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. To prepare students for successful application to dietetics supervised practice programs. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will prepare resumes, personal statements, and sample applications based on requirements of supervised practice programs.
2. Students will identify the steps and deadlines for applying to supervised practice programs.
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| NUTR 41500 - Practicum In Nutrition, Fitness, And Health |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Application of nutrition and exercise knowledge and skills by performing assessments, interpreting data, designing and implementing programs, documenting progress, and counseling of an adult client. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Collect, analyze, and interpret nutrition and fitness assessment data.
2. Organize aspects of interaction with the client (educational materials, short- and long-term planning, etc.).
3. Use critical thinking and counseling skills to elicit pertinent client information, evaluate client feedback, and guide the client toward positive changes.
4. Accurately and concisely document interactions with client.
5. Creatively apply nutrition and fitness knowledge.
6. Communication effectively with the client.
7. Evaluate effectiveness of intervention; make necessary changes.
8. Develop critical thinking skills and professional judgment to recognize and manage the ‘gray’ areas of one-on-one wellness counseling/coaching.
9. Utilize information technology and other methods of inquiry to accomplish all of the above.
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| NUTR 42400 - Communication Techniques In Foods And Nutrition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Communication of foods and nutrition information to lay and professional audiences through oral, written, and mass media channels. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lab 1, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students are able to demonstrate how to locate, interpret, evaluate and use professional literature to make ethical evidence-based decisions.
2. Students are able to use current technologies to locate and apply evidence-based guidelines and protocols, such as the ADA Evidence Analysis Library, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, National Guideline Clearinghouse Web sites.
3. Students are able to demonstrate effective and professional oral and written communication and documentation and use of current information technologies when communicating with individuals, groups and the public.
4. Students are able to demonstrate assertiveness, advocacy, and negotiation skills to the situation.
5. Students are able to develop an educational session or program/educational strategy for a target population.
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| NUTR 42600 - Lab In Community Nutrition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of previous knowledge and communication skills in nutrition of community settings, such as school nutrition, health facilities, and federal or state nutrition programs. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Perform as a community nutritionist and complete the competencies as outlined in the Learning Outcomes for Supervised Practice Form.
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| NUTR 43600 - Nutritional Assessment |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Nutrition assessment in humans, including anthropometric, biochemical, clinical, and dietary assessment. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate effective and professional written documentation of a nutrition assessment.
2. Apply counseling techniques and nutrition assessment procedures.
3. Use the nutrition care process to identify nutrition-related problems.
4. Collect and analyze information for assessment, and evaluate data to use in decision-making.
5. Use appropriate medical terminology in documentation of nutrition assessment.
6. Summarize and interpret current research related to assessment.
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| NUTR 43700 - Macronutrient Metabolism In Human Health And Disease |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Metabolism of the macronutrients, carbohydrate, lipds and protein in humans integrating physiology, biochemistry, and nutrition with a focus on maintaining optimal health and preventing disease. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the processes of digestion, absorption, utilization and function of macronutrients in humans.
2. Relate macronutrients to the regulation and processes of biochemical physiology.
3. Explain the cellular and molecular mechanisms related to macronutrient metabolism.
4. Identify the role of macronutrient metabolism in the etiology and pathophysiology of disease.
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| NUTR 43800 - Micronutrient And Phytochemical Metabolism In Human Health And Disease |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Metabolism of the micronutrients and phytochemicals in humans integrating physiology, biochemistry and nutrition with a focus on maintaining optimal health and preventing disease. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| NUTR 44200 - Foodservice Systems Management |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Systems approach to foodservice management. Foodservice operations based on nutritional goals of the target market. Food sanitation and safety, management of human resources, and supervision. Emphasis on applications to health-care facilities. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Communications-Knowledge of negotiation techniques, interpersonal communications skills, and concepts of human and group dynamics.
2. Physical and biological sciences- apply microbiological and chemical considerations to process controls.
3. Research- knowledge of needs assessment, outcomes-based research, quality improvement methods and interpreting current research.
4. Food- knowledge of safety and sanitation, food delivery systems, food and nonfood procurement, food production systems, pleasurable eating, food and nutrition laws/regulations/policies, food availability and access for the individual, family and community.
5. Calculate and interpret nutrient composition of foods, determines recipe/formula proportions and modifications for volume food production, apply food science knowledge to functions of ingredients in food, demonstrate basic food preparation skills, modify recipe/formula for group dietary needs.
6. Management- program planning monitoring and evaluation, strategic management, facility management, organizational change theory, risk management, management theories, human resource management, including labor relations, materials management, financial management, including accounting principles, quality improvement, information management, systems theory, marketing theory and techniques, diversity issues.
7. Determines costs of service/operations, prepare a budget, interpret financial data, apply marketing principles.
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| NUTR 44300 - Laboratory In Foodservice Systems Management |
|
Credit Hours: 9.00. Application of previous knowledge and communication skills in foodservice facilities. Laboratory, student's performance will ultimately include responsibilities equivalent to staff relief. Typically offered Fall.
9.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Prepare you for an entry-level job in foodservice management, and to introduce you to the fundamentals of management required for the competent practice in other areas of dietetics.
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| NUTR 45300 - Food Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Application of fundamental laws and concepts of chemistry, physics, and biology to the properties, composition, and storage of foods. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To identify the chemical components in foods in terms of their structures, reactions, and interactions, with special emphasis on structure activity relationships.
2. To define the chemical, physical, and biological changes in foods constituents as a result of heating, freezing, alterations in pH, storage, and other preparation, processing or preservation techniques.
3. To match the localization of chemical constituents in food to their function and aesthetic qualities in foods.
4. To explain the role of constituents added to food during processing (food additives).
5. To demonstrate the equipment and methods used to evaluate foods.
6. To be able to design, execute, and report (both orally and in written form) on an independent research project. As a part of this project you will document your research, acquire a basic knowledge of research methodologies, and utilize the fundamentals of the scientific method in your research. In both your written and oral presentation for this class you will critically interpret research from the literature and discuss how (and why) your finds are similar to or different from those results.
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| NUTR 46100 - Laboratory In Medical Nutrition Therapy |
|
Credit Hours: 10.00. Application of previous knowledge and communication skills of medical nutrition therapy in the hospital/pateint care setting to ultimately include responsibilities equivalent to staff relief. Typically offered Spring.
10.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Perform as a clinical nutritionist and complete the competencies as outlined in the Learning Outcomes for Supervised Practice Form.
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| NUTR 46500 - Laboratory In Engagement |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Culminating experiences in community nutrition, foodservice, medical nutrition therapy, public health, research and/or nutrition related business. Placements will be arranged based on individual student's preferred track in long-term care facilities, hospitals, public health or community agencies, and/or business and industry. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Perform at entry level as dietician and in placements arranged based on individual student's preferred track in long-term care facilities, hospitals, public health or community agencies, and/or business and industry.
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| NUTR 48000 - Medical Nutrition Therapy I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Nutrition assessment in humans and introduction to the nutrition care process. Application of the nutrition care process to various disease states. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate how to locate and interpret professional literature to make ethical evidence-based practice decisions.
2. Utilize current information technologies to locate evidence-based guidelines and protocols.
3. Locate and understand established guidelines to a professional practice scenario.
4. Identify the roles of others with whom the Registered Dietitian collaborates in the delivery of food and nutrition services.
5. Utilize the nutrition care process to make decisions and to identify nutrition-related problems for medical nutrition therapy.
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| NUTR 48100 - Medical Nutrition Therapy II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of the Nutrition Care Process in various disease states and conditions to prepare students for supervised practice programs. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate how to locate and interpret professional literature to make ethical-based practice decisions.
2. Utilize current information technologies to locate evidence-based guidelines and protocols.
3. Locate and understand established guidelines to a professional practice scenario.
4. Identify the roles of others with whom the Registered Dietitian collaborates in the delivery of food and nutrition services.
5. Utilize the nutrition care process to make decisions and to identify nutrition-related problems for medical nutrition therapy.
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| NUTR 48800 - Topics In Nutrition, Fitness, And Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course critically evaluates the interrelationships between nutrition and exercise and their impact on physical performance and health. Concepts combining nutritional sciences and exercise physiology will be presented. Emerging science and controversies in the current literature will be discussed. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| NUTR 49000 - Independent Undergraduate Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Independent research projects undertaken with faculty supervision. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Research
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will improve their critical thinking skills in nutrition science.
2. Students will conduct hypothesis-driven research projects.
|
| NUTR 49100 - Independent Study |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Independent scholarly activity undertaken with faculty supervision. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Increase knowledge and/or application in nutrition science.
|
| NUTR 49200 - Undergraduate Instruction In Nutrition |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Problems dealing with various aspects of nutrition. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop extensive knowledge base and/or application in nutrition science.
|
| NUTR 49500 - Undergraduate Seminar In Foods And Nutrition |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction and application of concepts for effective oral presentations in the field of nutrition sciences. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. To enhance your critical thinking skills.
2. To develop and enhance your oral communication skills.
3. To enhance your ability to make effective visuals for presentations.
|
| NUTR 49700 - Honors Research Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. The completion of the independent honors research project for CFS Honors Program students. Must have an approved Honors Project Proposal. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUTR 52000 - Medical Nutrition Therapy |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Application of nutrition principles in the dietary treatment of certain organic, functional, and metabolic diseases. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUTR 53000 - Public Health Nutrition |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Assessment of nutritional needs of the community and the programs that service these needs. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUTR 53400 - Human Sensory Systems And Food Evaluation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of human chemosensory (taste, smell, chemesthetic) mechanisms and function, as well as procedural and statistical methods for evaluating the sensory responsiveness of people and the sensory properties of foods. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUTR 53600 - Current Topics In Food Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Critical evaluation of recent literature in the field of food science. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUTR 53800 - Readings In Nutrition |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Critical evaluation of the recent literature in the field of nutrition. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| NUTR 54000 - Food Regulations |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Federal, state, and international regulations pertaining to the quality, wholesomeness, nutrition, and safety of foods; discussion of current topics in food legislation. Typically offered spring semester of odd numbered years.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| NUTR 59000 - Special Problems In Nutrition |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Individual problems dealing with various aspects of nutrition. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Summer Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture 1, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| NUTR 59500 - Special Problems In Food Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Individual research problems dealing with various aspects of research in the food sciences. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| NUTR 60100 - Functions Of Nutrients: Vitamins |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Readings and discussion with emphasis on molecular aspects and biological functions of vitamins in human nutrition. Prerequisite: NUTR 43500; Corequisite: BCHM 56100. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUTR 60200 - Functions Of Nutrients: Carbohydrates And Lipids |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Integration of biochemical and physiological functions of proteins, lipids, and carbohydrates as related to human nutrition. Prerequisite: BCHM 56100, NUTR 43500; Corequisite: BCHM 56200. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUTR 60500 - Nutritional Biochemistry And Physiology I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. (ANSC 62500) Integration of biochemical and physiological functions of nutrients in humans and animals emphasizing interactions in bone and gut. Prerequisite: BCHM 30700, 30900, BIOL 20300, 20400, NUTR 31500.
. Typically offered Fall.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUTR 60600 - Nutritional Biochemistry And Physiology II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. (ANSC 62600) Integration of biochemical and physiological functions of nutrients in humans and animals emphasizing post-absorptive use of nutrients as sources of energy and for the synthesis of macromolecules. Offered weeks 1 - 8. Prerequisite: NUTR 60500. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUTR 60700 - Nutritional Biochemistry And Physiology III |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. (ANSC 62700) Integration of biochemical and physiological functions of nutrients in humans and animals, emphasizing lipid metabolism and transport in the context of cardiovascular function. Offered weeks 9 - 16. Prerequisite: NUTR 60600. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUTR 60900 - Food Lipids |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. (FS 60900) Importance of lipids in the diet and food systems with emphasis on changes occurring during processing, preparation, and storage. Nomenclature, physical attributes, and oxidation of lipids as well as properties and characteristics of antioxidants will be major components of the course. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: BCHM 56100; Prerequisite: NUTR 45300 or FS 45300. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUTR 61000 - Food Proteins |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (FS 61000) Chemical and physical properties, distribution and function, and alteration of proteins in food. Protein toxicology and nutritional quality. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: BCHM 56100 and (NUTR 45300 or FS 45300). Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUTR 61100 - Food Toxicology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Acute, chronic, and genetic toxicology of naturally occurring food substances and their absorption and distribution through the digestive tract, food carcinogens and their mode of action, intentional food additives, and incidental food additives; foodborne pathogenic bacteria, mechanisms of action; presence and significance of fungi, viruses, and parasites in foods; immunological aspects of foods; food-drug interactions; toxicological aspects of food processing. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: BCHM 56200, NUTR 45300. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUTR 61200 - Obesity: Behavior, Physiology And Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The topics in this course provide a firm conceptual foundation for graduate students interested in issues related to obesity. Topics include issues ranging from molecular to policy: there is a strong emphasis on interdisciplinary approaches and critical thinking as it is a goal to integrate the sophisticated analyses of the physiological, nutritional, developmental, genetic, sensory, socio-economic, and experiential determinants of food and fluid intake. In addition, topics in this course such as health implications of obesity, epidemiology of obesity, endocrine, energy metabolism/integration, and neurochemistry will provide the opportunity for greater interdisciplinary collaborations. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Provide a foundation in scientific concepts, biochemistry, and physiology relevant to obesity.
2. Explore, in depth, important and current issues in obesity.
3. Increase skills important to a career in the life sciences, e.g., critical thinking skills, reading and discussing current scientific literature, and scientific debate. Students are required to participate in discussions of class materials and research articles.
|
| NUTR 61500 - Mineral Metabolism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Metabolic functions and bioavailability of minerals in human and animal systems. Should be preceded by BCHM 56100/56200. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUTR 61600 - Special Topics In Ingestive Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (PSY 61401) Explore, in –depth, important and current issues in ingestive behavior: enhance critical thinking skill; and acquire professional skills (e.g., organizational, interpersonal) and develop rapport with scholars in the field. Typically offered in even ending years. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To explore, in-depth, important and current issues in ingestive behavior.
2. To enhance critical thinking skills.
3. To acquire professional skills (e.g., organizational, interpersonal) and develop rapport with scholars in the field.
|
| NUTR 61700 - Ingestive Behavior Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. (PSY 61801) Fosters an exchange of ideas and promotes greater familiarity among individuals from different laboratories and departments with interests related to ingestive behavior, and gives students opportunities to build their communication skills and lead/mediate discussions at a high scholarly level. Typically offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To foster an exchange of ideas and promote greater familiarity among individuals from different laboratories and departments with interests related to ingestive behavior.
2. To give students opportunities to make and critique scholarly presentations and lead/mediate discussions with other graduate students and faculty.
|
| NUTR 62200 - Human Nutrition And Atherosclerosis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An in-depth examination of the role of nutrition in atherosclerosis. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: NUTR 60100, 60200. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUTR 62300 - Human Nutrition And Cancer |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An in-depth examination of the role of nutrition in cancer. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: NUTR 60100, 60200. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUTR 63000 - Carbohydrates |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (FS 63000) Carbohydrates with an emphasis on those of low molecular weight in foods. Structures, reactions, and properties of mono- and oligosaccharides. Introduction to polysaccharides and food gums. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: 6 credit hours in Organic Chemistry. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUTR 63100 - Polysaccharide Structure And Function |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (FS 63100) Chemical structures, molecular structures, and physical properties of polysaccharides with methods for determining each, and relationships to practical applications. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: BCHM 56100; Prerequisite: NUTR 45300 or FS 45300. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUTR 63400 - Nutrition And Cancer Prevention |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An in-depth examination of the role of nutrition in cancer prevention. Typically offered in the spring semester of alternate years.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Provide current knowledge of the influence of dietary factors on cancer disease risk.
2. Identify approaches to study molecular mechanism and the role of specific nutrients or bioactive compounds in molecular pathogenesis of cancer.
3. Improve communication and critical thinking skills via class discussions and writing assignment.
|
| NUTR 64000 - Human Feeding |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Critical review of the genetic, neural, metabolic, endocrine, sensory, cognitive, and cultural determinants of appetite, food selection, and energy balance. Offered in alternate years. Prerequisite: physiology, biochemistry. Masters student standing. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUTR 69000 - Interdepartmental Nutrition Program Grant Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Fulfillment of grant writing requirements for graduate students enrolled in the Interdepartmental Nutrition Program. Prerequisite: Interdepartmental Nutrition Program graduate students status. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUTR 69400 - Introductory Foods And Nutrition Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction and application of concepts for effective oral and written professional presentations in the field of nutrition science. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| NUTR 69500 - Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 or 1.00. Provides graduate students an opportunity to further develop and strengthen their skills in organization, preparation, and presentation of scientific information relevant to nutrition and/or foods to an informed audience of students and faculty, as well as constructively evaluate their peers' presentations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| NUTR 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| NUTR 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Nutrition Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OBHR 10100 - Introduction Career Development |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction Career Development. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| OBHR 22100 - Principles Of Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The fundamentals of organizing a business to succeed. The planning, organization, directing and controlling of business activities and the organizational plan to combine and allocate resources to meet expressed goals is the focus of this course. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an understanding of the basic principles of management.
2. Discuss different management schools (approaches) and describe contemporary management perspectives as applied to the workplace.
3. Describe and Explain the strategic planning process and the role of goals and goal setting; discuss the environment of organizations.
4. Explain how the international and cultural environments impact managerial behavior.
5. Demonstrate an understanding of how to predict and influence behavior of individuals and groups in organizations.
|
| OBHR 23000 - Teamwork |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Coupled with an immersion in a team-learning environment, students will be exposed to topics and exercises relating to the nature of teams, team and member assessments, goal setting, communications and meetings, conflict and resolution, and feedback tools. Students will benefit by first-hand experience in an environment that stresses team performance while requiring and providing the students with the ability to enforce individual accountability. The course is designed so that attendance on the first day is mandatory to maintain enrollment in the class. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| OBHR 23100 - Survey Of Human Resources |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exposure to a wide variety of human resource activities in the business enterprise. Topics include staffing, development, compensation and labor relations. This course is not open to Management majors. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate a general knowledge of the issues, policies, and practices relating to the key functions of human resource management including planning, staffing, training, appraising, and compensation human resources.
2. Identify and describe the major employment laws and agencies that impact human resource management.
3. Analyze and assess various human resource functions as to the major reasons that some organizations are skilled in making successful human resource management decisions.
4. Demonstrate a general knowledge of the role and function of human resource management and how it impacts the organization’s strategic business plan.
|
| OBHR 29000 - Sophomore Level Problems In Organizational Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Arrange with instructor before enrolling. Investigation in a specific organizational behavior/human resource management field. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OBHR 30000 - Management Of Human Resources |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of theory and techniques used in human resource management within organizations. Emphasis is placed on legal concerns, human resource staffing and development, reward systems, and the role of unions in American society. Techniques studied include job analysis, the use of various recruitment and selection procedures, compensation, administration, and collective bargaining. No credit for students in the School of Management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn about human resource management including legal concerns, human resource staffing, development, rewards systems, and the role of unions through study of job analysis, recruitment and selection procedures, compensation, administration, and collective bargaining.
|
| OBHR 33000 - Introduction To Organizational Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course investigates the impact that individuals, groups, and organizational structure have on behavior within organizations for the purpose of applying such knowledge toward improving an organization's effectiveness. Attention is given to such topics as motivation, leadership, group processes, organizational structure, technological innovation, and conflict management. Emphasis is placed on developing management skills and application of organizational behavior theories. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
|
| OBHR 39000 - Junior Level Problems In Organizational Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Arrange with instructor before enrolling. Investigation into a specific topic area of organizational behavior/human resource management. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OBHR 42300 - Negotiations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides both the theoretical foundation and practical methods for performing effective negotiations, persuading, and managing conflict in real life situations. Participants will be able to increase their own knowledge of the field and will be able to improve the outcomes of their own negotiations for themselves and others. The participants will also be able to use their knowledge of conflict management to more effectively resolve interpersonal and inter-group conflicts, both from the perspective of a participant and a third-party. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OBHR 42600 - Training and Managerial Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This courses focuses on traininig from a line managerial perspective and on management development, addressed through a consideration of critical personal, interpersonal, and team related skills. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OBHR 42700 - Occupational Safety And Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the economic, legal and social factors of occupational safety and health issues within an organization. Consideration will be given to the compliance with federal and state laws, safety training programs safety recognition and incentive programs, health education programs and joint labor/management safety committees. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OBHR 42800 - Human Resources Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of the techniques and practices used in human resource management. Emphasis is on legal requirements, cost/benefit considerations, and strategic needs in managing human resources. Topics include recruitment, selection and placement, compensation, work design, and reactions to work. Specific techniques reviewed include assessment centers, incentive plans, structured interviewing, and autonomous work groups. Current issues and managerial decision making are emphasized. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| OBHR 42900 - Labor Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course focuses on employee-employer relations. Attention is given to topics in legal aspects of union organizing and collective bargaining, labor unions history and structure in the United States, labor management negotiations, dispute resolution procedures, international labor relations, and labor-management cooperation. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| OBHR 43000 - Labor Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the role of unions in American society. Topics discussed include labor management relations, why workers join unions, dispute resolution, and cooperative labor-management programs. No credit for students in the School of Management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| OBHR 43100 - Human Resources Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of the theory and techniques used in the administration of the personnel function in the modern enterprise. Emphasis is placed on the meaning of work in industrialized societies, motivation and leadership of employees, manpower planning and development, reward systems, the minority worker, and the development of managerial skills. Techniques studied include the use of assessment centers, selection tests, wage and salary administration, job analysis, and man-power forecasting. No credit for students in the School of Management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| OBHR 43200 - Manpower Resources |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Allocation of manpower resources in an industrialized economy with emphasis on public and private policy issues. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| OBHR 43300 - Staffing Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the theory and practice of human resource planning, selection, and placement. The course will link human resource planning to organization-wide strategic planning. Selection devices as well as validation and reliability strategies are discussed. The implications of legal requirements for hiring practices are investigated. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OBHR 43400 - Benefits Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the historical, financial, motivational, and substantive aspects of employee benefits. Emphasis will be placed on practical administration. Consideration will be given to issues of productivity, union involvement, and future trends in benefit management. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OBHR 43500 - Compensation Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the theory and practice of employee compensation systems considering monetary topics, performance appraisal maintenance, audits of compensation decisions, internal equity, and individual equity will be discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OBHR 43600 - Collective Bargaining |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Considers current developments in the areas of collective bargaining, negotiations, and third party mediation and arbitration practices. Consideration will be given to the environments, structure, and processes of collective bargaining. Emphasis is on the practical aspects of labor-management negotiation and proceedings. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OBHR 43700 - Managing Career Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A consideration of individual and organization-centered approaches to career development. The seminal theories of career development. The seminal theories of career management will be discussed in terms of practical applications. Topics in career and life stage development will be explored Career path, dual career families, and careers in emerging fields will be discussed. Methods for diagnosing and planning services for employees from diverse backgrounds and at various occupational levels are considered. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OBHR 43800 - Managing Workforce Diversity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This couse will focus on the challenges of managing a work force. Consideration will be placed on identifying and resolving workplace problems attributed to the presence of demographic differences such as gender, race, ethnicity, age and able bodiness background among employees within a given work envireonment. Emphasis is on developing and conducting diversity training programs and reinforcing principles of valuing diversity. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OBHR 43900 - Employment Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course presents and examines the principles of employee-employer relations law. Students will be exposed to various federal and state laws pertaining to employement descrimination based upon demographic differences, such as gender, race, age, ethnicity, and able bodiness. In addition, this course will address issues such as negligent hiring, employment-at-will, wrongful discharge, drug and alcohol testing, and privacy in the workplace. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OBHR 44000 - Social Response Of Business |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course surveys areas of social choice faced by organizations. Students have the opportunity to clarify their own positions regarding appropriate organizational responses to such social problems as pollution, civil rights, consumerism, individual privacy, and business-government relations. Teaching techniques include case discussions, films, guest speakers, and student presentations. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| OBHR 44100 - Introduction To Organizational Change And Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course orients the student to planned approaches to adaptation and change in organizations. It is based upon applied behavioral science research and concepts which address themselves to "real life" change problems; models of the change-process, change strategies, the change agent, the critical study of organizational change efforts. This course will aid the student in understanding the dynamics of organizational behavior. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| OBHR 44200 - Introduction To Administrative Decision Making |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory course in organizational leadership which focuses on critical skills which a manager needs to work effectively with others. Topics covered include planning, interpersonal style, effective feedback, group decision making, and inter-group relations. The course will consist of both formal instruction and experiential learning. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| OBHR 44300 - Contemporary Legal And Social Issues In Human Resource Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course involves the comprehensive study of contemporary legal and social issues facing managers with a heavy emphasis on human resource management (HRM). Legal and ethical issues relevant to HRM are discussed at a level where students will develop policies and practices to assist firms avoid legal action and costly litigation. Defenses to human resource related lawsuits are also discussed. Theories regarding discrimination, harassment, and social workplace issues are analyzed enabling students to apply their knowledge to novel concrete situations. The course assists current and future HR practioners to effectively manage an organization's legal posture to be congruent with its strategic objectives. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OBHR 44400 - Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to introduce students to leadership theory and practice. Students will learn theories of leadership, practice methods of evaluating effective leadership, and develop a personal leadership action plan. Particular emphasis is placed on developing ethical leadership and trust. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OBHR 44500 - Team Dynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines team dynamics from both managerial and member perspectives. Basic concepts of interpersonal behavior, facilitation of effective teamwork, team design, and team processes are discussed. Additional topics include virtual, high performance, and cross-cultural teams. Concepts will be applied in team projects and exercises. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OBHR 44800 - Human Resources Information Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course topics will include ERP systems, e-business and electronic support of human resource function. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Know which common HRIS systems are in use.
2. Understand the functions of an HRIS system.
3. Demonstrate how to use HRIS software.
|
| OBHR 47000 - The Management Of Advanced Manufacturing Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides a framework for effectively managing employees in advanced manufacturing organizations. Emphasis is given to (a) understanding the relationship between technology, work system design, employee behavior, and manufacturing effectiveness, and (b) the processes involved in initiating and implementing changes in management policies, products, and technologies. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| OBHR 49000 - Problems In Organizational Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Supervised readings and reports in various subjects. Arrange with instructor before enrolling. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OBHR 49500 - Internship In Human Resources |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. A special course in selected areas of management, designed to provide practical field experience under professional supervision in selected situations. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 12 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Gain practical experience in the field of human resources.
2. Apply prior course knowledge to real world situations.
|
| OBHR 49900 - Undergraduate Research In Organizational Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Student will work with a faculty member on a research project in their major. They will contribute to ongoing research while learning current research techniques in management. During this process, the students will develop critical thinking and oral and written communication skills. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Conduct research in the area of human resources.
2. Learn current research techniques in management and business.
|
| OBHR 56000 - Mentoring and Socialization |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Students learn about the employee socialization process through case studies, discussion, and presentations. In addition, students receive practical experience through participation in a mentoring program for new students. Class discussions and presentations evolve from students' mentoring experiences, and guest speakers provide real-world perspective on new employee programs. The course helps students develop skills in mediation, leadership, conflict management, and communication.
Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| OBHR 58110 - Foundations Of Organizational Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 2.00. A review of the key elements of human relations in organizations necessary for managerial effectiveness (productivity, satisfaction, turnover, engagement). Focus is on the application of theory to issues such as motivation, values and ethics, group dynamics, leadership and change, and organizational structure and culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand and apply human behavioral theories to personal and professional practice within an organization.
2. To increase awareness of our own values, beliefs, attitudes and behaviors and their impact on others in an organization.
3. Develop leadership and collaborative skills that will increase organizational effectiveness.
|
| OBHR 59000 - Problems In Organizational Behavior And Human Resource Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Advanced study and investigation in a field of organizational behavior and human resource management under the guidance of staff. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OBHR 60500 - Research Methods I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to research methods. This seminar examines the use of research methods to develop empirical tests for theoretical and practical issues. It includes readings and discussions on the philosophy of science, reliability, validity, research design, threats to research, ethics, and other issues in research methodology. Students formulate hypotheses and an original research design to test their hypotheses. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| OBHR 60600 - Research Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Independent empirical research in organizational behavior and human resource management, including the submission of a written report. Prerequisite: OBHR 60500. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Practicum
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| OBHR 63100 - Human Resource Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of selected human resource activities/systems for the future human resource professional. Emphasis will be placed on building skills in areas that will provide a foundation for future coursework in human resources management. Topics covered include planning and forecasting human resource needs, job analysis, design and evaluation of training systems, design of performance appraisal systems, and safety and health in the workplace. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop a strong value for HRM knowledge generated from research (i.e., “evidence-based management”) and its potential for contributing to improving the quality of contemporary human resource management activities.
2. Develop an appreciation for the organizational environment in which HRM activities occur, and an understanding of the effects of that environment on such activities.
3. Demonstrate an understanding of relevant professional and legal standards in developing, implementing, and evaluating HRM functions.
4. Understand and apply fundamental principles and techniques related to HRM activities.
5. Evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of the primary tools and principles employed in HRM.
6. Improve writing, critical thinking, and discussion skills through course activities.
|
| OBHR 63300 - Human Resource Management |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 (West Lafayette) 3.00 (Calumet, North Central) Introduction to human resource management for general managers. Emphasis is on the impact of human resource components (e.g., staffing, rewards, labor relations) on the performance of the firm. Case analyses and computerized databases are used to illustrate major components of human resource decision making. Not open to students with credit in MGMT/OBHR 63100. Prerequisite: Master's student standing and Management majors only. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| OBHR 64000 - Industrial Relations I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An in-depth examination of human resource management in the context of union-management relations. Emphasis is on understanding how and why unions form, the legal context, and changing competitive environment for labor management relations. Covers the dynamics of the collective bargaining process, including the determinants of bargaining power, preparation of labor contract demands, and negotiation tactics. The course culminates with an extended mock negotiation exercise. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| OBHR 64100 - Industrial Relations II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An examination of union-management relations topics that build on material addressed in OBHR 640. Topics include causes of strikes, impasse resolution techniques, grievance and arbitration procedures, public sector labor relations, labor-management cooperation, and international labor-management relations. Emphasis is on how changes in the competitive environment have created the need for changes in the traditional union-management relationship. Films, cases, exercises, and guest speakers are utilized. Prerequisite: OBHR 64000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| OBHR 64200 - Compensation And Reward Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The first course in a two-course master's-level sequence focusing on the use of rewards to achieve organizational objectives. Special emphasis is given to compensation as a particularly salient reward. Designed for HR professionals, the course examines the relationship between rewards and organizational characteristics to achieve effective reward practices. Lectures, discussions, case studies, and guest speakers are used to build competence in job evaluation, skill-based pay, and setting pay levels. Prerequisite: OBHR 63100 or 63300, MGMT 67100 or STAT 51200. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn the current state of compensation decision-making.
2. Develop knowledge and skills in making evidence based compensation decisions.
3. Learn how compensation systems relate to business strategies, human resources systems, and other organizational processes.
4. Build competence in measuring and valuing work, the design of pay structures, and market-pricing systems.
|
| OBHR 64300 - Compensation And Reward Systems II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Continuation of OBHR 642. The second course in a two-course master's-level sequence that focuses on the use of rewards to achieve organizational objectives. Included are the use of rewards to attract, retain, and motivate employee behaviors in cost effective methods. Includes pay for performance programs, employee benefits, job design, promotion, recognition, and other rewards. Lectures, discussions, case studies, and guest speakers are used to build professional competence in these areas. Prerequisite: OBHR 63100, 64200 or OBHR 63300, MGMT 67100 or STAT 51200. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| OBHR 64400 - Staffing Tools |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Provides an in-depth analysis of the methods used in staffing and selection processes. Methods used to evaluate individuals as well as methods used to evaluate selection and promotion tools will be studied. Emphasis on the processes of designing, administering, revising, and evaluating selection programs that comply with government regulation as well as add value to the organization. This course is designed for the future HR professional. Concurrent Prerequisite: OBHR 63100 or 63300, MGMT 67100 or STAT 51200. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| OBHR 64500 - Staffing Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Examines all aspects of the staffing process beginning with applicant recruitment and ending with termination and outplacement. Emphasis on building skills that the general manager will need to evaluate, design, and implement these activities. Designed for the future manager, as well as the future HR professional. Topics will be addressed from an individual perspective, as well as an organizational perspective. Prerequisite: OBHR 63100 or 63300. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| OBHR 64600 - Human Resource Information Systems I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Designed to gain an understanding of and appreciation for the use of information systems as a tool for managing human resources. The course will introduce and master, and then apply to HR problems, a set of topical hardware and software solutions. The class project, an HRIS consulting assignment with a major corporation, will commence. Prerequisite: OBHR 63100 or 63300. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| OBHR 64700 - Teams, Technology And Human Capital |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Human capital-people and their collective knowledge, skills and abilities-is the lifeblood of organizations. Today's managers must be equipped to leverage technology effectively, which requires an understanding of how technology alters the social dynamics of work. Drawing on an interdisciplinary, socio-technical framework, this course develops an understanding of the interplay between information and communication technologies and human capital, and applies this knowledge to timely work topics, including change management, knowledge management, virtual and alternative work structures, ethics and fairness, distance leadership and control, security, privacy, and trust. Prerequisite: Master's student standing and Management majors only. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| OBHR 65000 - International Human Resource Management |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Explores the international dimensions of human resource management. Focuses on the human resource policies and practices that are adhered to in various regions of the world. The process of expatriating and repatriating managers to and from the U.S. is examined. International issues faced by a manager working for a multinational organization in the U.S. are studied. Prerequisite: OBHR 63100 or 63300. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| OBHR 66200 - Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Examines organizational leadership responsibilities, forms of leadership, the acquisition, use, and consequences of power, critical leader skills, and how corporate environments shape leadership. Emphasis on self-discovery and development of managerial leadership knowledge and skills. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| OBHR 66900 - Negotiations In Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Decision making examines organizational context, stages, creativity, biases, and group processes. Negotiations examine strategies for preparing and conducting negotiations. The principal focus is on individual and interpersonal aspects of each. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand the basic components of business negotiations through reading and completing assignments based on the textbook chapters.
2. Students will learn the basic components of a negotiated contract by completing a business transaction in written form.
3. Students will attain pragmatic negotiations skills using the I-Message method for daily activities encompassing negotiation tactics and the Verbal Skills method for more sophisticated negotiations for a major business transaction.
4. Students will explore cultural differences in negotiations by completing a study of practice in two countries other than the U.S. and sharing results with other students to expand their cultural knowledge base.
5. Students will explore and practice alternative dispute resolution techniques including mediation and arbitration.
6. Students will demonstrate the negotiations skills they are attaining by participating in class role-plays and by completing a final major negotiation in class.
|
| OBHR 68100 - Managing Behavior In Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Individual and group behavior are the central components of the study of behavior in organizations. Focus is on the managerial application of knowledge to issues such as motivation, group processes, leadership, organizational design structure, and others. The course employs cases, exercises, discussions, and lectures. Prerequisite: Master's student standing and Management majors only. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| OBHR 68300 - Individual Behavior In Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This seminar provides an analysis of theory and research on individual and group behavior in organizations. Readings and discussion focus on motivation, attitudes and job satisfaction, employee participation and turnover, stress, leadership, group processes, and other issues. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| OBHR 68400 - Research In Human Resource Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Focuses on research methods, theories, and issues in HR management. A doctoral-level course designed for students interested in a research and teaching career in HR or organizational behavior. Objectives are to learn the primary theories and theoretical issues in each major area in HR, to learn the primary research methods and methodological issues, to attain a comprehensive reading list of the literature, to learn about publishing and the article review process, and to develop ideas for potential research projects. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| OBHR 69000 - Advanced Problems In Organizational Behavior And Human Resource Management |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Advanced investigation in a specific organizational behavior or human resource field at the graduate level. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OBHR 69100 - Special Problems In Organizational Behavior And Human Resource Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Advanced investigation in a specific management field at the graduate level. For students in the master's programs in management who are registered in the master's program summer session. Prerequisite: Master's student standing and Management majors only. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OBHR 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: School of Management
Department: School of Mgmt Adm & Instr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OLS 10000 - Introduction To Organizational Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Transitional course to orient the Organizational Leadership and Supervision freshman to the department and Purdue. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| OLS 10200 - Freshman Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course provides entering first-year transfer students with less than 60 credits an opportunity to become familiar with available departmental and university resources, such as the advising process, the course management system, engage in goal setting, align academic and life goals, explore available career options, and develop a plan for success. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OLS 11000 - Supervisory Leadership: Story Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course develops skills in leadership. Specific areas covered include planning and change, problem analysis and decision making, motivation, interpersonal communication, giving and receiving feedback on performance, organizational values, and human relations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| OLS 12100 - Keyboarding |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is designed for students who have had no previous typewriting experience. Students will develop basic keyboarding skills which will enable them to use the alphabetic and numeric keys by the touch method and to input and retrieve information on microcomputers. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| OLS 13100 - Introduction To Safety And Health Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course emphasizes developing an understanding of various topics related to environmental health and safety which owners, managers, supervisors, and employees need to be aware of in the working environment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the importance of environmental, health and safety discipline in the society.
2. Identify and explain various aspects of safety in personal settings
3. Identify and explalin various aspects of environmental health and safety in occupatioanl settings.
4. Identify and explain the main theme applicable to areas of specializations.
5. Describe role of individuals, supervisors, managers, safety professionals, and management in environmental, health and safety discipline.
|
| OLS 16300 - Fundamentals Of Self-Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides students with an introduction to the Organizational Leadership and Supervision program, and prepares them for the program curriculum. It serves both as the Freshman Experience course, and the fundamental introduction to leadership. It includes the utilization of campus resources, goal setting, value and role exploration, relationship of academic planning and life goals, disciplines specific career exploration, and critical thinking. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to demonstrate critical thinking in identifying campus resources that will assist them in academic planning and support academic General Education Objectives.
2. Students will be able to demonstrate knowledge of their major field of study and discipline specific career choice.
|
| OLS 21100 - Professional Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The participant will engage in a variety of work activities under the supervision of the employer and the division of OLS. A report of the experience will be required. Admission to the cooperative education program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| OLS 21200 - Professional Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The participant will engage in a variety of work activities under the supervision of the employer and the division of OLS. A report of the experience will be required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division, Practicum
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| OLS 25200 - Human Relations In Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the concepts that provide a foundation for the understanding of individual and group behavior in organizations. Special emphasis on typical interpersonal and leadership relationships. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
Technology Dual Campus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| OLS 26200 - Supervision Work Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Supervised work experience in the fiel of Supervision. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OLS 26300 - Ethical Decisions In Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This class is for students interested in discussing and contemplating the difficult legal and ethical situations facing managers in all sizes and types of organizations. Students in this class will read and discuss a variety of writings on ethics in the workplace and also analyze both written and videotaped legal/ethical scenarios. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| OLS 26800 - Elements Of Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory law course with a brief comparison of the American federal system and the parlimentary system of government; covering law with emphasis on judicial review, court jurisdiction and procedure, generally, and basic law in particular. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| OLS 27200 - Job Evaluation |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. (IET 27200) A survey of the basic principles and significance of job evaluation. An analysis of current practices and techniques used in job analysis, job descriptions, and job evaluation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OLS 27400 - Applied Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to applied leadership in the context of organizational functions, structures, and operation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| OLS 28000 - Computer Applications For Supervisors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selection and use of microcomputer software tools for business, industrial, and technical applications. Representative tools include word processors, electronic mail, spreadsheets, graphics, database managers, computer-based training, project managers, telecommunications, and others. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| OLS 28400 - Leadership Principles |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Mastery of the basic knowledge managers need to effectively lead individual employees. Includes primary measures of performance success, leadership strategies, core leadership actions, and a comprehensive theory that explains how the strategies and actions cause positive attitudes and increased performance. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
Technology Dual Campus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| OLS 29300 - Automated Office System |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides and understanding of the impact of new technologies on office systems. Such topics as records management, micrographics, ergonometrics, telecommunications, feasibility studies, and systems analysis and design are included. No credit toward B.S. in business. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| OLS 29500 - Leadership Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. For sophomore-level students who have completed at least 30 credit hours. Practical work experience related to the OLS major in local industry for which the student receives compensation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Practicum
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| OLS 29900 - Organizational Leadership And Supervision |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Variable topics in organizational leadership. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| OLS 30300 - Substance Abuse In The Workplace |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overviews alcohol and drug problems affecting job performance in the workplace. Topics covered include current concepts of alcoholism and addictions, supervisor's role and responsibilities, work behavior of alcohol and drug abusers. Constructive confrontation and intervention, employee assistance programming, and referral. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OLS 31100 - Professional Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The participant will engage in a variety of work activities under the supervision of the employer and the division of OLS. A report of the experience will be required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| OLS 31200 - Professional Practice IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The participant will engage in a variety of work activities under the supervision of the employer and the division of OLS. A report of the experience will be required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| OLS 32000 - Customer Service And Commitment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis in this course is on developing techniques to gain customer commitment from both external (end user) and internal customers. Empowerment, quality commitment, risk-taking, customer feedback, and decentralized decision making are covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| OLS 32400 - Advanced Word Processing,Desktop Publishing, Presentation Graphics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis on the skills and knowledge necessary to create documents for college assignments and business use through the manipulation of word processing, desktop publishing, and presentation graphics software tools. Study of document formats, design and layout fundamentals, typographic principles, principles of graphing theory, and business presentation methods. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| OLS 32500 - Meeting Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An applications-oriented course in presenting technical information and conducting problem-solving and decision making meetings. Special emphasis on leading and facilitating interactive meetings, as well as structuring information for effective presentations. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| OLS 32600 - Comprehensive Spreadsheet Concepts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course covers the basic to advanced concepts of the spreadsheets. They will include planning, design, documentation and purpose of the spreadsheet, the ability to create charts, do business related analysis, work with data lists, create and edit macros, create pivot tables and charts, and displaying the worksheets on the Web. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| OLS 32700 - Leadership For A Global Work Force |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is for present and future leaders interested in the increasingly diverse global workforce. The course will present a variety of leadership issues including expatriate assignments, international business strategies and their cultural and managerial impact, and a review of business practices around the world. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| OLS 32800 - Principles Of International Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a survey of issues relating to international management and international enterprise. The goal is to help students understand the principles and practices involved in managing across national boundaries so that they can be more effective leaders and managers-both domestically and internationally. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| OLS 32900 - Comprehensive Database Management Concepts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course covers basic to advanced database concepts and skills such as planning, designing, documentation, and creating a database using indexing and multiple databases; modifying and editing database structures and tables; entering data and validating the input data; creating and modifying queries and views; creating and modifying labels, reports, and forms. Using queries and views to print reports and forms. The course uses the advanced features of graphics, programming, object linking and embedding and displaying the worksheets on the Web. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| OLS 33100 - Occupational Safety And Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A presentation of the aspects of occupational safety and health that are essential to the organizational leaders. Special emphasis is placed on developing an understanding of the economic, legal, and social factors related to providing a safe and healthy work environment. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| OLS 33200 - Fundamentals Of Industrial Hygiene |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the industrial hygiene factors instrumental in maintaining a safe and healthful workplace. Special emphasis is given to the recognition, evaluation, and control of occupational health hazards. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OLS 33300 - Environmental Health And Safety Legislation And Standards |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the laws, codes, and standards, which affect the occupational safety and health. Emphasis is placed on an overview of various environmental, health, and safety related laws, codes, and standards such as: OSHA, DOT, FRA, MSHA, EPA, NFPA, ANSI, NIOSH, ISO, etc. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OLS 33400 - Fire Protection |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores the principles involved in the protection of people and property from fire and explosion. Basic fire safety terminology, fire chemistry and extinguishment, fire safety references and standards, and fire safety management are presented. Also discussed are control measures for common fire and explosion hazards and the design of buildings in terms of life safety and fire suppressive systems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OLS 33600 - Fundamentals Of Risk Assessment And Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explore techniques for assessment and methods for managing the risks associated with occupational injuries, illnesses, deaths and property damage in the workplace. The principle methods include: 1) identifying the exposures to loss; 2) evaluating alternative techniques for treating the exposure; 3) selecting the appropriate technique(s); 4) implementing the chosen technique; and 5) monitoring and improving the risk management system. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OLS 33700 - Introduction To Emergency Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explore the principles of emergency management in preparing for disruptive events. Students explore the requirements and value of emergency management in preparation for a variety of emergency events likely to occur in either industrial or municipal environments. Students will study the concepts of emergency management including prevention of, mitigation of, preparedness for, response to, and recovery from disruptive emergency events. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OLS 34000 - Fundamentals Of Construction Safety |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of construction safety and health regulations. Throughout the course students will participate in discussions pertaining to construction safety issues and will be provided information to evaluate the primary OSHA targeted hazards in the construction industry, OSHA 30 Hr. card. Students will learn to recognize key hazards, be exposed to control technologies and corrective actions for the prevention of an injury, illness, and fatality that commonly occurs at construction sites. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OLS 34100 - Fundamentals Of Environmental Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This class will be presented as an overview of current issues in community and working environments. Those issues which are most essential to the supervisor/manager will be emphasized. Students will develop an understanding of key Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) regulations such as CERCLA, Clean Air Act and its Amendments, Clean Water Act, and RCRA and typical means to ensure compliance. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OLS 34200 - Interviewing Strategies In Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the various interviews supervisors conduct in organizational settings. This course focuses on general interviewing principles as well as specific types of interviews including selection, information gathering, disciplinary, and performance appraisals. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| OLS 34300 - Hazardous Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explore the practical, safe approach to handling hazardous materials. Topics include: basic chemistry of hazardous materials, hazard classes and toxicology, evaluating risk, selecting correct protective equipment, specific competencies required of persons responding to a hazardous materials emergency, managing an incident, and addressing tactical and strategic issues while minimizing down-time and reducing risk to other workers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OLS 34500 - Critical Thinking In Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on systems thinking and the understanding of research design and measurement theory used in solving organizational and human resource development problems. The emphasis is on applied methodology rather than on statistical issues, with the intent of the student becoming an effective consumer of information. The students will learn how to report findings in a practical and influential manner. Includes the importance of knowledge management issues in organizations. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| OLS 34600 - Critical Thinking And Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course in complex problem solving and creative thinking with an emphasis on the ethical impacts of these solutions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Define various approaches to the study of ethics in leadership.
2. Recognize and apply laws and regulations that affect ethical behavior in business and industry.
3. Work through processes to better identify what are real problems and perceived problems.
4. Use various techniques to ensure the real problem is identified and generate solutions.
5. Relate methods and concepts learned to new situations in order to solve problems.
6. Identify necessary steps to evaluate and implement solutions.
7. Develop individual problem solving and analytical skills.
8. Identify ethical, legal, and global challenges facing organizational leaders.
|
| OLS 35000 - Creativity In Business And Industry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the ways an individual can become more creative and how they can develop an environment which encourages creativity from employees. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| OLS 35100 - Innovation And Entrepreneurship |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An in-depth study of innovation in existing organizations, as well as entrepreneurship in start-up businesses, franchises, family-owned firms, and other business formats. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Define the nature, skills, and spirit of entrepreneurs.
2. Conduct market research to develop innovative business model.
3. Conduct an industry analysis to identify competitors and industry trends.
4. Explain the benefits of selecting a diverse leadership team and employee pool.
5. Create and evaluate a business plan.
|
| OLS 35500 - Incident Investigation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explore various approaches for conducting an incident/accident investigation, including methods to determine the causes of incidents/accidents, analyses of data gathered as part of the process and proper documentation. Through a series of case studies and examples, students will have the opportunity to identify the corrective action steps for preventing future occurrences and presenting those recommendations to management for implementation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OLS 36100 - Safety Department Supervision |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. That analysis, design, and implementation of safety programs in work settings. Will include systems safety and evaluation techniques for the loss-control functions. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| OLS 36200 - Cooperative Education Program |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Supervised work experience directed toward professional development in supervisory or related leadership positions. Rotational work-study periods planned and coordinated by department staff in conjunction with the student and the employing organization. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
|
| OLS 36400 - Professional Development Program |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey course covering many professional and personal facets relative to entering the work force upon graduation. Major areas addressed include resume preparation, interviewing techniques, development of job-search plans, social skills, and analysis of career fields and opportunities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| OLS 36500 - Leading Virtual Teams |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will introduce contemporary theories, concepts and applications of virtual teamwork. Examination of issues that determine virtual team effectiveness, including appropriate team design and leadership are stressed. In addition, the class will explicitly explore the differences in virtual and collocated team development, and use emerging theories (e.g. team identity theory, network theory) and perspectives (e.g. online community development) to predict and explain virtual team behavior and leadership needs. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| OLS 36800 - Personnel Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Wage contracts and payments, workmen's compensation and insurance, injunction, strikes and boycotts, and statutes affecting labor.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| OLS 37000 - Management Of Job Stress And Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course deals with the causes of work-related stress, how individuals respond to stressors, what effects stress may have on employee health and job performance, and what may be done to prevent or neutralize stress outcomes. Both stress and stress reduction are treated on an individual and organizational basis. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| OLS 37100 - Project Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides the basics of the project management discipline and allows the student to apply these skills in team-based situations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| OLS 37200 - Staffing and Performance Appraisal |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An application-oriented simulation of developing a compensation and benefits program, including the study of staffing and appraising employee performance. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| OLS 37300 - Case Studies In Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of selected case studies with emphasis on attitudes, philosophies, and responsibilities of leaders in relationship to peers, followers, and superiors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| OLS 37400 - Supervisory Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to and overview of the fundamental concepts of supervision. Emphasis is placed on the supervisor's major functions and essential areas of knowledge, his relations with others, and his personal development. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
|
| OLS 37500 - Training Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles, practices, and methods of employee training. Introduction to systematic training program design, development, and evaluation. Emphasis is on the supervisor as a trainer. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| OLS 37600 - Human Resource Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis and discussion of case problems concerning typical leadership and personnel situations that impact upon the supervisor/manager. Emphasis directed toward development of attitude, philosophy, analytical ability, and problem-solving skills within the working environment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| OLS 37800 - Labor And Management Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to, and overview of, the fundamental concepts of labor relations, collective bargaining, and dispute resolution procedures. An international comparative analysis is used to assess some of the legal, economic, and political structures of labor relations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| OLS 37900 - Compensation And Benefits |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focus on the use of rewards to achieve organizational objectives. Included in the use of rewards to attract, retain, and motivate employee behaviors in a cost effective manner and in support of the organization's mission. Pay for performance programs, employee benefits, job design, promotion, recognition, and other rewards will be discussed. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| OLS 38300 - Human Resource Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course teaches an overview of the human resource function in organizations today. Case studies are used to explore applications of human resource principles. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| OLS 38400 - Leadership Process |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An in-depth study of a sequence of manager actions that influence employees to achieve desired performance results. How these manager actions are transformed by employees into desired performance is also covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| OLS 38500 - Leadership Strategies For Quality And Productivity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Knowledge and applied leadership skills essential for establishing and continuously improving organizational effectiveness by forestalling and solving workplace problems.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| OLS 38600 - Leadership For Organizational Change And Innovation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to and overview of fundamental concepts of leading organizational change and innovation. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify company culture and transition readiness.
2. Apply the change-cycle concept to leading a workplace change.
3. Identify the concept of organizational learning.
4. Understand the role organizational culture plays in a transition.
5. Identify the effect of technological change on innovation, business, and society.
6. Develop and apply a change model.
|
| OLS 38700 - Emergency Planning And Exercises |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explore the development of emergency plans and exercises for organizations. Students will learn requirements imposed by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) for emergency plans. Students will study the linkage between emergency plans through emergency preparedness exercises. Students will develop an onsite emergency plan for an actual organization, and an emergency exercise to test the plan. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OLS 38800 - Leadership Through Teams |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The group process, team development and exploration of dynamics that impact group and team performance. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify various principles and theories of group dynamics.
2. Plan and lead effective meetings.
3. Provide opportunities to become skilled participant-observers of team processes.
4. Demonstrate the behavior of the team leader and team members in molding work groups into high performance teams.
5. Demonstrate the process of human communications in small group context.
6. Use communication skills to more competently solve problems in task-oriented groups.
7. Use personal knowledge and interpersonal skills in dealing with people in all group types.
8. Analyze and comprehend why teams are functional or dysfunctional.
|
| OLS 38900 - Emergency Management Programs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explore hazard analysis and develop a mitigation plan for an actual organization. The class will examine current plans and practices developed for site, community or countrywide use. Last course In the Emergency Management Certificate. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OLS 39000 - Leadership Theories And Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course integrates knowledge and skills from all associate level OLS courses and allows students to define, reflect upon, and improve their leadership abilities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| OLS 39500 - Leadership Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Practical work experience related to the OLS major in local industry for which the student receives compensation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| OLS 39900 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Hours and subject matter to be arranged by staff. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OLS 40100 - Women In Supervision |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to supervision and problems unique to women entering the field. Basic behavioral and organizational skills required for supervisory work; survey and discussion of problems such as self-concept, political aspects of the job, power networks, sexual harassment, and stress. The course ends with a panel discussion by successful women
supervisors.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| OLS 41000 - Survival Skills In Organizational Careers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focus is on the organization as a social system within which careers develop through the reciprocal influences of organization and people. Examines how occupations are chosen, the stages of an unfolding career, and factors that influence successful careers. Emphasizes coping with change and developing personal strategies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| OLS 41100 - Professional Practice V |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The participant will engage in a variety of work activities under the supervision of the employer and the department of supervision. A report of the experience will be required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| OLS 41500 - Introduction To Environmental Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This class will provide an introduction to current issues and concepts in environmental management including an overview of environmental policy, necessary measures to control and mitigate environmental impacts, and key Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) regulations such as CERCLA, Clean Air Act and its Amendments, Clean Water Act, and RCRA, and typical means to ensure compliance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OLS 42100 - Psychology And Sociology Of Safety |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explore contemporary approaches used to influence employees’ safety related behaviors using the principles of psychology and sociology. Case studies of behavior and operations that resulted in both human and material loss will be studied. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OLS 42300 - Green Organizations: Global Responsibility For Environmental And Economic Necessity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is interdisciplinary-emphasizing sustainability, engineering, manufacturing, technology, and leadership processes for the purpose of being environmentally responsible, cost effective, and socially responsible including guest lecturers, group discussions, and tours of businesses, locally or in other countries. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| OLS 43000 - Environmental Health And Safety Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designing and developing a management system to ensure safety and health for employees and environment where they work. Survey of designing a management system to ensure safety and health for employees operating processes and equipment, through the use of control measures that include hazard identification, risk assessment, and job safety analysis. The students will design a safety, health and environmental system that include the techniques for management of the designed system. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OLS 43300 - Analysis And Design Of Safety Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comprehensive survey of the analysis and design of safety system techniques for processes, equipment and machinery through the use of such control measures as hazard identification, risk assessment, and job safety analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OLS 44000 - Leading With Integrity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An investigation of ethical problems in business practice. Topics include personal morality in profit-oriented enterprise; codes of ethics; obligations to employees and other stakeholders; truth in advertising; whistle-blowing and company loyalty; regulation, self and government; the logic and future of capitalism. Emphasis on business law and legal impacts on ethical decision making. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| OLS 44100 - Leading Ethically |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An investigation of ethical problems in group and organizational settings. Topics include personal morality, character building, strategies for decision making, organizational values and codes of ethics, and cultural differences in ethical values. Emphasis on personal development, values clarification and ethical decision making.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| OLS 45000 - Project Management For Organizational And Human Resource Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to project management concepts and practices in the context of human resource development projects. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply the Project Management Institute’s methodology to plan a project in the training and development field.
2. Apply instructional development methodology.
|
| OLS 45400 - Gender And Diversity In Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The work force of the future will represent multiple differences including gender, race, culture, ethnicity, physical abilities, and age. Following this broad-based perspective of diversity, this course will focus on using knowledge of diversity to develop the leadership potential of individuals in organizations. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| OLS 45600 - Leadership In A Global Environment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of leadership strategies for organizations engaged in international business. Includes understanding of cultural differences and diverse business practices, and challenges of competing in a global marketplace. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop the concept of culture and its influence on behavior with respect to global leadership practices.
2. Develop familiarity with the types of situations and issues that managers confront when working internationally.
3. Describe the impact of living and working in another culture.
|
| OLS 46700 - Service Learning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Service learning is a reflective experience in which students are actively engaged in the community and integrate that experience into the classroom. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an ability to apply leadership education and interpersonal skills to work effectively with underserved populations in the community.
2. Use written communication skills to synthesize the readings, class discussions, and service learning experiences.
3. Demonstrate an understanding of civic responsibility.
|
| OLS 46800 - Personnel Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of employment laws specially affecting employer-employee relationships. The purpose of the course is to provide the supervisor with a summary of current employee relations laws and a practical approach to dealing with daily employer-employee legal concerns. Topics include laws related to discrimination based on sex, race, age, handicap, hiring and discharge of workers, drug and alcohol testing, privacy in the workplace, wages, ERISA, and other issues on employee rights and employer responsibilities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| OLS 47100 - Human Resource Information Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A practical introduction and application of Human Resource Systems Platforms of interest to the organizational or business leader. Topics include HRIS platforms, systems design and evaluation, coding structure, data input procedures, decision making, implementation, and human resource operational procedures. Emphasis is on hands-on practical application and development. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| OLS 47200 - Seminar In Safety |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of various topics which are relevant to the safety field. Case studies of unique and/or special safety problems, current events relating to safety, and ethics in safety are emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OLS 47300 - Global Human Resource Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The traditional Human Resource Management System has five components. These function within the internal and external environments of the organization. With the rapid adaptation of technology, the world has become smaller. A study of global human resource issues provides students with the unique opportunity to employ theory learned in fundamental courses and develop in-depth analytical abilities presented when a business opportunity, such as globalization, changes the culture and scope of the firm. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| OLS 47400 - Conference Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Understanding the role of facilitating group discussion in business and industry conferences. Special emphasis on developing group facilitation skills. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| OLS 47500 - Human Resource Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will build on the topics covered in OLS 37500. Topics will include needs analysis, advanced training and development methods, techniques of evaluation, and meeting the job training needs of special groups. Additional topics of special interest will be covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| OLS 47600 - Compensation Planning And Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Planning and implementation of a total compensation system, including job analysis, job evaluation, salary survey and analysis, benefits and development of a structured pay system. Includes behavioral implications and legal compliance issues. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| OLS 47700 - Conflict Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the methods for dealing with innerpersonal, interpersonal, and political disputes by means generally outside the traditional court system. Students will investigate the theoretical and practical aspects of conflict assessment, negotiation, problem solving, mediation, and arbitration. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Interpret and summarize major conflict management concepts.
2. Apply course conflict management concepts to new situations and real-world applications.
3. Assess conflict situations and apply appropriate methods to mitigate conflict.
4. Demonstrate ability to handle difficult people and situations.
|
| OLS 47900 - Staffing Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An applications-oriented study of key concepts in staffing organizations, including principles and issues in conducting job analysis; preparing job descriptions/specifications; and screening/selecting employees. Special emphasis on the design, validation, and operation of high-volume staffing systems. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| OLS 48200 - Labor Arbitration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Student will learn how to analyze discipline and discharge cases in light of the just cause requirements. They will also be able to evaluate contract language against basic standards and legal principles. In addition, they will be able to write an arbitrator's opinion and award. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OLS 48300 - The Common Law Of The Workplace |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Statutory and individual rights are expanding significantly, and supervisors must have the expertise to deal with these new workplace issues. The intent of this course will be to present cases reflecting how supervisors deal with current workplace issues. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OLS 48400 - Leadership Strategies For Quality And Productivity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of how organizational leaders create an environment conducive to high levels of employee self-motivation, quality, and productivity (TQM). Actual case situations are used to illustrate the application of course content. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| OLS 48500 - Leadership For Team Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An in-depth study of self-directed work teams and team processes in the work setting, with a view to understanding team functions under varying task conditions. Especially emphasized will be the leadership of teams for effective performance and maximum member satisfaction. This course deals extensively with maintenance and task behaviors of team members. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| OLS 48600 - Management Of Change |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the concepts that provide a foundation for the understanding of leadership and its relationship to the management of organizational change, with special emphasis on managing the human side of quality improvement. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| OLS 48700 - Leadership Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A review of current managerial, education, and development theories and practices; discussions of fundamental social, economic, and political changes affecting business and the art of managing; implications of these changes for individual development and continued growth. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Discuss disparate texts/writings on leadership from different eras and cultures.
2. Exhibit familiarity with a philosophical approach to studying leadership.
3. Explain a personal leadership philosophy.
|
| OLS 48800 - Leadership For Lean Enterprise |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of how organizational leaders create an environment conducive to lean enterprise. Actual case studies of leadership techniques are used to illustrate the application of course content. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| OLS 49000 - Senior Research Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Opportunity to study specific problems in the field of personnel, safety, supervision, and training under the guidance of an OLS faculty member. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| OLS 49100 - Internship Program |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 (West Lafayette and Tech Statewide locations) 1.00 to 3.00 (Calumet and North Central campuses). A practicum designed to combine University study with work experience directly related to the student's plan of study. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply organizational leadership theory in a corporate environment.
|
| OLS 49101 - Internship Experiences |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A practicum designed to combine University study with work experience directly related to the student’s plan of study. Includes a design of an optimal interning experience as well as a written final paper and oral presentation covering the student’s internship experience. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-Vincennes
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Compare and contrast internship experiences of different types of organizations.
2. Describe the internship experience.
3. Evaluate the effectiveness of the internship experience.
|
| OLS 49200 - Individual Research Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Supervised individual research on appropriate topics. Hours and subject matter to be arranged by staff. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| OLS 49400 - Organizational Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A senior level case-oriented approach designed to provide the student with opportunities to evaluate various organizational policies and strategies and recommend improvements for the organization's future. This course is considered the OLS "capstone" and will allow students the opportunity to utilize the knowledge gained in previous courses. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| OLS 49500 - Leadership Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Practical work experience related to the OLS major in local industry for which the student receives compensation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| OLS 49600 - Leading Change: Theory And Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to assist students in integrating leadership theories and modeling change initiatives. A final syntheses project is required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| OLS 49700 - Senior Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course allows students to integrate their learning by solving a real world issue, concern, project, or problem in an organization of their choice. Students will submit a proposal, choose a methodology, and resolve the issue, concern, or problem, by using material from previous course material. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| OLS 49900 - Special Topics In Organizational Leadership And Supervision |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Hours and subject matter to be arranged by staff. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 12 credits
|
| OLS 51000 - Foundations Of Behavior And Leadership In Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Leadership involves relationships and social influence processes in an interactive relational context. In this survey course, the foundational concepts and theories of human behavior that enable effective leadership is examined. Organizational behavior at the levels of the individual, group, and organization are discussed, with the goal of predicting, shaping, and evaluating workplace behavior. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| OLS 51500 - Foundations Of Human Resources |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey course emphasizing the human resource function (and its development) in the context of the work organization. Human resource development topics include exploration of various training and development techniques, the relation of training to organizational strategies, training needs analysis, evaluation of training, and career development. The strategic approach to human resource management also is covered, including what human resource professionals can and should do to help the organization succeed. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| OLS 52000 - Foundations Of The Organizational Context |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction of the tools of organizational decision making and for students to learn to integrate functional area knowledge and analysis in the organizational context. A variety of analyses are introduced, including budgeting, audits (i.e., cultural, strategic), planning, classification of core competencies and strategic capabilities, and understanding value chain, industry and competitor analyses, and basic project management. Using cases and real organizational problems, students will: (1) identify types of organizational reports and understand how to evaluate them; (2) demonstrate knowledge of when to request various analyses and; (3) understand how to complete some common organizational analyses and reports. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| OLS 52500 - Organizational Analysis And Action |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of key, recent, and essential elements of organizational theory and design that provide the foundation for diagnosing, developing, and critiquing organizational decisions and forms. Questions and issues to explore include: Why do organizations exist and why do they survive? Why and how do organizations differ? Why and how do organizations change? Multiple frameworks from the social sciences that are useful for understanding organizational processes will be applied. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| OLS 53000 - System Change And Organization Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This introductory graduate seminar explores the theory and practice of change in organizations. The process of organization development is explored, as well as basic OD interventions. Issues and challenges of organization development also are discussed. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| OLS 54000 - Leading Collaborative Projects And Work Teams |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on methods of understanding and improving the performance of collaborations and work teams. A holistic view of teams is obtained by combining psychological theories and current practices in contemporary organizations. Topics include task design, team composition, member role structures, member socialization, influence and power, leadership, decision making, and training. Students are asked to watch and reflect on collaborative work relationships. A heavy emphasis is placed on experiential learning, including case studies and a variety of team-learning exercises. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an understanding of the implications for using teams within the organizations.
2. Differentiate between the types of teams available to organizations and when it is appropriate to use each.
3. Identify the criteria for team membership and the role members play within the team.
4. Explain the need for ability to develop goals for team success.
5. Understand the value of team measures and be able to design task and process measures.
6. Compare and contrast the different phases of team process development and the role of the leader at each phase.
|
| OLS 54500 - Compensation And Benefits |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Addresses the theoretical and practical issues associated with the design of effective compensation systems. Covers compensation philosophy, strategy, and policy, including topics such as performance-based pay, equity considerations, job evaluation, and benefits. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| OLS 55000 - Managing Diversity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a senior undergraduate and graduate course designed to provide students with the comprehensive study of contemporary diversity issues facing supervisors and human resource professionals. Issues relevant to supervisors and human resource professionals are discussed at a level where students will be able to manage a diverse workforce and develop policies and practices to assist organizations to avoid problems and litigation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. List the effects of globalization on diversity management.
2. Describe how civility in the workplace can promote diversity initiatives.
3. Explain how personal views on diversity impact the management of diversity.
4. Compare the historical origins of various ethnic groups that comprise US diversity.
5. Evaluate the progress of diversity in the US workforce.
6. List the steps organizations can take to develop diverse employees.
7. Explain how to manage diversity while confronting stereotypes, prejudice and discrimination.
|
| OLS 55500 - Workforce Planning And Employment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of all aspects of the staffing process beginning with workforce planning and applicant recruitment and ending with termination and outplacement. Recruitment and selection methods used by organizations are evaluated using scientific and ethical criteria, and discrepancies between research recommendations and practice are explored. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| OLS 56500 - Employee Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores determinants of employee attitudes and job satisfaction and modification of attitudes and morale. Ways to reduce barriers between management and employees are investigated, as are organizational communication issues, diversity issues, procedures to resolve disputes, employee involvement strategies, and working effectively with unions and maintaining non-union status. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| OLS 57000 - Leadership Across Cultural Boundaries |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will enhance the student's ability to harness the talents of diverse members in organizations and take full advantage of cultural similarities and differences. Various activities will link theory and experience and help students predict and understand the worldly context of organizations. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| OLS 57400 - Managerial Training And Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of current managerial education and development theories and practices; discussion of fundamental social, economic, and political changes affecting business and the work of managing; implications of these changes for individual manager development and continued growth. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| OLS 57500 - Contemporary Employment Practices And The Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey and analysis of the law governing human resources. Students will strengthen their understanding of the legal framework in which human resource administration takes place by studying employment discrimination, compensation laws and regulations, employee selection guidelines, and other topics. Typically offered Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| OLS 57600 - Advanced Topics In Human Resource Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Current topics and issues in the legal, behavioral, and technical environment of human-resources management. Topics may include employment practices, labor-management relations, wage and salary administration, treatment of employees on the job, or productivity-improvement programs. Employs seminar format with emphasis on applications research. Course may be offered in traditional, distance, or blended format. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| OLS 57700 - Organization And Administration Of Training And Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The function and management of training and development in the world of work. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| OLS 57800 - Leadership In International Human Resources |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores issues and practices in technologically-driven international organizations pertaining to the six major HR functions (recruitment and selection, performance management, training and development, organizational development, compensation and benefits, and labor-employee relations). These are considered in the context of technologically-driven multinational organizations with the United States being the foundation for comparison. The course is strategic in focus. A "best practices" approach, utilizing the case method, is emphasized. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| OLS 57900 - Emerging World-Class Leadership Strategies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exposes graduate students to the theoretical foundation and empirical research associated with emerging strategies and theories in the study of world-class leadership. The structure of the course is four fold: the discovery of critical leadership skills and behaviors, discovery of critical world-class leadership strategies, encouragement of self analysis, discovery of leadership strengths, and conducting research on leadership issues. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| OLS 58000 - Interpersonal Skills For Leaders |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development and improvement of interpersonal and group dynamic skills for effective leadership in organizations. Emphasis on action learning and real-world application of skills. Course may be offered in traditional, distance, or blended format. Open to all graduate students with special consideration given to senior OLS students with 3.0 GPA and School of Technology graduate students. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| OLS 58100 - Workshop In Organizational Leadership And Supervision |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. Advanced study of technical and professional topics. Emphasis is on new developments relating to technical, operational, and training aspects of industry and technology education. Course may be offered in traditional, distance, or blended format. Course format may vary, depending upon topic of course. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OLS 58200 - Leadership And Organizational Change |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores issues in leadership and organizational change. Included are change theories, utilizing resistance to change, contemporary approaches to change, the future workplace, and researching best practices in organizational change. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will attain an understanding of the major models of change theory.
2. Students will gain skills in managing change through pragmatic applications of change theories.
3. Students will complete a major change research project in which they investigate a change initiative, gather data, and make recommendations for successfully implementing the change.
|
| OLS 58300 - Coaching And Mentoring In Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores issues and practices in technologically-driven organizations pertaining to the roles and functions that coaching and mentoring play in employee development. A "best practices" approach, utilizing the case method, is emphasized. Presented from the point of view of a human resource manager/leader, the focus of the course is on identifying coaching opportunities, enhancing communication skills, developing and implementing coaching and mentoring strategies, and evaluating the outcomes of these strategies. Attention is directed to facilitating personal coaching mentoring skills. Course may be offered in traditional, distance, or blended format. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| OLS 58400 - Constructive And Destructive Conflict And Cooperation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide students from all functional backgrounds with skills needed to approach interdependent relationships and negotiations with confidence. Included is an examination of how leadership and influence is gained, maintained, used, abused, and lost in the pursuit of interpersonal and organizational objectives that are often in conflict. Students in the course will develop a framework for analysis, gain knowledge about one's own tendencies in negotiation, and have a chance to experiment with negotiating techniques in various contexts. Topics include: integrative and distributive negotiations, individual differences in bargaining styles, coalitions, team negotiations, negotiating through agents, and ethical issues in negotiation. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| OLS 58500 - Health, Safety And Security |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A seminar course covering safety promotion, human factors considerations, contingency planning and crisis management, theft and misuse of organizational resources, and investigations and preventive measures. Other topics covered include promoting employee health and creating psychosocially healthy organizations. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| OLS 58700 - Developing A Leadership Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on affect, motives, attitudes, beliefs, values, ethics, morals, will, commitment, preferences, norms, expectations, responsibilities, and other key concepts as they relate to leadership. Students will develop a deeper understanding of the kind of ethical dilemmas they may face in the workplace. A variety of methods, such as invited speakers, case studies, or readings are used to deepen the understanding of these issues and provide practical examples. Students will develop their personal philosophy, as well as the skills and confidence needed for ethical leadership in their professional careers. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Discuss key theories of the phenomenon of leadership such as trait, skill and behavioral, contingent, psychodynamic, relational and collective.
2. Reflect on one’s own practice and apply leadership concepts to one’s setting.
3. Practice leadership and develop as leaders within the learning community.
4. Create one’s own development goals and ultimately a personal working model of leadership.
|
| OLS 58800 - Strategic Planning And Marketing For Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines concepts, models, and methods useful for developing strategic initiatives in industrial/technical business environments. Focuses on planning concepts, including industry structure, strategic mission, organizational structures, competitor analysis, and related areas. Graduate status or senior standing with consent of instructor. Graduate students without an OLS background may be required to take leveling courses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the principle concepts in strategic planning and apply them appropriately.
2. Write detailed, analytical case studies, alone and in groups, to demonstrate practical application of material and teamwork skills.
3. Present case studies to class to enhance communication skills.
4. Develop an individual project that synthesizes the class materials and individual experiences of the student.
|
| OLS 58900 - Leadership And Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of ethical, legal and policy issues facing business and technology leaders. Topics include ethical decision making, corporate social responsibility, codes of ethics, public policies and government regulations, international business practices, technology innovation, risk management in a global environment, and specific areas of law- employment, health and safety, environment, contract, warranties and liabilities, intellectual property, technology law, and international laws and regulations. Graduate student standing or senior status with consent of instructor. Graduate students without an OLS background may be required to take some leveling course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the common philosophical approaches to ethics, and analyze his/her own ethics approach. Understand the aspects of decision making that can lead to unethical results.
2. Synthesize and analyze business/technical ethics problems and create appropriate ethical solutions.
3. Research and critically analyze the ethical components of an issue or aspect of business or technology, applying the case study method or other structured analysis.
4. Write a substantial research paper analyzing an ethical issue in business/technology leadership, using appropriate citation style, grammar, academic tone, and research sources.
5. Identify the differences among law, policy and ethics, and analyze the interplay among the three.
|
| OLS 59000 - Individual Research Problems In Supervision And Personnel |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Opportunity to study specific problems in the field of supervision and personnel under the guidance of a qualified faculty member within the department. Does not include thesis work. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OLS 59200 - Labor Arbitration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide students with a comprehensive study of contemporary labor arbitration issues facing supervisors and human resources professionals, and to provide students with a familiarity with the arbitration process, including discipline, grievance and hearing. Graduate students with insufficient background may be required to take leveling courses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. List the effects of the labor arbitration process on the behavior of labor and management.
2. Describe the advantages of labor arbitration and compare the process with litigation.
3. Explain the impact of the grievance system on arbitration.
4. Compare the arbitration process with mediation, and explain the differences in the processes.
5. Evaluate the just cause doctrine’s application in a given workplace scenario.
6. Understand the elements of just cause and apply them.
7. Understand how to prepare for grievance and arbitration as a supervisor or leader in the workplace.
|
| OLS 59800 - Directed MS Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A formal investigation of a particular problem under the guidance of the advisory committee. Not applicable to a thesis option plan of study. Enrollment during at least two consecutive terms for a total of three credits is required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OLS 62300 - Contemporary Organizational Leadership And Supervision Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and practice in the development of comprehensive solutions to problems in industrial, technical, and human resource development environments. Solutions based on emerging procedures will be emphasized. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| OLS 68000 - Research In Organizational Leadership And Supervision |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. This course focuses on the planning and executing of research designs after identifying a real organizational challenge or problem. Students will develop their own methods for uncovering and diagnosing organizational problems, reviewing relevant literature, formulating solution models and recommendations, and helping client organizations implement changes. Students are required to prepare and present an action learning project, with an emphasis on documenting ways they have and can make a difference in an organization. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| OLS 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Org Leadership & Supervision
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OLS I1960 - Career Enrichment Internship I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's readiness for entering an initial or a second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Internship, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OLS I3980 - Career Enrichment Internship IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's readiness for entering an initial or a second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OLS I4980 - Career Enrichment Internship V |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. A semester or summer of external, full-time, related career experiences designed to enhance the student's readiness for entering an initial or a second career. A comprehensive written report on the internship experience is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OLS S3000 - Personnel Supervision |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to and overview of the fundamental concepts of supervisory management. Emphasis is placed upon the supervisor?s major personnel functions, including organizing, planning, communication, job definition and assignment, recruiting, orientation, training, salary administration, and labor relations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| OLS S3100 - Production Supervision |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The role and function of the supervisor in the production of goods and services. Course will include such production topics as scheduling, quality control, time and motion studies, cost control, tooling, etc. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| OLS S3200 - Labor Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to labor relations for supervisors. The organization of labor unions and federations, certification, contracts, collective bargaining, grievances, arbitration, and labor law will be covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| OVST A4900 - Overseas Study In Kenya |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Overseas study in Kenya. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OVST A4910 - Overseas Study In Australia- Anthropology |
|
Credit Hours. 0.00. This course is associated with the Liberal Arts-Anthropology-Australia program. Typcially offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OVST B4910 - Overseas Study-IU Program |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Overseas Study - IU Program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OVST B5920 - Overseas Study |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Course is associated with a study abroad program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OVST C4900 - Study Abroad In China |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Study Abroad In China. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OVST D4900 - Overseas Study |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Overseas Study. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OVST D4920 - Overseas Study In Croatia |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Overseas Study In Croatia. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| OVST E4900 - Overseas Studies In France-World Language And Cultures |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Overseas study in France-World Language and Cultures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OVST E4970 - IES Overseas St-EU-Freiburg |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 17.00. IES Overseas St-Eu-Freiburg. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 17.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OVST F4900 - Overseas Study In Germany-Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Overseas Study in Germany - Internship. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OVST G4920 - Overseas Study In Turkey - English And Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Overseas Study In Turkey - English And Technology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OVST G4970 - Overseas Study College Year In Athens |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00-17.00. Applicable to all academic work undertaken with approval of Indiana University/College Year in Athens Overseas Study Program in Athens, Greece. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 17.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OVST H4900 - Overseas Study In Italy-Art |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Overseas Study in Italy-Art. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OVST H4910 - Overseas Study- Informatics |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Course associated with a study abroad program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| OVST I4920 - Overseas Study In France-English And Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Overseas Study in France - English and Technology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OVST J4910 - Imrsn Experience Mexican Culture-Student Life |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Imrsn Experience Mexican Culture-Student Life. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OVST J4920 - Overseas Study In Poland - Computer Graphics Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. This course is associated with the Engineering and Technology – Computer Graphics Technology – Poland program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| OVST K4900 - OVST In Poland-Intercultural Comm |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. OVST In Poland- Intercultural Comm. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OVST K4920 - Overseas Study |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Overseas Study. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OVST L4920 - Overseas Study In The United Kingdom Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course is associated with the Herron- London program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OVST M4900 - Overseas Study In The United Kingdom |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Overseas Study In The United Kingdom. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| OVST M4910 - Overseas Study |
|
Credit Horus: 0.00. This course is associated with a study abroad program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OVST M4920 - Overseas Study |
|
Credit Hours: This is a course associated with a study abroad program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OVST M4960 - Overseas Study In Madrid |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Overseas Study in Ghana. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OVST N4910 - Overseas Study |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Overseas Study. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OVST N4920 - Overseas Study In Ghana |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Overseas Study in Ghana. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OVST O4230 - Overseas Study In Germany-Go Green |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Overseas Study in Germany - Go Green. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OVST P4910 - Overseas Study-Global Design Studio |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Overseas Study - Global Design Studio. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OVST Q4900 - Overseas Study |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Overseas Study. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OVST Y4950 - Ovreseas Study/Non-IU Program Rise |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Overseas Study/Non-IU Program Rise. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OVST Y4960 - Overseas Study - Non IU Program |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Overseas Study - Non IU program.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| OVST Y4970 - Overseas St/Non-IU Program RISE |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will allow students participating in external study abroad programs to receive RISE to the challenge credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| OVST Y4980 - Overseas Study/Non-IU Program |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Overseas Study/Non-IU Program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PACS P2000 - Introduction To Peace And Conflict Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An initial survey of major themes, approaches, and issues of peace and conflict, including violence and nonviolence, war and peace, social oppression and justice, conflict and conflict resolution. Texts and approaches are interdisciplinary, with a humanities focus. Either PACS P2000 or P2010 is required for Peace and Conflict Studies Certificate. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PACS P2010 - Introduction To Peace And Conflict Studies-Social & Behavioral Sciences Perspective |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An initial survey of major themes, approaches and issues of peace and conflict, including violence and nonviolence, war and peace, social oppression and justice, conflict and conflict resolution. Texts and approach are interdisciplinary, with a social/behavioral sciences focus. Either PACS P2000 or P2010 is required for Peace and Conflict Studies certificate. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PACS P4970 - Humanities Readings And Research In Peace and Conflict Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Readings and research with a humanities focus. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PACS P4980 - Social And Behavioral Sciences Readings and Research In Peace & Conflict Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Readings and research with a social and behavioral sciences focus. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PACS P4990 - Social And Behavioral Sciences Internship In Peace And Conflict Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Internship in an organization related to peace and conflict studies with social and behavioral sciences focus. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PATH C4010 - General Externship I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Supervised clinical experience in clinical chemistry. Student rotates through various areas of clinical chemistry.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PATH C4020 - General Externship II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Supervised clinical experience in clinical hematology. Student rotates through various areas of clinical hematology, coagulation, and urinalysis.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PATH C4030 - General Extenship III |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Supervised clinical experience in clinical microbiology. Student rotates through various areas of microbiology, serology, virology, and parasitology.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PATH C4040 - Hemostatis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Hemostasis is a course covering the basic principles of the hemostasis mechanism, including an overview of the laboratory techniques used to evaluate disorders of hemostasis. Emphasis will focus on the major components of hemostasis, interaction of these components, and laboratory evaluation of the major hemostatic disorders.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PATH C4050 - General Externship IV |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Supervised clinical experience in blood banking. Student rotates through various areas of modern blood bank, including donor room, transfusion service, antibody identification, component therapy, transplantation therapy, and quality control.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PATH C4060 - Clinical Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Emphasis on metabolic processes that maintain chemical homeostasis in humans, the application of clinical chemistry assay values in evaluating the integrity of these processes, and the correlation of abnormal results with metabolic dysfunction and/or disease states.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PATH C4070 - Hematology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of functions, maturation, and morphology of blood cells in addition to factors regulating production, metabolism, and kinetics of blood cells. The etiologic and morphologic classifications of blood disorders and diseases; correlations with bone marrows and cytochemistries. Study of cellular contents of other body fluids.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PATH C4080 - Principles Of Immunohematology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Emphasis on major blood group antigens and antibodies including their role in transfusion medicine. Current practices in blood donation, apheresis, and quality control are also covered.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PATH C4090 - Serology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Lectures describing and comparing all pertinent serologic procedures utilized in diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis, rubella, streptococcal disease, syphilis, various febrile conditions, fungal infections, parasite infections, and infectious mononucleosis. Selected lectures in viral culturing methods.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PATH C4100 - Urine Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Routine urine examination and special tests; laboratory and special lectures. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PATH C4110 - Diagnostic Medical Microbiology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. An in-depth study of the clinically significant microorganisms with special emphasis on their clinical significance, cultural and biochemical characteristics, and susceptibility testing patterns.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PATH C4120 - Topics In Medical Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Selected topics in medical technology covered by lecture and clinical experience.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PATH C4200 - Mycology/Parasitology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Lecture and laboratory experience covering clinically significant fungi and parasites. Clinical manifestations, collection and procedures for processing of specimens, and identification techniques will be employed.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PATH C4210 - Diagnostic Microbiology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Laboratory experience in the performance of skills and procedures needed for the isolation, identification, and susceptibility testing of clinically significant microorganisms.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PATH C4260 - Clinical Chemistry Instrumentation and Methodologies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Emphasis is on utilization of basic and intermediate methodologies and instrumentation and their application to assaying a variety of body constituents in a clinical chemistry laboratory.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PATH C4270 - Hematologic Techniques And Procedures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Experience in blood cell identification on stained smears; blood cell, platelet, and reticulocyte counting procedures. Techniques of sedimentation rates, hematocrits, corpuscular indices, hemoglobin determination, and smear preparation staining. Introduction to instrumentation and quality control. Special procedures including bone marrow preparations, flow cytometry, and automated differential counters.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PATH C4280 - Techniques In Immunohematology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Emphasis on laboratory techniques used in blood banks, including blood typing, crossmatching, antibody identification, record keeping, and quality control.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PATH C4290 - Serology Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory experience in performance of various testing procedures utilized in serologic diagnosis of infectious diseases and various syndromes. Techniques include precipitation, flocculation, various hemagglutination and hemagglutination inhibition techniques, fluorescent antibody testing, and complement fixation.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PATH C4500 - Serology I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to serologic and immunologic principles. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL A3160 - Environmental Health Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The environmental health problems and concerns facing our world today are an integral part of our everyday life. These concerns reach across social, economic, scientific and regulatory boundaries. They are not limited to one country, one species, or even one unique solution. This course presents environmental concerns within the context of the prevalent social, economic, scientific, and governmental perspectives. The course attempts to define these perspectives, place them in the proper “balanced” context needed for effective decision-making, and provide the necessary science and non-science background for a clear understanding of the issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL A3220 - Principles Of Epidemiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles Of Epidemiology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL A3800 - Environmental Health Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00-6.00. The Internship in environmental health science provides students with an opportunity to gain meaningful and appropriate experience in any of the disciplines within environmental health. Students may seek internships in local, state, national, or international organizations in the government, non-for-profit, business, or industrial sectors, providing the work of the internship reflects one of the environmental health disciplines. Internships may be paid or unpaid. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PBHL A4100 - Introduction To Environmental Toxicology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is structured for those students desiring a basic understanding of the principles and practices of toxicology and how these are applied in the environmental regulator arena. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL A4160 - Environmental Health Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of professional requirements and duties of the environmental health functions within health agencies; consideration of applicable laws and standards in each environmental health function; environmental health program planning, evaluation, implementation, and personnel responsibilities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL A4240 - Environmental Health Science Technology: Management Water And Waste |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Environmental Health Science Technology Management Water And Wastewater will cover various aspects of environmental science applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL A4280 - Food Science And Sanitation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic concepts of food technology with emphasis on methods and procedures in food processing to minimize contamination and to prevent food-related illness. Federal, state, and local food laws and inspection procedures will be examined. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL A4330 - Industrial Hygiene |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Industrial Hygiene. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL A4510 - Air Pollution In The Community |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course on air pollution provides the student with a basic foundation in the science and management of air quality. Our focus is on scientific technical aspects of air pollution through the study of the characteristics of the atmosphere and atmospheric pollutants/ meteorology, and basic dispersion modeling, atmosphere effects, including global warming and ozone depletion; health and welfare effects, emissions assessment; motor vehicles emissions and stationary source emissions control/ and indoor air pollution. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL A4590 - Environmental Science And Health Data Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is structured for those students desiring a basic understanding of the theoretical and applied principles and practices of analyzing data in the environmental science and health fields. Students will learn the basic concepts of how to sample, analyze and interpret data as it is commonly used in these fields. A selective portion from a number of science disciplines will be used covering, mathematics, biology, chemistry and statistics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL A4600 - Techniques In Environmental Science And Health |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course will focus on field applications and comprehension of environmental sampling and analysis techniques. Analytical methods and sampling techniques will be addressed along with common laboratory quality assurance and quality control. The course uses a format of hands-on learning supplemented by lecture to establish theoretical concepts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL B3000 - Introduction To Biostatistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an introductory survey of statistical reasoning and analysis. Additionally, students should have a working knowledge of personal computers and the Windows operating environment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL B6510 - Introduction To Biostatistics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. B6510 is an introductory level bio statistical course designed for healthcare professionals. This course will cover the topics on data presentation techniques, describing data with numerical summary measures, probability and probability distributions, sampling distributions, statistical inferences from small and large samples, analysis of categorical data, analysis of variance, correlation and simple linear regression analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL B6520 - Biostatistics-Public Health II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the advanced principles and methods of data analysis in public health biostatistics. Emphasis is placed on public health examples as they relate to concepts such as: multiple regression, analysis of variance and covariance, logistic regression, nonparametric statistics, survival analysis, statistics used in epidemiology, and repeated measures analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PBHL C5010 - Program Planning In Public Health Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to illuminate health planning models and key steps in health promotion planning. Students will develop a health promotion campaign through needs assessment and brochure development. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL E3220 - Principles Of Epidemiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A basic overview of epidemiologic methodology and techniques. Both communicable and chronic disease risk factors will be discussed. Along with data acquisition, analysis techniques, and current published epidemiological studies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL H1200 - Contemporary Healthcare Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course offers students a basic introduction to the U.S. health care system through a selective review of current issues and challenges in health policy and management. During the semester, we will explore a number of contemporary health issues in public health, environmental health, and health care delivery. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL H2000 - Heatlh Care Accounting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Health Care Accounting will provide the students with a foundation in health care accounting from long-term care to acute care. Topics will include a balance sheet or statement of financial position; income statement or statement of revenues and expenses; journals ledgers, trial balances and discrimination of formatting financial statements between acute care and long-term care organizations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL H3200 - Health Systems Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores components of the United States health care system and associated managerial, organizational, financial, insurance, delivery, quality assurance, workforce, and performance issues and challenges. Instructional methods used will include lectures, discussions, readings, in-class exercises and project work on a wide range of concepts, ideas, factors, trends and opinions about the U.S. healthcare system and its components. This course is designed to help create a foundation of knowledge and understanding that students will use in many other courses in the program. This course is divided into an introductory component and four modules. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL H3300 - Global Public Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. All public health is global in today's world. This 3 credit hour course will explore the key global public health issues that face countries throughout the world, ranging from malnutrition to the use of new technologies to improve health. The course will focus on the ways in which health policy of both developed and developing countries, impacts public health strategies, specific interventions, and outcomes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PBHL H3520 - Health Finance And Budgeting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the financial management of health care facilities based on generally accepted business principles. Accounting and managerial control of cash, accounts receivable, inventory control, budgeting, and cost control, as well as accounting and evaluation of short-term and long-term debt will be examined. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL H3530 - Advanced Health Finance And Budgeting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced Health Finance And Bugeting. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL H3540 - Health Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course applies economics to the study of administrative and policy issues in the health care sector. Economic concepts are used to explain the system of health care financing and the organization of health care delivery in the U.S. The economic evaluation of health care programs is also discussed. By the end of the course, students should recognize the relevance of economics to health and medical care, particularly how price acts as an allocation mechanism and be able to analyze public policy in health and medical care from an economic perspective. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL H3650 - Health Services Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. The Health Services Practicum will consist of a personal career-planning component coupled with weekly field visits to health care agencies in central Indiana. Students must perform satisfactorily in both parts of the practicum to receive a passing grade. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL H3730 - Human Resources For Healthcare |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces students to the concepts and techniques related to the human resources management and training practices within healthcare organizations. We will examine and analyze various human resource issues unique to the health care industry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| PBHL H3750 - Management Of Health Service Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the discipline of management and its major components relating to health service organizations. This course will provide students with a foundation of basic fundamentals, principles and techniques of management which have particular relevance and application in healthcare. Students will learn about management theory and its practical application in healthcare in fundamental areas such as planning, organizing, leading, and controlling. Other key elements of management such as communication, decision making, delegation, participatory management, leadership style, managing staff, teamwork, and change and innovation will be explored. Successful completion of this course will help provide students with a general foundation of knowledge about management and its application in health service organizations. Instructional methods used will include lectures, interactive discussions, readings, in- class exercises and individual and group homework assignments using a wide range of management terms, concepts, fundamentals, theories, methods, techniques, and practices used in managing health service organizations. Special emphasis will be given to the role and application of leadership in the management of a diverse healthcare workforce, in a variety of health service settings. This course is designed to help create a foundation of knowledge and understanding of management that students will use in other courses in the public health undergraduate programs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| PBHL H4010 - Strategic Planning In Health Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Strategic Planning In Health Organizations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL H4110 - Chronic Long-Term Care Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Administering programs across the continuum of care including nursing homes, hospice, home health, and assisted living; Medicare and Medicaid financing; quality improvement; care management; and needs of special populations, particularly, vulnerable elders. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL H4200 - Health Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course is divided into three sections. In the first, we review the objectives of health policy and the current performance of the US health care system in terms of cost, access and quality of care. In the second, we review the formation and implementation of health policy through both Federal and State levels of government. In the final section, we review several reform efforts, discuss the feasibility of their implementation, and the likely impacts on the health care system should they be enacted. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL H4320 - Health Care Marketinig |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course studies the principles of marketing as they relate to the healthcare industry. Course objective is to provide clear understanding of marketing principles as they relate to the healthcare industry; to develop an understanding of market share and the unique Indianapolis healthcare market and to provide an opportunity to use course competencies to develop a comprehensive marketing plan and project. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL H4410 - Legal Aspects Of Health Care Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of the liability and legal responsibility, as well as legal recourse, that health care facilities and providers may exercise. This course will discuss policies and standards relating to health facility administration. Also included is a discussion of financial aspects unique to the hospital/ health care facility environment, such as third-party payments and federal assistance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL H4740 - Health Administration Ethics Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course follows an interactive application approach to examine ethical decision making challenges from an individual managerial perspective. It also explores ethical decisions with broader policy implications associated with difficult cases and problems at institutional and societal levels. The demonstration of professional values and specific job-oriented presentation and analytical skills is expected. Students will be expected to demonstrate intellectual depth, an understanding of society and culture, and how health administrators influence both the work environment and respective community. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL H5170 - Fundamentals Of Epidemiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces basic epidemiologic concepts including determinants of health and patterns of disease in populations, and implications of disease processes on prevention strategies and policy development. Among the topics to be covered are measures of morbidity and mortality, sources of data, and design of research studies and clinical trials. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL H5230 - Health Services Human Resource Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides the knowledge and skills needed to understand the application of personnel and labor relations techniques to the health services sectors, with particular emphasis on human resources management, employees' benefit programs, and labor relations as applied to the health services delivery organization. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL H6700 - Topics In Public Health |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course has a variable title and can be offered for variable credits. Similar to topics courses offered in other IUPUI programs, this course offers an introduction to a variety of public health topics and current issues will be covered in this course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times or for a maximum of 0 credits
|
| PBHL P1000 - Topics In Public Health |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An introduction to public health disciplines, topics and issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PBHL P3000 - Topics In Public Health |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Various topics within the Public Health arena. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 7 times
|
| PBHL P4000 - Topics In Public Health |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course offers an introduction to a variety of public health topics and current issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PBHL P5000 - Philosophy/Principles Of Health Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course is designed to introduce graduate students and/or public health professionals to the historical and contemporary philosophies and principles that provide the foundation for health education/promotion and disease prevention with the context of population-based public health. Learners will explore topics that promote a better understanding of the importance of health education in building the bridge between health information and health practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL P5040 - U S Health Care Systems And Health Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This web supported course explores the U.S. health care system, policy development, and ethical challenges. It examines the structure, components, organization and financing of the U.S. health care system. The policy process at national, state, and local levels will be analyzed using legislation and related activities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL P5170 - Fundamentals Of Epidemiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will introduce students to basic epidemiologic concepts including determinants of health and patterns of disease in populations, populations health descriptive techniques, use of health indicators and secondary data sources. Students will gain an understanding of the role of Epidemiology in developing prevention strategies and policy. Among the topics to be covered are measures of mortality and morbidity, design and analysis of observational studies, community health assessment and program evaluations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL P5190 - Environmental Science In Public Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will examine national and international environmental factors that influence health such as population, toxic substances, energy food quality and air and water quality. Students will discuss risk analysis as well as prevention strategies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL P5510 - Biostatistics For Public Health I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Biostatistics for Public Health I. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL P6090 - Infectious Disease |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide a basic overview of the infectious disease process, including disease agents, transmission routes, immunity and public health significance. The course introduces principles of infectious disease epidemiology, including outbreak investigation and surveillance, using case studies as examples. Concepts on globalization of disease, microbial ecology, and disease eradication are also discussed.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL P6130 - Bioterrorism: Public Health's Roles and Responses |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This graduate elective course, which can be taken for 1, 2, or 3 credits, is designed to familiarize learners with biological agents used for terrorism in the past, and agents the Centers for Disease Control consider most likely to be used at present. As the course will be made available to students in both healthcare and non healthcare majors, student expectations will be assessed at the course¿s outset and every attempt will be made to provide opportunities for student satisfaction in meeting personal objectives. It is already known that as one component of the course, students will be provided with instructional CDs addressing bioterrorism epidemiology, resources for infection control and key resources for further exploration. All of these instructional materials will be further discussed and elaborated in class. Other student opportunities include readings from past great works depicting responses to naturally occurring infectious diseases or contemporary responses to terrorism and bioterrorism. Public health responses to bioterrorism at local, state and federal levels will also be discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL P6310 - Maternal, Child, Family Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Maternal, Child, Family Health. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL P6500 - Readings In Public Health |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. This course is designed to expose the student to published material on a specific topic or technique in the field of Public Health. The material to be studied will be determined primarily by the student under the direction of a faculty member with input from the student’s concentration advisor. The student is expected to work closely with the faculty member to develop a strategy to identify the material to study, plan a time frame for completion of the study and to determine the nature of the study product. Generally the product will be a summary and interpretation of the material studied in a literature review format. The student and faculty member will complete a written agreement, which outlines the scope of work for the semester. This agreement will also be signed by the concentration advisor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 6 times or for a maximum of 12 credits
|
| PBHL P6550 - Historical Evolution Of Epidemiology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course covers the major developments in the history of epidemiology. The course is not meant to be comprehensive, but rather to provide an opportunity to follow the development of the discipline. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PBHL P6700 - Topics In Public Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Various topics in the Public Health arena. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PBHL R5150 - Sociology Of Health And Illness |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to acquaint the student with both the theoretical and empirical foundations of medical sociology and the current research foci of work in this field. Among topics to be considered are Social influences on distribution of disease and impact of culture on symptom recognition and help seeking. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL S1010 - DD&D An Introduction To Public Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An Introduction to Public Health. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PBHL S3200 - This Stress Is Killing Me: Stress And Its Effects On You |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will teach you all about stress and its effect on your body and mind. You will learn the biology of stress, factors that protect you from stress or make you more
vulnerable to it and the experience of stress in various settings, such as work, family and community. You will also learn how to manage stress. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PCTX 20100 - Introductory Pharmacology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. An introduction to the pharmacological basis of therapeutics. This course involves an integration of knowledge of anatomy, physiology, microbiology, and chemistry with the biological and selected chemical and physical actions and reactions of drugs. Primairly for students in nursing and other paramedical programs. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
|
| PES 11100 - Lifetime Fitness |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Provides students opportunities to assess levels of physical fitness, develop an exercise plan, and experience activities designed to improve cardiovascular condition, strength, and flexibility. Presents current findings and provides laboratory experiences regarding techniques of initiation, maintaining, and evaluating personal fitness. For non-H&K majors only. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PES 11200 - Aquatic Movement Forms |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction and practice in aquatic movement forms. Students select from the activities listed in the current schedule of classes. Following is a partial list of activities: beginning swimming; intermediate swimming; advanced swimming; synchronized swimming. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PES 11400 - Exercise And Conditioning |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction and practice in various types of exercise programs. Students select from the activities listed in the current schedule of classes. Following is a partial list of activities: body conditioning; exercise and fitness; exercise to music; jogging and running; swimnastics; relaxation techniques; weight training; exercise and principles of weight control. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PES 11500 - Individual And Dual Movement Forms I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction and practice in individual and dual movement forms conducted in an indoor setting. Students select from the activities listed in the current schedule of classes. Following is a partial list of activities: badminton; billiards; bowling; fencing; judo; karate; beginning gymnastics; intermediate gymnastics; squash; racquetball; yoga; kung fu; personal defense. Special fee required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PES 11600 - Individualized And Dual Movement Forms II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction and practice in individual and dual movement forms conducted mainly in outdoor settings. Students select from the activities listed in the current schedule of classes. Following is a partial list of activities: beginning golf; intermediate golf; advanced golf; bicycling; beginning tennis; intermediate tennis; advanced tennis; track and field. Special fee required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Travel Time, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PES 11700 - Team Movement Forms |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction and practice in team movement forms. Students select from the activities listed in the current schedule of classes. Following is a partial list of activities: basketball; field hockey; lacrosse; softball; soccer; power volleyball I; power volleyball II. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PES 11800 - Horseback Riding |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction and practice in hunter seat equitation. Class meets off campus, and students are expected to provide their own transportation. Following is a partial list of offerings: beginning; intermediate; advanced; combined training. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PES 12000 - Officiating |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Theory and practice in officiating movement forms. Students select from the activities listed in the current schedule of classes. Following is a partial list of activities: basketball; field hockey; gymnastics; swimming; softball; volleyball; track and field. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PES 13000 - Lifeguard Training |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Knowledge, skill practice, and evaluation of rescue techniques leading toward Red Cross lifeguarding certification. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PES 13200 - Water Safety Instructor Course |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Knowledge, practice, and evaluation of swimming and rescue skills. Teaching techniques leading to Red Cross W.S.I. certification. Possession of a current Red Cross Instructor Candidate Training Certificate. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PH 39900 - Electricity And Magnetism - University Of Indianapolis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a consortium course for Univeristy of Indianapolis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PH 46000 - Quantum Mechanics- U Of I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PH 49000 - Physics Senior Research- Univeristy Of Indianapolis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. This is a consortium course for Univeristy of Indianapolis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHAD 45200 - Social Aspects Of Pharmacy Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A survey of selected social and behavioral models and related issues that affect the contemporary practice of pharmacy. Special emphasis is given to the interdependent roles of the patient, the pharmacist, and the physician. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHAD 46400 - Management Of Professional Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of the principles and practices of administration, operation, and communication applicable to the practice of pharmacy in community and institutional environments. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHAD 46800 - Community Pharmacy Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles, practices, and case studies related to the organization, operation, and control of community pharmacies. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHAD 47200 - Jurisprudence |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Legal principles and laws that affect the practice of pharmacy in community and institutional environments. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHAD 48200 - Marketing Pharmaceutical Products |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Examination of the channels of distribution for pharmaceutical products, including research-intensive and generic manufacturers, drug wholesalers, independent and chain community pharmacies, non-pharmacy retailers, prescription benefit managers, and third-party payers. Areas of special emphasis include new product development, product distribution, advertising and promotion, Rx-to-OTC switching, and product pricing and payment policies. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHAD 49000 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An honors course for superior students to be used in relation to, and to supplement, an existing course; an in-depth approach to topics of current interest utilizing the original literature as prime source material. A laboratory project may be included. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHAD 50100 - Food And Drug Law I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A systematic study of the structure and function of the major federal (USA) laws and regulations governing the manufacturing, distribution, and marketing of foods, drugs, cosmetics, and devices. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| PHAD 50200 - Food And Drug Law II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Detailed study of statutes and regulations applied to discovery, development, and marketing pharmaceutical and devices in the United States.
. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| PHAD 55600 - Healthcare Economics And Public Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles and theories of healthcare economics applied in analysis of the U.S. healthcare system. Perspectives are presented on the differential roles of economic analysis and policy analysis. Topics include medical care as an input to health, pharmaceutical service market, adequacy of health manpower supply, health associations and demand for legislation. Healthcare reform, the pharmaceutical industry, and social values that guide policy are explored. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHAD 69000 - Special Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individual investigations in pharmacy marketing, retailing, and management. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHAD 69600 - Seminar In Pharmacy Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Selected topics on current research, teaching methods, and contemporary problems in management and marketing. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHAD 86300 - Marketing Professional Services |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Application of marketing principles, strategies, and techniques in developing, implementing, marketing, and evaluating professional pharmacy services. Special emphasis is placed on the creation of innovative services that target unmet patient needs. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| PHAR F5980 - Drugs, Diseases, And Poisons |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an overview of the molecular basis of drug action and pharmacological properties of several of the major drug groups used in medical science. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHAR F8040 - Introduction To Pharmacology AndToxicology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the fundamental principles of pharmacology and toxicology for the beginning graduate student, as an introduction to the discipline.
. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHAR F8260 - Seminar In Toxicology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Literature and research reports by students and staff. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHIL 10100 - The History Of Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the problems, methods, and main traditions of philosophy through readings in Greek, medieval, modern, and contemporary philosophy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| PHIL 10200 - Methods In The Humanities |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to research tools and methodologies in the humanities stressing the development of skills necessary for effectively navigating reference sources, evaluating scholarly literature, working with primary texts, and understanding the norms and values of humanistic inquiry across the disciplines. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. To provide students with a toolkit for textual work, independent of the chosen major.
2. To allow students to gain an appreciation of what the humanities are about.
|
| PHIL 10600 - Human Experience In Art Literature, Music, And Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the problems, methods, and main traditions experiences and ideas which lie at the heart of all humanities (e.g.love, death, justice, duty, nature, beauty, and deity) using as material specimens of the visual arts, music, literature, and philosophy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| PHIL 10700 - Freshman Experience -English & Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course is required of all entering freshmen and transfer students with less than 60 credits. This course will include utilization of campus resources, goal setting, values exploration, relationship of academic planning and life goals, discipline specific career exploration and critical thinking. The course also serves well as the departmental Freshman Experience, since it introduces majors to the disciplines of art, literature, music, and philosophy. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| PHIL 11000 - Introduction To Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The basic problems and types of philosophy, with special emphasis on the problems of knowledge and the nature of reality. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
CTL:ISH 1050 Introduction To Philosophy
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHIL 11100 - Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the nature of moral value and obligation. Topics such as the following will be considered: different conceptions of the good life and standards of right conduct; the relation of nonmoral and moral goodness; determinism, free will, and the problem of moral responsibility; the political and social dimensions of ethics; the principles and methods of moral judgment. Readings will be drawn both from contemporary sources and from the works of such philosophers as Plato, Aristotle, Aquinas, Butler, Hume, Kant, and J. S. Mill. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
CTL:ISH 1051 Ethics
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHIL 11400 - Global Moral Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A systematic and representative examination of significant contemporary moral problems with a focus on global issues such as international justice, poverty and foreign aid, nationalism and patriotism, just war, population and the environment, human rights, gender equality, and national self-determination. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will acquire a thorough understanding of a comprehensive selection of global moral issues, including the concepts and theories that are essential to understanding and discussing these issues.
2. Students will acquire skills in the analysis and evaluation, as well the construction, of the kind of arguments needed for justifying personal opinion on ethical issues.
3. Students will develop critical thinking skills.
4. Students will develop skills in analytical writing and in clear and precise oral communication.
|
| PHIL 12000 - Critical Thinking |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to develop reasoning skills and analytic abilities, based on an understanding of the rules or forms as well as the content of good reasoning. This course will cover moral and scientific reasoning, in addition to ordinary problem solving. This course is intended primarily for students with nontechnical backgrounds. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Information Literacy, UC-Information Literacy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHIL 15000 - Principles Of Logic |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A first course in formal deductive logic; mechanical and other procedures for distinguishing good arguments from bad. Truth-tables and proofs for sentential (Boolean) connectives, followed by quantificational logic with relations. Although metatheoretic topics are treated, the emphasis is on methods. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHIL 20600 - Philosophy Of Religion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course encourages critical reflection on traditional and contemporary views about God and other religious ideas. Topics include arguments for God's existence, the problem of evil, understanding the divine attributes, miracles, religious pluralism, and life after death. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
CTL:ISH 1052 Philosophy Of Religion
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PHIL 21900 - Introduction To Existentialism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of both the philosophical and more literary writings of the existentialist movement. Readings will be chosen from among the following writers: Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Dostoevsky, Kafka, Marcel, Heidegger, Camus, Sartre, Jaspers, de Beauvoir, Ortega, and Merleau-Ponty. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PHIL 22100 - Introduction To Philosophy Of Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the scope and methods of science and to theories of its historical development. Topics include scientific revolutions, theories of scientific method, the nature of scientific discovery, explanation, and the role of values in scientific change. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PHIL 22500 - Philosophy And Gender |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the beliefs, assumptions, and values found in traditional and contemporary philosophical analyses of women. A range of feminist approaches to knowledge, values, and social issues will be introduced. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Improved knowledge of human cultures, creative thinking, critical thinking, integrative learning.
|
| PHIL 23000 - Religions Of The East |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (REL 23000) A study of the history, teachings, and present institutions of the religions of India, Southeast Asia, China, and Japan. This will include Hinduism, Jainism, Sikhism, Buddhism, Confucianism, Taoism, Shintoism, and Zoroastrianism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Information literacy.
2. Human cultures.
3. Creative thinking.
4. Inter-culteral knowledge.
|
| PHIL 23100 - Religions Of The West |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (REL 23100) A comparative study of the origins, institutions, and theologies of the three major Western religions, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Information literacy.
2. Human cultures.
3. Creative thinking.
4. Integrative learning.
|
| PHIL 24000 - Social And Political Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of some major social and political philosophers from Plato to contemporary authors. Issues such as justice, rights and freedom, community, and the "globalized" future will be considered. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| PHIL 24200 - Philosophy, Culture, And The African American Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The purpose of this course is to consider African American based or inspired conceptions of Western philosophy and new visions of what it is to do philosophy sensitive to culturally rooted diversity. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHIL 25200 - Intermediate Logic |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced introduction to formalized basic logic. The classical concept of consequence is studied from both a syntactic and semantic point of view in the areas of propositional logic, quantificational logic, and axiomatics. The main technique introduced is natural deduction style proofs, exposing students to an intuitive but rigorous concept of deductive proof. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. To provide students with a second but advanced introduction to formalized logic that, while still gentle on the beginner, it is also meant to be a preparation for more advanced work and is therefore informed by research in the field.
2. To offer a general logic education for all who might take an interest in it (linguists, mathematicians, computer scientists, etc.)
3. To suit the specific logical needs of philosophy students.
|
| PHIL 26000 - Philosophy And Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A discussion of philosophical issues in the law: a critical examination of such basic concepts in law as property, civil liberty, punishment, right, contract, crime and responsibility; and a survey of some main philosophical theories about the nature and justification of legal systems. Readings will be drawn from both law and philosophy. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Written Communication, GTC-Information Literacy, UC-Written Communication, UC-Information Literacy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| PHIL 27000 - Biomedical Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the moral problems raised by developments in medicine and the biomedical sciences. Topics include abortion, reproductive technologies, euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide, experiments involving human subjects, and health care delivery. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHIL 27500 - The Philosophy Of Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the principal theories concerning the nature, function, and value of the arts from classical times to the present. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| PHIL 28000 - Ethics And Animals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An exploration through the study of major historical and contemporary philosophical writings of basic moral issues as they apply to our treatment of animals. Rational understanding of the general philosophical problems raised by practices such as experimentation on animals or meat-eating will be emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHIL 29000 - Environmental Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to philosophical issues surrounding debates about the environment and our treatment of it. Topics may include endangered species, "deep ecology," the scope and limits of cost-benefit analyses, and duties to future generations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHIL 29300 - Selected Topics In Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A critical examination of some special topic or topics in philosophy. Details concerning topics selected for treatment in a given semester may be obtained in advance from the Department of Philosophy. Sections of this course may sometimes be initiated by students upon petition to the department. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| PHIL 30100 - History Of Ancient Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of Greek philosophy from its beginning in the Milesian school through the Presocratics to Plato and Aristotle. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PHIL 30200 - History Of Medieval Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the main trends and figures of medieval philosophy, with an emphasis on metaphysics, epistemology, and ethics. Readings (in English translation) may include Augustine, Boethius, Avicenna, Anselm, Abelard, Maimonides, Aquinas, Scotus, Ockham and Suarez. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| PHIL 30300 - History Of Modern Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Concentrates on the major philosophical writers from the Renaissance to the beginning of the nineteenth century: Descartes, Hobbes, Spinoza, Locke, Leibniz, Berkeley, Hume, Kant. Some in other areas, e.g., Galileo, Newton, Calvin, are also considered. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PHIL 30400 - Nineteenth-Century Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the major movements and directions of nineteenth-century philosophy, including such figures as Hegel, Comte, Mach, Schopenhauer, Nietzsche, Mill, Royce and Peirce. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PHIL 30500 - Philosophical Theories Of Feminism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on an analysis of ancient, medieval, and contemporary philosophical theories of gender and the role that these theories play in current political structures. In addition to classical readings, current philosophical issues such as pornography, abortion, family values ideology, body and self-image, biological determinism, and racism in the context of historical ideologies are discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PHIL 30600 - Twentieth-Century Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A critical examination of the main currents of contemporary philosophical thought, such as pragmatism, analytic philosophy, phenomenology, and existentialism, and other recent developments. The course will cover selected works of such philosophers as Russell, Wittgenstein, Peirce, Whitehead, Heidegger, and Sartre. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PHIL 31200 - Medical Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A critical examination of various issues, such as abortion, euthanasia, the health-care system, and experimentation on humans. Topics will be dealt with from medical, ethical, religious, and legal perspectives. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PHIL 31900 - Classic And Contemporary Marxism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A systematic exposition and analysis of principal elements in the philosophy of Marx, followed by a survey of some important twentieth-century writers in the Marxian tradition (e.g., Lenin, Lukacs, Marcuse, the Yugoslav Praxis group, etc.). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHIL 32400 - Ethics For The Professions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the ethical problems faced by professionals in engineering, management, and other professional fields. Topics include: ethical theories, moral decision-making, social responsibility, employee rights and responsibilities, the environment, truth telling, affirmative action, privacy and confidentiality, whistle-blowing, and deception. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| PHIL 32500 - Ethics And Public Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the ethical issues and problems of public health and health care. Within public health, such topics will be considered as; ethical theories; laws, codes, values, and moral decision making; the health care system; issues of the health care professional; health care professionals and patients; the sanctity of life; biomedical research and human experimentation; health policy; and allocation of resources. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
|
| PHIL 32600 - Business Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Philosophic examination of such topics as morality and self-interest, freedom and coercion, distributive justice, limits of the law, moral and legal rights, fair equality of opportunity, justice between nations. These topics are seen from a new perspective when they are connected to discussions of fair wages and capitalism, legal constraints on manufacturers and advertisers, affirmative-action programs, environmentalism, and multinational corporations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PHIL 32700 - Environmental Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of traditional ethical theory applied to environmental issues such as population control, conservation, human rights and pollution, nuclear energy, extinction and animal rights, our obligations to future generations, toxic waste, and issues in agriculture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
|
| PHIL 32800 - Ethics And Animals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of traditional philosophical positions on questions of animal rights. Topics covered typically include human rights and doctrine of duty and obligation, vivisection, animals and food, extinction, the pet industry, hunting, the fur industry, and animal-rights organizations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PHIL 32900 - Foundations Of Professional Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigates conceptions of professions and their relationship to society. Explores the relationship between ethics for professionals and the ethics of private citizens. Addresses such topics as privacy, confidentiality, whistle-blowing, and conflicts of interest as they exist in fiduciary relationships. Identifies the philosophical implications of Codes of Ethics of various professions. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. The nature of a profession.
2. The roots of professional (as opposed to personal) ethics.
3. The conflicts-of-interest most commonly encountered by professionals.
4. Learning to revise and edit written work and move from a low stakes writing assignment to a formal paper.
5. Learning to write an analytical paper in which they make a claim, support that claim, and defend it from likely challenges.
6. Students will develop the ability to provide reasons in support of and in opposition to a moral claim.
|
| PHIL 35000 - Philosophy And Probability |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the student to mathematical probability and its philosophical applications. Topics may include theories of probability, Hume's problem of induction, Goodman's paradox, and the foundations of scientific reasoning. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHIL 35100 - Philosophy Of Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines topics at the intersection of science and philosophy. Primary topics: Fundamental Principles of the Scientific Method; The Nature of Scientific Change; The Epistemology of Science and the Debate over Scientific Realism; Scientific Covergence and the Future of Science; Consilience of Science with Nonscience; Science and Pseudoscience; Science and Human Values. Secondary topics: The Strange World of Contemporary Physics; Ethical Issues in Scientific Research; Science and Religion; Science and Education; Science and the Meaning of Life. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PHIL 35200 - Topics In The History And Philosophy Of Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of philosophical issues raised by the history and practices of science with a focus on the history and practices of a specific scientific discipline, e.g., anthropology, biology, chemistry, geology, physics, psychology, sociology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Gain awareness and understanding of ontological, epistemological and axiological issues raised both by the history and practices of science in general and by the history and practices of the specific science under consideration.
|
| PHIL 39300 - Biomedical Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A philosophical consideration of ethical problems that arise in current biomedical practice; for instance, abortion, euthanasia, determination of death, consent to treatment, and professional responsibilities in connection with research, experimentation, and health care delivery. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| PHIL 40200 - Studies In Medieval Christian Thought |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of medieval (and patristic) philosophical theology. Issues include the nature and existence of God, religious language, and doctrines such as the Trinity, Incarnation, and Atonement. Readings (in English translation) will include, among others, Augustine, Boethius, Anselm, and Aquinas. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHIL 40600 - Intermediate Philosophy Of Religion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intensive study of some important problems such as the existence of God, the problem of evil, immortality, or the nature of religion. Or the religious philosophy of some significant thinkers such as Buber, Berdyaev, Tillich, Barth, Maritain, or Chardin may form the content of the course. Subject matter may vary. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 40800 - Philosophy Of Love And Friendship |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a survey of the main trends and major figures in the philosophy of love and frienship in the western trasition from antiquity to the contemporary period. Using the method of history of philosophy, this course will explore special topics (the ethical basis of love and friendship, the transition from eros to agape, the body-soul dichotomy, philosophy of sexuality and embodiment,etc.), using original writings (in transition) of authors ranging from Sappho, Plato and Aristotle to Foucault. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| PHIL 41100 - Modern Ethical Theories |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the major controversies in the history of modern ethics, including: the place of reason in ethics, the basis of moral obligation, and the relation between science and morals. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHIL 41200 - Topics In Analytic Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced introduction to Analytic Philosophy. In this course we try to understand, examine, and critically assess the main changes brought about by Analytic Philosophy and to gain an appreciation of its accomplishments. The course will either (1) provide an overview of the main periods of the Analytic movement; or (2) put key players in focus; or (3) make topical particular doctrines. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students are expected to be familar with selected names in Analytic Philosophy and the programmatic goals they stand for.
2. Students would appreciate the achievements of Analytic Philosophy and the repercussions they had for philosophy as a discipline.
3. Students would be better prepared for graduate studies in Philosophy.
|
| PHIL 42100 - Philosophy Of Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of central issues in philosophy of science. Topics include theories of explanation, confirmation, reduction, laws, the status of theoretical entities, and the epistemological foundations of scientific theories. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHIL 42200 - Topics In Continental Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced introduction to Continental Philosophy. In this course we try to understand, examine, and critically assess major topics in Continental Philosophy and to gain an appreciation of its accomplishments. The course will either (1) put key players in focus such as Husserl, Dilthey, Heidegger, Satre, Foucault; or (2) discuss particular strands within Continental Philosophy (such as phenomenology, existentialism, post-modernism, structuralism critical theory). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students are expected to be familar with selected names in Continental Philosophy and the programmatic goals they stand for.
2. Students are expected to appreciate the achievements of Continental Philosophy and the repercussions they had or philosophy as a discipline.
3. Students would be better prepared for graduate studies in Philosophy.
|
| PHIL 42400 - Recent Ethical Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A philosophical examination of significant issues in recent ethical theory and metaethics, such as the nature of value, obligation, virtue, rationality, moral knowledge, the status of ethical sentences, practical applications, and the relationship between ethics and science or religion. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will acquire a thorough understanding of the concepts and theories in ethics and metaethics.
2. Students will become more familiar with important ethical issues and with conceptions of value that continue to shape our world.
3. Students will develop critical thinking skills.
4. Students will develop skills in analytical writing and in clear and precise oral communication.
|
| PHIL 42500 - Metaphysics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A concentrated investigation of some of the basic problems concerning essence, existence, time, space, substance, causality, permanence, and change. Readings and discussions will center on representative metaphysical thinkers. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| PHIL 43000 - Modern Religious Thought |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of important philosophical and theological issues that arose in the modern period. Possible topics include the role of religion in the modern secular state, religious toleration and civic equality, and the historicism of Scripture. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand philosophical approaches to the relation between ethics and religion.
2. Identify how philosophical discussions in the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries impacted religious toleration and civic equality in Europe.
3. Understand the process through which Scripture was historicized.
|
| PHIL 43100 - Contemporary Religious Thought |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An exploration of the work of major nineteenth and twentieth-century philosophers of religion and theologians such as Kierkegaard, Hegel, Schleiermacher, Barth, Rahner, and others. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the demands placed on religion by critical human reason.
2. Identify the ways in which modernism and post modernism affected the understanding of Religion in the West.
3. Identify contemporary responses to modernism and post-modernism.
|
| PHIL 43200 - Theory Of Knowledge |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of selected texts on knowledge and rationality. Topics such as the following will be considered: foundationalism, coherentism, internalism, externalism, skepticism, contextualism, empiricism, rationalism, analyses of epistemic concepts, and the Gettier problem. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| PHIL 43500 - Philosophy Of Mind |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of some central issues in the philosophy of mind. Attention is given to such topics as the knowledge of other minds, the relation between mind and body, the nature of persons, and the analysis of certain relevant concepts such as action, emotion, and perception. Readings are selected primarily from the writings of contemporary philosophers. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| PHIL 45000 - Metalogic |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to metatheoretic studies of formal axiomatic systems. Basic set theory is developed for use as a tool in studying the propositional calculus. Further topics include many-valued logics and metatheory for modal or predicate logic. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Critical thinking.
2. Integrative learning.
3. Quantitative reasoning.
|
| PHIL 45100 - The Godel Theorems: Their Logic And Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to Primitive-Recursive Arithmetic as a framework to prove Godel’s two incompleteness theorems followed by a critical discussion of their philosophical significance. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Acquire a basic understanding of primitive-Recursive Arithmetic, its scope and limits.
2. Learn how to prove claims using the language and rules of a formalized first-order language.
3. Acquire a thorough understanding of Godel’s two Incompleteness Theorems.
4. Gain an understanding of various proof techniques and levels of rigor.
5. Further hone their critical reading and thinking skills.
6. Demonstrate the ability to think critically and to carefully scrutinize complex and subtle arguments.
7. Evaluate their own ideas and those of others based upon disciplined reasoning.
8. Have gained a critical and transdisciplinary appreciation of the field they major in and its conceptual foundation.
|
| PHIL 46500 - Philosophy Of Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of some of the central issues in the philosophy of language, such as meaning, reference, truth, propositions, and speech acts. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| PHIL 47000 - Independent Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHIL 47100 - Topics In Aesthetics And The Philosophy Of Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intensive examination of some of the characteristic questions of contemporary aesthetic theory. Variable content may include the definition of art; the ontology of art; artist-artwork-audience relations; intentions; interpretation; evaluation; aesthetic experience; and ethics and aesthetics. A transdisciplinary approach includes consideration of works of art and artworld writings in addition to philosophical writings. May be repeated for credit with consent of instructor. Typically offered Fall Spring
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students who have completed the course successfully will have an excellent knowledge of problems in contemporary philosophy of art.
2. Students wil also have an excellent knowledge of the relationship of modern and cotemporary art to philosophy of art and aesthetics through an exposure
to each literature pertaining to them.
|
| PHIL 48000 - Practicum In Applied Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will be assigned a definite task relevant to their educational interests in applied ethics. Students may be placed in appropriate cooperating local social-service agencies, educational institutions, legal services offices, businesses, or medical facilities. Work will be supervised by the department and the agency. Research and written reports will be required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PHIL 49000 - Advanced Topics In Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced study of a significant topic in philosophy. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 49300 - Interdisciplinary Undergraduate Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Subject matter will vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHIL 50100 - Studies In Greek Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The subject-matter will alternate between the intensive study of some fairly specific topic in Greek philosophy (e.g., Plato's theory of knowledge, Aristotle's ethics, etc.) and a general study of either the philosophy of Plato or the philosophy of Aristotle. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 50200 - Studies In Medieval Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intensive study of some central topics in the thought of major medieval philosophers. Subject matter will vary. Philosophers most often studied are Augustine, Thomas Aquinas, Duns Scotus, and Ockham. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 50300 - Studies In Early Modern Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A detailed study of either: 1) one or more central philosophical themes or 2) one or more major figures (typically, but not restricted to, Descartes, Spinoza, Leibniz, Locke, Berkeley, Hume, and/or Kant) in the early modern period. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 50400 - Human Rights Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces students to both the history and the different ways of justifying, critiquing, extending, and revising the concept of universal individual human rights as it has developed since the eighteenth century out of the previous European tradition of natural law and rights. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PHIL 50500 - Islamic And Jewish Philosophy And The Classical Tradition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of representative texts and issues in medieval Islamic and Jewish philosophy. Possible topics include the commensurability of philosophy and (revealed) law, the creation or eternity of the world, the nature of prophecy, the human good, the nature of God, and divine language. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 50600 - Advanced Philosophy Of Religion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A detailed critical investigation of some central problems in a philosophical approach to religion. Readings will be selected from leading representatives of traditional theism and various contemporary schools. The thought of the representative thinkers will be analyzed, discussed, and critically evaluated. The problems discussed will be selected from the existence of God, the problem of evil, freedom and determinism, the problem of immortality, and the nature of religious language. Variable content. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 50700 - Recent American Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A detailed examination of the central doctrines of one or more of the following six American philosophers: Peirce, James, Royce, Santayana, Dewey, and Whitehead. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 51000 - Phenomenology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A detailed, critical examination of some major issue(s) in phenomenology. Attention will be given to either the historical development or contemporary relevance of phenomenological philosophy. Readings will be drawn from the works of Husserl, Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty, and others. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 51400 - Twentieth-Century Analytical Philosophy I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The origins of contemporary philosophical analysis. An examination of the most important philosophical writings of Gottlob Frege and Bertrand Russell, as well as the Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus of Ludwig Wittgenstein. Need not be followed by PHIL 51500. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 51500 - Twentieth-Century Analytical Philosophy II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The development of philosophical analysis through logical positivism and the various forms of linguistic philosophy. An examination of some of the important writings of Moore, Ayer, Ryle, Wisdom, Austin, and the later Wittgenstein. Need not be preceded by PHIL 51400. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 52000 - Existentialism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A detailed exploration and examination of the existentialist movement in modern thought, including its historical roots, its philosophical formulations, and its influence and expression in and relation to art, literature, psychology, social criticism, and religion. Readings will be from at least some of the major existentialists: Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Jaspers, Heidegger, and Sartre. In addition, texts from existentialist thinkers in other areas will be used. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 52400 - Contemporary Ethical Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A critical review of twentieth-century developments in ethical and value theory, with particular reference to the dispute between utilitarianism and deontological theories, and to the problem of justification. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 52500 - Studies In Metaphysics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intensive and critical examination of one or more of the basic problems of ontology and cosmology, such as substance, existence, causality, change, time, space, teleology, freedom, and universals. Variable content. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 53000 - Deconstructionist And Postmodernist Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the main currents of deconstructionist and postmodernist thought in the latter part of the twentieth century. Texts to be studied will be selected from the writings of Heidegger, Derrida, Foucault, Kristeva, Irigaray, Deleuze, Guattari, Lyotard, Baudrillard, and Rorty. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 53200 - Studies In Theory Of Knowledge |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intensive examination of selected problems concerning the nature of human knowledge, its scope and limits, its relation to sense-perception and memory. Variable content. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 53500 - Studies In Philosophy Of Mind |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intensive study of select topics in the philosophy of mind such as the explanation of human behavior, knowledge of other minds, the relation between mind and body, and the nature of persons. Variable content. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 54000 - Studies In Social And Political Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A detailed study of one or more important concepts in social or political philosophy, such as natural rights, revolution, law, freedom, justice, or political obligation. Variable content. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 54200 - Rationality And Relativism: African American Perspectives |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines philosophical issues of relativism and rationalism. Considers arguments by particular African American authors concerning relativist or rationalist approaches to the nature of social entities. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 54500 - Recent Analytic Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of contemporary developments in analytic philosophy, with emphasis on major issues relevant to the philosophy of language, epistemology, and metaphysics. The course will cover such figures as W.V.O. Quine and Saul Kripke, and such problems as analyticity and necessity, ontological relativity, and the definition of knowledge. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 55000 - Advanced Symbolic Logic |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the properties of formal systems, including consistency and completeness theorems for the propositional calculus, the first order predicate calculus, and various modal logics, as well as a brief consideration of Godel's incompleteness theorem. Students who have taken MA 58500 should not take this course; PHIL 65000 is more appropriate. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 55100 - Philosophy Of The Natural Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of issues and theories in contemporary philosophy of science. Variable content. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 55200 - Philosophy Of The Social Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An exploration of the nature of the concepts in the social sciences, and a study of the ways in which they have been and are employed. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 55500 - Critical Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of either the historical development or the contemporary relevance of critical theory. Primary texts may be selected from the "old" Frankfurt School (Horkheimer, Adorno, Marcuse, Benjamin, Fromm) or from "new" critical theory (Habermas, Wellmer, Honneth, Benhabib, and others). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 56000 - Studies In Eastern Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. One of the traditional areas of Eastern philosophy (Indian, Buddhist, Chinese) will be selected for an intensive historical study. Readings will be from English translations of the writings of representative Eastern philosophers. Variable content. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| PHIL 57500 - Problems In Esthetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intensive examination of some of the characteristic questions of contemporary esthetic theory. Variable content. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 57600 - Philosophy And Literary Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ENGL 57600) Explores the interchanges between philosophy and literary theory that animate such areas as hermeneutics, phenomenology, existentialism, Marxism, feminism, African-American studies, postmodern theory, and cultural studies. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHIL 58000 - Proseminar In Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed primarily for majors in philosophy who have already successfully completed six hours in philosophy. Other students may be admitted to the course with the special consent of the instructor in charge. Topic to be selected by the department. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 59000 - Directed Reading In Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A reading course directed by the instructor in whose particular field of specialization the content of the reading falls. Approval of each reading project must be secured from the department. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHIL 60100 - Special Topics In Ancient Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A detailed critical analysis of special problems or texts in ancient philosophy. Prerequisite: PHIL 50100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 61000 - Seminar In Recent Continental Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intensive, critical examination of some of the current modes of thought in recent continental philosophy, including phenomenology, critical theory, hermeneutics, deconstruction, and postmodernism. Selected writings from representative figures. Topics and texts will vary from semester to semester. Prerequisite: PHIL 51000 or 52000. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 62400 - Seminar In Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intensive study of some persistent problems of ethics, metaethics, and theory of action such as: intrinsic goods, ends and means, the concepts of utility, justice, and duty; facts and values, justification, ethical relativism, free will and blame-worthiness, belief, and action. Emphasis will be on contemporary discussions. Variable subject matter. Prerequisite: PHIL 52400. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 66500 - Philosophy Of Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to some of the main concepts and problems in the philosophy of language, such as meaning, reference, and private languages, through readings in the chief contributors to the field. Prerequisite: 6 credit hours in Philospohy. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 67200 - Philosophy Of Logic |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of some of the more fundamental logical and philosophical concepts. Topics may include: the analysis of singular and general propositions, the sense-reference distinction, predication, singular terms, assertion, intentional contexts, and truth. Prerequisite: PHIL 45000 or 55000 or 65000. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 68000 - Seminar In Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intensive course for graduate students majoring or minoring in philosophy. The content of the seminar will be determined in accordance with the needs and interests of the students. Prerequisite: 6 credit hours at the graduate level in Philosophy. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 68300 - Studies In Continental Rationalism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intensive study of Descartes, Spinoza, or Leibniz, or of certain themes and ideas that played an important role in the development of their philosophies. Variable subject matter. Prerequisite: PHIL 30300. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 68400 - Studies In British Empiricism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intensive study of Locke, Berkeley, or Hume, or of certain themes and ideas that played an important role in the development of their philosophies. Variable subject matter. Prerequisite: PHIL 30300. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHIL 68500 - The Philosophy Of Kant |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will be concerned with the critical philosophy as a whole. Primary emphasis, however, will be on the theories of knowledge and metaphysics as developed in the Critique of Pure Reason. Lesser attention will be paid to Kant's ethics and the principles of judgment as time permits. Prerequisite: PHIL 30300. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHIL 69800 - Research MA Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MA Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHIL 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Philosophy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHIL B1000 - Introduction to Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Perennial problems of philosophy, including problems in ethics, epistemology, metaphysics, and philosophy of religion.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHIL B2000 - Logic |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The nature of deductive reasoning. Inquiry into the forms and procedures necessary to draw correct conclusions from given premises regardless of the factual content of the premises. Critical introduction to the correct forms of deduction.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHIL B2300 - Environmental Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to and analysis of basic concepts, principles, theories, and issues in environmental ethics.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHIL P1000 - Introduction To Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Philosophy is perhaps the only remaining field in the humanities with
its canon largely intact. This course aims to acquaint students with the field by engaging them with some important samples from that canon. We will learn about what philosophy is by considering its unique relationship with its past, especially in the areas of epistemology, ethics, and metaphysics. Our reading list will include some recent articles, as well as selections from Russell, James, Hume, Descartes, and Plato. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHIL P1020 - Critical Thinking And Applied Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to ethics and is approved as meeting the IU South Bend campus-wide General Education Critical Thinking requirement. This course integrates an introduction to ethics with instruction in basic techniques of critical thinking. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHIL P1050 - Critical Thinking |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. We spend a good part of our waking hours thinking and/or critiquing the thoughts and beliefs of ourselves and others. This course is designed to help you develop a toolbox of techniques and skills that will help you become a skilled evaluator and creator of arguments.Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHIL P1100 - Introduction To Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory study of such philosophical concerns as existence, knowledge, meaning, and morality. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHIL P1200 - Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of ethics in relation to personal and societal decision making. Typically addresses such topics as abortion, world hunger, assisted suicide, sexual morality, animal rights, moral education, virtue and character, and environmental ethics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHIL P1350 - Introduction To Phenomenology And Existentialism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Existentialism as a philosophical movement founded on phenomenology. Philosophical themes and their development, applications, or exemplifications in existentialist literature. Course presupposes no particular knowledge of philosophy. Readings from some or all of the following: Buber, Camus, Heidegger, Husserl, Jaspers, Kierkegaard, Marcel, Nietzsche, Sartre. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHIL P1400 - Introduction To Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. These sections of Introduction to Ethics are designed to stimulate reflection about a number of issues in ethics and political philosophy. Readings will include both great classics and contemporary philosophical writings, and we will also read some excerpts of legal cases. Topics will include abortion, free speech, oppression, tolerance, capital punishment, and the relationship between morality and the law. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHIL P1450 - Introduction To Social And Political Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental problems of social and political philosophy; the nature of the state, political obligation, freedom and liberty, quality, justice, rights, social change, revolution, and community. Readings from classical and contemporary sources. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHIL P1500 - Elementary Logic |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this course, students learn the basic concepts of reasoning and the language of modern symbolic logic. A large part of the course deals with developing a system of symbolic logic called propositional logic, along with the skills required for its use. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHIL P1620 - Logic |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the principles of logic. The course covers a variety of traditional topics, selected for their practical value, within formal and informal logic. Among the topics typically covered are fallacies, syllogisms, causal hypotheses, logic diagrams, argument analysis, and truth-functional reasoning. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHIL P1700 - Introduction To Asian Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of select philosophical traditions of India, China, and Japan, including Vedanta, Mahayana Buddhism, Confucianism, and Taoism. Topics include the nature of reality, ethical responsibility, and the role of the "self" in creating ignorance and attaining enlightenment.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHIL P2000 - Problems of Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Selected writings of modern philosophers concerning some of the most important philosophical problems.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHIL P2010 - Ancient Greek Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selective survey of ancient Greek philosophy (Pre-Socratic, Plato, Aristotle). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHIL P2040 - Business And Morality |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental issues of moral philosophy in a business context. Application of moral theory to issues such as the ethics of investment, moral assessment of corporations, and duties of vocation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
|
| PHIL P2220 - Legal Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to ethical principles and practices in the legal profession.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHIL P2370 - Environmental Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory consideration of philosophical views regarding the extent of human responsibility for the natural environment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHIL P2420 - Applied Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Applied ethics (Ethics and the Law) involve the practical application of the rules of professional conduct of lawyers and how these rules apply to the everyday practice of the legal profession. We will also examine the canons of judicial conduct, which are the standards of conduct for judges. How do these standards of conduct for lawyers and judges protect the general public by the policing of the legal profession and the administering of justice in our courts - or do these rules, in reality, protect the general public? As the calendar permits, we will also look at the rule of admission (to the bar) and disciplining of lawyers. Upon scrutiny, we'll attempt to answer the question of whether these rules and canons really work or are they simple "window dressing" for a profession and system in need of uplifting in the eyes of the general public? Additional readings and studies might include the rules of small claims courts in Indiana, and time permitting, such study will include scenarios of ethics regarding the administration of justice and litigation involving landlords and tenants (a common small claims subject of litigation).Additional subjects which may be reviewed relate to patients' rights under the "patients' Bill of Rights" as such codes and statements are related to medical ethics. Included in this subject would be the "Pediatric Bill of Rights," "Codes of Specialty Healthcare Associations" and patients' rights as they are afforded by the "Regulations for Skilled Nursing Facilities.". Typically offered Fall Summer Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHIL P2500 - Introductory Symbolic Logic |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of, and extensive practice with, the concepts and techniques of formal deductive logic. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHIL P2650 - Introduction To Symbolic Logic |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the most important and widely applicable parts of modern symbolic logic: propositional logic and predicate logic. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| PHIL P2800 - Philosophical Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A concentrated treatment of an important philosophical problem.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHIL P2810 - Philosophy Of Religion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Philosophical views regarding such topics as the meaning and purpose of religion, religious experience, religious knowledge, and the existence and nature of God. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| PHIL P2820 - Philosophy Of Women |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Philosophy of Women. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| PHIL P3070 - Classical Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the significant texts of ancient Greek and Roman philosophy, including the Presocratics, Plato, Aristotle, and the Hellenistic Thinkers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| PHIL P3100 - Topics In Metaphysics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics such as existence, individuation, contingency, universals and particulars, causality, determinism, space, time, events and change, relation of mental and physical. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| PHIL P3110 - Environmental Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The purpose of this course is to explore the relationship between human beings and the natural world and evaluate what ethical obligations human begins have toward the environment. In the first half of the course we’ll survey the history environmental ethics and various theories that have been created in response to the central question of what (if any) parts of nature have moral status. We’ll evaluate whether the environment has ethical value because it is useful to human beings or because it is valuable in its own right. In doing this we’ll look at theories that can be used to evaluate what ethical obligations you might have to plants, animals, ecosystems, and the natural world as a whole. In the second half of the course we’ll narrow in on some specific topics within environmental ethics which might include wilderness preservation, population, the ethics of food, the relationship between technology and nature and the role of government in setting environmental ethics policies. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHIL P3130 - Theories Of Knowledge |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics such as nature of knowledge, the relation of knowledge and belief, knowledge and evidence, knowledge and certainty, the problem of skepticism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| PHIL P3140 - Modern Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of Western philosophy from the rise of science to the disenchantment with absolutism, including such philosophers as Bacon, Descartes, Berkeley, Hume, Leibniz, Kant, and others. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| PHIL P3160 - Twentieth-Century Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of one or more twentieth-century approaches to philosophy, such as pragmatism, analytic philosophy, phenomenology, existentialism, deconstructionist philosophy, or neo-Marxism. May be repeated for credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-New Albany
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHIL P3170 - Nineteenth-Century Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A historical survey of philosophy in the nineteenth century from Hegel to Nietzsche, including utilitarianism, positivism, and philosophies of evolution. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHIL P3220 - Philosophy Of Human Nature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theories of human nature and their philosophical implications. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHIL P3230 - Society And The State In The Modern World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics, issues, and key figures in modern political philosophy?e.g., distributive justice, state authority, and the political thought of Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, Mill, Marx, and Rawls.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHIL P3250 - Social Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Concentrated study of one or more topics in social philosophy?e.g., human rights, political violence, civil disobedience, and legal paternalism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHIL P3260 - Ethical Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A variable title course. Advanced consideration of one or more ethical theories or theoretical issues about the nature and status of ethics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| PHIL P3280 - Philosophies Of India |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Historical and critical-analytic survey of the major traditions of Indian philosophy. Attention to early philosophizing and the emergence of the classical schools in Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain traditions. Attention also to contemporary thought in India including critical theory and subaltern theorizing. Credit not given for both PHIL P3280 and REL R3680. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHIL P3310 - Philosophy Of Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory study of theories with regard to the nature, purpose, and limitations of science. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHIL P3340 - Buddhist Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this course we will examine the basic concepts of early Buddhist philosophy and their subsequent development in various Buddhist schools. Although the Three Refuges - The Buddha, the Dharma (teaching), and the Sangha (Buddhist community) serve the common foundation for all Buddhist traditions, we will focus primarily on the Dharma. Specifically, we will examine its philosophical development and interpretation in the Theravadin Abhidharma; the Mahayanan Prajnaparamita and the Ch'an/Zin traditions; and the Vajrayana of Tibet. And finally we will explore some of the practical applications and implications of the Buddhist theory of impermanence and interdependence for the contemporary obsession with the ownership and consumption of goods. In so doing, we will ponder the Buddha's observation that: "Contentment is the greatest wealth."
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHIL P3350 - Phenomenology and Existentialism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selective survey of central themes in nineteenth- and twentieth-century phenomenology and existentialism. Readings from some or all of Buber, Camus, Heidegger, Husserl, Jaspers, Kierkegaard, Marcel, Nietzsche, Beauvoir, and Sartre.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHIL P3480 - Philosophy And Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this course we will explore philosophical questions concerning literature and the institution of literary studies in academia. The course will be divided into three major sections, each featuring a guiding question and a series of sub questions:
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHIL P3490 - Philosophies Of China |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a study of Chinese philosophical traditions beginning with Confucius and those who followed him, such as Mencius and Hsun-tzu, in contrast to Legalism, Taoism and the School of Mo-tzu. From Taoism we will study the writings of Leo-tzu, Chuang-tzu and other Taoist and Neo-Taoist philosophers. Taoism in synthesis with Buddhism yields Ch/an (Zen). We will explore Taoist/Buddhist dialectic in the evolution of Zen. The synthesis of Ch¿an and Taoism with Confucianism yields Neo-Confucianism. We will study the process of integrating the Buddhist/Taoist synthesis into Confucianism philosophical understanding as we read from the Neo-Confucian sources. The course will follow this historical process into modern times. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHIL P3500 - Logic Of Sets |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Elementary operations on sets; relations; functions; orderings; introduction to ordinal and cardinal numbers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHIL P3550 - Philosophy Of Film |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Philosophic topics, themes, and issues raised by and in film. Special emphasis on viewing film as a visual text with philosophical import. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHIL P3560 - American Indian Philosophies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the philosophical views, themes, and implications of North American Indian traditions, with applications to variety of cross-cultural and philosophical issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHIL P3580 - American Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the philosophical tradition in the United States, emphasizing major thinkers such as Peirce, Royce, James, Dewey, and Whitehead. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHIL P3600 - Introduction To Philosophy Of Mind |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected topics from among the following: the nature of mental phenomena (e.g., thinking, volition, perception, emotion); the mind-body problem (e.g., dualism, behaviorism, materialism). Typically offered Fall, Spring, Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHIL P3650 - Intermediate Symbolic Logic |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics in metalogic, set theory, and modal logic. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHIL P3670 - Philosophy Of The Arts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the philosophy of the arts, designed to show the relationship of human creativity to political, moral, aesthetic, and cognitive value. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHIL P3680 - Philosophy Of Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Philosophical study of the nature and functions of language. Covers such topics as meaning and truth, theories of reference, linguistic relativity, and speech acts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHIL P3690 - Epistemology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Knowledge and justified belief: their nature, structure, sources, and limits. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHIL P3710 - Philosophy of Religion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will span several topics in classical philosophical theology. We will begin by considering the implications of the very idea of God as an absolutely perfect being, noting various puzzles to which this idea gives rise and surveying main responses to those puzzles. We will then consider at some length a popular form of argument against the existence of God, so-conceived (the argument from evil) and a popular form of argument in favor of God's existence (the argument from design). Near the end of the course, we will consider a range of perspectives - some friendly to religious belief and some unfriendly - on the relationship of religious faith and reason. Our topics are the subject of much recent philosophical writing, and our readings will draw from a wide array of contribitors to this contemporary discussion. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHIL P3740 - Chinese Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Viewpoints of philosophical schools, sub schools, and individual thinkers on metaphysical, epistemological, ethical, social, and methodological issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| PHIL P3810 - Religion And Human Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An attempt to understand “religious experience” in the light of interpretations made possibly by the insight of such disciplines as anthropology, psychology, sociology of knowledge and value theory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHIL P3830 - Topics In Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced study of special, experimental, or timely topics drawn from the full range of philosophical discussion and designed to pursue interests unmet in the regular curriculum. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHIL P3850 - Metaphysics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of several of the principal problems of metaphysics, such as identity through time, the self, the mind-body problem, freedom and determinism, fate, causation, the problem of universals, and the existence of God. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHIL P3930 - Biomedical Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A philosophical consideration of ethical problems that arise in current biomedical practice, e.g., with regard to abortion, euthanasia, determination of death, consent to treatment, and professional responsibilities in connection with research, experimentation, and health care delivery. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHIL P3940 - Feminist Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of philosophical problems embedded in feminist theories, particularly those relating to the nature/nurture distinction, the value of sex-specific experiences such as motherhood, and conditions for achieving a just social order. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHIL P4100 - Ancient Greek Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the earliest period of western philosophy, dealing with such figures as Plato, Aristotle, and the pre-Socratics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| PHIL P4140 - Philosophy And Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In-depth consideration of a topic involving the interrelationship between philosophy and culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHIL P4180 - Seminar In The History Of Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A concentrated study of one major philosopher or philosophical school whose ideas have helped to form our age and contribute to an understanding of its problems. May be repeated for credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHIL P4480 - Seminar In American Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intensive study of a major American thinker, such as Edwards, Royce, James, Peirce, Dewey, Whitehead or Santayana, or of a leading theme, such as community, experience, or education. May be repeated for credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHIL P4580 - American Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the philosophical tradition in the United States, emphasizing major thinkers such as Peirce, Royce, James, Dewey, and Whitehead. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHIL P4680 - Seminar In The Philosophy Of Mind |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An in-depth study of some particular problem of current concern in one of the following: theory of meaning, conceptual analysis, information theory, theory of action, artificial intelligence. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHIL P4880 - Research In Philosophy I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Independent research in philosophical theory approved by and reported to any member of the department. May be repeated for credit, but no more than 6 credit hours may be counted toward the major. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| PHIL P4900 - Readings In Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Intensive study of selected authors, topics, and problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHIL P4930 - Topics In Biomedical Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A thematic course in biomedical ethics focusing on a selected group of topical issues such as justice in health care for historically disadvantaged groups, alternative theoretical approaches to bioethics, for historically disadvantaged groups, alternative theoretical approaches for credit or ethical issues in reproductive technologies. The course may be repeated for credit when topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHIL P4950 - Senior Proseminar In Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. For philosophy majors in their senior year of study. The proseminar will concentrate on issue(s) and figure(s) selected by students with faculty involved. The emphasis will be on the preparation, presentation and formal discussion of papers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHIL P4970 - Internship In Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Designed to provide academic credit for paper or other project done for supervisor of the intern in a given semester. The student will also be assisting in some courses(s) in this department. Does not count towards the major in Philosophy. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHIL P5030 - The Semiotics of C S Peirce |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A rigorous initiation to Peirce's logic of signs, including his theory of knowledge, his categoriology, his definitions and classifications of signs, the three branches of semiotics, with an applied research component.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHIL P5250 - Topics In The History Of Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHIL P5400 - Contemporary Ethical Theories |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental problems of ethics in contemporary analytic philosophy from G. E. Moore's Principia Ethica to present.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHIL P5420 - The Ethics and Values of Philanthropy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An inquiry into the ethics and values of philanthropy rooted in a philanthropic activity in light of this ideal. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHIL P5470 - Foundations Of Bioethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A rigorous examination of bioethical theory and practice. Stress is placed on moral and conceptual issues embedded in biomedical research, clinical practice, and social policy relating to the organization and delivery of health care. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHIL P6000 - Topics In Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A detailed examination of a specific topic in philosophy. May be repeated for credit if topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHIL P6960 - Topics In Biomedical Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected topics in bioethics, such as international research ethics; ethical issues in pediatrics; ethical issues in genetics. Typically offered Fall, Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHIL S1100 - Introduction To Philosophy-Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to key philosophical concepts and issues as well as major thinkers and historical periods. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHIL S3140 - Philosophy and Modern Times-Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of one or more philosophical concepts, themes, or developments characteristics of the modern period. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHIL V1110 - Introduction To Philosophy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces beginning students to the recurring problems, ideas and thought systems as presented in the literature and lived of great thinkers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| PHIL V2120 - Introduction To Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a study of the morality of human behavior. After discussion of certain introductory questions about the nature and verification of moral propositions, this course will focus on components of the morally good life and alternative theoretical approaches to its achievement, using case studies (civil disobedience, abortion, euthanasia, etc.) to illustrate the principles and norms involved. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| PHPR 20200 - Introductory Pharmacology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the pharmacological basis of therapeutics for nursing students. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHPR 31300 - Introduction To Pharmacy And Pharmaceutical Care |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This first professional year course is designed to provide the entering pharmacy student an introduction to the profession of pharmacy and the concept of pharmaceutical care, integrated with career preparation, prescription dispensing and compounding, and effective pharmacist-patient communications. The purpose of this course is to introduce pharmacy students to the profession of pharmacy by developing informed perspectives on: 1. the professional role of the pharmacist in providing pharmaceutical care to patients in any health care setting, 2. important concepts in the career preparation of health care professionals that are essential to being capable of providing pharmaceutical care, 3. components of pharmaceutical care services related to individualizing dosage forms and counseling for unique patient needs, 4. the necessity to development a basic framework or approach to problem-solve situations in pharmacy practice. Upon completion of this course students will: 1. demonstrate evolving skills in pharmaceutical care, patient communication, adherence monitoring, and professionalism, 2. demonstrate prescription service abilities including receiving, preparing and dispensing prescriptions, 3. demonstrate basic counseling abilities used by pharmacists to encourage effective pharmaceutical care, 4. evidence knowledge and use of medical terminology and abbreviations. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHPR 31800 - Service Learning I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Through weekly visits, students develop a caregiving relationship with a homebound client that also contributes to the case management monitoring process of the partner agency. Learning is facilitated through reflection activities, including a personal journal, weekly reflection sessions with other student participants, articles with brief reflective writing assignments, and a brief final report. Learning objectives include an appreciation for the impact of a caring relationship, social support, aging, health care problems, medications, and health system changes on a person's health and well-being. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHPR 41800 - Service Learning II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Students engage in patient care service experiences in conjunction with a community health or social service agency and learn through reflection activities as in Service Learning I. Learning objectives include practicing professional abilities essential to pharmaceutical care and gaining enhanced understanding of the individuality of patient needs. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHPR 42100 - Professional Service Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. This course is the first part of an experiential course series designed to provide DP-A students experience in a client-based community healthcare setting. Students keep journals, write reflections, and compare/contrast their experiences with other students in a small group setting. Emphasis is placed on communication skills and professional development. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHPR 42300 - Practice Skills Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. This course is the second part of an experiential course series designed to provide DP-B students with 80 hours of experience in a pharmacy setting, working in direct contact with a pharmacy practitioner. Students complete a reflective worksheet and participate in a panel discussion comparing and contrasting experiences with other students. Emphasis is placed on skill development and the pharmacy practitioner's role. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHPR 42400 - The Shadowing Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. The Shadowing Experience is the third and final component of the Introductory Pharmacy Practice Experience Sequence. It is a zero-credit-hour experiential course, which includes two 4-hour shadowing experiences in two different pharmacy settings plus submission of career options worksheets and IPPE forms. The goals are to further an interest in career path exploration, prepare for clerkship rotations and to define a personal career plan. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| PHPR 42600 - Professional Service Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A one credit hour required experiential course in the first year of the professional pharmacy program. Students partner with community healthcare providers to learn collaboration and patient care skills. Students begin experience hours in the fall semester and continue through the spring when they are registered and evaluated. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Upon completion of the service and project components of the Professional Service Experience, the student shall demonstrate:
30 hours of collaborative, longitudinal patient/client service
Design and implementation of a healthcare-related service project addressing a specific community need
Preparation of a grant application
Professional attitudes, behavior, and dress
An effective communication style with the organization's clients and staff
Upon completion of journaling, the written reflection and the Debriefing Day laboratory, the student shall describe verbally or in writing:
Types and value of community services available to the public
Value of a multidisciplinary service learning experience to pharmacy students and the profession
Expectations and misconceptions from the experience
Barriers and solutions to optimize health care
How experiential course objectives were met
How the service experience related to topics discussed in didactic coursework
Upon completion of the patient Interview, Medication History, and Professional Recommendation Letter, the student shall demonstrate the ability to:
Perform an efficient and conversational interview
Complete a medication history review
Correlate the patient's medications with the appropriate condition or disease state
Describe common problems patients encounter with medications
Describe the value of pharmacists' contributions to patient care
Compose a formal letter to a healthcare professional containing specific healthcare recommendations
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| PHPR 42700 - Pharmacy Leadership Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is specifically designed to mentor enthusiastic leaders and enhance their ability to become an effective leader in the practice of pharmacy. The objective of this course is not to build a leader, rather to augment the characteristics the particular leader possesses. Students have the opportunity to partake in a variety of activities including the development of a proposal with implementation plan to address a current school-wide issue. A variety of outside speakers share their leadership experiences with the class. The course has a maximum enrollment and requires instructor approval to enroll. Students interested in enrolling in the course must submit a course application packet. Students are assessed on written reflections, oral presentation, written reports, and a group project. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| PHPR 42800 - Community Practice Skills Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A three credit hour experiential course in the second professional year of the pharmacy program. Students learn community pharmacy operations. Students begin accumulating experience hours in the summer preceding their second year and continue until 120 hours are completed. Students are registered and evaluated in the spring semester. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Upon completion of this experience and the Debriefing Day laboratory, the student will:
1. Perform basic functions and skills in an actual practice setting
2. Document a minimum of 120 hours of performance-based experience in a community pharmacy
3. Demonstrate professional and ethical standards of conduct
4. Reflect on the degree of professionalism displayed by pharmacy practitioners at the site
5. Recognize and describe exemplary pharmacy operations and dispensing practices
6. Debate the advantages and disadvantages of a variety of career options in community practice
7. Self-assess learning with the scope of the experience
Upon completion of the Pharmacist Interview assignment, the student will:
8. Conduct an effective, conversational interview with a pharmacist
9. Discuss and describe in writing the community pharmacist's role
10. Discuss and describe in writing common problems/barriers that pharmacists encounter in the workplace
11. Discuss and describe in writing important aspects, advantages, and disadvantages of a career in community pharmacy
12. Reflect on new information learned
Upon completion of the Pharmacy Observation assignment, the student will:
13. Describe the community pharmacy work environment and staffing
14. Describe the steps involved in the prescriptions filling and dispensing process
15. Formulate an opinion on the quality of patient care
16. Review common causes of medication errors and methods of prevention
Upon completion of the Patient Interview/Medication History and Recommendation Letter assignment, the student will:
17. Conduct an effective, conversational interview with a patient about medication use
18. Review the patient's medications in relation to their condition(s) or disease(s)
19. Describe common problems/barriers patients encounter with medications
20. Utilize pharmacy references and document sources of information
21. Formulate an opinion on the value of pharmacists' involvement in patient care
22. Prepare a formal recommendation letter to a healthcare provider
23. Reflect on successes of the assignment and self-assess the need for improvement
|
| PHPR 42900 - Self Care Pharmacy Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is specifically designed to provide students with guided experience in the application of knowledge acquired during previous professional course work to the solution of simulated problems which occur in self-care pharmacy practice. Students will be introduced to the appropriate selection and use of non-prescription medications and devices for the treatment of minor health complaints by patients. Active learning methods are employed to involve students directly in the actual application of this process to simulated practice problems. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHPR 43200 - Ethics In Pharmacy Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Application of ethics principles using a problem-solving framework to analyze ethical dilemmas in pharmacy practice. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| PHPR 43400 - Institutional Pharmacy Introductory Pharmacy Practice Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A 4-credit hour required experiential course in the third year of the professional Doctor of Pharmacy program. Students learn basic institutional pharmacy operations and sterile product compounding. Typically offered Fall.
4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Upon completion of this experience and the Debriefing Day laboratory, the student will:
1. Perform basic functions and skills in an actual practice setting.
2. Document a minimum of 160 hours of performance-based experience in an institutional pharmacy.
3. Demonstrate professional and ethical standards of conduct.
4. Reflect on the degree of professionalism displayed by pharmacy practitioners at the site.
5. Recognize and describe exemplary pharmacy operations and dispensing practices.
6. Debate the advantages and disadvantages of a variety of career options in institutional practice.
7. Self-assess learning within the scope of the experience.
Upon completion of the Pharmacist Interview assignment, the student will:
1. Conduct an effective, conversational interview with a pharmacist.
2. Discuss and describe in writing the institutional pharmacist's role.
3. Discuss and describe in writing common problems/barriers that pharmacists encounter in the workplace.
4. Discuss and describe in writing important aspects, advantages, and disadvantages of a career in institutional pharmacy.
5. Reflect on new information learned.
Upon completion of the Pharmacy Observation assignment, the student will:
1. Describe the institutional pharmacy work environment and staffing.
2. Describe the steps involved in the medication order filling and dispensing process.
3. Formulate an opinion on the quality of patient care.
4. Review common causes of medication errors and methods of prevention.
|
| PHPR 44700 - Tobacco Dependence And Treatment For Health Care Professionals |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course provides comprehensive training on issues of tobacco use, dependence, and treatment. The course will focus on enabling students in health care disciplines to provide tobacco cessation treatment to patients. The course reviews and expands on any previous tobacco-related coursework. However, previous course work in tobacco cessation is not required. The course is designed as an online, asynchronous, during a semester length time period with students completing a series of modules independently and asynchronously. Outside readings are required. Students are evaluated through completion of various assignments within each module. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHPR 45000 - Introduction To Institutional Pharmacy Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An overview of the delivery of pharmaceuticals and the provision of clinical and administrative services to patients in institutional settings is presented along with the various roles pharmacists play both within the pharmacy department and the institution. Course content focuses on the provision of services and career development rather than on drug therapy. The course features a series of presentations by practitioners from a variety of practice settings. Enrollment is limited to Doctor of Pharmacy students (068) DP -B or DP-C status or by consent of course coordinator. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| PHPR 45100 - Issues In Pharmacy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Readings and discussions on current issues and problems affecting professional practice and the distribution of drugs and health services. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| PHPR 45500 - Medicare In Pharmacy Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Elective course providing an in-depth review of Medicare and related topics beyond that covered in the core curriculum. A service-learning component involving hands-on experience with Medicare beneficiaries is part of the course requirements. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHPR 46400 - History Of Pharmacy |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A survey of the history of the profession from earliest times to the present day. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| PHPR 46800 - Patient Services Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Experiences in providing patient services in the Purdue University Pharmacy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| PHPR 47000 - Nonprescription Drugs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A consideration of nonprescription drugs, health-care devices, and accessories to prepare the student to deal authoritatively with the self-medicating public. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| PHPR 49000 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An honors course to be used to relate to, and supplement, an existing course. Subject matter and method of approach individually directed by instructor. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHPR 49800 - Hospital Pharmacy Operations I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Four weeks of supervised, objective-based, on-site experience in selected Indiana pharmacies in health care institutions serving primarily institutionalized patients. Depending on the experience site assignment, most students will be participating in locations away from the West Lafayette Campus, requiring relocation to that area. Completion of non-experiential pharmacy curriculum is required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic 1, Clinic 2, Clinic 3, Clinic 4, Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHPR 49900 - Community Pharmacy Operations I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Four weeks of supervised, objective-based, on-site experience in selected Indiana community pharmacies and health care entities serving primarily ambulatory patients. Depending on the experience site assignment, most students will be participating in locations away from the West Lafayette Campus, requiring relocation to that area. Completion of non-experiential pharmacy curriculum. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic 1, Clinic 2, Clinic 3, Clinic 4, Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHPR 59000 - Special Topics In Pharmacy Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Special topics in selected areas of pharmacy practice. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHPR 59800 - Introduction To Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Qualified students will undertake a project in an area of pharmacy practice, clinical pharmacy, or pharmacy administration under a member of the graduate faculty. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHPR 66400 - Research Techniques And Proposal Development |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A consideration of current trends in pharmacy practice, clinical pharmacy, and pharmacy administration relating to healthcare services and systems. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| PHPR 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHPR 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHPR 90000 - Faculty Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| PHPR 90100 - Mentor Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| PHPR 90200 - Liberal Studies Sem |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| PHPR 90300 - Pre-Pharmacy Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| PHPR 90400 - Glaxo Prog |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| PHPR 90500 - Dean's Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHPR 90600 - Career Resource Meetg |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| PHPR 90700 - Stdy Skill Seminar I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHPR 90800 - Stdy Skill Seminar II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHPR 90900 - Integrat Abilits Wkshp |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHPR 91000 - Stdy Skill Seminar III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHPR 91300 - Study Skill Sem IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHPR 91400 - Study Skill Sem V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHRM 10000 - Pharmacy Orientation I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This first semester pre-pharmacy course is designed to provide the pre-pharmacy student with an introduction to the profession of pharmacy and to Purdue University College of Pharmacy. The topics presented in this course will allow the pre-pharmacy students to develop informed perspectives on: pharmacy summer employment opportunities for students; pharmacy career opportunities; current pharmacy practice trends; the importance of professionalism, values, and ethics as it pertains to the profession; resume and cover letter development; the College’s curriculum, admissions process, and course registration process. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe various pharmacy career paths and opportunities.
2. Discuss professionalism as it relates to the profession.
3. Discuss current pharmacy practices trends in various settings.
4. Develop a resume.
5. Develop a cover letter.
6. Describe the College's admissions process.
|
| PHRM 20000 - Pharmacy Orientation II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A second orientation course to provide students interested in pre-pharmacy an introduction to the profession of pharmacy and to the Purdue University College of Pharmacy. Topics include personal development, academic program and career planning, pharmacy career opportunities, professionalism and ethics, and the Pharm.D. curriculum and the pharmacy admissions process. The course builds on PHPR 10000, but students are not required to have taken that course in order to enroll in this course. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Awareness of personal strengths and weaknesses.
2. Recognize the variety of traditional and non-traditional career options available.
3. Develop a personal plan for career development.
4. Reflect on how ethics and professionalism apply to the pharmacist practice role.
5. Gain knowledge regarding the content and structure of the Pharm.D. curriculum as well as the application process.
|
| PHRM 31600 - Drug Abuse/Addiction Education |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An overview of alcoholism and other chemical addictions. Students are given the information and experience necessary to present a five-hour drug abuse education program to the public and specifically middle school students. Course is taught by undergraduate pharmacy students with oversight by staff. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the pharmacology involved with classes and specific substances of abuse.
2. Discuss aspects (i.e., social, genetic predisposition, intervention, treatment) associated with the disease of chemical addiction.
3. Describe the role of the Pharmacist Recovery Network (PRN).
4. Present a drug abuse/addition program (5 hours) to a class of sixth grade students.
|
| PHRM 38199 - Industrial Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Professional practice of pharmaceutical sciences in industry. Comprehensive written report of this experience required. For cooperative program students only enrolled in the College of Pharmacy. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Applying fundamental principles of the pharmaceutical sciences studied in the classroom environment.
2. Learning to work effectively with others and in teams.
3. Clarifying opportunities best suited to individual aptitudes and interests.
4. Gaining confidence in the application of skills and abilities.
5. Developing foundation for transition into the job environment following graduation.
|
| PHRM 38299 - Industrial Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Professional practice of pharmaceutical sciences in industry. Comprehensive written report of this experience required. For cooperative program students only enrolled in the College of Pharmacy. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Applying fundamental principles of the pharmaceutical sciences studied in the classroom environment.
2. Learning to work effectively with others and in teams.
3. Clarifying opportunities best suited to individual aptitudes and interests.
4. Gaining confidence in the application of skills and abilities.
5. Developing foundation for transition into the job environment following graduation.
|
| PHRM 38399 - Industrial Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Professional practice of pharmaceutical sciences in industry. Comprehensive written report of this experience required. For cooperative program students only enrolled in the College of Pharmacy. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Applying fundamental principles of the pharmaceutical sciences studied in the classroom environment.
2. Learning to work effectively with others and in teams.
3. Clarifying opportunities best suited to individual aptitudes and interests.
4. Gaining confidence in the application of skills and abilities.
5. Developing foundation for transition into the job environment following graduation.
|
| PHRM 40100 - Integrated Laboratory III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Continuation of PHRM 30200 with emphasis upon modules that provide laboratory practice experience designed to integrate basic science concepts and practice applications. Small group problem-solving methodology will be utilized as appropriate. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHRM 40200 - Integrated Laboratory IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Continuation of PHRM 40100 with emphasis upon modules that provide laboratory practice experience designed to integrate basic science concepts and practice applications. Small group problem-solving methodology will be utilized as appropriate. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| PHRM 40300 - Integrated Laboratory V |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Continuation of PHRM 40200 with emphasis upon modules that provide laboratory exercises, patient care discussions, and patient-assessment skill development designed to integrate basic science concepts and patient care applications. Small group problem-solving methodology will be utilized as appropriate. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| PHRM 40400 - Integrated Laboratory VI |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Continuation of PHRM 40300 with emphasis upon modules that provide laboratory exercises, patient care discussions, and patient-assessment skill development designed to integrate basic science concepts and patient care applications. Small group problem-solving methodology will be utilized as appropriate. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| PHRM 42500 - Dean's Executive Pharmacy Forum |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course introduces students to emerging trends and career opportunities in pharmacy and the pharmaceutical sciences through exposure to leaders in professional and corporate environments. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Principles of management and administration.
2. Synthesize information to draw logical conclusions.
3. Interact with other pharmacists, physicians, nurses, and other healthcare professionals to achieve positive patient outcomes.
4. Demonstrate values consistent with the provision of quality healthcare to all patient groups and populations.
5. Demonstrate awareness of key issues and debates in healthcare.
6. Demonstrate awareness of and ability to analyze internal and external factors that influence the practice of pharmacy and healthcare in an attempt to resolve practice-related problems.
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| PHRM 46000 - Drug Discovery And Development I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on the strategies, current methods and technologies used in early stage pre-clinical research to disover, validate and select lead drug candidates. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. A variety of College outcomes related to: conceptual competence, scientific comprehension, integrative competence, critical thinking and decision-making abilities, communication skills and abilities, responsible use of professional values and ethical principles, and group interaction and citizenship.
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| PHRM 46100 - Drug Discovery And Development II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course focuses on the process of drug development from pre-formulation to unit operations. The emphasis is on the scientific principles behind every step in moving from a drug molecule to its products. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate evidence-based knowledge of the following theoretical foundations and apply these to basic anatomy/physiology, delivery of drugs from various dosage forms, relationship between chemical structure and dosage form selection, influences of pharmacokentics on formulation and dosage form design, unit operations of drug manufacturing.
2. Demonstrate comprehension of major scientific discoveries and methods.
3. Be able to use mathematical variables to analyze physical and pharmacokentic properties of a drug compound.
4. Meld theory and abilities in a practical setting to identify and provide solutions of related problems.
5. Examine issues rationally logically, and coherently.
6. Be able to read, write, speak, listen, use data, media, and appropriate technologies to send and respond effectively to communications for varied audiences and purposes.
7. Demonstrate effective interpersonal and intergroup behaviors in a variety of situations and circumstances, in particular, working together in their term-projects.
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| PHRM 49000 - Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Subject matter and method of approach individually directed by instructor. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. The development of professional skills and increased knowledge base of pharmaceutical subject matter.
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| PHRM 82000 - Professional Program Laboratory I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Experiments, computer simulations, case studies, and problem sets that actively involve the student in problem-solving, applying and interrelating important concepts from the core courses taught that semester. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Theoretical foundations of the profession are presented and reinforced as well as scientific comprehension.
2. Theory and practice are brought together in most laboratories.
3. Critical thinking and decision-making abilities are employed in solving problems through case studies and recitation.
4. Group interaction and communication skills are addressed through small group activities.
5. Other professional outcome ability goals incorporated in several modules are the evaluation of patient data, scientific literature, and pharmaceutical products followed by making specific recommendations and documentation of services.
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| PHRM 82100 - Professional Program Laboratory II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Continuation of PHRM 82000 with emphasis upon modules that provide laboratory practice experience designed to integrate basic science concepts and practice applications. Small group problem-solving methodology will be utilized as appropriate. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Theoretical foundations of the profession are presented and reinforced as well as scientific comprehension.
2. Theory and practice are brought together in most laboratories.
3. Critical thinking and decision-making abilities are employed in solving problems through case studies and recitation.
4. Group interaction and communication skills are addressed through small group activities.
5. Other professional outcome ability goals incorporated in several modules are the evaluation of patient data, scientific literature, and pharmaceutical products followed by making specific recommendations and documentation of services.
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| PHRM 82200 - Pharmacy Skills And Patient Counseling |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Pharmacy Skills and Patient Counseling is a one credit hour, required first professional year experiential course combining practical experience in the Purdue University Pharmacy with small group discussion. Students are monitored by faculty instructors, staff pharmacists and Advanced Pharmacy Practice Experience (APPE) students on an academic rotation to meet learning objectives. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Recall and apply brand and generic names, common uses, strengths, doses, side effects and counseling points of commonly used medications.
2. Obtain pertinent patient information during the prescription intake process.
3. Recall and apply commonly used pharmacy abbreviations, conversions, and computer software functions.
4. Process and dispense new and refilled prescriptions according to federal and state law requirements.
5. Confidently engage in interactive patient counseling and respond to inquiries with diverse patient populations.
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| PHRM 82400 - Principles Of Pathophysiology And Drug Action |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the basic principles of pathophysiology, pharmacodynamics, toxicology and medicinal chemistry necessary to understand the therapeutic use and adverse actions of drugs. The course will integrate and apply concepts of science courses, including organic chemistry, biochemistry, anatomy and physiology into an understanding of the basic fundamentals of disease processes, toxicology and drug actions. Thus, this course will provide students with the basic background necessary to understand and apply pharmacotherapeutics to the practice of pharmacy. Prerequisite: MCMP 20400, 20500, 20800, and BIOL 20300, 20400 or 30100, 30200. Departmental permission required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Conceptual Competence: Pathophysiology, Principles of pharmacology.
2. Scientific Comprehension: Basic principles of thermodynamics and kinetics and their role in defining chemical processes; Basic principles of drug design and their chemical and biochemical mechanisms of drug action.
3. Critical Thinking and Decision Making Abilities: Synthesize information in order to draw logical conclusions; Provide evidence-based support for arguments, recommendations and solutions; Demonstrate the ability to make sound decisions given complex scenarios in a time-constrained environment.
4. Communication Skills and Abilities: Demonstrate the ability to present ideas, plans, and data in appropriate written formats to succinctly and effectively communicate with various audiences.
5. Responsible use of Professional Values and Ethical Principles: Exhibit professional behavior at all times in congruence with the pharmacist code of ethics.
6. Professional Abilities and Habits: Demonstrate the ability to self-access and take needed steps to achieve competence; exhibit positive, professional, empathic attitudes and behaviors in all intra- and interprofessional communications.
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| PHRM 82500 - Integrated Pharmacotherapy I |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. This course will serve as an integrated approach to the physiology/pathophysiology, medicinal chemistry, pharmacology, pharmacokinetics/ pharmaceutics, and pharmacotherapeutics of the following topics: fluids/electrolyte pharmacotherapy, renal diseases, acid/base disorders, clinical nutrition, autonomic nervous system (ANS), pulmonary diseases, hematology, immunology, and rheumatology. The emphasis of this course is knowledge and skill development. Also in the process of completing the objectives, attitudes toward the role of the pharmacist and patient-related issues will be imparted. Typically offered Spring.
6.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Conceptual Competence: The student must demonstrate evidence-based knowledge of the following theoretical foundations of the profession and apply these to individual practice settings. Basic anatomy/physiology; Pathophysiology; Diagnostic methods and decision making; Principles of pharmacology; Relationship between chemical structure and biological activity; Delivery of drugs from various dosage forms; Pharmacotherapy; Drug interactions; Treatment guidelines.
2. Scientific Comprehension: The students must demonstrate comprehension of major scientific discoveries and use of the scientific method to make these discoveries. Basic principles of drug design and the chemical and biochemical mechanisms of drug action; The relevance of molecular biology, biochemistry, and pharmacogenomics and apply key principles of disease states and therapeutics.
3. Mathematical Competence: The students must be able to use mathematical variables to analyze physical, biological, and socioeconomic phenomena. Perform error-free mathematical calculations with regard to drug dosing and pharmacokinetics.
4. Integrative (Practice-related) Competence: The student must be able to meld theory and abilities in the practice setting to enhance positive patient outcomes. Provide patient-centered pharmaceutical care; Promote health improvement and disease prevention; critically evaluate patient data, literature sources, and drug products; provide specific, sound, cost effective, evidence-based drug and healthcare recommendations; design, implement, and evaluate patient specific pharmacotherapeutic regimens; select the proper drug, dose, and dosage form for a specific patient; design strategies to monitor patients’ drug regimens for therapeutic and toxic effects of medications; design strategies to avoid or manage drug interactions and adverse drug events; identify and implement strategies to encourage patient adherence to therapeutic interventions.
5. Critical Thinking and Decision Making Abilities: The student must examine issues rationally, logically, and coherently; and shall acquire, evaluate, and synthesize information and knowledge relevant to an identified problem; and make sound decisions in both familiar and unfamiliar context. Synthesize information in order to draw logical conclusions; provide evidence-based support for arguments, recommendations, and solutions; demonstrate the ability to make sound decisions given complex scenarios in a time-constrained environment.
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| PHRM 82600 - Introduction To Patient Centered Care |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The introductory course teaches students the key communication principles and skills necessary to deliver patient care and interact with other health care professionals. This includes performing basic physical assessments, evaluating patient comprehension, and improving personal communication skills. Typically offered Fall.
4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and perform physical assessment techniques based on disease states.
2. Demonstrate the ability to interpret and use assessment values appropriately.
3. Demonstrate communication skills to effectively advise and counsel patients.
4. Demonstrate effective communication skills when conveying patient information or therapeutic recommendations to healthcare providers.
5. Develop strategies to appropriately adjust behavior or communication style based on cultural and communication considerations in order to optimize patient care.
6. Develop strategies to modify therapeutic regimens based on an assessment of patient readiness and motivation.
7. Develop strategies to address issues related to patient adherence to therapeutic recommendations.
8. Demonstrate skills to interview patients, evaluate medication regimens, respond to health-related needs, and develop an action plan for addressing therapeutic issues.
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| PHRM 82700 - Public Health Pharmacy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course is designed to provide the pharmacy student with a comprehensive overview of key public health and wellness principles and related to self-care and nonprescription products as they impinge upon the ability of patients to assume active roles and function effectively on their own behalf in health promotion and disease prevention, detection, and treatment. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify key public health issues.
2. Describe the profession of pharmacy’s role in public health initiatives.
3. Retrieve information about various aspects of key public health issues.
4. Interpret information about various aspects of key public health issues.
5. Educate others about various aspects of key public health issues.
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| PHRM 82800 - Dosage Forms I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The purpose of Dosage Forms I is to provide a foundation in the basic concepts of pharmaceutics that are the foundation of drug delivery. The course begins by presenting the molecular basis for aqueous and lipid solubility of drugs, pharmacokinetic principles that are related to dosage forms, mechanisms by which excipients or manufacturing processes affect bioavailability, and chemical kinetics applied to the shelf-life of dosage forms. The pharmaceutics principles are then applied to successively more complex liquid dosage forms: solution, emulsion, and suspension. The excipients that are required to prepare the dosage forms: buffers, preservatives, emulsifiers, suspending agents, wetting agents, etc. and the method of preparing each dosage form in both a compounding and manufacturing setting are covered. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the basic scientific principles involved in drug delivery such as dissolution, chemical stability, physical stability, content uniformity, and bioavailability.
2. Describe the essential scientific principles involved in the design of solutions, emulsions, suspensions, as well as dermatological and ophthalmic dosage forms.
3. Evaluate the quality parameters of dosage forms that are involved in product selection.
4. Analyze and interpret the results of bioequivalence studies that are important in product selection.
5. Advise patients on the proper use and storage of liquid dosage forms.
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| PHRM 82900 - Dosage Forms II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Education in the use of dosage forms to deliver drugs. Collaboration with peers and other members of the health care team regarding the proper use of the various dosage forms so that the desired therapeutic objective is achieved. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the basic scientific principles involved in administering sterile solutions, including factors needed to maintain sterility, solution isotonicity and isoosmolality, IV bags and drip sets.
2. Explain the basic scientific principles involved in the performance of solid dosage forms, including amorphous and crystalline solids, polymorphism, dissolution, diffusion, chemical and physical stability, bioequivalence and bioavailability.
3. Explain the factors involved in absorption of drugs from solid dosage forms administered by various routes, including oral, buccal, rectal, subcutaneous and transdermal routes.
4. Evaluate quality parameters for solid dosage forms, as an aid to product selection.
5. Advise patients on the proper use and storage of solid dosage forms, and understand the relationship of dosage form selection to clinical outcomes.
6. Explain the factors involved in the use of generic versions of solid dosage forms and their influence on therapeutic outcomes, including the ability to identify drugs for which switching to a generic form should be approached with caution.
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| PHRM 83000 - Introduction To Pharmacy Law And Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Elements of law necessary for full understanding of outside experience in early years. Application of modern ethics principles, including autonomy, veracity, justice, and confidentiality, to practice-related scenarios. Decision making required. Law includes legal categories of drugs, Practitioners and their scope of responsibility, basics of prescription validation, exposure to complex rules from Board of Pharmacy. Topics include: Brief history of pharmacy law, Basics of dispensing laws and rules, Controlled substances, Prescription legality, completeness, appropriateness, Professional standards/pharmacist, Medical specialty and Scope of Practice, HIPAA- Institutional Rule (Indiana Rule 28.1). Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to judge prescription for completeness and legality.
2. Students will develop an awareness of the historical need for regulation of drugs, and be able to place drugs in legal categories, e.g. controlled, orphan, OTC, BTC.
3. Students will be able to navigate the complex rules that govern specialty practice in institutions.
4. Students will recognize when a decision is ethical or legal, or if a decision is required at all.
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| PHRM 83100 - Health Care Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is envisioned as a primarily didactic course whose main purpose is to provide students with an introduction to the structures and functions of the United States Health Care System. It is also designed to provide the student an opportunity to compare and contrast the methods used in other countries to address the needs of society for provision of health care to its members. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Integrative (Practice-related) Competence:
1.The student must be able to meld theory and abilities in the practice setting to enhance positive patient outcomes.
2.Promote health improvement and disease prevention.
3.Identify and implement strategies to encourage patient adherence to therapeutic interventions.
Critical Thinking and Decision Making Abilities:
1.The student must examine issues rationally, logically, and coherently, and shall acquire evaluate, and synthesize information and knowledge relevant to an identified problem; and make sound decisions in both familiar and unfamiliar contexts.
2.Sythesize information in order to draw logical conclusions.
3.Provide evidence-based support for arguments, recommendations, and solutions.
Communication Skills and Abilities:
1. The student must read, write, speak, listen, and use media, and appropriate technologies to send and respond effectively to communications for varied audiences and purposes.
2.Demonstrate the ability to present ideas, plans, and data in appropriate written formats to succinctly and effectively communicate with various audiences.
3.Interact with other pharmacists, physicians, nurses, and other healthcare professionals to achieve positive patient outcomes.
4.Interact with technicians and other support staff to develop and maintain a positive and productive work environment.
Responsible Use of Professional Values and Ethical Principles:
1.The student must demonstrate sensitivity to personal values and ethical principles in professional and social contexts.
2.Maintain professional competence through sound judgment, ethical behavior, adherence to legal guidelines and socioeconomic principles.
3.Demonstrate values consistent with the provision of quality healthcare to all patient groups and populations.
Social Awareness and Social Responsibility:
1.The student must demonstrate an understanding of self, the strengths and challenges of cultural diversity, and the historic responses of society in times of rapid change.
2.Demonstrate awareness of key issues and debates in healthcare.
Professional Abilities and Habits:
1.The student must effectively self-assess and satisfy learning and continuous professional development on an ongoing basis.
2.Take an active role in professional and community organizations and promote advocacy for key healthcare and professional initiatives.
3.Demonstrate awareness of and be able to analyze internal and external factors that influence the practice of pharmacy and healthcare policy in an attempt to resolve practice-related problems.
Group Interaction and Citizenship:
1.The student must demonstrate effective interpersonal and intergroup behaviors in a variety of situations and circumstances.
2.Demonstrate awareness of the roles of various healthcare professionals in multiple healthcare environments.
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| PHRM 83200 - Principles Of Diagnosis Labs And Monitoring |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will serve as an introduction to the role of diagnostics in the clinical continuum of patient care. Since most therapeutic decisions are based in part on information obtained through utilization of diagnostic testing, it is important for pharmacists to have an understanding of these tests as the pertain to diagnosis. As they progress in their training, students will be required to evaluate and interpret diagnostic tests to help monitor and fine tune drug therapy. This course will provide an introduction to diagnostic testing as a whole, with an introduction to differential diagnosis and the selection of diagnostic tests. The students will also have the opportunity to learn about different types of testing (lab, imaging, etc.) and how to critically judge information provided by various tests. Finally, the students will be introduced to several common laboratory tests that have wide application in the diagnosis and treatment of many different disease states. This course will provide a background introduction to these tests, allowing the students to gain understanding of how the test is performed, how the results are interpreted and how to identify potential problems with the laboratory data, allowing a strong foundation as they move into subsequent integrated pharmacotherapeutic (IP) modules. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify the role of diagnostic testing in patient care.
2. Describe the importance of differential diagnosis in the clinical evaluation of a patient.
3. Construct a differential diagnosis for a patient based on a variety of clinical scenarios.
4. Determine the reliability of diagnostic testing in terms of sensitivity, accuracy, positive predictive value and negative predictive value.
5. Discuss the role of diagnostic imaging in patient care.
6. Recognize the scientific rationale behind different methods of diagnostic testing.
7. Explain the rationale for several common and frequently used diagnostic tests.
8. Interpret a series of laboratory values as part of a patient case study.
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| PHRM 83400 - Pharmaceutical Calculations |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Mastery of pharmaceutical calculation skills is vital and PHRM 83400 prepares students to apply calculation problem solving skills to clinical practice. PHRM 83400 prepares students to perform pharmaceutical calculations necessary for prescription/drug order preparation, compounding dosage forms, and medication dosage calculations based on patient specific factors. Pharmacists must perform error-free pharmaceutical calculations. Correct calculations contribute as much to pharmaceutical care as the newest methods/guidelines for diagnosis, treatment, and prevention. The development of problem solving skills with pharmaceutical calculations is an important component of this course. In addition, practice ad repetition of problems is necessary to develop confidence as well as accuracy. Appropriate documentation of work/set up and numerical answers (including units) is required. Approaches to minimize errors and maximize accuracy with pharmaceutical calculations are emphasized. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the role of pharmaceutical calculations in the provision of pharmaceutical care.
2. Perform accurate/error-free pharmaceutical calculations in an organized, clear, and appropriately documented format.
3. Express numerical answers in a clear manner which includes units and appropriate use of zeros with decimal points.
4. Interpret abbreviations and professional nomenclature in prescriptions/drug orders.
5. List the equivalents/conversion factors for the systems of measurement used in pharmacy (i.e., metric, apothecary, avoirdupois, and household).
6. Convert from one unit to another between and within the various systems of measurement used in pharmacy.
7. Calculate quantities of ingredients necessary to reduce or enlarge a pharmaceutical formula.
8. Define and appropriately utilize specific gravity in pharmaceutical calculations.
9. Define and perform pharmaceutical calculations using various expressions of concentration [i.e., percentage (i.e., W/V, V/V, W/W), ratio strength, milligram percent, parts per million] used in pharmacy.
10. Calculate a patient’s body surface area (BSA) utilizing a nomogram and/or BSA formula and apply in dose determinations.
11. Calculate ideal body weight (IBW) and estimated creatinine clearance (CrCl) rates and apply in dose determinations.
12. Calculate body mass index (BMI) from a standard formula.
13. Calculate appropriate medication dosages based on patient specific factors.
14. Calculate admixed intravenous (IV) solution quantities/volumes.
15. Calculate intravenous (IV) solution flow rate.
16. Perform the calculations necessary to prepare isotonic compounded solutions.
17. Perform calculations for the preparation and use of stock solutions.
18. Perform calculations for altering product strength by dilution or concentration.
19. Solve problems associated with compounding in contemporary practice.
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| PHRM 83600 - Biochemistry For Pharmaceutical Sciences II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course provides instruction in biochemistry that builds on basic knowledge by presenting content on advanced aspects of human biochemistry for students in pharmaceutical sciences. The content emphasizes the integration of biochemical knowledge and the application of biochemical understanding to medically relevant situations including disease etiology, medical diagnosis, disease research, drug discovery, drug and toxin mechanisms of action, and mechanism of drug metabolism. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understanding and knowledge of biochemistry to an advanced level and to increase the ability to apply that understanding and knowledge to pharmaceutical sciences and the practice of pharmacy.
2. Advanced understanding of biochemistry includes integration of multiple areas of metabolism in the causation of disease and in physiologic homeostasis; biochemical signal transduction paradigms and concepts; the basis of complex biotechnology methods for disease diagnosis and disease research (recombinant DNA, proteomics, genomics, metabolomics), and development of experimental therapeutics (gene transfer, reverse genetics, siRNA); and advanced aspects of molecular transport, membrane function, enzyme kinetics, and the enzymology of drug metabolism.
3. Application of biochemical understanding and knowledge includes understanding the molecular basis of many idopathic and acquired metabolic disease, of inborn disorders of metabolism, of diseases of aberrant molecular signaling, and of diseases of aberrant molecular transport. It also includes the mechanisms of DNA damage and repair and the mechanisms of action of anti-metabolites and of synthetic therapies for metabolic disorders.
4. Demonstrate proficient knowledge of each of the content areas presented in this course, as well as demonstrate understanding of the concepts in each content area presented in this course ta is sufficient for accurate application of those concepts to novel situations.
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| PHRM 84000 - Professional Program Laboratory III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Experiments, simulations, case studies, and problem sets that actively involve the student in problem-solving, applying and interrelating important concepts from the core courses taught that semester. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Theoretical foundations of the profession, including scientific comprehension.
2. Development of practice skills.
3. Critical thinking and decision-making.
4. Group interaction and communication skills.
5. Evaluation of patient data, scientific literature and pharmaceutical products as well as the development and documentation of patient-specific recommendations.
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| PHRM 84100 - Professional Program Laboratory IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Experiments, simulations, case studies, and problem sets that actively involve the student in problem-solving, applying and interrelating important concepts form the core courses taught that semester. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Theoretical foundations of the profession, including scientific comprehension.
2. Development of practice skills.
3. Critical thinking and decision-making.
4. Group interaction and communication skills.
5. Evaluation of patient data, scientific literature and pharmaceutical products as well as development and documentation of patient-specific recommendations.
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| PHRM 84200 - Community Pharmacy IPPE |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A 4-credit hour required experiential course in the second year of the professional Doctor of Pharmacy program. Students learn community pharmacy operations and patient counseling skills. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Perform basic functions and skills in a community practice setting.
2. Document a minimum of 160 hours of performance-based experience in a community pharmacy.
3. Demonstrate professional and ethical standards of conduct.
4. Reflect on professionalism displayed by pharmacy practitioners at the site.
5. Recognize and describe exemplary pharmacy operations and dispensing practices.
6. Debate the advantages and disadvantages of a variety of career options in community practice.
7. Self-assess learning within the scope of the experience.
8. Conduct an effective, conversational interview with a pharmacist.
9. Discuss and describe in writing the community pharmacist's role.
10. Discuss and describe in writing common problems/barriers that pharmacists encounter in the workplace.
11. Discuss and describe in writing important aspects, advantages, and disadvantages of a career in community pharmacy.
12. Reflect on new information learned.
13. Describe and reflect on the community pharmacy work environment and staffing.
14. Describe and reflect on the steps involved in the prescription filling and dispensing.
15. Formulate and describe opinions on the quality of patient care.
16. Describe and reflect on common causes of medication errors and methods of prevention and apply knowledge to suggest system improvements.
17. Conduct an effective, conversational interview with a patient about medication use.
18. Review the patient's medications in relation to their condition(s) or disease(s).
19. Describe common problems/barriers patients encounter with medications.
20. Utilize pharmacy references and document sources of information.
21. Formulate an opinion on the value of pharmacists' involvement in patient care.
22. Prepare a formal recommendation letter to a healthcare provider.
23. Reflect on successes of the assignment and self-assess the need for improvement.
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| PHRM 84400 - Integrated Pharmacotherapy II |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. This course will provide an integrated approach to instruct the students in physiology, pathophysiology, pharmacology, medicinal chemistry, and therapeutics relevant to diseases of the endocrine and cardiovascular systems. When applicable, special emphasis will be placed on presenting the interrelationships between deficits in endocrine function and cardiovascular disease. In addition, students will study and critique current therapeutic approaches and opinions in the application of replacement therapy with natural, synthetic, or recombinant hormone preparations. Typically offered Fall.
6.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Basic anatomy/physiology.
2. Pathophysiology.
3. Diagnostic methods and decision making.
4. Principles of pharmacology.
5. Relationships between chemical structure and biological activity.
6. Delivery of drugs from various dosage forms.
7. Pharmacotherapy.
8. Drug interactions.
9. Treatment guidelines.
10. Basic principles of drug design and the chemical and biochemical mechanisms of drug action.
11. The relevance of molecular biology, biochemistry, immunology, and pharmacogenomics and apply key principles to disease states and therapeutics.
12. Perform error-free mathematical calculations with regard to drug dosing and pharmacokinetics.
13. Provide patient-centered pharmaceutical care.
14. Promote health improvement and disease prevention.
15. Critical evaluate patient data, literature sources, and drug products.
16. Provide specific, sound, cost effective, evidenced-based drug and healthcare recommendations.
17. Design, implement, and evaluate patient specific pharmacotherapeutic regimens.
18. Select the proper drug, dose, and dosage form for a specific patient.
19. Design strategies to monitor patients’ drug regimens for therapeutic and toxic effects of medications.
20. Design strategies to avoid or manage drug interactions and adverse drug events.
21. Identify and implement strategies to encourage patient adherence to therapeutic interventions.
22. Synthesize information in order to draw logical conclusions.
23. Provide evidence-based support for arguments, recommendations, and solutions.
24. Demonstrate the ability to make sound decisions given complex scenarios in a time-constrained environment.
25. Effectively present information to colleagues and other healthcare practitioners, and the general public, regarding drug therapy and related topics.
26. Demonstrate awareness of key issues and debates in healthcare.
27. Demonstrate cultural competence that includes awareness of the impact that cultural, social, and ethnic differences can play in the provision of healthcare and the workplace.
28. Discuss and remain open to differences of opinion and defend rational opinions that differ from those of other healthcare professionals.
|
| PHRM 84500 - Integrated Pharmacotherapy III |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. This course will develop knowledge and skills regarding the physiology/ pathophysiology, medicinal chemistry, pharmacology, pharmacokinetics/pharmaceutics, and pharmacotherapy of specific cardiovascular diseases, neurology diseases, and psychiatric disorders. Typically offered Spring.
6.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain structure-function relationships of drugs used for the management of ischemic heart disease, heart failure, arrhythmias, Parkinson’s disease, dementia/Alzheimer’s disease, seizure disorders, MS, migraine, headache, psychotic disorders, bipolar disorder, depression, anxiety/sleep disorders, ADHD, pediatric psychiatric disorders, eating disorder, pain management, neuropathic pain, narcolepsy, and substance dependence.
2. Explain the pharmacology of drugs used for the management of ischemic heart disease, heart failure, arrhythmias, Parkinson’s disease, dementia/Alzheimer’s disease, seizure disorders, MS, migraine, headache, psychotic disorders, bipolar disorder, depression, anxiety/sleep disorders, ADHD, pediatric psychiatric disorders, eating disorder, pain management, neuropathic pain, narcolepsy, and substance dependence.
3. Describe the pathophysiologic processes responsible for specific disease states and integrate this knowledge into the therapeutic decision making process.
4. Evaluate various therapeutic alternatives for a given disease state in light of specific patient factors and design a patient-specific pharmacotherapeutic regimen. This will include assessing the effectiveness of therapy on the basis of clinical and laboratory parameters.
5. Describe adverse effects associated with drugs used for the management of ischemic heart disease, heart failure, arrhythmias, Parkinson’s disease, dementia/Alzheimer’s disease, seizure disorders, MS, migraine/headache, psychotic disorders, bipolar disorder, depression, anxiety/sleep disorders, ADHD, pediatric psychiatric disorders, eating disorder, pain management, neuropathic pain, narcolepsy, and substance dependence.
6. Design evidence-based drug therapy treatment plans for patients with ischemic heart disease, heart failure, arrhythmias, Parkinson’s disease, dementia/Alzheimer’s disease, seizure disorders, MS, migraine/headache, psychotic disorders, bipolar disorder, depression, anxiety/sleep disorders, ADHD, pediatric psychiatric disorders, eating disorder, pain management, neuropathic pain, narcolepsy, and substance dependence.
|
| PHRM 84600 - Principles Of Pharmacokinetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the theory and concepts of pharmacokinetics and biopharmaceutics. It provides the student with a foundation for more advanced therapeutic concepts in subsequent courses. The learner will develop expertise in quantifying drug absorption, distribution and elimination from concentration vs. time data or urinary drug excretion vs. time data to estimate primary pharmacokinetic parameters. Use of these parameters is required to design and modify individual drug-dosing regimens. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the general physiological processes and factors that influence drug dissolution, absorption, distribution, metabolism and excretion.
2. Define and describe the pharmacokinetic features of parallel, sequential, and reversible first-order processes. Define and describe the pharmacokinetic features of zero-order and first-order, and Michaelis-Menten processes.
3. Anticipate the effects of altering rate and extent of absorption, clearance, volume of distribution on the amount of drug in the body following an oral dose.
4. Define and describe the pharmacokinetic parameters and equations used to calculate the loading and maintenance dose of drugs eliminated by first-order kinetics.
5. Collect relevant patient information and relevant drug information data in order to calculate the appropriate loading and maintenance dose of a drug.
6. Design and modify dosing regimens given patient-derived information such as plasma concentration vs. time data and dosing regimen.
7. Quantitatively draw the concentration vs. time curves when clearance, volume of distribution or bioavailability changes and explain how the curves have changed.
8. Define and describe relative and absolute bioavailability the factors controlling bioavailability from various routes of administration. Determine if absorption or elimination rate-limits drug absorption kinetics.
9. Describe the pharmacokinetic parameters that determine the time course of active metabolite disposition. Determine if formation or elimination rate-limits active metabolite kinetics.
10. Describe drug disposition based upon physiological determinants in terms such as organ perfusion, unbound intrinsic clearance, free fraction in plasma and in tissue.
11. Describe, with examples, how altered physiology (e.g., renal disease, liver disease, pregnancy, advanced age) affects the disposition of drugs. Define and describe the principles of hemodialysis and how this alters the disposition of drugs.
12. Define steady-state concentration and describe the controlling factors following a constant rate intravenous infusion. Use pharmacokinetic parameters to predict drug concentrations during and after a constant rate infusion, with or without a bolus dose.
13. Define and describe the pharmacokinetic parameters and equations used to calculate the loading and maintenance doses of drugs. Predict the rate and extent of drug accumulation for a given regimen of fixed dose and interval.
14. Define and describe the basic models used to characterize the kinetics of effect (pharmacodynamics).
|
| PHRM 84700 - Principles Of Pharmacogenomics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Personalized treatment has been expected to sustainability reform the pharmacotherapy in next decades. There has been increased application of pharmacogenomics knowledge in clinical practice right now. Therefore, it is an urgent need to integrate the pharmacogenomic knowledge into the pharmacist education and training program to meet the immediate requirements in the current and future clinical practice. This course is designed to introduce new knowledge about the theory and concepts of pharmacogenomics and personalized medicine to professional pharmacy students for meeting the requirement for their Pharm D degree. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Broad knowledge for advanced integrated therapeutic strategy on patient’s genetic information.
2. Develop expertise in informed patient care by selecting the proper drug, dose, and/or dosage form for a specific patient care based on personalized data and pharmacogenomics information.
|
| PHRM 84800 - Principles Of Drug Information And Literature Evaluation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide students with the fundamental skills needed for the provision of drug information in pharmacy practice. Emphasis is placed on the evaluation, interpretation, and practical implications of primary medical literature on the delivery of pharmaceutical care. Four recently published clinical trials will be reviewed and discussed throughout the semester to illustrate contemporary issues in the interpretation of biomedical research. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Discuss the fundamentals and importance of drug information skills for all pharmacists.
2. Demonstrate effective verbal communication skills in obtaining pertinent background and patient-specific information when receiving drug information requests.
3. Demonstrate effective written communication of drug information.
4. Demonstrate familiarity with contemporary drug information retrieval technology and the ability to conduct a thorough and systematic search of the tertiary and primary literature.
5. Demonstrate the ability to judge the reliability of various tertiary sources of drug information.
6. Demonstrate an understanding of the role of the Internet in providing accurate and timely drug information.
7. Demonstrate the ability to incorporate drug information, patient-specific factors, and other pertinent information in the delivery of pharmaceutical care.
8. Describe the hierarchy of study designs as it relates to level of evidence.
9. Explain the general principles of observational and experimental research designs used to answer drug information questions.
10. Explain fundamental regulatory and ethical principles involved in human subjects research.
11. Differentiate between internal and external validity of clinical trial results.
12. Apply the principles of literature evaluation to analyze recent clinical trial results.
13. Understand and interpret statistical tests commonly used in contemporary biomedical literature.
14. Delineate between statistical significance and clinical significance.
15. Interpret the usefulness of clinical trial data for making evidence-based practice decisions.
|
| PHRM 84900 - Population Health Management |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This two-credit hour course aims to provide students with the core knowledge and basic skills used in managing the health of populations. Core content will include managed care principles, pharmacist involvement in managed care, and program designs. The course will also provide instruction in the topic areas of pharmacoeopidemiology and pharmacoeconomics. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Become prepared for work in managed care settings.
2. Understand of the concepts and computations used in pharmacoepidemiology, pharmacoeconomics, decision analysis, and comparative effectiveness research.
3. Know the tools needed to conduct new drug evaluations and formulary reviews and therapeutics committees.
4. Understand basic driving forces behind policy analysis as it relates to ongoing healthcare reform and pipeline drug products.
|
| PHRM 85000 - Immunization Certification |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The purpose of the course is to provide immunization training certification for students in the Doctor of Pharmacy program. Certification is awarded based on completion of the Pharmacy-Based Immunization Delivery program content that is provided through the American Pharmacists Association (AphA). All students will be expected to have completed immunization training as a graduation requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Provide comprehensive immunization education and training.
2. Provide pharmacists with the knowledge, skills, and resources necessary to establish and promote a successful immunization service.
3. Teach student pharmacists to identify at-risk patient populations needing immunizations.
4. Teach student pharmacists to administer immunizations in compliance with legal and regulatory standards.
|
| PHRM 88000 - Advanced Pharmacy Practice Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This final year begins in May and continues through the following April. The 40 weeks of rotation are broken down as follows: 4 weeks Hospital Operations 2, 4 weeks Community Pharmacy Operations 2, 8 weeks Ambulatory rotations, 8 weeks inpatient rotations, and 16 weeks General Electives (4 of which must be additional patient care rotation). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic 1, Clinic 2, Clinic 3, Clinic 4, Clinic 5, Clinic 6, Clinic 7, Clinic 8, Clinic 9, Clinic
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 10 times
Learning Objectives:
1. The purposes, uses, and effects of their medications and related therapy.
2. Achievable therapeutic outcomes with estimated time frame.
3. Drug cautions and side effects in relation to the patient’s condition.
4. Medication cost issues.
5. Relevant lifestyle modifications (i.e. weight loss and smoking cessation) and non-drug therapies.
6. Use, storage, side effects, and dosage of nonprescription drugs.
7. The appropriate selection of over-the-counter medications in response to patient’s condition/needs.
8. Appropriate patient’s comprehension of student’s counseling (i.e. final verification step).
|
| PHRM 90500 - Dean's Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHRM 90600 - Orientation Meeting |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHRM 92100 - Orientation I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHRM 92200 - Orientation II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
Department: Dept of Pharm Practice
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHSL F5030 - Human Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. P: Introductory biology (K1010, K1030), and organic chemistry (C3410, C3420), and physics (P2010, P2020); or equivalent. Advanced course in human physiology designed for studets with no prior exposure to the discipline. Emphasis on basic physiological mechanisms of conntrol with regard to membrane, neural, endocrine, reproductive, muscle, cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, renal, and multisystems physiology. Typically offered Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHSL F5920 - Biophysics Radioisotope Methodology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic properties of radioisotopes; characteristics and utilization of instrument systems; design and analysis of experiments in physiology.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHSL F5950 - Advanced Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 15.00. Special techniques in advanced areas of physiology.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 15.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHSL F7050 - Molecular And Cellular Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The emphasis is on the intracellular mechanisms which underlie the physiological functions of many organ systems. Three fundamental topics will be discussed: membrane transport, physiology of excitable membranes and contraction, and endocrine regulation. Current research techniques in these areas will be discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHSL F7100 - Physiology of Membranes |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Structure and function of cell membranes. Kinetics and energetics of membrane transport. Regulation of intracellular
ionic concentrations. Hormonal and pathophysiological modification of membrane function.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHSL F7110 - Physiology: From Cells To Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Graduate level course surveying physiologic functions of cells, tissues and organs of the neural, muscle-skeletal, cardiovascular, respiratory, renal, endocrine, and gastrointestinal systems. Special emphasis will be placed on the methods for assessing and interpreting physiologic functions. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHSL F7800 - Special Topics In Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Special Topics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHSL G9010 - Advanced Research |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Available to graduate students who have completed all course requirements for their doctorates, have passed doctoral qualifying examinations, and have the requisite number of degree credit hours, this course provides the advanced research student with a forum for sharing ideas and problems under the supervision of a senior researcher. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHSL P1300 - Human Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. For non-science majors. Credit allowed for only one of BIOL L1000, BIOL L1040, BIOL T1000, and PHSL P1300. Credit not allowed toward a biology major. Basic concepts of human biology: reproduction, development, heredity, physiological regulation including stress and drugs, behavioral biology. Includes related social problems.
Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHSL P2150 - Basic Human Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00 or 5.00. Functional aspects of cells, tissues, organs, and systems in the mammalian organism. Designed for preprofessional students in allied health, nursing, speech and hearing, and HPER. Four lectures per week and one two-hour laboratory section per week. Course requires special fee. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHSL P4180 - Lab In Comp Animal Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Laboratory in Comp Animal Physiology. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| PHST P1050 - Giving And Volunteering In America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This introductory course for non-majors encourages students to reflect on their past and current experiences with giving and volunteering. Students will be introduced to the historical, philosophical, and literary traditions of America philanthropy and will be encouraged to apply these traditions to their own lives, service experiences, educational and professional goals, and visions for a better world. One component of the course involves a service-learning experience and reflective essay. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHST P2010 - Traditions And Practice In Philanthropic Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the issues and values surrounding philanthropy and nonprofit organizations as they have developed in history, as they shape contemporary formal study of philanthropy, and as an important part of students' personal, intellectual, and professional lives. One component of the course involves a service-learning experience and reflective essay. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHST P2100 - Philanthropy And The Social Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course in the social sciences (including anthropology, communication studies, economics, ethnic studies, political science, psychology, and sociology) offers an introduction to the analytical approaches and perspectives that the social sciences bring to bear upon the study of philanthropy. The course surveys the issues and diverse roles played by voluntary action and philanthropic organizations in society, as well as the problems and questions that shape social science research on understanding and improving the practice of philanthropy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHST P2110 - Philanthropy And The Humanities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course draws from the humanities (including the arts, history, literature, philosophy, and religion) to address the question of responsible action in philanthropy. To whom or to what should a philanthropist be responsible? How should philanthropic action be done? Readings and discussions will involve and analysis of values, goals, purposes, moral claims, and aspirations that sometimes compete, conflict, or coexist uneasily in philantrhopic action and organizations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHST P2120 - Philanthropy And Civic Engagement |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Offers and Introduction to and a survey of approaches to the issues and values surrounding civic engagement and public support of giving, voluntary action, and actions taken in the name of the public good. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHST P3010 - Contemporary Contexts For And Approaches To Philanthropy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces you to the study of philanthropy with a focus on the United States. Unlike some courses on the nonprofit sector that emphasize administration or history exclusively, in this course, we will use a multidisciplinary approach to explore the “how” and “why” of philanthropy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHST P3300 - Topics In Philanthropic Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In-depth study of selected topics and issues in philanthropic studies. Specific topics vary by semester. May be repeated once for credit with a different course topic. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHYS 01000 - Pre-Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. For students not ready to take the algebra- and trigonometry-based courses in physics (218 and P201). Basic concepts of physics. Methods of analyzing physics problems. Setting up equations for physics problems. Interpreting information in physics problems. Analyzing and presenting the results of laboratory measurements. Extensive drill in these topics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Remedial
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHYS 10000 - Physics In The Modern World |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Ideas, language, methods, and impact of physics today. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| PHYS 10500 - Sound And Music |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A non-mathematical course that deals with the physical properties of sound and sound patterns, the physiological response to sound and the psychological sensations of music. The physical principles covered include wave motion, wave properties, resonance, and analysis of tones and complex waveforms. How sound patterns are produced using musical instruments, how these sounds propagate and how they are detected and interpreted will be examined. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PHYS 10700 - Conceptual Physics For Humanities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A descriptive, non-mathematical explanation of physical laws and theories, phenomena, and practical applications. Topics: mechanics, properties of matter, heat and waves. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| PHYS 10800 - Conceptual Physics For Humanities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A descriptive, non-mathematical explanation of physical laws and theories, phenomena and practical applications. Topics: electricity, magnetism, light, and modern physics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| PHYS 11500 - Introduction To Lasers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Three-hour lecture class about the theory and operation of lasers. Lectures will discuss basic optics, the operation of lasers, laser safety, and the uses of lasers in science, industry, construction, communication, entertainment and medical fields. Class intended for non-physics majors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PHYS 11501 - Introduction To Lasers Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This is an optional lab course for PHYS 11500, Introduction to Lasers. We will experiment the concepts involved in the PHYS 11500 lectures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PHYS 12000 - Physics Of Sports |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course enables students to learn fundamental physical principles and concepts from examples of situations occurring in sports. The numerous recent applications of physics toward enhancing sports performance, both by improving techniques and equipment, will be selectively studied. Physical concepts such as velocity and acceleration, force, momentum, impulse, rotational motion, torque, pressure, fluid flow, energy and power will be introduced and exemplified through sports. The course is intended for non-science majors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PHYS 12100 - How To Solve A Problem Without Solving The Problem |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course teaches students how to formulate a research question and start doing research with their current knowledge. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Increase the students’ ability to connect their (textbook) knowledge to its real world applications.
2. Engage students in creating models that can address open-ended questions,
3. Instill the habit of carrying out reality checks on the solutions they have developed.
4. Facilitate student inquiry through increased critical thinking and independent project work.
|
| PHYS 12200 - How To Know When You Are Right |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course continues developing students' capabilities to perform research. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Increase the students’ ability to connect their (textbook) knowledge to its real world applications.
2. Engage students in creating models that can address open-ended questions,
3. Instill the habit of carrying out reality checks on the solutions they have developed.
4. Facilitate student inquiry through increased critical thinking and independent project work.
|
| PHYS 12500 - Light And Color |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to the phenomena associated with electromagnetic waves having visible wavelength, i.e., light. Topics will include: characteristics of light, optical instruments such as telescopes and cameras, rainbows, human seeing, color and color mixing, lasers, Polaroid lenses, and tricks with mirrors. The course will emphasize phenomenological and conceptual consideration of these topics using many demonstrations and activities. This course is intended for non-science majors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PHYS 12700 - Physics For Computer Graphics And Animation I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the physics of light and its interactions with objects as these topics apply to the production of computer generated images. The course will investigate light and color through observation and the use of 3D graphics programs. In particular how light interacts with surfaces and how we see will be explored in order to understand how to make graphic images that appear true to life. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PHYS 12800 - Physics Of Martial Arts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A conceptual study in physics as it applies to martial arts. In particular, Newtonian mechanics, rotational dynamics, material study, and center of mass will be addressed. No martial arts experience is necessary nor will any martial art be taught. Unlike other conceptual physics courses, this course will very much focus on the forces a human can exert on another object. From these beginnings, the course will develop the student's conceptual understanding of momentum, work, energy, power, and intensity to achieve a final goal of understanding collisions. The course will also examine leverage, rotational dynamics, and center of mass (throwing, grappling, and joint maneuvers). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PHYS 12900 - Physics Of War |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the physics behind weapons developed throughout centuries of warfare. Weapons to be examined are the bow, the many variations of the catapult, the development of artillery from the muzzle loader to the rail-gun, rockets and missiles, directed energy weapons such as lasers, and nuclear bombs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will describe the basic projectile motion, conservation of momentum, and energy.
|
| PHYS 13000 - Exploring The New Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a survey for non-science majors of the conceptual foundations, applications, and implications for the future of the recent major discoveries in physics. Examples of topics are quantum electronics, high temperature superconductivity, lasers, chaos, fractals, the cold fusion controversy, the search for the fifth force, quarks, and dark matter in the universe. Topics are presented in a descriptive and conceptual manner without mathematics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PHYS 13100 - Concepts In Physics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A nonmathematical course that introduces students to physics through interactive investigations and discussions. Everyday life is compared to the scientific concepts of forces, motion, momentum and energy. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the nature of science.
2. Demonstrate a conceptual understanding of mechanics based topics in physics.
3. Improved critical thinking and problem solving skills through experimental investigations and demonstrate the ability to communicate conceptual understanding of related topics.
|
| PHYS 13101 - Concepts In Physics I Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This is an optional Lab course for PHYS 13100, Concepts in Physics I. We will experiment the concepts involved in the PHYS 13100 lectures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PHYS 13200 - Concepts In Physics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of PHYS 131. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PHYS 13500 - The 1st Three Minutes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a descriptive introduction to the major concepts of contemporary physics and their relationship to theories of the origin of the universe. The course presents a historical survey of cosmological thought, leading to today's recent developments. Topics include stars and galaxies, the four forces, relativity, quantum physics, elementary particles, and the Big Bang. The course is intended for non-science majors. There is no need for a background in college math. However, knowledge of mathematics at high school level is required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PHYS 13600 - Chaos And Fractals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores novel ideas in geometry and dynamical systems as they appear in natural phenomena. Irregular patterns in nature can be understood in terms of fractal geometry. Physical processes that appear to be random actually obey a deterministic law. The concepts of chaos and fractals help us to understand these processes. This course is intended for non-science majors. There is no need for a background in college math. However, knowledge of mathematics at high school level is required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PHYS 14000 - Short Courses In Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Five-week short courses on a variety of topics related to the physical world. Examples of topics include: Waves and Particles are the Same Thing, Relativity, Quarks and Other Inhabitants of the Zoo, Why Things Work and Why They Don't, Lasers and Holography, Physics of Star Trek. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHYS 14900 - Mechanics, Heat, And Wave Motion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed primarily for engineering students in need of preparation for PHYS 15200. Basic concepts of kinematics, dynamics, mechanical energy, heat energy, and wave motion. Not available for credit toward graduation in the School of Science or the Schools of Engineering. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 15200 - Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. (West Lafayette, Calumet, North Central, IUPUI) 5.00 (Fort Wayne) Statics, uniform and accelerated motion; Newton's laws; circular motion; energy, momentum, and conservation principles; dynamics of rotation; gravitation and planetary motion; hydrostatics and hydrodynamics; simple harmonic motion; wave motion and sound. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| PHYS 15250 - Honors Mechanics Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The primary goal of the course is to enrich the student's experience in PHYS 15200 by presenting a topic not traditionally covered in first-year physics, such as special relativity, quantum mechanics, or particle physics. The course will meet for 50 minutes, during which time there will be a lecture and/or class discussion. The course will carry honors credit. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. To learn about modern development in mechanics and their impact on our scientific worldview.
2. To be able to identify the limitations in Newtonian physics and to explain how modern theories address these shortcomings.
|
| PHYS 16200 - Particle Kinematics and Conservation Laws |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Particle kinematics, Newton's laws of particle dynamics, work and energy, energy and momentum conservation, particle collisions. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 16300 - Mechanics, Heat, And Kinetic Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Rotational kinematics, rotational dynamics, conservation of angular momentum, gravitation, fluid statics and dynamics, oscillations and waves, heat and the first law of thermodynamics, introduction to special relativity. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 17000 - Special Topics In Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Specialized topics in introductory physics, including laboratory experiments if appropriate. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHYS 17200 - Modern Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introductory calculus-based physics course using fundamental interactions between atoms to describe Newtonian mechanics, conservation laws, energy quantization, entropy, the kinetic theory of gases, and related topics in mechanics and thermodynamics. Emphasis is on using only a few fundamental principles to describe physical phenomena extending from nuclei to galaxies. 3-D graphical simulations and numerical problem solving by computer are employed by the student from the very beginning. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
CTL:IPS 1753 Calculus-based Physics I
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To understand and describe a wide range of physical phenomena in mechanics and thermodynamics using only a few fundamental principles of physics.
2. To learn a unified approach that relates microscopic behavior to macroscopic behavior.
3. To model natural phenomena quantitatively.
4. To apply all this to a range of topics related to mechanics and thermodynamics.
|
| PHYS 18300 - Professional Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Course shall include supervised experience and/or training as a professional physicist. Must be accepted for the program by cooperative program coordinator. For cooperative education students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 18400 - Professional Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Course shall include supervised experience and/or training as a professional physicist. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 19000 - Special Assignments |
|
Credit Hours:1.00 to 4.00. Readings, discussions, written reports, or laboratory work selected for enrichment in special areas of physics. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. To deepen and/or broaden understanding of physics and physical laws of nature by learning beyond what is offered by currently available fixed-title courses.
|
| PHYS 19400 - Freshman Physics Orientation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Designed to provide incoming physics majors with the academic, survival, and computational skills to make a successful transition from high school to college. Discussion of opportunities within the Department including degree options, co-op program, undergraduate research, careers in physics, use of spreadsheet software, graphing packages, and drawing programs. Attendance and performance on assigned projects are the basis of the Pass/Not Pass requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| PHYS 20000 - Our Physical Environment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A nonmathematical introduction to physical concepts and methods by means of examples from daily life and current technological applications. Typically offered Spring Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| PHYS 20100 - General Physics I |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Newtonian mechanics, wave motion, heat and thermodynamics. Application of physical principles to related scientific disciplines including life sciences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PHYS 20200 - General Physics II |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Electricity and magnetism, geometrical and physical optics, quantum theory, introduction to concepts of relativity, atomic and nuclear physics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PHYS 21000 - Nature Of Physical Science I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An integrated, activity-based introduction to some of the basic phenomena, concepts, principles, and reasoning in physics and chemistry. This course is designed for non-science majors and is especially appropriate for education majors since many of the activities can be readily modified for use with younger students. Course does not count toward degrees in science, engineering, or technology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PHYS 21300 - Physics For Elementary Education |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Development of basic concepts and theories in physical science. Not available for credit towards graduation in the College of Science, PU North Central and PU West Lafayette. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| PHYS 21400 - The Nature Of Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of basic concepts and theories in physics; a terminal survey course designed for non-science majors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
CTL:IPS 1750 Survey Of Physical Science
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHYS 21500 - Physics For Elementary Education |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The curriculum draws heavily on Project 2061 Benchmarks and NRC Science Education Standards for content and nature of science materials and focuses on middle school learning goals (especially those with strands at elementary level). Each learning goal was expanded to finer-grained target ideas creating more steps to make concepts more understandable and explicit. Activities were designed to enable students to develop deep conceptual understanding of each target area and the structure and sequence were guided by research on student learning. In this class social interactions are used to clarify ideas and to encourage peer teaching. The students' understandings are based on prior knowledge. The class is based on a constructivist framework where new understandings are scaffolded from partial to incomplete understandings, and those are refined over time. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 21600 - Introduction To Science-Based Dating |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to age determination techniques used in archaeology and the earth sciences. Various techniques currently in use, and their impact on our understanding of the past, will be described qualitatively. Topics covered include dating by use of Carbon 14, thermoluminescence, tree rings, and fission tracks, and surface exposure dating by use of cosmogenic nuclides. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 21700 - Introduction To Current Physics And Forefront Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course introduces new physics majors to current physics and the research areas of the department. There are multiple sections with each section having eight or less students meeting with a Professor. The course is part seminar, part interactive discussion and questions and answers and part laboratory visits to research areas. Topics cover a wide range including the evolution of the Universe, astrophysics, elementary particle physics, nuclear physics, geophysical dating, nanoscience and imaging. Topics evolve to match current physics and the interests of the students. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 21800 - General Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Mechanics, heat, and sound, primarily for technology students. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHYS 21900 - General Physics II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Electricity, light, and modern physics, primarily for technology students. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHYS 22000 - General Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Mechanics, heat, and sound, for students not specializing in physics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:IPS 1751 Algebra-based Physics I
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 22100 - General Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Electricity, light, and modern physics, for students not specializing in physics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:IPS 1752 Algebra-based Physics II
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 22200 - Mechanics Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Selected experiments in mechanics, thermodynamics, and fluid mechanics such as those dealing with kinematics, dynamics, waves, oscillations, work, energy, and fluids. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will demonstrate the ability to think and function as a scientist.
2. Students will demonstrate the ability to communicate well, both orally and in writing.
3. Students will demonstrate the ability to understand the role of scientific observation of Nature in uncovering the Laws of Physics.
|
| PHYS 22300 - X-Ray Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides background in physics necessary to understand the generation and usage of X-Rays. It will cover basic concepts in Physics such as Forces, Energy and Power. Concepts in Electricity and Magnetism will be explored as an introduction to Electromagnetic Radiation. Physical models of Electromagnetic Radiation and Matter will be developed. The interaction between Electromagnetic Radiation matter will be explored. Particular focus will be placed on the physical mechanism of generating X-Rays and the use of X-Rays. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to describe basic AC circuit concepts, such as current, voltage and induction.
2. Students will describe physical models of electromagnetic radition; Photons, Waves, Rays.
3. Students will comprehend the interaction of electromagnetic radiation with matter.
4. Students will explain the process of generation of X-Rays and their detection.
|
| PHYS 23500 - Seminar In Careers In Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Course is designed to help physics majors evaluate different career options. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 24100 - Electricity And Optics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Electrostatics, current electricity, electromagnetism, magnetic properties of matter. Electromagnetic waves, geometrical and physical optics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
Both PHYS 24100 + 25200 = CTL:IPS 1754 Calculus-based Physics II
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 24200 - Introduction To Heat And Thermal Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A general introduction to thermodynamics for students in science and engineering who have a basic calculus and mechanics background. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 25100 - Heat, Electricity And Optics |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Heat, kinetic theory, elementary thermodynamics, heat transfer. Electrostatics, AC/DC circuits, electromagnetism, magnetic properties of matter; geometrical and physical optics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| PHYS 25200 - Electricity And Optics Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Selected experiments in electric fields, magnetic fields, steady-state and transient d.c. circuits, thermodynamics, and optics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
Both PHYS 24100 + 25200 = CTL:IPS 1754 Calculus-based Physics II
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will demonstrate the ability to think and function as a scientist.
2. Students will demonstrate the ability to communicate well, both orally and in writing.
3. Students will demonstrate the ability to understand the role of scientific observation of Nature in uncovering the Laws of Physics.
|
| PHYS 26100 - Electricity And Optics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Electricity and magnetism with emphasis on fields; geometrical and physical optics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 27000 - Special Topics In Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Specialized topics in physics. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHYS 27100 - Electricity And Magnetism |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Electrostatics; current density; resistance; direct current circuit theory, Kirchhoff's laws; RC and RL circuits; magnetostatics; electromagnetic induction; magnetic properties of materials; generation of electromagnetic waves. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 27101 - Electricity And Magnetism Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Selected experiments in electric fields, magnetic fields, steady-state and transient d.c. circuits. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 27200 - Electric And Magnetic Interactions |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Calculus-based physics course using concepts of electric and magnetic fields and an atomic description of matter to describe polarization, fields produced by charge distributions, potential, electrical circuits, magnetic forces, induction, and related topics, leading to Maxwell's equations and electromagnetic radiation and an introduction to waves and interference. 3-D graphical simulations and numerical problem solving by computer are employed throughout. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, GTC-Science, UC-Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To understand and describe a wide range of physical phenomena in electricity and magnetism using only a few fundamental principles of physics.
2. To learn a unified approach that relates microscopic behavior to macroscopic behavior.
3. To model natural phenomena quantitatively.
4. To apply all this to a range of topics related to electricity and magnetism.
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| PHYS 28400 - Professional Practice III |
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Credit Hours: 0.00. Course shall include supervised experience and/or training as a professional physicist. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
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| PHYS 29000 - Special Assignments |
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Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Readings, discussions, written reports, or laboratory work selected for enrichment in special areas of physics. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| PHYS 29400 - Sophomore Physics Seminar |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Required of sophomores majoring in any physics curriculum. Discussion of undergraduate research opportunities, upper-division courses, career opportunities, laboratory safety, use of the library including physics journals, and topics of current interest in physics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| PHYS 29500 - Outreach Assistance As Service Learning |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Physics 29500 is a service learning class available to students willing and able to deliver physics lessons to K-12 classrooms and to other public events. Students are required to prepare and rehearse labs/activities so they are able to offer professional presentations. Students are also required to maintain a reflection journal, where they record notes about their experiences. Although efforts are made to work around students' schedules, students should have at least on open morning or afternoon each week (preferably 2-3) that allows them to visit an assigned site on a regular, consistent basis. One credit is equivalent to 32 hours of involvement in preparation and/or delivery of activities, and journaling time. Prerequisites: desire, commitment, dependability responsibility. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| PHYS 30000 - Introduction To Elementary Mathematical Physics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Brief but practical introduction to various mathematical methods used in intermediate-level physics courses. Vector analysis, orthogonal coordinate systems, matrices, Fourier methods, complex numbers, special functions, and computational methods. Emphasis will be on worked examples and the application of these methods to physics problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| PHYS 30200 - Puzzles, Strategy Games And Problem Solving in the Physical Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will explore scientific problem solving by comparing and contrasting it with problem solving in two other domains: puzzles and strategy games. Puzzles serve as the vehicle for introducing such basic aspects of problem solving as developing representations, defining the problem, using heuristics, and evaluating solutions. Strategy games will be used as a way to practice problem solving skills in a domain in which can be quickly learned. No credit toward a physics major. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| PHYS 30300 - History And Philosophy Of Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of the history of science, with an emphasis on the underlying philosophical ideas that have shaped and characterized the development of science. Their relevance to contemporary issues will also be explored. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Provide the students with a basic understanding of the history and philosophy of science.
2. Relate the importance of the history and philosophy of science to contemporary issues in science education.
3. Provide the students with experience at critically evaluating scientific experiments, data, and models, and communicating their critiques effectively.
4. Allow non-science majors to gain additional knowledge of history and philosophy, and to practice fundamental algebra and geometry.
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| PHYS 30500 - Intermediate Mathematical Physics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction and review of the mathematical techniques and procedures used in intermediate and advanced physics courses. Applications involving vector calculus, linear algebra, complex analysis, Fourier series and transforms, and second-order linear differential equations will be discussed. The course provides additional mathematical preparation for PHYS 31000, 31100, 32200, 33000, 34200, and 51500. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to use the various techniques to solve intermediate to advanced physics problems.
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| PHYS 30600 - Mathematical Methods Of Physics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discussion of wide-ranging physics problems from mechanics, E&M, thermal, and modern physics with emphasis on reviews and introductions of mathematical methods and techniques that are essential in such discussion. Relevant mathematical methods include one-and multi-variable calculus, complex numbers and functions of a complex variable, and vector calculus. Intended primarily for sophomore physics majors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will acquire capacity to apply essential mathematical methods and techniques to physics problems.
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| PHYS 30700 - Mathematical Methods Of Physics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discussion of wide-ranging physics problems from mechanics, E&M, thermal, and modern physics with emphasis on reviews and introductions of mathematical methods and techniques that are essential in such discussion. Relevant mathematical methods include vectors, matrices and normal modes as well as ordinary and partial differential equations. Intended primarily for sophomore physics majors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will acquire capacity to apply essential mathematical methods and techniques to physics problems.
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| PHYS 30800 - Scientific Computation |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to scientific problem solving using a computer. Students will be introduced to numerical methods for evaluating integrals and for solving algebraic and differential problems in physics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| PHYS 30900 - Scientific Computation II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A second semester course in using modern computational methods to solve physics problems numerically. PHYS 30900 uses the methods developed in PHYS 30800 to address problems in mechanics, electricity and magnetism, and quantum physics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| PHYS 31000 - Intermediate Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. For students familiar with calculus. Elements of vector algebra; statics of particles and rigid bodies; theory of couples; principle of virtual work; kinematics; dynamics of particles and rigid bodies; work, power, and energy. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To Understand order in Nature as contained in the Laws of Physics. The student exhibits the knowledge of and the ability to apply the core physics subject of Classical Mechanics.
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| PHYS 31100 - Quantum Physics I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course discusses the limits of classical physics and the development of quantum physics. Topics will include: Planck's quantization hypothesis, the photoelectric effect, the wave theory of matter, the Uncertainty Principle, Bohr's atomic model, the Schroedinger equation, wave functions, the Hydrogen atom, operator methods, and the quantized simple harmoics osciallator. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| PHYS 31200 - Intermediate Electricity And Magnetism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Vector calculus, electrostatics and magnetostatics, Maxwell¿s equations, introduction to electromagnetic waves, transmission lines, and radiation from antennas. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| PHYS 31400 - Introduction To Medical Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers Physics topics relevant to biological effects in the human body. Topics include sound, optics, thermodynamics, electricity and magnetism, atomic and nuclear physics, radiation effect, tools in radiation treatment, and medical imaging techniques. This course serves to prepare students for future careers in medical physics or related biological sciences. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| PHYS 31500 - Lasers In Art And Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Laser safety and operation (in greater detail than in earlier courses), laser alignment and optics for students in science, fine and performing arts, engineering and technology. Significant experimental projects tailored to students' interests, such as color holography, light shows, fiber optics and communications, laser gyroscopes, extraction of chlorophyll and spectroscopy of diatomic molecules. Course project required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PHYS 31700 - Special Nuclear Materials |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This Great Issues course addresses the impact of science and technology of the special nuclear materials (so designated by congress as they could be used to make nuclear weapons as well as to produce low-cost electric power) on society and the ethical issues that arise. The course is designed to be a dynamic, interactive learning experience, and topics covered range from the technical issues involved in searching, transporting, and safely utilizing these materials to social and economic impact of these activities, and to the ethical and philosophical issues presented by the flow of modernity. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Ability to think and function as a scientist.
2. Demonstrated breadth of knowledge.
3. Demonstrated knowledge of a subfield of physics: The student demonstrates knowledge of the diverse applications of physical laws in fundamental physics, in various branches of science and in applied science and engineering.
4. Ability to communicate well both orally and in writing.
5. Ability to collaborate as part of a team.
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| PHYS 32000 - Computational Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Computational methods will be introduced and used to solve problems associated with electromagnetic phenomenon, mechanics or statistical mechanics and quantum physics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| PHYS 32200 - Intermediate Optics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Wave optics and properties of light, including reflection, refraction interference. Fraunhofer and Fresnel diffraction dispersion, polarization, double refraction, introduction to lasers and holography. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| PHYS 32500 - Scientific Computing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Programming in FORTRAN. Numerical techniques in integration, root finding, and solution of systems of ordinary and partial differential equations occurring in physics. These techniques will be applied to problems in classical, quantum, and statistical physics, including non-linear and chaotic systems. Includes use of mathematical subroutine libraries and introduction to Monte Carlo methods. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PHYS 32600 - Motion, Biomechanics And Animation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course will focus on Newtonian physics of motion and ultimately its application in biomechanics and how an understanding of physics applies to 3D computer animations. In particular, motion will be explored to understand how to make animations that look and feel correct. Topics to be covered include Newton's three laws of motion, conservation of energy and momentum, and rotational dynamics. The course will investigate these phenomena through observation, experimentation, the use of 3D graphics programs and simulations. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| PHYS 32700 - Modern Physics Survey |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A survey of modern physics topics, intended primarily for non-physics majors, organized in a mixture of lectures and activity-based laboratories. Topics will include: special relativity; pre-quantum phenomena; the Bohr aromic model; multi-electron atoms; cosmology and the Big Bang; radioactivity, fission, and fusion. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| PHYS 33000 - Intermediate Electricity And Magnetism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Electrostatics; electric currents; magnetostatics; electromagnetic induction; Maxwell's equation; electromagnetic waves. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| PHYS 33100 - Electricity And Magnetism II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Applications of Maxwell's equations to electromagnetic waves, boundaries, dispersion, and radiation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
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| PHYS 34000 - Modern Physics Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory experiments to accompany PHYS 34200 or 34400. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will acquire the ability to understand design of a physics experiment, to develop experimental techniques and tools, to analyze and interpret data, and to draw and present physical conclusions.
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| PHYS 34200 - Modern Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of basic concepts and phenomena in atomic, nuclear, and solid-state physics. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 34300 - Modern Physics Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory experiments to accompany PHYS 34200. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| PHYS 34400 - Modern Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Survey of modern physics primarily intended for physics majors. Special relativity; particle properties of electromagnetic radiation; wave properties of particles; uncertainty principle; atomic spectra and X-rays; nuclear structure; elementary particles; statistical distribution laws; physics of atoms, molecules and condensed matter such as solids. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will acquire the ability to understand design of a physics experiment, to develop experimental techniques and tools, to analyze and interpret data, and to draw and present physical conclusions.
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| PHYS 34500 - Optics Laboratory I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory experiments in geometrical and physical optics and spectrometry. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PHYS 34600 - Advanced Laboratory I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Experiments in atomic, molecular, solid state, and nuclear physics, electricity and magnetism, and physical optics. Students will have the opportunity to work intensively on a particular experiment. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PHYS 35000 - Intermediate Laboratory I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Geometrical optics, lenses, microscopes, telescopes, aberrations, illuminations; Schlieren, Moire, and Foucault testing; interference and diffraction dispersive instruments, emission and absorption spectroscopy; Fourier transforms and spatial filtering, polarized light, and holography. Many experiments use lasers, photodiodes, chart recorders, computers, and analog to digital conversion. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
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| PHYS 35100 - Intermediate Laboratory II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Lectures on AC circuit theory; instructor demonstrations and student experiments involving particle diffraction, wave polarization, double refraction, AC circuits and meters. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHYS 35300 - Advanced Physics Laboratory I: Modern Physics And Electronics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Experiments associated with advances in the early part of the 20th century to accompany PHYS 34200 and an introduction to electronic circuits and test equipment for scientists. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Understanding of physics laboratory processes and protocol.
2. Knowledge of electronic circuits.
3. Understanding of the use of test equipment in a scientific laboratory setting.
|
| PHYS 36000 - Quantum Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Historical development of quantum mechanics, wave packets, uncertainty principle, Schrdinger equation, operators, the hydrogen atom, electron spin, angular momentum, perturbation theory, and other selected topics. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 36100 - Electronics For Scientists |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. DC and AC circuit theory. Fourier methods, electronic structure of crystals, semiconductor devices, common scientific instrumentation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PHYS 37000 - Special Topics In Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Specialized topics in intermediate physics, including laboratory experiments if appropriate. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHYS 38000 - Advanced Physics Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction and survey of modern experimental topics in advanced physics, including areas such as: Interferometry, Zeeman Effect, Compton Effect, Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Nuclear counting and half-life measurements. An introduction to data analysis will also be included. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| PHYS 38199 - Professional Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Typically offered: Summer, Fall, Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 38299 - Professional Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Typically offered: Summer, Fall, Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 38399 - Professional Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. To obtain professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Typically offered: Summer, Fall, Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 38600 - Professional Practice IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Course shall include supervised experience and/or training as a professional physicist. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 39000 - Special Assignments |
|
Credit Hours:1.00 to 4.00. Readings, discussions, written reports, or laboratory work selected for enrichment in special areas of physics. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. To deepen and/or broaden understanding of physics and physical laws of nature by learning beyond what is offered by currently available fixed-title courses.
|
| PHYS 40000 - Physical Optics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Electromagnetic waves; wave theory of reflection, refraction, diffraction, and interference. Spatial and temporal coherence. Fourier optics, coherent imaging, and holography. Polarization phenomena; Jones vectors and matrices. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHYS 40100 - Advanced Physics Laboratory II: Modern Optics |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Experiments to accompany PHYS 40000 in reflection, refraction, and interference using lasers. Interferometry. Diffraction patterns with emphasis on Fourier analysis and Fourier transformations. Polarization, Brewster's angle. Coherence length of lasers. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Understanding of physics laboratory processes and protocol.
2. Knowledge of reflection, refraction, interference using lasers, interferometry, diffraction patterns, polarization, Brewster's angle, coherence length of lasers.
|
| PHYS 40200 - Senior Research I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Experiential learning undergraduate research course in physics directed and mentored by physics faculty during student’s penultimate semester. Background preparation, specialized training, and identification of a final research project. Submission of a formal research proposal and initial work towards completion. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be expected to have gained mastery of any requisite physics not explicitly covered in other coursework and competence using any specialized equipment.
2. Students will have submitted a formal research proposal and begun work on the research project.
|
| PHYS 40300 - Senior Research II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Experiential learning undergrad research course in physics directed and mentored by physics faculty during student’s final semester. Continuation and completion of work begun in Senior Research I; Preparation and presentation of results in multiple formats. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Studnets will be expected to have completed their research project, as proposed in Senior Research I.
2. Students will prepare findings and results in final written report, final oral report, and as poster presentation.
|
| PHYS 40500 - Atomic And Molecular Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic topics of atomic and molecular physics will be covered in lecture and demonstrations. The course will use fundamental quantum mechanics to describe the hydrogen atom, multi-electron atoms, and simple molecules. The course will also cover the interaction of atoms with other atoms, electrons and photons, and include discussions of various forms of atomic and molecular spectroscopy. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PHYS 41000 - Physical Mechanics I Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Newtonian, Lagrangian, and Hamiltonian mechanics. Emphasis on point mass mechanics. Free, driven, and damped harmonic motion, central force problem. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To understand order in nature as contained in the Laws of Physics: The student exhibits the knowledge of and the ability to apply the core physics subject of Classical Mechanics.
|
| PHYS 41100 - Physical Mechanics II Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Continuation of mechanics in PHYS 41000. Coupled systems, general theory of small oscillations, the vibrating string, perturbation theory. Rigid body motion. Motion of charged particles in electromagnetic fields. Elements of continuum mechanics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To understand order in nature as contained in the Laws of Physics: The student exhibits the knowledge of and the ability to apply the core physics subject of Classical Mechanics.
|
| PHYS 41200 - Quantum Physics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of the concepts introduced in PHYS 31100, including more advanced topics in modern quantum mechanics. Topics will include: addition of angular momenta, scattering theory, identical particles, time-independent and time-dependent perturbation theory, and the WKS approximation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| PHYS 41310 - Intermediate Electricity And Magnetism II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continued study of electrostatics and magnetostatics, electric currents, electromagnetic induction, applications of Maxwell's equations to electromagnetic waves, boundaries, dispersion, and radiation. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to solve complex electricity and magnetism problems in particular problems that lack symmetry.
|
| PHYS 41600 - Thermal And Statistical Physics Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Thermal equilibrium; first, second, and third laws; entropy; probability and statistics; canonical ensembles; chemical potential and Grand Canonical Ensemble; classical and quantum ideal gases; chemical reactions; phase equilibria; critical phenomena. Typically offered Fall.
4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To understand order in nature as contained in the Laws of Physics: The student exhibits the knowledge of and the ability to apply the core physics subject of Thermal and Statistical Physics.
|
| PHYS 41800 - Thermal And Statistical Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Temperature, equations of state, first and second laws of thermodynamics, entropy and applications, kinetic theory, transport processes, statistical mechanics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will understand basic thermal processes in light of statistical mechanics.
|
| PHYS 42200 - Waves And Oscillations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Physics of waves and oscillations including sound, elastic waves, and electromagnetic waves such as light. Topics range from the theory of simple harmonic oscillators, transverse modes of a continuous string, and physical optics including interference, Fresnel and Fraunhofer diffraction, and resolution, to diffraction of X-rays and electrons by crystals. Optionally includes topics such as nonlinear waves and surface waves. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 43000 - Electricity And Magnetism I Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Electrostatics, solutions of Poisson's equation in spherical and cylindrical coordinates, macroscopic and microscopic theory of dielectrics, electrostatic energy, conduction; magnetostatics, electromagnetic induction, and magnetic properties of matter. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To understand order in nature as contained in the Laws of Physics: The student exhibits the knowledge of and ability to apply the core physics subject of Electromagnetism.
|
| PHYS 43100 - Electricity And Magnetism II Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A continuation of PHYS 43000. Magnetic energy; applications of Maxwell's equations to a.c. circuits, filters, transmission lines, waveguides, and antennae; Lienard-Wiechert potentials. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To understand order in nature as contained in the Laws of Physics: The student exhibits the knowledge of and ability to apply the core physics subject of Electromagnetism.
|
| PHYS 44200 - Quantum Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Inadequacies of classical physics; wave packets and Schrodinger equation, one-dimensional problems; operator formulation of quantum mechanics; linear harmonic oscillator; angular momentum; hydrogen atom; Pauli principle and application to helium atom. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to use quantum mechanics to solve basic quantum problems. They will interpret quantum mechanical solutions.
|
| PHYS 45000 - Intermediate Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Laboratory primarily intended for junior year physics majors. Assorted experiments in optics and other fields using lasers, photodiodes, computers, and other modern technology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will acquire the ability to understand design of a physics experiment, to develop experimental techniques and tools, to analyze and interpret data, and to draw and present physical conclusions.
|
| PHYS 45200 - Intermediate Modern Physics Laboratory III Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Material of PHYS 352 covered in greater depth for honors physics majors. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 46000 - Quantum Mechanics I Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Limits of classical physics, wave packets. Bohr model, atomic systems, Schrodinger equation, eigen-functions, one-dimensional potentials, wave mechanics general structure, multiparticle systems, Pauli principle, operator methods. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To understand order in nature as contained in the Laws of Physics: The student exhibits the knowledge of and ability to apply the core physics subject of Quantum Mechanics.
|
| PHYS 46100 - Quantum Mechanics II Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Angular momenta, radial equation, operators, matrices, spin, time-independent perturbation theory, electron-electromagnetic field interaction, hydrogen atom, structure of atoms, molecules, radiation; selected topics in radiative transitions, collision theory, solids, nuclei, elementary particles and their symmetries. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To understand order in nature as contained in the Laws of Physics: The student exhibits the knowledge of and ability to apply the core physics subject of Quantum Mechanics.
|
| PHYS 46900 - Research In Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Undergraduate research, which will qualify as an Experiential Learning experience. Admission by special permission. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHYS 47000 - Special Topics In Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Topics vary. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHYS 48001 - Senior Thesis I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will consist of independent research under the supervision of a faculty advisor. Senior Theses course is required to graduate. It must be taken in the senior year. This course is part of a two-semester course-track that is completed when PHYS 48002 is completed in the second semester. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. The development of critical thinking.
2. The ability to carry out independent research.
3. The ability to present new material in clear, non-technical language.
4. Understanding of the physics underlying the work.
|
| PHYS 48002 - Senior Thesis II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. This course will consist of independent research under the supervision of a faculty advisor. Senior Thesis I and Senior Thesis II are required to graduate; they must be taken in the senior year. PHYS 48002 is the second part of a two-semester course-track that starts with PHYS 48001. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. The development of critical thinking.
2. The ability to carry out independent research.
3. The ability to present new material in clear, non-technical language.
4. Understanding of the physics underlying the work.
|
| PHYS 48700 - Professional Practice V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Course shall include supervised experience and/or training as a professional physicist. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 49000 - Special Assignments |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Reading, laboratory work, or research in special areas of physics. Intended for upperclass students. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHYS 49400 - Junior-Senior Physics Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Major emphasis on developing skills in oral and written presentations by students. The subject matter can be library material and/or accomplishments in undergraduate or co-op research. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| PHYS 51000 - Physical Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Mechanics of particles, rigid bodies, and vibrating systems. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 51100 - Laser Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is about all physical aspects of lasers. In particular, the course concentrates on optical amplification, interaction of radiation with matter, and laser rate equations. Basic physical and geometrical optics and atomic physics are covered in sufficient detail to understand the design, operation, and application of lasers. Topics include matrix methods in ray optics, Gaussian beams, transverse and longitudinal modes, cavity design, rate equation models of laser gain media, different types of lasers and nonlinear optics. Applications of lasers are discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PHYS 51500 - Thermal And Statistical Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Equilibrium states, the concept of heat, and the laws of thermodynamics; the existence and properties of the entropy; different thermodynamic potentials and their uses; phase diagrams; introduction to statistical mechanics and its relation to thermodynamics; treatment of ideal gases. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 51700 - Statistical Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Laws of thermodynamics; Boltzmann and quantum statistical distributions, with applications to properties of gases, specific heats of solids, paramagnetism, black-body radiation, and Bose-Einstein condensation; Boltzmann transport equation and transport properties of gases; Brownian motion and fluctuation phenomena. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
|
| PHYS 52000 - Mathematical Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Portions of selected areas of mathematics that are of particular importance in physics are covered. These are drawn from vector and tensor operators, infinite series, analytic functions, and the calculus residues, partial differential equations, and the special functions of mathematical physics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| PHYS 52100 - Survey Of Classical Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is intended for first-year graduate students in the Department of Physics. It provides an intensive problem solving environment encompassing a broad survey of major topics in classical mechanics, electromagnetism, and thermal physics. The primary objective is to prepare beginning graduate students for continuing on to higher level of work in the physics graduate program. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To get the beginning graduate students ready for higher levels of physics work by consolidating the foundations in all areas of classical physics.
|
| PHYS 52200 - Coherent Optics And Quantum Electronics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Recent experimental and theoretical developments in optics emphasizing concepts of coherence. Fourier optics, and the quantum theory of radiation. Applications to lasers and masers, nonlinear optics, holography, and quantum electronics. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 52400 - Physical Optics And Experimental Spectroscopy |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Theory and applications of spectroscopic instruments, including Fourier spectrometer, scanning and photographic interferometer, grating and prism spectrometers and spectrographs. Emphasis is on the analysis of the instruments and their fundamental and practical limitations. Theory and structure of spectra and their regularities, and the Zeeman effect. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PHYS 52600 - Physics Of Quantum Computing And Quantum Information |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the physics of quantum information science. Starting with the concepts of quantum superposition, it defines and describes qubits (quantum bits) and their manipulation by quantum logic gates. The topics of quantum entanglement and the EPR paradox are introduced, and their importance for quantum teleportation, communication, and quantum cryptography are covered. Quantum computing is described in terms of quantum circuits of logic gates, and also in terms of quantum algorithms, such as Deutche¿s algorithm, the quantum Fourier transform, Shor's prime factoring algorithm, and Grover's search algorithm. The final topic is quantum decoherence and the limits it places on practical implementations of quantum computing. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 53000 - Electricity And Magnetism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Electrostatic problems; theory of dielectrics; theory of electric conduction; electromagnetic effects due to steady and changing currents; magnetic properties of matter; Maxwell's equations; electromagnetic radiation. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 53600 - Electronic Techniques For Research |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A summary of principles of modern electronics currentl used in research Coursework will include broad coverage of the field and selected topics in electronics instrumentation. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 54500 - Solid-State Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Crystal structure; lattice vibrations and electronic band structure of crystals; electrical, optical, and thermal properties of solids; transport and other nonequilibrium phenomena in uniform and nonuniform materials. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 55000 - Introduction To Quantum Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Brief historical survey of the development of quantum mechanics; wave-packets, uncertainty principle, wave functions, operators, Schrodinger equation with application to one-dimensional problems, the hydrogen atom, electron spin, selected topics in perturbation theory, scattering theory, and compounding of angular momenta. Not available for students with credit in PHYS 36000 or 46000. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 55600 - Introductory Nuclear Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory of relativity, brief survey of systematics of nuclei and elementary particles, structure of stable nuclei, radioactivity, interaction of nuclear radiation with matter, nuclear reactions, particle accelerators, nuclear instruments, fission, nuclear reactors. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 56000 - Stellar Evolution |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ASTR 56000) Observational basis of astrophysics; formation of galaxies and stars; evolution of stars; white dwarfs, supernovae and neutron stars, pulsars, quasars, black holes; cosmic rays, their origin and acceleration; radio astronomy, radio galaxies; the H-21 cm line and the 3mK blackbody radiation; gravitational radiation; X-ray and g-ray astronomy; cosmology; space physics, magnetosphere, and solar wind. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 56100 - Galaxies And Large Scale Structure |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ASTR 56100) Covers basic observed properties and models of galactic structure, dynamics of stars, physics of interstellar medium, formation of galaxies, properties of clusters of galaxies, and dark matter. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 56200 - Introduction To High Energy Astrophysics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ASTR 56200) An overview of important physical processes in a variety of astronomical settings and of the experimental techniques employed in the field of high energy astrophysics. Covered in more detail are individual systems that include black holes, neutron stars, white dwarfs, supernova remnants, active galactic nuclei, clusters of galaxies, gamma-ray bursts, and cosmic rays, with special emphasis on several research frontiers. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 56300 - Astroparticle Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ASTR 56300) An overview of an emerging research frontier in modern physics that lies at the interface of particle physics and astrophysics. Emphasis is on topics that are particularly relevant to both fields, including cosmology, cosmic ray physics, very-high-energy gamma ray astrophysics, neutrino astrophysics, and gravitational wave physics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 56400 - Introduction To Elements Particle Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course brings students up to the current status of research in elementary particle physics. The focus of the course is the construction of the Standard Model with emphasis on the electroweak theory. The seminal experiments that confirmed the predictions of the Standard Model is presented. The solar neutrino problem, the search for nonzero neutrino masses, and the efforts to construct a theory which unifies all interactions, including gravity, is discussed. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 56500 - Introduction To Elementary Particle Physics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course follows PHYS 56400, and it continues to present current topics in elementary particle physics. It focuses on the Higgs mechanism, and it explores physics beyond the standard model. Special attention is devoted to supersymmetry and searches for new particles. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 56600 - Introduction To Quantum Chromodynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the fundamental theory of strong interactions, Quantum Chromo-Dynamics (QCD), which describes the interactions of quarks and gluons. The main focus is on a reasonably self-contained approach. All the necessary ingredients will be introduced within the course. Knowledge of graduate-level E&M and Quantum Mechanics is helpful but not essential. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 57000 - Selected Topics In Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Specialized topics in physics selected from time to time. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHYS 57100 - Selected Topics In Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Specialized topics in physics selected from time to time. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHYS 57500 - Relativity Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the theory of relativity. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 58000 - Computational Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to computationally based problem solving in physics, emphasis on understanding and applying various numerical algorithms to different types of physics problems. Topics will include chaos in mechanical systems, stochastic systems including percolation and fractal structures, molecular dynamics and the properties of simple fluids, Monte Carlo methods and phase transitions, and time dependent as well as time dependent problems in quantum mechanics. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 58500 - Introduction To Molecular Biophysics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of concepts and methods from physics to the understanding of biological systems with a focus on proteins, lipids, and nucleic acids. Introduction of experimental and theoretical techniques, including X-ray crystallography, nuclear magnetic resonance, and molecular dynamics simulations in the investigation of the structures, forces, dynamics, and energetics of these biological molecules. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Ability to comprehend the majority of a research article or talk in the field of molecular biophysics.
2. Be equipped to begin research in any of the biophysics research labs in the department.
3. Apply physical concepts and techniques to investigate the nature (structure, interactions, and energetics) of biological systems.
|
| PHYS 59000 - Reading And Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00 (West Lafayette, Calumet, Fort Wayne) 1.00 to 6.00 (IUPUI). Reading and research in Physics. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHYS 59300 - Independent Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Research in some area of modern physics (spectroscopy, nuclear physics, solid state physics, elementary particle physics, biophysics, geophysics, etc.) with student receiving individualized supervision and guidance from staff member. This course may be used to satisfy the independent project or 500-level elective requirement of the undergraduate majors in Honors and Applied Physics Honors Programs. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHYS 59500 - Physics Curriculum Development |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course helps K-12 teachers learn new developments in physical sciences and in their pedagogy, which will then help them to update and improve science curricula at their schools. Most activities of this course are performed in collaboration with the outreach activities of the College of Science and with the administrative assistance by the Office of Continuing Education. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHYS 60000 - Methods Of Theoretical Physics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide first-year physics graduate students with the mathematical background for subsequent studies of advanced mechanics, electrodynamics, and quantum theory. Topics treated include functions of complex variable, ordinary and partial differential equations, eigenvalue problems and orthogonal functions. Green's functions, matrix theory, and tensor analysis in three and four dimensions. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 60100 - Methods Of Theoretical Physics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of PHYS 600. Prerequisite: PHYS 60000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 60200 - Methods Of Theoretical Physics IIIA |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The elements of the theory of groups. The theory of group representations. The irreducible representations of the crystallographic point groups and of orthogonal transformations in three-dimensional space. Applications of the theory of group representations to the quantum theory of atoms, molecules, and solids. Prerequisite: PHYS 60100. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 60300 - Methods Of Theoretical Physics IIIB |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic theory of groups and group representations. Finite groups and abelian infinite groups, with applications to atomic physics. Elements of Lie group theory. The three-dimensional rotation group. The group SU(3). Application to particle physics. Prerequisite: PHYS 60100. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 60500 - Pedagogical Methods For Physics Graduate Students |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course prepares physics graduate students for classroom and laboratory teaching assignments. Through 100 minutes per week of lectures and hands-on recitations, it provides an intensive survey of basic pedagogical methods, both theoretically and in practice. Students will learn and practice teaching techniques via various forms and microteaching, reading, and class discussion. A broad range of results from physics education research will be studied in detail. Additional topics include grading and assessment, responsible conduct in teaching related to issues such as gender, culture and ethnicity, students with disabilities, and ethics in academia, generally, including ethical conduct of research. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture 1, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 61000 - Advanced Theoretical Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Lagrangian and Hamiltonian mechanics; variational principles; canonical transformations; Hamilton-Jacobi theory; theory of small oscillations; Lagrangian formulation for continuous systems and fields. Prerequisite: PHYS 51000. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 61700 - Statistical Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Classical and quantum statistical mechanics. Prerequisite: PHYS 66000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 61800 - Advanced Statistical Mechanics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced statistical physics provides important principles and methods to the studies of many particle and complex systems, including those in condensed matter physics, materials physics, biophysics and so on. This course covers fundamental concepts and modern techniques through solving specific statistical models. Topics include: phase transition and critical phenomena, mean field and Landau-Ginzburg phenomenalogical approaches, thermal and quantum fluctuation, scaling and renormalization group, exactly solvable models, quantum phase transition, topological phase transition, non-equilibrium and dissipative dynamics, and effect of disorder in physical systems. Prerequisites: PHYS 61700. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 63000 - Advanced Theory Of Electricity And Magnetism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The experimental origins of Maxwell's equations. Electrostatics and magnetostatics; solution of boundary value problems. Quasi-static currents. Electromagnetic energy and momentum and the Maxwell stress tensor. Foundations of optics. Radiation from antennas, multi-pole expansion; waveguides. Prerequisite: PHYS 53000, 60000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 63100 - Advanced Theory Of Electricity And Magnetism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Covariant formulation of electrodynamics; Lienard-Wiechert potentials; radiation from accelerated particles; Cerenkov radiation; dynamics of relativistic particles; radiation damping; introduction to magneto-hydrodynamics. Prerequisite: PHYS 63000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 64500 - Electron Theory Of Solids I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Electronic energy bands in crystalline solids; crystal symmetry and Brillouin zones, approximate methods of calculation, electrons and holes under applied fields. Lattice dynamics and thermal conductivity. Electron-lattice interactions. Transport phenomena in metals and semi-conductors. Prerequisite: PHYS 54500, 60100, 66100. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHYS 64600 - Electron Theory Of Solids II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Crystal imperfections, impurities and lattice defects. Magnetic properties: diamagnetic effects, paramagnetism, ferromagnetism, resonance phenomena. Ferroelectricity. Optical properties of metals and semiconductors; interband and intraband transitions, excitons, effects of crystal imperfections. Prerequisite: PHYS 64500. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHYS 65800 - Theoretical Techniques Of Elementary Particle Physics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and phenomenology of the standard model of elementary particle interactions. Electro-weak model of Glashow, Salam, and Weinberg: spontaneous symmetry breaking, mass generation, Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa mixing in charged weak current, path integral quantization, R3 gauge Feynman fules, renormalization. Parton model. Neutral current phenomenology. Comparison to high energy high precision electron-positron annihilation and deep inelastic scattering experiments: weak mixing angle, heavy top quark constraints. Prerequisite: PHYS 66200, 66300. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHYS 65900 - Theoretical Techniques Of Elementary Particle Physics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and phenomenology of the standard model of elementary particle interactions. Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD) theory of strong interactions: asymptotic freedom, perturbative QCD applied to high energy electron-positron annihilation and deep inelastic phenomena using operator product expansion, renormalization group, extended parton model, and Altarelli-Parisi equation. SU(3)xSU(3) current algebra and effective Lagrangians, chiral perturbation theory and chiral anomalies. Weak decay of heavy quarks: Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa mixing matrix, CP violation. Neutrino physics. Electroweak symmetry breaking and Higgs physics. Other topics of current research interests in and beyond the standard model. Prerequisite: PHYS 65800. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHYS 66000 - Quantum Mechanics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Origins of the quantum theory, the uncertainty and complementarity principles. The Schrodinger equation and its solutions for simple physical systems. Mathematical formulation of the quantum theory. Applications: simple harmonic oscillator, theory of angular momentum, the hydrogen atom. Time-independent and time-dependent perturbation theory. The Pauli exclusion principle. Spin of the electron. Elementary theory of scattering. Prerequisite: PHYS 53000, 55000, 60000, 61000, Corequisite: PHYS 60100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 66100 - Quantum Mechanics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Symmetry and conservation laws. The Klein-Gordon and Dirac equations. Interaction of radiation with matter. Applications of quantum mechanics to atomic structure. Scattering theory. Prerequisite: PHYS 60100, 63000, 66000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 66200 - Quantum Field Theory I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to relativistic quantum field theory. Representations of the Lorentz and Poincare groups. Noether's theorem: symmetries and conservation laws. Canonical quantization of free Klein-Gordon, Dirac, Maxwell fields. Interacting field theory: Lehmann-Kallen representations. LSZ reduction formula. Schwinger action principle. Quantum Electrodynamics (QED): Gell-Mann Low expansion, Wick's theorem, Feynman rules for Green functions and S-matrix elements. Scattering processes in QED: cross sections in low orders of perturbation theory. Prerequisite: PHYS 66100. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHYS 66300 - Quantum Field Theory II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Concepts and techniques of relativistic quantum field theory. Quantum Electrodynamics: radiative corrections, renormalization program, infrared divergences, external field problem. Feynman path integral quantization. Global symmetries and Ward identities. Quantum effective action: effective potential, loop expansion. Non-Abelian gauge theories: quantization via Faddeev-Popov prescription, Feynman rules, BRS invariance. Quantum Chromodynamics. Callen-Symanzik equation and renormalization group. Prerequisite: PHYS 66200. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHYS 66400 - Quantum Theory Of Many-Body Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Practical introduction to modern quantum field theory techniques as applied to the study of many-body phenomena occurring in solid state systems. Standard perturbative-theoretic results based on zero- and finite-temperature Green's functions, with application to specific physical situations. Introduction to nonperturbative methods. PHYS 645 and 646 are recommended. Prerequisites: PHYS 61700, 66000, 66100. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PHYS 67000 - Selected Topics In Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Specialized topics in physics, varied from time to time. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture 1, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHYS 67200 - Advanced Physics Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides modern laboratory experience for graduate students in physics. Emphasis is on student initiative in accomplishing difficult but meaningful results. The course is intended to fill the gap between undergraduate-level laboratory, with detailed description of each experiment, and real-life experimental work. Students will share in the responsibility of determining how to conduct many of these experiments, learn how to use original equipment manuals, redesign experiments, and redefine goals depending on the progress. Prerequisite: graduate level E & M and QM courses, undergraduate level laboratory course. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 67500 - General Relativity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theoretical and experimental general relativity. The equivalence principle and its experimental basis. The Einstein field equations; classical tests of general relativity; gravitational radiation, cosmological considerations; topics to be chosen. Prerequisite: PHYS 60000, 61000, 63000. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PHYS 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHYS 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Physics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PHYS B1100 - General Physics I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Newtonian mechanics, wave motion, heat and thermodynamics, fluids. Application of physical principles to related scientific disciplines including life sciences. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHYS B1110 - General Physics I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Helps students master problem solving in physics. Work in small groups with the assistance of a professor who will guide their work and teach them to analyze and set up problems on mechanics and thermodynamics. Intended to help students succeed in physics.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHYS B1120 - General Physics II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Wave motion, electricity and magnetism, geometrical and physical optics, introduction to concepts of relativity, quantum theory, atomic and nuclear physics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHYS B1200 - General Physics I |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. First course in calculus-based physics for students in pre-engineering, the physical sciences, or mathematics. Topics include Newtonian mechanics, work and energy, motion, impulse and momentum, elasticity and wave motion, sound, and hydrostatics and hydrodynamics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHYS B1220 - General Physics II |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Topics include heat and laws of thermodynamics, Coulomb's law and the electric field, Ampere's law and the magnetic field, introduction to Maxwell's equation, DC and AC circuits; the nature, propagation, and properties of light; and lens systems. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHYS G9010 - Advanced Research |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Advanced research in physics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 5 times
|
| PHYS L3420 - Modern Physics Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory experiments to accompany PHYS 342. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PHYS N1900 - The Natural World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Introduces students to the methods and logic of science, and helps them understand the importance of science to the development of civilization and the contemporary world. Provides a context within which to evaluate the important scientific and technological issues of modern society. Interdisciplinary elements. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHYS P1000 - Physics In The Modern World |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 5.00. Ideas, language methods, impact, and cultural aspects of physics today. Includes classical physics up to physical basis of radar, atomic-energy applications, etc. Beginning high school algebra used. Cannot be substituted for physics courses explicitly designated in specific curricula. Credit is not given in Physics P100 to students who have passed P201 or P221. (Lab fee required.)
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHYS P1050 - Basic Physics Of Sound |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Physical principles involved in the description, generation, and reproduction of sound. Topics include physics of vibrations and waves, propagation, Fourier decomposition of complex wave forms, harmonic spectra, standing waves and resonance, sound loudness and decibels, room acoustics, analog/digital recording/reproduction. For interested students, P1090 is an optional companion laboratory course. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHYS P1200 - Energy And Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides the physical basis for understanding interaction of technology and society, and for the solution of problems, such as energy use and the direction of technological change. Intended for students majoring in the humanities, social sciences, business, music and education. Little or no background in science is assumed. Mathematics at the level of one year of high school algebra is used. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
|
| PHYS P2010 - General Physics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Newtonian mechanics, wave motion, heat, and thermodynamics. Application of physical principles to related scientific disciplines, especially life sciences. Intended for students preparing for careers in the life sciences and the health professions. Three lectures, one discussion section, and one two-hour laboratory period each week. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHYS P2020 - General Physics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Electricity and magnetism; geometrical and physical optics; introduction to concepts of relativity, quantum theory, atomic and nuclear physics. Three lectures, one discussion section, and one two-hour laboratory period each week. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHYS P2210 - Physics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. First semester of a three-semester, calculus-based sequence intended for science majors. Newtonian mechanics, oscillations and waves, heat and thermodynamics. Three lectures, two discussion sections, and one two-hour lab each week. Physics majors are encouraged to take P221 in the fall semester of the freshman year.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHYS P2220 - Physics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Second semester of a three-semester, calculus-based sequence intended for science majors. Primarily electricity, magnetism, and geometrical and physical optics. Three lectures, two discussion sections, and one two-hour lab each week. Physics majors are encouraged to take P222 in the spring semester of the freshman year. Credit not given for both P202 and P222.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHYS P3010 - Physics III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to modern physics for physics majors and students in other departments (including secondary education majors). Atomic and nuclear physics, kinetic theory, relativity and elementary particles.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHYS P3030 - Digital Electronics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Integrated lecture and laboratory course. Semiconductor devices, operational amplifiers, oscillators, Boolean Algebra, and digital circuits containing devices such as decoders, multiplexers, light-emitting displays, flip-flops, counters, registers, and memories. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHYS P3090 - Modern Physics Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Fundamental experiments in physics with emphasis on modern physics. The course aims to develop basic laboratory skills and data analysis techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| PHYS P3100 - Environmental Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Relationships of physics to current environmental problems. Energy production, comparison of sources and byproducts; energy use, alternative sources, conservation methods; global warming, environmental effects. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHYS P3230 - Physics III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Third semester of a four-semester sequence. Special relativity, introduction to quantum theory, Schroedinger equation, the hydrogen atom, many-electron atoms, statistical physics, molecules and solids.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHYS P3310 - Theory Of Electricity And Magnetism I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Electrostatic fields and differential operators, Laplace and Poisson equations, dielectric materials, steady currents, power and energy, induction, magnetic fields, scalar and vector potentials, Maxwell’s equations. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| PHYS Q2020 - Physical Science-Elementary Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fulfills the physical science requirement for elementary education majors. Introduction to topics such as motion, forces, energy, states of matter, electricity, magnetism, and light. Two lectures and one laboratory each week. Enrollment is limited to majors in the School of Education. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Richmond
|
| PHYS V1050 - General Physics I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The course covers mechanics, heat, and sound. Typically offered Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| PHYS V105L - General Physics Laboratory I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Examines principles of PHYS V1050. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| PLSC B1010 - Plant Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Fundamental principles of biology as illustrated by plants: characteristics of living matter, nutrition, growth, responses to environment, reproduction, basic principles of heredity. This course will not count towards a biology major. (Lab fee required.)
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PLSC B2030 - Survey Of The Plant Kingdom |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Survey of various groups of plants, including their structure, behavior, life histories, classification, and economic
importance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PLSC B3640 - Summer Flowering Plant |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. A course for students desiring a broad, practical knowledge of common wild and cultivated plants.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PLSC B3700 - Plant Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. The physiological process of plants. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| PLSC B3730 - Plant Growth And Development |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. Examination of growth and development of seed plants from embryo to ovule, with emphasis on experimental studies of abnormal growth. (Lab fee required.)
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PLSH 10100 - Polish Level I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to Polish. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
|
| PLSH 10200 - Polish Level II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of PLSH 101 - Polish Level I. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
|
| PLSH 20100 - Polish Level III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course completes the introduction of cases in the Polish language. Students continue to develop listening and speaking skills and to build reading and writing skills by analyzing authentic texts. Emphasis on viewing and commenting on films. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
|
| PLSH 20200 - Polish Level IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is the second part of a two-semester second-year sequence in Polish. The course will provide students with conversation, writing ability, reading, and capabilities of understanding Polish poetry, newspapers, other reading materials and cinema. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
|
| POL 10000 - American Public Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of current public affairs in America designed to help students become conscious of the societal issues of our times. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 10100 - American Government And Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the nature of democratic government, the U.S. Constitution, federalism, civil rights, political dynamics, the presidency, Congress, and the judiciary. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
CTL:ISH 1002 American Government
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| POL 10200 - American Government In Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is intended to give students an opportunity to study the nature of democratic government, the U.S. Constitution, federalism, civil liberties and rights, political dynamics, the presidency, Congress, and the judiciary. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn what the ideas about American government are and where they originated.
2. Students will learn how the formal and informal institution of American government work.
2. Students will learn how these institutions, along with political factors affect both decision- and policy-making.
|
| POL 10400 - Political Participation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the major dimensions of citizen politics in America: voting behavior, poitical socialization of children and adults, political opinion and culture, leadership recruitment and partisan participation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 12000 - Introduction To Public Policy And Public Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the fields of public policy and public administration. Processes of policy formation and administration are examined. Different approaches to evaluating and improving public policies are discussed. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Lafayette
|
| POL 13000 - Introduction To International Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of the fundamentals of international law, organization, and politics, particularly as relevant to contemporary international relations. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
CTL:ISH 1003 Introduction To World Politics
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| POL 14100 - Governments Of The World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the politics and government in selected foreign countries. The course presents the tools and background needed to understand contemporary events in the world beyond the United States. Readings and discussions pay special attention to democratization and development. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| POL 15000 - Introduction To Political Thought |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to basic concepts in political philosophy, such as conflict and community, justice and the good society, the origins of democracy, and the intersections of class, race, gender, and sexuality. Selected classical and contemporary political thinks covered. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| POL 19000 - The Politics Of Change |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory survey of the political forces at play in the processes of social, economic, and political change. Among topics to be considered are the politics of the post-industrial revolution, environmental control, civil rights, the role of women in society, international cooperation and conflict. Emphasis will be placed on the political forces and processes involved in change and the resultant public policies. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
|
| POL 20000 - Introduction To The Study Of Political Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to basic concepts and methods of political science. Basic concepts including, among others, power, justice, authority, ideology, and democracy, and a variety of quantitative and qualitative methods of analysis will be explored. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
CTL:ISH 1001 Introduction To Political Science
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| POL 20200 - Introduction To Political Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory study of polictial concepts and systems of political thought from classical to modern times. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 22100 - Introduction To Science And Government |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of major policy issues associated with scientific and technological advances. Special attention is focused upon the organization of science and technology, the determination of science and policy, and the role of government in support of research and development. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 22200 - Women, Politics, And Public Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to women's participation in politics, with an emphasis on America. Structural and attitudinal conditions limiting women's political roles and contemporary efforts to change women's status in society through politics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| POL 22300 - Introduction To Environmental Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of decision making as modern societies attempt to cope with environmental and natural resources problems. Focuses on the American political system, with some attention to the international dimension. Current policies and issues will be examined. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Social-Behavioral, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Behavior/Social Science, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| POL 23000 - Introduction To The Study Of Peace |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an interdisciplinary introduction to peace studies including an examination of war and violence, forms of exploitation and discrimination, and how to create a peaceful and just world. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| POL 23100 - Introduction To United States Foreign Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to introduce students to the major themes and issues in contemporary U.S. foreign policy. Lectures, discussion, and readings will examine such areas as U.S. relationships with the major powers, the Third World, and international organizations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| POL 23200 - Contemporary Crises In International Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The focus of this course will be on major world crises, such as in the Middle East and Southern Africa, and ways in which these crises may be analyzed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| POL 23300 - Introduction to The Study Of Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the theory and practice of law, including the process of legal research, legal analysis of facts as applied to pertinent law, and legal writing. Typically offered Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. The process of legal research, analysis, and writing in major areas of the law.
2. The distinct legal issues presented in major areas of the law.
3. The structure of the court system including civil and criminal procedure.
4. Legal professional and ethical responsibility.
|
| POL 23500 - International Relations Among Rich And Poor Nations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the major themes in the contemporary international relations among rich and poor nations. Examines such areas as North-South relations, interdependence, international organizations, and global development. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| POL 23700 - Modern Weapons And International Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the student to the roles that modern weapons systems play in contemporary international relations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| POL 30000 - Introduction To Political Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the study of politics, its basic concepts and major areas of concern; also review of important research techniques, including methods of data collection and analysis. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| POL 30500 - Technology And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the interactions of technology and society, the impact of engineering and technological solutions, and the role of professionals, this class will focus on contemporary societal and global topics and themes such as: Environmental issues involving sustainable development, design for recycling, and other critical themes. Contemporary international issues, such as trade and trade barriers, multinational companies, and distribution of resources such as oil and minerals; and the importance of cultural, religious, and socio-economic differences, values, international relations, living and working in another country, the impact of poverty and economic differences. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 30600 - The United States In The 1960's |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A description and analysis of major domestic and foreign, social, political, military and diplomatic issues confronting the United States in the 1960's and approaches and efforts to resolve these issues. The class will utilize the 1960's as laboratory to provide students with both historical and political science skills and approaches to the issues and themes of a particular period. May be taken for history or political science credit. Not open to students with credit in HIST 306. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 30700 - Victimology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study and analysis of institutional and other problems and issues relating to victims, including the relationship between the victim and the offender, the victim and the criminal justice system, and the victim and various governmental and/or social institutions. The course will also explore how race, class, and gender have impacted victims and often been a part of victimization. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 30800 - United States Foreign Policy And Latin America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines US foreign policy toward countries in Latin America. Encompassing an analysis of the US’s historical role in the politics of the Western hemisphere, the course pays particular attention to US foreign policy in the twentieth century. Important themes include foreign policy during the Cold War, domestic insurgency and revolution, and such economic concerns as trade and foreign direct investment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. The historical legacy of the Monroe Doctrine and nineteenth-century US foreign policy towards Western hemisphere states.
2. The Cold War, the containment doctrine and the superpower rivalry in Latin America.
3. US policy toward domestic political instability, insurrection and revolutionary movements in Latin American countries.
4. The nature of US foreign policy towards selected “special” cases, including Mexico, Panama and Cuba.
5. The significance of economic interests to American foreign policy, particularly foreign direct investment and trade.
|
| POL 30900 - The Middle East |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey beginning with the period of European involvement in the Ottoman Empire up to the present. The course includes the study of political Zionism and Arab nationalism, the role of the major powers between the two World Wars and that of the United States and the Soviet Union during the Cold War, and developments in the Middle East in the post-Cold War era. Not open to students with credit in HIST 309. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 31100 - Congress And The President |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of policy formation which stresses the linkage between the Congress and the President, legal, behavioral, and normative approaches will be considered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 31200 - American Political Thought |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analytical survey of the American contribution to Western political thought from the colonial period to the present day. The major themes and concepts of the American tradition are analyzed through study of the writings of representative thinkers, with special attention to the ideas which have affected the development of American political institutions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 31400 - The President And Policy Process |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of presidential leadership as the embodiment of social forces and as reflective of the personality of the incumbent; the president as national leader reflecting national myths and ideologies; the growth of the presidency; issues and forces affecting the continuity of presidential leadership; the degree of institutionalization of the presidency. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| POL 31500 - Public Opinion And Elections |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Contemporary public opinion, political socialization, and voting behavior in America. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 32000 - Introduction To Public Policy Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of public policy analysis models and approaches and current public policy questions. The course will emphasize application of analytical methods to the examination of contemporary policy issues in the United States. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 32300 - Comparative Environmental Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Comparative study of environmental policy development and processes in industrialized democracies, former and current communist states, and developing nations. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| POL 32600 - Black Political Participation In America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of African American political participation in the United States. Analyzes political culture and socialization, with a focus on the interaction between African Americans and actors, institutions, processes, and policies of the American system of politics and governance. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| POL 32700 - Global Green Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis and assessment of the nature of global environmentalism, its connections with other new social movements, and its impact on domestic and international politics worldwide, with particular attention to green political parties and nongovernmental organizations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| POL 33000 - Politics Of Lake County |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of Lake County politics focusing upon the selection of political leaders; the relation of the county to municipalities, townships, the state and federal government and public policy. Party officials and government office holders will be a resource for the course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 33100 - Politics And Religion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Religion and Politics examines the relationship between religious faith and political life from philosophical, theological, and behavioral perspectives. The class will focus in this course on perspectives from the intellectual heritage of the Western world. Therefore the work of thinkers, ancient and modern, will be examined. In addition, empirical works on the consequences of religious beliefs on political behavior will also be reviewed. Topics will range from medieval scholastic philosophy to contemporary international relations. Religion will be viewed as one of the major driving forces of national and international politics in the 21st century. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 33300 - Political Movements |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of political change ranging from legal reform to peaceful protest to violent revolution. Emphasis on ideologies and strategies of change relevant to consideration of contemporary political change. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 34100 - Criminal Investigation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to develop an analytical understanding of the investigative process. It will merge theoretical and philosophical approaches to crime detection and solution. This course examines judicial efforts to define individual rights and to control enforcement conduct in the investigation and prevention of crime. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 34300 - Introduction To The Criminal Justice System |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the agencies and processes involved in the criminal justice system; legislatures, the courts, the police, the prosecutor, the public defender and corrections. An analysis of the roles and problems of each component with an emphasis on their interrelationships. Not open to students with credit in SOC 34300. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 34400 - Introduction To The Politics Of The Third World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the politics of Africa, Asia, Latin America, and the Middle East. Special emphasis on problems of modernity and tradition; social mobilization and political decay; revolution and reform; communalism and imperialism. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| POL 34500 - West European Democracies In The Post-Industrial Era |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the political institutions and processes in West European democracies. The course focuses on the ability of Western democracy to survive the transition to the post-industrial era. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| POL 34600 - Law And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Nature and development of law and legal institutions in historical, comparative, and contemporary prospectives; interrelationship of law, morality, and custom; legal change and social change; and the legal profession. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 34700 - Introduction To Latin American Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Major aspects of Latin American politics and development. Questions such as the impact of the military on political development, the dynamics of Latin American industrialization, and Latin America's changing international role will be explored. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| POL 34800 - East Asian Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course will examine East Asian politics and society, with special emphasis on Japan. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| POL 34900 - Intro To Jewish Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (HIST 34900 and IDIS 33000) An interdisciplinary seminar touching on many aspects of the Jewish experience, from biblical times to the present. The course introduces students to aspects of the rich and multi-faceted history, literature, theology, and culture of Jews and Judaism from antiquity to the present: from the ancient Near East to Europe, America and back to the modern Near East. The course begins with an examination of basic concepts of Judaism, such as God, Torah, People, Land, and Identity. It involves concepts from Jewish historical, theological, and literary roots from the formation of ancient Israel to contemporary Israel and Jewish-American Culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 35000 - Foundations Of Western Political Theory: From The Renaissance To Marx |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of modern political thought from Machiavelli through Marx. Major writers studied include Machiavelli, Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, the Utilitarians, and Marx. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| POL 35100 - Foundations Of Western Political Theory: From Plato To The Reformation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of ancient and medieval political theory in the West. Major writers include Plato, Aristotle, St. Augustine, and St. Thomas Aquinas. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| POL 35200 - Selected Topics In Political Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is intended to provide a more narrowly focused analysis of selected problems and topics that are briefly presented in POL 350 and 351, giving special emphasis to their conceptual frameworks and their significance in the history of political philosophy. This course also will allow students to see the practical role of the political theorist by stressing the methods and criteria used in the selection, formulation, and solution of problems in political philosophy. Course topics will be different each semester. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| POL 35300 - Current Political Ideologies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Liberalism, conservatism, socialism, fascism, communism, and other political ideologies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| POL 35400 - Civil Liberities And The Constitution |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the politics of civil rights and liberties in the United States focusing upon the Constitution, legislation, court decisions, and executive implementation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 35500 - Computer Applications In Public Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A problem solving introduction to microcomputer utilization in local, state, and federal government agencies. The course will address the role of computers in government decision -making. The history of the microcomputer's emergence in the public administration environment will be presented. In addition, the student will be introduced to customization of popular software packages to address specific problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 35600 - Personnel Management In Government |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the working of personnel management systems in local, state and federal agencies emphasizing recruitment, classification, compensation, and employee services. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 35700 - Budgeting In The Public Sector |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of budgetary process in public agencies emphasizing the preparation and implementation of budgets by the public agencies. Political aspects of budgeting will be considered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 35800 - Administrative Law And Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to administrative law and ethics as they relate to the working of public agencies. Ethical codes developed by the professional organization of public administrators (e.g. ASPA) will be considered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 35900 - Administrative Behavior In Public Agenicies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of organizational and interpersonal behavior in government agencies. Applications of behavioral theories in relation to organizational effectiveness will be emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 36000 - Women And The Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory survey of women's legal status in America. Topics include constitutional law, marriage and divorce, reproductive rights, employment discrimination, and crimes of violence. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| POL 36400 - Law, Ethics, And Public Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is divided into three sections. Justice as liberty examines the notion of a right to privacy. Justice as equality focuses on economic rights. Finally, justice as community addresses the notion of duties. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| POL 37000 - Introduction To Comparative State Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the structure and process of state government, including the legal and political relationships between the state and local units of government. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| POL 37100 - Introduction To Comparative Urban Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The politics of governing urban areas, including the selection of political leaders, and citizen participation in the decision making of the central city. Special attention will be given to the integration of minorities into the political and social life of the city. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 37200 - Indiana Government And Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the political and governmental organization of the state of Indiana. Includes the political and historical development of Indiana state government and comparison of policies and institutions with those of other states. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| POL 37300 - Campaigns And Elections |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course analyzes the role of political parties, issues, candidates, media, funding, and electoral and campaign strategies in presidential, congressional, and state campaigns. Contemporary election examples will be utilized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| POL 38000 - The Politics Of Bureaucracy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of bureaucratic organization in government. Organization theory and internal politics, foundations of bureaucratic power, and the relationship between bureaucracies and political culture, parties, pressure groups, and other structures of government. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| POL 38800 - The World Of Ideas I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The first half of a two-semester chronological sequence based on reading and discussing source materials and documents drawn from Political Science, Economics, History, Sociology, Psychology, and philosophy. This course is designed to familiarize students with the major ideas and ideals which have shaped world civilization. Major themes of this course are Liberty, Human Nature, and The Individual and Society. Not open to students with credit in HIST 38800 or PHIL 38800. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 38900 - The World Of Ideas II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The second half of a two-semester chronological sequence based on reading and discussing primary source materials and documents drawn from Political Science, Economics, History, Sociology, Psychology, and philosophy. This course is designed to familiarize students with the major ideas and ideals which have shaped world civilization. Major themes of this course are Liberty, Human Nature, and The Individual and Society. Not open to students with credit in HIST 38900 or PHIL 38900. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 39000 - Topics In Political Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POL 40000 - Principles Of Empirical Politcal Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intermediate critical treatment of the scientific approach to the study of political behavior. Focus on the advantages and problems of analyzing political phenomena in terms of the following elements of scientific methodology: classification, measurement, generalization, verification, reliability, validity, casual inference and prediction. The importance of these elements for understanding politics will be illustrated by analyzing empirical studies drawn from various fields of political behavior. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 40100 - Practicum In Local Government |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Observation and supervised participation on an official community committee or board, in a political campaign, or with professional governmental staffs. Readings and class meetings to integrate theory and experience. This course requires five hours per week of field experience. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POL 40300 - Field Experience In Political Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Students are able to earn credit for internships in federal, state, and local government offices as well as with political parties, campaign organizations, nonprofit organizations, legislative bodies, and interest groups. Credit and course requirements to be arranged with the instructor. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
|
| POL 40400 - United States Policy Making Elite |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the logical, empirical and normative dilemmas in theories of democratic governance with analysis of contemporary democratic systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 40500 - Research Seminar In Public Administration And Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A senior seminar to consider current research literature in public administration policy. Each class member will prepare a major research paper for public presentation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 40600 - Internship In A Public Agency |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Public agency work experience as an intern. Primarily designed for pre-service students interested in a public service career. The students will be supervised by the agency and an academic advisor. On-campus seminars for the interns will be organized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 41000 - Political Parties And Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of the nature and functioning of U.S. political parties in terms of social and economic forces that shape our political system. Interactions among political parties, pressure groups, and formal government structures are emphasized throughout. Special attention is devoted to political leadership, nominating processes, campaign management, voting behavior, and other important aspects of American politics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| POL 41100 - Congress: Structure And Functioning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of how Congress actually operates. Formal and informal power structures within both chambers and roles of the individual members of Congress are analyzed. Attention is directed to latent, as well as manifest, functions of legislative, investigative, and other major activities of Congress. The problem of bringing expertise to bear on the legislative process is considered throughout. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| POL 41300 - The Human Basis Of Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A broad-based survey of human political behavior and the forces that underlie it, organized around the concept of political power. Examines how people think and communicate about politics, political symbols they employ, roles they occupy, and their political interactions with other individuals, groups, and nations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| POL 41500 - US Politics And The Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the roles and influences of the mass media on American politics generally and with particular emphasis on election campaigns and the evolving political culture of the United States. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| POL 41900 - The Politics Of Intergovernmental Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A behavioral analysis of the dynamics of the American federal system. The interaction among local, state, and federal governmental units will be analyzed. Existing and future political relationships between the various levels of government will be stressed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| POL 42300 - International Environmental Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Environmental policy development in the international arena, with attention to international law, international organizations, and transboundary environmental problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| POL 42500 - Environmental Law And Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to statutory and case law relating to environmental policy. Regulatory schemes in environmental policy and the legal framework for environmental regulation are presented. Market alternatives to various regulatory mechanisms will also be treated. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| POL 42700 - Comparative Public Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of public policy determinants, processes, and outputs in both advanced industrial and less-developed countries and in both democratic and nondemocratic countries. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| POL 42800 - The Politics Of Regulation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Politics and policies of federal and state regulatory agencies. Explanations of regulatory agency behavior, arguments for and against government regulation, and alternatives to government regulation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| POL 42900 - Contemporary Political Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Contemporary political problems in the United States affecting the interpretation of democracy, human rights and welfare, social pressures, and intergovernmental relations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POL 43000 - Selected Problems In International Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An in-depth analysis of selected problems in international relations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POL 43100 - Selected Problems In International Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An in-depth analysis of the role international law plays in resolving selected problems in international relations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| POL 43200 - Selected Problems In World Order |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An in-depth analysis of how selected problems in international relations are treated within international organizations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| POL 43300 - International Organization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the structure and functions of the United Nations and associated agencies, with an emphasis on the role of this system in contemporary international relations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| POL 43400 - United States Foreign Policy, Central America And The Caribbean |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines United States foreign policy toward Central America and the Caribbean and the impacts of the policy on the region. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| POL 43500 - International Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of international legal theories, principles, and practices, with an emphasis on the role and utility of law in contemporary international relations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| POL 43900 - United States Foreign Policy Making |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of the decision-making process in United States foreign policy. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| POL 44100 - Violence And Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A cross-national approach to the problem of violence in politics. Primarily devoted to the study of collective political violence. Special attention will be given to theoretical explanations of the causes of violence and contemporary patterns. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| POL 44200 - Government And Politics In Russia |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of Russian political culture and the Russian political tradition. History, organization, and functioning of the governmental apparatus. The role of the social organizations, interest groups, and elites. Models of the Russian political system. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 44300 - Field Experience In Criminal Justice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Observation and supervised participation in the criminal justice system. Readings and class meetings to integrate theory and experience. Intended for students who plan to become employed in the criminal justice system upon receiving the bachelor's degree. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| POL 45300 - Marxism And Its Critics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The Marxian tradition of political thought. The Marxian system (materialism, the state, ideology, the revolution, etc.), its development into Soviet Marxism, and critiques of Marx by Bakunin, Bernstein, Weber, Mosca, and Freud, among others. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| POL 45400 - Political Economy From Smith To Keynes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The capitalist political economists, including Adam Smith, Malthus, Ricardo, the Mills, the Marginalists, and Keynes; the moral, social, psychological, and political assumptions and implications of their theoretic works and their theories of history and models of human behavior. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| POL 46000 - Judicial Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of judicial processes as they operate in America. Both trial courts and appellate courts will be examined in light of the procedures with which they operate. The external social, economic, and political pressures surrounding courts and the impact courts have on society will be considered. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| POL 46100 - Constitutional Law I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of selected areas of constitutional law, considering the political and social influences as well as the doctrinal forces that have produced these policies and interpretations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| POL 46200 - Constitutional Law II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the development of individual rights and civil liberties through constitutional law and interpretation of the Bill of Rights and Civil War Amendments. Both doctrinal and political pressures will be discussed to illustrate the evolution of these rights. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| POL 49000 - Topics In Political Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POL 49100 - Political Science Senior Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a variable-title seminar focusing on contemporary issues in political science at the senior level. It is part of the "capstone" experience for political science majors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POL 49300 - Interdisciplinary Undergraduate Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An undergraduate seminar devoted to an interdisciplinary examination of social, economic, political, and intellectual movements, using the faculty resources of the participating departments. Subject matter will vary. Each offering of the seminar will be approved by a committee of department heads from the sponsoring departments. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POL 49500 - Undergraduate Research Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Students are able to earn credit by working on a research project with a faculty member. Students will become familiar with all phases of the research process. Credit and course requirements are arranged with the instructor. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POL 49800 - Individual Studies In Political Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Individual Studies In Political Science. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POL 50100 - Political Science: Methodology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the basic techniques of statistical analysis applicable to political science data. Elementary descriptive statistics and statistical inference. Introduction to multivariate analysis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| POL 51700 - The Politics Of Capital And Labor In The United States |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of conflicts between capital and labor in the political process, with emphasis upon labor organization, the state and labor policy, and the political economy of capital-labor relations since World War II. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| POL 52000 - Special Topics In Public Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a course focused on a specific current public policy topic, chosen for its contemporary political relevance, which varies from semester to semester. In general, each topic will be examined in terms of its historical roots, past policy initiatives, present policy proposals, and its enduring political and social challenges. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POL 52300 - Environmental Politics And Public Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The political problems of natural resource use and environmental quality. Theoretical foundations for environmental policy and its evaluation, the political context of environmental policy, principles of administering environmental policies, and the significance of international law and institutions for environmental policies. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| POL 52400 - Public Policy And The Family |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intensive examination of the interrelationships between public policy making and the structure and quality of life of families. The primary focus is the United States, but consideration is given to family policies in other capitalist nations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| POL 59000 - Directed Reading In Political Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A reading course directed by the instructor in whose field of specialization the content of the reading falls. Approval of each reading project must be secured from the department. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POL 60000 - Political Science: Discipline And Profession |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An exploration of the scope of political science and of its development as a profession, with a focus on what American political scientists do as disciplinary professionals. Analysis of major approaches to the study of politics and of current developments. Prerequisite: 6 credit hours in Political Science. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| POL 60500 - Research Design And Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selection of research problems involving political phenomena; formulation of concepts and hypotheses; research design; data collection techniques; data processing, analysis, and interpretation, with attention to uses of high-speed facilities. Students will design a research project and, as appropriate, carry out the project in the laboratory or in the field. Prerequisite: POL 50100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POL 60600 - Advanced Quantitative Techniques In Political Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course deals with advanced quantitative techniques useful in political science research. These include multiple correlation and regression, causal modeling, dynamic (time series) analysis, dimensional analysis (Coombsean scaling, Shepard-Kruskal scaling, and factor analysis), and cross-level inference techniques. Prerequisite: POL 50100, 60500. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POL 61000 - Proseminar In American Political Systems, Processes, And Behavi |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to American political systems, processes, and behavior as a field of graduate study with an emphasis on literature. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POL 61100 - Research Seminar In American Government And Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POL 61500 - Proseminar In Electoral Behavior And Political Socialization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A reading and lecture course acquainting the student with the general literature in the field. Traces the descriptive aspects, causes, and consequences of electoral behavior and political socialization in the American polity and selected European countries. Emphasis on the processes of citizen integration into the larger political system. Both historical and comparative approaches to the material will be used. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| POL 61600 - Research Seminar In Political Behavi |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Extends the work of POL 51600 (Group Politics) to the empirical study of primary groups, cliques, social groups, voluntary associations, experimental and occupational groups (insofar as they have political impacts) and of political clubs and associations, paraparties, and inchoate political movements and parties. Training will be given in the use of phenomenological observation, interaction analysis, content analysis, personality inventories, and other instruments that reveal the social structure and dynamics of groups. Students will conduct field studies of politically-relevant groups, or will conduct or participate in conducting laboratory experiments. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POL 62000 - Proseminar In Public Policy And Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to public policy and processes as a field of graduate study with an emphasis on the literature. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POL 62200 - Research Seminar In Public Policy And Public Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigation in depth of a substantive aspect of public policy such as energy policy or social policy, or of a theoretical topic, for example, policy formulation, enactment, implementation, impact, or evaluation. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POL 62300 - Research Seminar In Environmental Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigation in depth of a substantive aspect of environmental policy or a theoretical approach to environmental policy, with emphasis on student research. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| POL 63000 - Proseminar In International Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to international relations as a field of graduate study with an emphasis on literature. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POL 63100 - Research Seminar In International Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POL 63200 - Research Seminar In Peace And World Order Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of some of the forces which endanger the planet, the related political problems, and prospective strategies to overcome these problems. Particular attention will be directed to problems such as war, population pressure, resource shortages, and environmental deterioration. Students will examine a variety of ideas that might contribute to the elimination or control of these problems, and their overarching objective will be to conceptualize a "world order model" in conformity with basic canons of scientific inquiry. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POL 64000 - Proseminar In Comparative Political Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to comparative political systems, processes, and behavior as a field of graduate study with an emphasis on literature. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POL 64100 - Research Seminar On Comparative Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary. Prerequisite: POL 64000. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POL 65000 - Proseminar In Political Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to political theory as a field of graduate study with special emphasis on the literature of great political thinkers. Prerequisite: Master's student standing. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POL 65100 - Research Seminar In Political Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigation in depth into a selected area of political thought. Intensive study and close analysis of the selected topic, school, or theoretic system. Development of historic and philosophic methods applicable to the study of political thought. Prerequisite: POL 35000, 35100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POL 66200 - Proseminar In Political Economy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to political economy as a field of graduate study with an emphasis on literature. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POL 69300 - Interdisciplinary Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary - Interdisciplinary Seminar. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POL 69500 - Directed Reading And Research Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individual topics involving research by the student other than on a thesis topic. Admission and hours require the consent of instructor who will supervise the research. Approval of each topic must be secured from the department. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POL 69800 - Research MA Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MA Thesis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POL 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Political Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POLS B1300 - American National Government |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The examination of the essential elements of our national government. Emphasis on institutions, policies, and processes
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS B1900 - Human Behavior And Social Institutions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Develops insights into human nature, the nature of social institutions, the social processes that have shaped the world of the twenty-first century. In an interdisciplinary way, introduces the distinctive perspectives of the social sciences, emphasizing frameworks nad tecniquess used in explaining causes and patterns of individual and institutional behavior.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS B2380 - Urban Government In The United States |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines how cities are governed in the United States and what policies have been derived to deal with the problems of the cities. The problems of race and poverty and public policies to address them will be considered.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS B2800 - Comparative Political Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comparative introduction to politics and government in major democratic, communist/post-communist, and developing countries of the contemporary world. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
|
| POLS B2930 - International Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the formal relations among sovereign states in the international system, emphasizing diplomacy, the elements of power, and the procedures for conflict resolution. May include computer simulation exercises.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS B3940 - International Relations In Asia |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of contemporary international relations in Asia and the Pacific emphasizing the roles of major powers in this area.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS B3990 - Human Behavior And Social Institutions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Develops insights into human nature, social institutions, and social processes that have shaped the world of the 21st Century. Explores a specific critical problem or social science theme in a manner that takes into account perspectives from several disciplines. Attention given to ethical dilemmas as they arise in the discipline and theme of course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS B4880 - Government And Politics Of China |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comprehensive survey of the government and politics of both the Republic of China and the People's Republic of China.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS B4950 - Foreign Policy Of China |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comprehensive analysis of China?s role in international politics, emphasizing the effects of the foreign policy of the People's Republic of China.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS S1030 - Introduction to American Politics-Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Equivalent of Y103 for Honors students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| POLS S1050 - Introduction To Political Theory-Honrs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Equivalent of Y105 for Honors students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| POLS S2000 - Political Topics-Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Equivalent of Y200 with a variable title for Honors students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| POLS S2110 - Introduction To Law-Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Equivalent of Y211 for honors students. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| POLS S4010 - Studies In Political Science-Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Equivalent of Y401 for honors students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| POLS Y1010 - Introduction To Political Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Introductory survey of the discipline of political science: integrates basic elements of American politics, political theory, comparative politics, and international relations. Intended especially for actual or prospective majors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS Y1030 - Introduction To American Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the nature of government and the dynamics of American politics. Origin and nature of the American federal system and its present political party base. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS Y1050 - Introduction To Political Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Perennial problems of political philosophy, including relationships between rulers and ruled, nature of authority, social conflict, character of political knowledge, and objectives of political action. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the western tradition culture studies requirement. Credit not given for both Y105 and Y215. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS Y1070 - Introduction To Comparative Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines countries around the world to investigate fundamental questions about politics. Topics include democratic development, promotion of economic prosperity, maintenance of security, and management of ethnic and religious conflict. Critical thinking skills encouraged. Cases for comparison include advanced industrialized democracies, communist, and former communist countries, and developing countries. Credit not given for both Y107 and Y217. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS Y1090 - Introduction To International Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Causes of war, nature, and attributes of the state, imperialism, international law, national sovereignty, arbitration, adjudication, international organization, major international issues. Credit not given for both Y109 and Y219. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS Y1150 - Environment And People |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An interdisciplinary analysis of the relationships between people, pollution, the environment and society. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS Y1200 - Public Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to public affairs through inquiry into government structures and policy processes at the international, federal, state and local level. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS Y1500 - Foundations Of Community Advocacy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course will prepare students to learn more than the basic structure of government. It will prepare students to learn the historical and philosophical foundations of our democracy and to question long-established ideas. It is designed to prepare a person to develop the skills necessary to be a community leader. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| POLS Y2000 - Contemporary Political Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Extensive analysis of selected contemporary political problems. Topics vary from semester to semester and are listed in the Schedule of Classes. May be repeated for credit with a different topic. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
|
| POLS Y2010 - Controversies In United States Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A critical examination of multiple perspectives on contemporary political issues. Students develop critical thinking and oral examination skills through lively class debate and dialogue regarding some of the most controversial issues in United States domestic and foreign policy. Topics updated each semester. Argumentative essays required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS Y2030 - The Promise And Problems Of Democracy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the promise and problems of democratic governance and civic education. The course introduces students to the fundamental issues of democratic politics through a close reading of classic texts in the history of political philosophy. Students will also engage in a discussion of the requirements for the establishment and maintenance of a democratic political order in the United States through an exploration of key arguments from the Founding to the present era. This course fulfills the theory component of the Certificate in Civic Education and Public Advocacy. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| POLS Y2050 - Analyzing Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the scope and methods of political science. Stresses the development of writing skills appropriate to the discipline. This course may be used to fulfill the Arts and Sciences writing requirement. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| POLS Y2070 - Elements Of Political Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to the approaches and practices of political science. It provides an overview of disciplinary language, concepts, research techniques, and methodological debates. It also teaches students how good writing, strong argumentation, and sound methodological understand can be combined to produce high-quality political science papers. Typically offered Fall, Spring, Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| POLS Y2110 - Introduction To Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to law as a method for dealing with social problems and as an aspect of the social and political system. An introduction to legal reasoning, procedures, and materials. Will usually include comparison of U.S. and other societies and their approaches to law. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS Y2120 - Making Democracy Work |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course discusses analytical and theoretical aspects of Democracy in the United States. Students will look at the Amendments to the United States Constitution. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Richmond
|
| POLS Y2130 - Introduction To Public Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Studies the processes and institutions involved in the formation of public policy with particular reference to the United States. The course will identify key policy actors, analyze the process of policy making, and critically assess selected policy issues (such as foreign, defense, economic, welfare, and environmental policy). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| POLS Y2150 - Introduction To Political Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to major ideas and theories in Western political thought, including theories of democracy and the analysis of conflict and cooperation. The course also addresses the attempts made by prominent political philosophers-from Aristotle and Plato to Locke, Marx, and Rawls-to understand and describe the nature of politics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS Y2170 - Introduction To Comparative Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course that introduces students to the major political systems of the world. Students will study systems within Western and non-Western countries. Comparisons will include executive and legislature structure, elections, political parties, interest groups, and key areas of public policy. Not open to students who have completed POLS Y1070. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS Y2190 - Introduction To International Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the global political system, and issues that shape relations among countries. The course looks at problems of conflict resolution, the role of international law and organizations, the challenges of poverty and development, and the other major policy issues over which nations cooperate, argue, or go to war. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS Y2210 - Legal Research And Writing For Paralegal Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of research and communication skills special to the area of law. Includes methods of organizing and conducting legal research, resources available for legal research, presentation of findings in memoranda and briefs, other forms of legal writing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS Y2220 - Litigation For Paralegal Studies I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the processing of a case from initial client interviews to final disposition. It includes drafting of complaints, answers, counterclaims, interrogatories and other discovery tools, gathering of evidence, and motions and judgments. Both Indiana and federal rules of evidence are emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS Y2230 - Litigation For Paralegal Studies II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This elective course in advanced litigation focuses primarily on aspects of trial preparation not covered in depth in POLS Y2220. Topics may include jury selection, witness preparation and examination-preparation of evidence for use at trial, jury instructions, post-judgment relief. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| POLS Y2240 - Property Law For Paralegal Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the legal rules governing various types of property and the ways in which human beings relate to property. Types of property include real and personal; relationships to property include both ownership and interest. Emphasis is placed on forms and procedures used in Indiana. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| POLS Y2250 - Contract Law For Paralegal Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course includes the basic elements and principles involved in the drafting, interpretation, and enforcement of contracts, including current trends in contract law in Indiana. Includes Uniform Commercial Code. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| POLS Y2260 - Tort Law For Paralegal Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course reviews current law and recent trends in negligence and liability. Different dimensions of liability are covered. Emphasis on conduct of a tort case from initiation through relief, and on the responsibilities of legal assistants therein. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| POLS Y2270 - Criminal Law For Paralegal Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This in-depth review of criminal law in Indiana covers the Indiana Criminal Code-infractions, misdemeanors, and felonies. The course emphasizes real situations that legal professionals encounter throughout the process. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| POLS Y2280 - Family Law For Paralegal Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines legal rules and procedures concerning domestic relations. Topics covered include separation and divorce, adoption, child custody and support, and other areas of domestic relations in Indiana. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS Y2290 - Estate Law For Paralegal Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course reviews legal rules and procedures concerning the transfer of property upon the owner's demise. Provides a practical approach to the language, procedures, forms, interpretation, and administration of wills and trusts. Emphasis on current trends in Indiana and federal law. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| POLS Y2300 - Bankruptcy Law For Paralegal Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the legal rules relating to bankruptcy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| POLS Y2310 - Advanced Legal Writing For Paralegal Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Builds on Y221 by giving students the opportunity for advanced study of research and communication skills needed for paralegals. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| POLS Y2320 - Professional Responsibility For Paralegals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a concentrated study of legal ethics from the perspective of the paralegal. The study of ethical situations, rules and model codes of the paralegal profession, conflict of interest, client confidentiality, and other ethical dilemmas. The course will present a concrete, practical approach to the ethical challenges for paralegals. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| POLS Y2330 - Business Associations For Paralegals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to various business entities including sole proprietorships, partnerships, corporations, and other entities. Drafting partnership agreements and incorporation documents. Introduction to tax considerations and the Securities and Exchange Commission. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| POLS Y2750 - Politics And Film |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course investigates how various political institutions, processes, problems and individuals have been portrayed on screen: it also covers politics of movie industry, including film censorship and electoral interventions. Topics from all subfields of political science possible, but emphasis is on American politics and international relations. Typically offered Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| POLS Y2850 - Science And Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of uses and misuses of natural and social scientific expertise in politics. Implications of scientific method and experimental results are studied in depth. Topics include: global climate change, biotechnology, teaching evolution in public schools and epidemiological controversies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| POLS Y3010 - Political Parties And Interest Groups |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination and evaluation of the behavior of political parties, voters, interest groups, and other institutions and procedures by which Americans try to control their government. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS Y3020 - Public Bureaucracy In Modern Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines public bureaucracy, with special emphasis on the United States, as a political phenomenon engaging in policy making and in the definition of the terms of policy issues. Considers the role of bureaucratic instruments in promoting social change and in responding to it.
Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| POLS Y3030 - Policy Making In The United States |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Processes and institutions involved in formation of public policy in a democratic society, with emphasis on American experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| POLS Y3040 - Constitutional Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. American political powers and structures; selected Supreme Court decisions interpreting American constitutional system. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Richmond
|
| POLS Y3050 - Constitutional Rights And Liberties |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Extent and limits of constitutional rights; selected Supreme Court decisions interpreting American constitutional system. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Richmond
|
| POLS Y3060 - State Politics In The United States |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Comparative study of politics in the American states. Special emphasis on the impact of political culture, party systems, legislatures, and bureaucracies upon public policies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-New Albany
|
| POLS Y3070 - Indiana State Government And Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Constitutional foundations, political development, organizational and functional process and growth, and current problems of Indiana government as a focal point for understanding role of states as instruments of social policy. Readings, case studies, problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| POLS Y3080 - Urban Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Political behavior in modern American communities; emphasizes the impact of municipal organization, city officials and bureaucracies, social and economic notables, political parties, interest groups, the general public, and protest organizations on urban policy outcomes.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| POLS Y3090 - American Politics Through Film And Fiction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Recurrent themes of politics are explored in depth-by means of novels, short stories, and films. Subject matter varies by semester-check class schedule for current semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| POLS Y3100 - Political Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A research course in which students design and execute their own investigations into political phenomena. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| POLS Y3110 - Democracy And National Security |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of fundamental tensions between democratic values and the requirements of national security. Topics include homeland security and civil liberties in an age of terror, civil-military relations, oversight of intelligence operations, effects of interventions and wars on democracy abroad and at home, and debates over the morality of United States security policies. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS Y3120 - Workshop: State And Local Government |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Workshop: State And Local Government. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POLS Y3130 - Environmental Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the causes of environmental problems and the political, economic, social, and institutional questions raised by designing and implementing effective policy responses to these problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| POLS Y3150 - Political Psychology And Socialization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of the relationship between personality and politics. Use of major psychological theories and concepts to understand the attitudes and behavior of mass publics and political elites. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| POLS Y3170 - Voting, Elections And Public Opinion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Determinants of voting behavior in elections. The nature of public opinion regarding major domestic and foreign policy issues; development of political ideology; other influences on the voting choices of individuals and the outcomes of elections; relationships among public opinion, elections, and the development of public policy. Credit not given for both Y316 and Y317. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| POLS Y3180 - The American Presidency |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of the presidency and its relationship to the political system; problems of the contemporary presidency; personality and presidential roles, with emphasis on political leadership. Credit not given for both Y318 and Y322. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS Y3190 - The United States Congress |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Congress is both a policy-making institution and a body of professional politicians representing state and local interests. This course examines Congress within the frameworks created by making each of these goals paramount. The conflicts and contrasts that arise in interpretation and evaluation of Congress by the differences in these points of view are explored. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| POLS Y3200 - Judicial Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the American judicial system in the contemporary context. Analysis of the trial and appellate courts with a focus on the United States Supreme Court. Topics include analyses of the structure of the judicial system, the participants in the system, and the policy-making processes and capabilities of the legal system. The course concludes with an assessment of the role of courts in a majoritarian democracy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| POLS Y3210 - The Media And Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the contemporary relationship between the media and politics, including politicians' use of the media, media coverage of governmental activities, and media coverage of campaigns and elections. Course focuses primarily on the United States, but includes comparative perspectives. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| POLS Y3240 - Women And Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of women in contemporary political systems, domestic or foreign, with emphasis on political roles, participation and public policy. Normative and/or empirical examination of how political systems affect women and the impact women have on the system. Topics vary semester to semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| POLS Y3250 - African American Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Politics is the process of decision making, the authoritative allocation of values, and who gets what, when, and how. Politics serve to either facilitate or repress the struggle for African American equity in the American polity. African American Politics will focus on how African Americans seek to impact the political process. It will examine the African American quest for political power from the pre-slavery era through the present. The course seeks to critically
analyze the impact of the theory of black political empowerment as well as well as contemporary black equity strategies. Special emphasis will be given to contemporary issues who are generally thought to challenge the quest for black equity.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS Y3280 - Women And The Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of origins and underlying rationale of women's status in the American legal tradition and the role that law plays in helping to shape political climate and structure of the nation. Course will provide basic knowledge of various fields of law as they pertain to women. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| POLS Y3320 - Russian Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Political process and government structure in the independent Russian state. Political institutions inherited from tsarist empire and USSR (1917-1991), history of political reform, Gorbachev regime (1985-1991). Political problems of ethnic conflict, creating democratic institutions, transition from socialism to market economy. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the Cultural Studies (Non-Western Culture) requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| POLS Y3350 - Western European Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development, structure, and functioning of political systems in Western Europe. Political dynamics of European Integration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-New Albany
|
| POLS Y3360 - Southeast Asian Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Covers the governmental organization, and the political behavior and traditions, of countries in the Southeast Asian region. Addresses regional issues of political and economic development, and international issues regarding the relationship of the region to the rest of the world. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| POLS Y3370 - Latin American Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Comparative analysis of political change in major Latin American countries, emphasizing alternative explanations of national and international developments; examination of impact of political parties, the military, labor and peasant movements, Catholic Church, multinational corporations, regional organizations, and United States on politics; public policy processes in democratic and authoritarian regimes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| POLS Y3380 - African Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores politics in sub-Saharan Africa. Examines relevance of traditional political systems: impact on colonialism; building new nations and states; authoritarian regimes; process of democratization; management of ethnic, regional, religious and class conflict; political challenges of economic development; role of international actors, including the United States, United Nations, World Bank and non-governmental organizations; and globalization. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS Y3390 - Middle Eastern Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Political culture and change in selected Middle Eastern and North African countries. Topics include political elites, traditional cultures, modern political ideology, institutions of political control, conflict management, and social reform policies. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the nonwestern culture studies requirement. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| POLS Y3400 - Eastern European Politics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Compares political change in the East European states, and emphasizes the legacies of authoritarianism and communism and the post-communist transition to democracy. Topics include the building of political institutions, the inclusion of citizens into the policy, the reform of the economy, the management of ethnic and social conflicts, and integration into the European Union. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| POLS Y3410 - Authoritarian Regimes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Comparative study of fascism, Nazism, and communism as institutional arrangements for governing modern societies. The political process in the one-party “movement regime.”
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| POLS Y3430 - The Politics Of International Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the key debates and issues regarding how "poor" countries develop economically and socially. Analyzes the interactions between politics and economics in the development process at the global, national, and local levels. Cases for comparison will include countries from Africa, Latin America, Asia, and the Middle East. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| POLS Y3460 - Comp Pol In Dev Countries |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Citizens of industrialized countries ignore developing countries at their peril. Developing countries control most of the world's natural resources, house most of the its people, are the location of most of the its current armed conflicts, and are the target of a great deal of its investment. An understanding of the politics of these countries, therefore, is required in our present era of "globalization." Students in this course will explore the distinctive nature of political systems and political processes in developing countries. The course will address fundamental questions such as how do different political systems work in less developed countries? What is the role of economics in these countries' political processes? Are there fundamental differences between the politics of developed and less developed countries? What are the distinctive problems faced by developing countries? Students will investigate these issues with reference to numerous concrete cases drawn from a variety of developing countries. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| POLS Y3500 - Politics Of The European Union |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the politics of the European Union (EU). Assesses past and present dynamics of economic and political integration in Europe, the structure and work of European Union institutions, and EU public policies such as the Single Market, the common currency, common foreign and security policy, and trade. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| POLS Y3510 - Political Simulations |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A course tied to simulations of political organizations such as the European Union, the United Nations, or the Organization of American States. May be taken alone or in conjunction with related political science courses. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-New Albany
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POLS Y3550 - Ethnic Conflict And Nationalism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Causes, dynamics, and management of contemporary ethnic conflict. Origins and political mobilization of nationalism. Analyzes ethnic conflicts of varying intensity. Explores liberal and non-liberal forms of nationalism. Investigates management strategies including power-sharing, assimilation, integration, and partition. Based on comparative study of cases drawn from around the world. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| POLS Y3600 - United States Foreign Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of competing concepts of the national interest; isolationism, the Open Door, Monroe Doctrine, national security, containment, military and political alliances, the new nations; their relation to substantive policies and to the character of American democracy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS Y3620 - International Politics Selected |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. How are authoritarian governments different from democratic governments like the United States? How do some authoritarian regimes become democratic and what determines whether they will remain democratic or revert to authoritarianism? These are some of the questions this course will seek to answer as it explores the recent world-wide "revolutions" to democracy.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS Y3660 - Current Foreign Policy Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The purpose of the course is to assist the student in improving his or her ability to think about and critically evaluate American foreign policy problems. Major trends in the post-World War II U.S. foreign policy field will be analyzed. Theoretical concepts will be considered, along with information about contemporary events. Hopefully, the student will be a better educated and more articulate analyst at the end of the semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS Y3670 - International Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces basic concepts and principles such as sources of public international law, the law of treaties and international agreements, states and recognition, state liability and human rights, and jurisdiction and immunities from jurisdiction. The course also covers act of state doctrine, law of the sea, and resolution of transnational disputes through national and international courts, arbitration tribunals, the United Nations, and diplomatic exchanges. Course topics include terrorism and hostage-taking, U.S. executive-legislative conflict in the conduct of foreign relations, suits by and against foreign states, worldwide improvement of civil and political rights, extraction of seabed resources, and prohibition of the use of force in international relations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| POLS Y3680 - Russia And Soviet Foreign Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Behavior of Russia and USSR in world affairs from 1945 to the present. Emphasis on impact of geographic assets and vulnerabilities, historical experience, domestic politics, and the changing international environment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| POLS Y3700 - The Politics Of Islam |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will examine the principles of the politics of Islam, its impact on contemporary world politics, and its impact on selected national and regional politics around the world. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| POLS Y3710 - Workshop In International Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Includes such topics as development of the international system, politics of food and populations, law of the sea, human rights, trade, U.S. foreign policy, United Nations issues, etc. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
|
| POLS Y3740 - International Organization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines assumptions about the causes, functions, results, and structures of international organizations. Theory is combined with case study of the United Nations. The European community and regional organization examples provide a basis for understanding an evolving phenomena. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| POLS Y3750 - War And International Conflict |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The nature of war. Theories and evidence on the causes of war. Discussion of the ways in which war has been conceived and perceived across time and of methods employed to study the phenomenon of war. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| POLS Y3760 - International Political Economy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theories about the interaction between the international economic and political systems are the subject of this course. Specific topics covered will include (among others) the politics of trade, aid, foreign investment, and international monetary affairs; theories of dependency and imperialism; the politics of international competition in specific industries; the stability/instability of international economic regimes. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS Y3770 - Globalization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course that investigates the economic, environmental, financial, political, security and technological aspects of globalization.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| POLS Y3780 - Problemss In Public Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines various substantive problems in the formulation and conceptualization of public policy. Both the policy and its impact are considered in the context of the entire political environment in which it operates. Examples are selected from various levels of government, not always confined to the United States. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| POLS Y3800 - Selected Topics In Democratic Government |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of basic problems and issues in the theory and practice of democratic government. Specific topics vary by semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POLS Y3810 - Classical Political Thought |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An exposition and critical analysis of the major political philosophers and philosophical schools. I. From Plato to Machiavelli. II. From Machiavelli to the present. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the western tradition culture studies requirement. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS Y3820 - Modern Political Thought |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An exposition and critical analysis of the major political philosophers and philosophical schools. I. From Plato to Machiavelli. II. From Machiavelli to the present. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the western tradition culture studies requirement. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| POLS Y3830 - American Political Ideas I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. American political ideas from the colonial period to the Founding Period. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS Y3840 - American Political Ideas II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. American political ideas from the Founding Period to the present. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-New Albany
|
| POLS Y3880 - Marxist Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Origin, content, and development of Marxist system of thought, with particular reference to philosophical and political aspects of Russian Marxism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS Y3900 - Political Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides an opportunity to study, understand, and participate in political communication. Topics covered include the rhetoric of politics, campaign discourse, political advertising, the role of the media and public opinion, the impact of new technology, and the place of interpersonal communication. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| POLS Y3940 - Public Policy Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Place of theory and method in examining public policies in relation to programs, institutional arrangements, and constitutional problems. Particular reference to American political experience.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| POLS Y3950 - Quantitative Political Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to methods and statistics used in political inquiry, including measures of central tendency and dispersion, probability, sampling, statistical inference and hypothesis testing, measures of association, analysis of variance, and regression. (Fall). Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| POLS Y3960 - Law And Public Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The origins, process, and impact of law is the making and implementing of public policy. Provide students with the substantive concepts necessary to understand the judicial system and law. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| POLS Y3970 - Intervention, Peace, And War |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines international intervention that is at least nominally humanitarian. Explores changing norms and laws on sovereignty and intervention, including the responsibility to protect. Topics include military intervention, UN and non-UN peace operations, economic sanctions, arms embargoes, humanitarian relief operations, and judicial investigations and prosecutions. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| POLS Y3980 - Internship In Urban Institutions |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. This course is designed to provide opportunities for students to observe or participate directly in the policy-making process of those urban institutions requesting the assistance of paraprofessionals. Research and written reports are required. Evaluations will be made by both the agency and the instructor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| POLS Y4010 - Studies In Political Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topic varies with the instructor and year; consult the Schedule of Classes for current information. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| POLS Y4030 - Legal Issues In Public Bureaucracy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the legal framework of public bureaucracies, their powers, functions and roles. Analysis of relevant cases in which basic principles are identified and synthesized along with other elements of public law. Ordinarily offered Fall Semester, even years. Cross-listed with SPEA-V 3760. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| POLS Y4800 - Undergraduate Readings In Political Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Individual readings and research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| POLS Y4810 - Field Experience in Political Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Faculty-directed study of aspects of the political process based on field experience. Directed readings, field research, research papers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| POLS Y4820 - Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Faculty-directed study of aspects of the political process based upon field experience. Directed readings, field research, research papers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| POLS Y4900 - Senior Seminar In Political Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Readings and discussion of selected problems; research paper ordinarily required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
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| POLS Y4960 - Foreign Study In Political Science |
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Credit Hours: 3.00 to 8.00. Course involves planning of research project during year preceding summer abroad. Time spent in research abroad must amount to at least one week for each credit hour. Research paper must be presented by end of semester following foreign study. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| POLS Y4980 - Readings For Honors |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Course involves an intensive individual program of reading and/or research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| POLS Y4990 - Honors Thesis |
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Credit Hours: 3.00 to 8.00. Honor Thesis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
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| POLS Y5700 - Introduction To The Study Of Politics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Problems of graduate study and professional scholarship; central organizing concepts and the use of theory in political science and related disciplines; specialized areas of research and scholarship in political science; conditions of scientific inquiry and methodological problems in the study of political phenomena; central importance of theory in explanation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| POLS Y6810 - Readings In Comparative Politics |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Political process and government structure in the Russian state. Political institutions inherited from tsarist empire and the Soviet state 1917-1991, history of subsequent political reform. Political problems of ethnic conflict, creating democratic institutions, and transition from socialism to market economy. Graduate students will do some extra reading, write a term paper, and participate in regular discussion sessions led by the instructor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| PPOL E1620 - Environment And People |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An interdisciplinary examination of the problems of population, pollution, and natural resources and their implications for society. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL E2720 - Introduction To Environmental Sciences |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of principles from the life and physical sciences to the understanding and management of the environment. Emphases will be placed on (1) the physical and biological restraints on resource availability and use, and (2) the technological and scientific options to solving environmental problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL E4000 - Topics In Environmental Studies |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An interdisciplinary consideration of specific environmental topics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| PPOL H1200 - Contemporary Health Issues |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An examination of current public health, environmental health, and health service delivery issues in the U.S. Topics include the organization and costs of health systems, access to care, and the interrelationships between risk factors and health; also environmental challenges facing our society and their impact on health. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL H3160 - Environmental Health Science |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of human interaction with the environment and potential impacts of environmental agents on health and safety. Hazards from natural sources and human activities that contaminate our air, land, water, food, homes, neighborhoods, and workplaces are examined. Environmental control activities, including pollution control technology and policy, are also examined. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL H3200 - Health Systems Administration |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of the U.S. health-care delivery system. Examines the organization, function and role of the system; current system problems; and alternative systems or solutions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL H3220 - Principles Of Epidemiology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A basic overview of epidemiologic methodology and techniques. Both communicable and chronic disease risk factors will be discussed, along with data acquisition, analysis techniques, and current published epidemiological studies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL H3520 - Health Finance And Budgeting |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the financial management of health-care facilities based on generally accepted business principles. Accounting and managerial control of cash, accounts receivable, inventory control, budgeting and cost control, as well as accounting and evaluation of short- and long-term debt will be examined. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL H3710 - Human Resources Management In Health Care Facilities |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers the function of management, which is concerned with the acquisition, development, and use of human resources in the field of health care delivery. Labor relations relating to health care delivery are also included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL H4020 - Hospital Administration |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of organization, structure, function and fiscal operations within hospitals. The role of the hospital in the community, relationship to official and voluntary health agencies, coordination of hospital departments and managerial involvement will be examined. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL H4110 - Chronic And Long-Term Care Administration |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Administering programs across the continuum of care including nursing homes, hospice, home health, and assisted living; Medicare and Medicaid financing; quality improvement; care management; and needs of special populations, particularly, vulnerable elders. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL H4160 - Environmental Health Policy |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of professional requirements and duties of the environmental health functions within health agencies; consideration of applicable laws and standards in each environmental health function; environmental evaluation, implementation, and personnel responsibilities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL H4220 - Aids, Violence and Substance Abuse |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines HIV/AIDS, violence, and substance abuse in the context of racial, gender, sexual orientation, and class dynamics that may underlie the way these pathologies affect certain populations. Emphasized is the recognition that how we define disease and causation can influence how we attempt to find a cure. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL H4410 - Legal Aspects Of Health Care Administration |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of the liability and legal responsibility, as well as legal recourse health-care facilities may exercise. This course will discuss policies and standards relating to health facility administration. Also included is a discussion of financial aspects unique to the hospital/health-care facility environment, such as third-party payments and federal assistance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL H4550 - Topics In Public Health |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Extensive discussion of selected topics in public health. The topic may change from semester to semester with resource availability and student demand. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| PPOL H4560 - Managed Care |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Course examines the organizational structures of managed care as used in the health industry. The strengths and weaknesses of managed care organizations are examined as well as the performance of both public and private managed care organizations. Course also examines and discusses current issues surrounding managed care. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL H4740 - Health Administration Ethics Seminar |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines healthcare ethical decision making challenges from managerial perspective and explores broader policy issues associated with ethical problems in healthcare institutions. It provides an overview of general theories of ethical challenges in everyday managerial activities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL H5090 - Financial Management Principles of Health Care |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides knowledge of corporate finance practice in health care organizations. Establishes an understanding of the basic elements of financial theory used to address service expansion or contraction, capital investment issues, developing business plans and working capital management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL H5170 - Managerial Epidemiology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines general epidemiologic methods such as population descriptive techniques, use of health indicators and secondary health-related data sources. Includes design, administration, and analysis of observational and experimental studies. Emphasis will be on the use of epidemiologic techniques to assess community health, determine community risk factors, and evaluate community-based programs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL J1010 - The American Criminal Justice System |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the criminal justice system of the U.S. and its function in contemporary society. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL J2010 - Theoretical Foundations Of Criminal Justice Policies |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the impact of sociological, psychological, biological, and economic theories of crime and the practice of criminal justice. Focus is upon the nature and importance of theory, context of theoretical developments, methods for the critical analysis of theoretical developments, and policy implications of the varying perspectives considered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL J2020 - Criminal Justice Data Methods and Resources |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Course examines basic concepts of criminal justice. Students become familiar with research techniques necessary for systematic analysis of the criminal justice system, offender behavior, crime trends, and program effectiveness. Students will learn to critically evaluate existing research. Students will become familiar with existing sources of criminal justice data and will learn to assess the quality of that data. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL J2600 - Topics In Criminal Justice |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Study of selected issues in criminal justice. Topics vary from semester to semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| PPOL J3010 - Substantive Criminal Law |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The development, limitations, and application of substantive criminal law utilizing the case- study method. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL J3020 - Procedural Criminal Law |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Criminal law application and procedure from the initiation of police activity through the correctional process utilizing the case-study method. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL J3030 - Evidence |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The rule of law governing proof at trial of disputed issues of fact; burden of proof; presumptions and judicial notice; examination, impeachment, competency, and privileges of witnesses; hearsay rule and exceptions; all related as nearly as possible to criminal, as opposed to civil, process. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL J3040 - Correctional Law |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Legal problems from conviction to release; pre-sentence investigations, sentencing, probation, and parole, incarceration; loss and restoration of civil rights. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL J3050 - Juvenile Justice |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide an overview of the justice system's response to abused, neglected, and dependent children; juvenile misconduct, and delinquent behavior. An extensive review of the development of recent legal changes to the court, options for prevention, treatment of juvenile offenders, and possible system reforms. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL J3060 - The Criminal Courts |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of the criminal justice process from prosecution through appeal. The organization and operation of felony and misdemeanor courts are examined. Topics include prosecutorial decision-making; plea-bargaining; judicial selection; and the conduct of trials, sentencing, and appeal. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL J3100 - Introduction To Administrative Processes |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to principles of management and system theory for the administration of criminal justice agencies. Credit not given for SPEA J3100 and SPEA V2700. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL J3200 - Criminal Investigation |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory of investigation, crime-scene procedures, interviews, interrogations, surveillances, and sources of information; collection and preservation of physical evidence; investigative techniques in specific crimes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL J3210 - American Policing |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will examine the history, evolution, and organization of policing in the United States. Emphasis is placed on such major contemporary issues as the police role, discretion, use of force, corruption, accountability, and community. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL J3220 - Introduction To Criminalistics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The broad range of physical evidnece developed through the investigative process, and methods of identifying and establishing validity and relevance through forensic laboratory techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL J3310 - Corrections |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the historical development of the U.S. correctional system; the study of administration of local, state, and federal corrections programs, including jails, probation, community corrections, and prisons. Includes the study of punishment rationales, current correctional policies, and possibilities for reform. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL J3700 - Seminar In Criminal Justice |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected contemporary topics in criminal justice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| PPOL J3760 - Principles Of Public Safety |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of threats to public safety and of governmental response at various levels to those threats. Treatment of areas such as transportation and highway threats; occupational safety and health; criminal threats; emergency and disaster planning; consumer protection; and fire control and suppression. Discussion of techniques to identify and measure risk, the acceptability of risk, and governmental attempts to control risk. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL J3800 - Internship In Criminal Justice |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Students may be placed with various criminal justice agencies for assignment to a defined tasks relevant to their educational interests. Tasks may involve staff work or research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
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| PPOL J4330 - Institutional Corrections |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The history and development of the jail, penitentiary, prison, and reformatory. Analysis and evaluation of contemporary imprisonment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL J4390 - Crime and Public Policy |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A detailed examination of the major efforts designed to control or reduce crime. A review of existing knowledge is followed by an investigation of current crime control theories, proposals, and programs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL J4400 - Corrections In The Community |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A detailed analysis of correctional alternatives to incarceration that focus on the reintegration of the offender while remaining in the community. Because of their extensive use, considerable attention is given to probation and parole. Other topics include diversion, community residential programs, restitution, halfway houses, and home detention. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL J4450 - Trends In Corrections |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis and evaluaton of contemporary correctional systems. Discussion of recent research concerning the correctional institution and the various field services. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL J4600 - Police In The Community |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. In-depth examination of crime as an urban policy problem, focusing on the role of police and victims in defining crime as a policy problem, and their role in seeking to reduce the incidence of crime. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL J4700 - Seminar In Criminal Justice |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Emphasizes current developments in legal, administrative, and operational aspects of the criminal justice system. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL J4800 - Research In Criminal Justice |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Individual research under guidance of faculty member. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| PPOL J5010 - Evolution Of Criminological Thought And Policy |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an intensive introduction to the theoretical literature on crime and delinquency. Its purpose is to develop students' ability to critically evaluate and compare theories of crime as they apply to public policy and the criminal justice system. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL J5020 - Research Methods In Criminal Justice And Public Affairs |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines research techniques necessary for systematic analysis of the criminal justice system, offenders' behavior, crime trends, and program effectiveness. The course requires that students actively pursue such techniques as conducting interviews, coding data, and designing studies. Criminological research will be critically examined. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL J5820 - Criminal Justice Systems |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Detailed examination of operations of police, courts, and correctional agencies. Study of management problems in system response to criminal activity. Development of understanding of relationships among system components. Examination of major policy issues in criminal justice, with emphasis on decision-making techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL J5870 - Criminal Violation: Problems and Characteristics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Commonalities in criminal behavior. Curcumstances leading to the commission of the criminal act, subsequent perceptions of them. Family, community, and other environments affecting criminal behavior. Behavioral consequences of processes of crime control. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL J5880 - Law And Control In Society |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The role of law versus other forms of social control. How social change and social institutions shape the law. Social factors influencing the administration of law. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL J6660 - Criminal Justice Policy And Evaluation |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An empirical assessment of the foundations of contemporary and historical attempts to control or prevent crime. Major policies, programs, and strategies are reviewed and critically analyzed. Specific topics and policies will vary in this capstone seminar. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL J6820 - Planning And Management For Criminal Justice And Public Safety |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Methods and procedures involved in criminal justice and public safety planning and management. Administration and implementation of public policies in policing, courts, corrections, emergency management and homeland security. Organization, decision making, evaluation and human resource issues of public policy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL K3000 - Statistical Techniques |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to statistics. Nature of statistical data. Ordering and manipulation of data. Measures of central tendency and dispersion. Elementary probability. Concepts of statistical inference decision. Estimation and hypothesis testing. Special topics discussed may include regression and correlation, analysis of variance, nonparametric methods. Credit given for only one of the following: K3000, ECON E2700, SOC S3510, POLS Y3950, PSY 20100 and STAT 30100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| PPOL V1700 - Introduction To Public Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Broad Coverage of public affairs through critical and analytical inquiry into policy-making at all levels of government. Particular emphasis on intergovernmental relations as they affect policy in the fedral system. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V2600 - Topics In Public Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Study of selected issues in public affairs. Topics may vary from semester to semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PPOL V2630 - Public Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an examination of the management process in public organizations in the United States. Special attention will be given to external influences on public managers, the effects of the intergovernmental environment, and in particular, problems of management in a democratic, limited government system. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V2640 - Urban Structure And Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to urban government and public policy issues. Topics include: urban government structure and policy making, the economic foundations and development of cities, demography of cities and suburbs, land-use planning, and other selected urban policy problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V2700 - Survey Of Administrative Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to principles of management and systems theory for the administration of public agencies. Credit not given for both V2700 and J3100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V2750 - Introduction To Emergency Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the background and nature of the profession, the central theoretical debates concerning natural and human-induced disasters, mitigating and reacting to these catastrophic events, and the major roles and responsibilities of emergency managers. Current practical problems and future directions will be explored.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V3400 - Urban Government Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Structure of the local government in the United States, federalism and intergovernmental relations, policy problems faced by local officials, and the implications of these problems for local government administrators. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V3480 - Management Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to management-science models and methods for policy analysis and public management. Methods include decision analysis, linear programming, queuing analysis, and simulation. Computer-based applications are included. Prior familiarization with computers is recommended, though not required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V3650 - Urban Development And Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course identifies the major problems associated with urban development in the U.S. and investigates the potential of public planning strategies and tools to deal with these problems. An emphasis is placed on the application of analytical approaches to problem definition and solution. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V3660 - Managing Behavior In Public Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to the management of people in public organizations. Focus is on behavioral science in management and related analytical and experiential applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V3680 - Managing Government Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of analytical techniques to operating decisions in the public-management sector. Cases are used extensively to illustrate the application of techniques (such as charting, capacity and demand analysis, forecasting, performance measurement, decision analysis, queuing/simulation, Markov modeling, and cost- effective analysis) to design, scheduling, inventory assignment, transportation and replacement decisions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V3700 - Research Methods And Statistical Modeling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will introduce the student to the basic methods, issues, analytical techniques, and ethical considerations of evaluation research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V3710 - Financing Public Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of economic and political theories of market failures, public expenditure evaluation, economic stabilization, systems of redistribution and fiscal federalism. Examples and applications to contemporary government decisions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V3720 - Government Finance And Budgets |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of fiscal management in public agencies, including revenue administration, debt management, and public budgeting. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V3730 - Human Resources Management In The Public Sector |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The organization and operation of public personnel-management systems, with emphasis on concepts and techniques of job analysis, position classification, training, affirmative action, and motivation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V3760 - Law And Public Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The purpose of this course is to provide a basic understanding of the origins, process, and impact of law in the making and implementing of public policy. The course's major objective is to provide students with the substantive concepts necessary to understand the judicial system and law in its various forms. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V3770 - Legal Process And Contemporary Isssues In America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the American legal system, including the Constitution, courts system, and administrative law in federal and state agencies. Readings and discussion center around current issues affected by the legal process. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V3780 - Policy Processes In The United States |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intended as an integrative senior course, primarily for PPOL-students. Course content includes analytical perspectives of the policy process, the centers of policy, and the public interest. Selected cases involving problem analysis and decision making on public issues are included, as well as discussion of current policy issues. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V3800 - Internship-Public Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 6.00. Open to interested students upon approval of the faculty. Students are placed with public agencies or governmental units for assignment to a defined task relevant to their educational interests in public affairs. Tasks may involve staff work or research. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PPOL V3810 - Professional Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Students will be required to fulfill a minimum of 120 hours of professional relevant work. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V3870 - Public Administration And Emergency Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the American federal system and how if affects policy making and emergency management. Topics include government programs, participation of agencies and actors from all three levels of government, the nonprofit sector, and the private sector. Administrative processes involved in managing major hazards and disasters will be presented. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V3890 - Risk And Hazard Mitigation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the principles and practice of risk and hazard mitigation at all levels of government and private industry. The tools, techniques, resources, programs, intergovernmental relationships, public-private partnerships, and the broader social context involved in planning for organizational and business continuity and implementing risk reduction strategies are covered. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V3900 - Independent Readings In Public Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Independent readings and research related to a topic of special interest to the student. Written report required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PPOL V4050 - Public Law And The Legislative Process |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on Congress as a policy-making body in the United States public law system. It covers the constitutional framework for congressional operations as well as technical aspects of the legislative process such as bill drafting and analysis, the role of leadership, and the prerogatives of individual members. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V4060 - Public Law And The Electoral Process |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The purpose of this course is to facilitate understanding of the interaction of electoral politics and policy. It covers the legal framework of the evolution of the "right" to vote, the impact of the judiciary on the structure of elections, limitations on campaign practices, and the importance of legislative districting and its control. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V4070 - Public Law And Government Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The purpose of this course is to build understanding of government relations work as applied to careers in the field. It covers the historical evolution of the constitutional right to petition the government with an understanding of the limitations imposed upon the process. The interaction of public and private sectors is included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V4210 - Metropolitan Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discussion of the process of development in metropolitan regions. Includes topics such as economic development, land use evolution, and demographic change. Consideration of relevant policy issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V4320 - Labor Relations In The Public Sector |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory overview of labor relations in the public sector. Course includes the development, practice, and extent of the collective bargaining process and administration of the labor agreement by state and local governments. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V4410 - Topics In Financial Management And Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Various topics on financial management and policy are examined in a state and local setting. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PPOL V4440 - Public Administrative Organization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A review of research findings and analysis of the operation of public agencies and their performance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V4470 - Federal Budget Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of the institutions and processes involved in putting together the annual federal budget, with emphasis on the role of the Appropriations and Budget committees in Congress and the White House and the Office of Management and Budget in the executive branch. Selected major policy areas will be considered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V4500 - Contemporary Issues In Public Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Extensive analysis of selected contemporary issues in public affairs. Topics vary from semester to semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PPOL V4560 - Topics In Public Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Extensive analysis of selected contemporary issues in public law. Topics vary from semester to semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PPOL V4570 - Management Science In The Public Sector |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intermediate treatment of management science methods with primary application to public managerial decision support. Topics include network analysis, queueing, simulation and others. Computer-based analysis is emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V4650 - Geographic Information Systems For Public And Environmental Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will learn the concepts, methodologies, and perspectives essential for using geographic information systems (GIS) to address critical public affairs issues. Through course projects, students will learn how to use desktop and Internet-based GIS applications, and will develop complementary skills related to designing and implementing GIS applications for public-sector organizations. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V4710 - Urban Management Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to extend the students' skill in applying a variety of qualitative and quantitative methods to the problems of urban government planning and management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V4900 - Directed Research In Public And Environmental Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. To be arranged with the individual instructor and approved by the chairperson of the undergraduate program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PPOL V5020 - Public Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Analysis of concepts, methods, and procedures involved in managing public organizations. Problems of organization, planning, decision making, performance evaluation, and management of human resources are considered. Cases are drawn from a variety of public services found at federal, state, and local levels of government. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V5040 - The Public Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course focuses on the behavior and theory of public organizations in four areas: (1) individuals and groups in public organizations, (2) the design of public organizations, (3) organization-environment relations, and (4) interorganizational relations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V5060 - Statistical Analysis For Effective Decision Making |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Noncalculus survey of concepts in probability, estimation, and hypothesis testing. Applications of contingency table analysis and analysis of variance, regression, and other statistical techniques. Computer processing of data emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V5070 - Data Analysis And Modeling For Public Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focus on analytical models and their use in solving problems and making decisions in the public sector. Discussion of standard approaches to modeling and estimation of parameters. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V5080 - Topics In Quantitative Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Study and application of selected quantitative methods of analysis. Additional topics that are not included in SPEA V5060 and SPEA V5070 may be presented, or more advanced examination of topics that are introduced in SPEA V5060 or SPEA V5070 may be presented. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PPOL V5090 - Administrative Ethics In The Public Sector |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Ethical conduct in the public sector is examined. Topics covered could include personal ethical responsibility, deception, corruption, codes of ethics, policy-making, morality, politics, and whistle blowing. Case studies and media material will be used to illustrate these and other such issues affecting the workplace. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V5120 - Public Policy Process |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An examination of the role of public affairs professionals in policy processes. Focuses on relationships with political actors in various policy areas. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V5170 - Public Management Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on applications of the principles and concepts of intermediate microeconomic theory and managerial economics to public-sector management decisions and policy analysis. The course utilizes case studies with the goal of giving students opportunities to recognize the economic dimensions inherent in the public policy problems and to develop an analytical problem-solving orientation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V5220 - Human Resource Management In Nonprofit Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an overview of the human resource management areas necessary for the productive functioning of nonprofit organizations. Theories of motivation applicable to the management of staff and volunteers and personnel topics of recruitment, selection, board-staff relations, compensation, training and development are covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V5250 - Management In The Nonprofit Sector |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of nonprofit organizations and their role in society. Management issues and public policy affecting these organizations are discussed. Primary emphasis is upon U.S. organizations, but attention is given to the global nature of the sector. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V5390 - Management Science For Public Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focus on management science methods as applied to public affairs. Includes treatment of decision theory, constrained optimization, and probability simulation.
Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V5400 - Law And Public Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Explanation of law in society and its influence on public sector operations. Examination of some of the central substantive areas of the study of law, including regulatory processes, administrative adjudication, the Administrative Procedures Act, ombudsmen, and citizen rights, among others. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V5410 - Benefit-Cost Analysis Of Public And Environmental Policies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course applying benefit-cost analysis to public and environmental policies. The first part of the course develops the foundation of benefit-cost analysis. The second part of the course consists of case studies applying benefit-cost analysis to actual policy decisions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V5430 - Health Services Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course that integrates theory and application with respect to management of health service organizations. Emphasis on role of managers and management within formal health service organizations. Current management and organization theories are applied to an understanding of healthcare delivery settings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V5450 - The United States Health Care System |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of the delivery of health care in the United States from 1900 to the present. Major system components are defined and studied with emphasis on current health care policy. Topics include the organization of health care delivery on federal, state, and local levels, in both public and private sectors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V5460 - Health Services Utilization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of problems of access to health care and the utilization of health services. The social, political, and individual factors associated with utilization are studied, along with social change and control strategies. Special emphasis is given to power and the definition of power in the system. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V5500 - Topics In Public Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Selected research and discussion topics organized on a semester-by-semester basis, usually with significant student input in the course design. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PPOL V5600 - Public Finance And Budgeting |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. The fiscal role of government in a mixed economy; sources of public revenue and credit; administrative, political, and institutional aspects of the budget and the budgetary process; problems and trends in intergovernmental fiscal relations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V5610 - Public Human Resources Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Analysis of the structure, operations, and design of public personnel systems, including government agencies and public enterprise. Relationships between public policy and personnel concepts, values, and operations are considered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V5620 - Public Program Evaluation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Examination of how the programs of public agencies are proposed, established, operated, and evaluated. Discussion of the role and conduct of research in the program evaluation process. In addition, techniques of effective evaluation and analysis are discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V5630 - The Planning Process |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Seminar designed to familiarize students with planning ramifications of policy issues faced by governments. The focal topics selected for study will vary. Emphasis placed on identification and analysis of substantive issues, methods employed for resolution, and application of planning techniques for achieving goals. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V5640 - Urban Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course deals with the management of public policy in American urban government, with special attention to the relationships between structure, process, and policy. Readings and case studies will focus on urban management problems relating to leadership, planning, and operations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V5660 - Executive Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course offers an in-depth examination of factors that contribute to successful executive leadership practice in a wide variety of organizational settings. Topics include what leadership is, what impact leadership has, and how leaders use various approaches and powers to achieve their goals. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V5670 - Public Financial Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Problems of financial management in governmental units; alternative revenue sources, financial planning, and control; cash debt management; and survey of modern expenditure management, control, and planning. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V5690 - Managing Interpersonal Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides in depth examination and experience with the management of people in public organizations. It focuses on approaches and techniques in the utilization of human resources for organizational achievement and personal development. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V5700 - Public Sector Labor Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An introductory overview of labor relations concepts within the framework of the public sector. The development, practice, and extent of the collective bargaining process, as well as the administration of the labor agreement, will be examined for state agencies, local municipalities, and school districts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V5800 - Readings In Public Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Readings on selected topics in public affairs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PPOL V5850 - Practicum In Public Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Students hold work assignments with public agencies. Grading is on an S/F basis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PPOL V5900 - Research In Public Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Research on selected topics in public affairs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PPOL V6000 - Capstone In Public And Environmental Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Interdisciplinary course designed to expose students to the realities of the policy process through detailed analyses of case studies and projects. Course integrates science, technology, policy, and management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPOL V6310 - Health Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A workshop in analysis and use of health data in a planning context. Course deals with the planning process and planning methods with an emphasis on systems theory. Class project or plan is developed, and presented and defended in a simulated public hearing format. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| PPT 25200 - Professional Practice For Internship II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Professional Practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Ofc of Professional Practice
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PPT 32100 - Professional Practice For Advanced Leadership Experience I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Professional Practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. For Advanced Leadership Experience students only. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Ofc of Professional Practice
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PPT 32200 - Professional Practice For Advanced Leadership Experience II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Professional Practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. For Advanced Leadership Experience students only. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Ofc of Professional Practice
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PPT 32300 - Professional Practice For Advanced Leadership Experience III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Professional Practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. For Advanced Leadership Experience students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Ofc of Professional Practice
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PPT 33100 - Professional Practice For Concentrated Cooperative Education I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Professional Practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. For Concentrated Cooperative Education Students only. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Ofc of Professional Practice
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PPT 33200 - Professional Practice For Concentrated Cooperative Education II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Professional Practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. For Concentrated Cooperative Education Students Only. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Ofc of Professional Practice
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PPT 33300 - Professional Practice For Concentrated Cooperative Education III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Professional Practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. For Concentrated Cooperative Education Students Only. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Ofc of Professional Practice
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PPT 33400 - Professional Practice For Concentrated Cooperative Education IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Professional Practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. For Concentrated Cooperative Education Students Only. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Ofc of Professional Practice
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PPT 35300 - Professional Practice For Internship III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Professional Practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. For Internships only. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Ofc of Professional Practice
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PPT 44100 - Professional Practice For Intensive Internship I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Professional Practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. For Intensive Internship Students Only. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Ofc of Professional Practice
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PPT 44200 - Professional Practice For Intensive Internship II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Professional Practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. For Intensive Internship Students Only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Ofc of Professional Practice
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 10000 - Introduction To The Science And Fields Of Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An introduction to psychology as a science and as a profession. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Information Literacy, UC-Information Literacy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 12000 - Elementary Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the fundamental principles of psychology, covering particularly the topics of personality, intelligence, emotion, abnormal behavior, attention, perception, learning, memory, and thinking. As part of their learning experience, students participate in psychological experiments. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:ISH 1020 Introduction To Psychology
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY 12100 - Topics In Psychology For Students Of Science And Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course surveys the scientific knowledge of the brain, mind, and behavior. Topics include sensation, perception, learning, memory, decisions, emotions, neuropsychology, development, and social interactions. As part of their learning experience, students participate in psychological experiments. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 14000 - Critical Foundations For Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comprehensive introduction to psychology as a science and as a profession; methods of inquiry used in the science of psychology, critical thinking, information literacy, and basic written communication as applied to the discipline; survey of career opportunities in psychology, focusing on developing short-term and long-term academic/professional goals and effective strategies for pursuing them. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the scientific foundations of psychology, e.g., how to evaluate assertions about behavior.
2. Understand IPFW PSY B.A. degree requirements, campus support resources, and opportunities for active engagement in the psychology department.
3. Explore future academic/professional goals and identify a possible career path.
4. Understand the foundations of information literacy and elements of scientific writing.
|
| PSY 20000 - Introduction To Cognitive Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of psychology as the science of mental life, covering theories and research in perception, reading, attention, consciousness, imagery, memory and its improvement, problem solving, creativity, decision making, and artificial intelligence. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 20100 - Introduction To Statistics In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the development and application of statistical, quantitative, and measurement techniques pertinent to the psychological sciences. Fundamental concepts of numerical assignment, sampling theory, distribution functions, experimental design, inferential procedures, and statistical control. Should be taken at Purdue University, West Lafayette. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Basic introduction to statistical methods used in psychology and other social sciences.
2. Includes descriptive statistics and understand the logic of inferential statistics.
3. Be able to calculate various descriptive and inferential statistics and know when to use them.
4. Assist students to be a critical reader of statistical information presented in the news media.
|
| PSY 20200 - Introduction To Quantitative Topics In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of PSY 20100. Fundamental concepts of test theory, introduction to applied psychological testing, the scaling of data, and an introduction to mathematical models of psychological phenomena. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 20300 - Introduction To Research Methods In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The use of scientific method in psychology. Lecture covers principles of collecting and interpreting data, using examples of research from many areas of psychology. In the laboratory portion, the student uses many different techniques from various areas of psychology. Should be taken at Purdue University, West Lafayette. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 20500 - Testing And Measurement |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental concepts of test theory, introduction to applied psychological testing, the scale of data, and the interpretation of test results. Not open to students with credit in PSY 50500. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| PSY 22000 - Brain And Behavior: An Introduction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the relation of brain structure and function to behavior. Topics covered include sensation and perception, the effect of early experience on the growing brain, learning, motivation, sleep and dreaming, language and thought, abnormal behavior and brain injury. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 22200 - Introduction To Behavioral Neuroscience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to how the nervous system controls behavior. Topics include evolution and comparative psychobiology, the neuroscience of sensation and perception, the neuroscience of motivation, neuropsychology, and cognitive neuroscience. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 23000 - Life-Span Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A multidisciplinary course intended primarily for non-majors that draws upon a range of physical and social sciences to explore development of the individual from infancy through old age. Physical, cognitive, social, and personality development are covered. Not open to students with credit in PSY 23500. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 23500 - Child Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Not open to students with credit in PSY 36000. General principles of children's behavior and development, from conception to adolescence, including sensory and motor development, and basic psychological processes such as learning, motivation, and socialization. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 23900 - The Psychology Of Women |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The purpose of the course is to provide an overview of the psychology of women. Topics include stereotyping, women and achievement, aggression and power, the psychological concept of androgyny, and attitudes toward feminism. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 24000 - Introduction To Social Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Not open to students with credit in SOC 34000. A broad survey in current knowledge about human social behavior. Topics covered include aggression, attraction and love, social influence, attitudes and attitude change, nonverbal communication, leadership, prejudice and discrimination, and application of social psychology to law, medicine, and other fields. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:ISH 1024 Social Psychology
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 24400 - Introduction To Human Sexuality |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will provide a broad survey of research on human sexuality from a psychosocial perspective. Topics covered include research methods, gender identity, sexual orientation, reproductive anatomy, typical and atypical sexual behavior, and sexual difficulties and their treatments. Typically offered Fall Spring.
CTL:ISH 1022 Human Sexuality
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 25000 - Psychology Of Adjustment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of principles of human adjustment, with emphasis on integration of self, perception, control, behavior, and relationships. Solutions to selected problems and anxieties are discussed to illustrate effecting change, building emotional stability, and preventing maladjustment. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 25100 - Health Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Health psychology is concerned with the interaction between behavior and health and illness. It includes the psychological study of the relationship between health and lifestyle, stress and coping, and health-injurious behaviors. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 27200 - Introduction To Industrial-Organizational Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of psychological principles and research methods relevant to organizations and industry. Topics covered include research methodology, individual differences, personnel selection, performance measurement, training, motivation, job satisfaction, emotions, work stress, and leadership. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Provides instruction and covers material to assist students in obtaining a broad perspective on the field of Psychological Sciences.
|
| PSY 28500 - Consumer Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic concepts and methods of psychology as used to understand consumer behavior. Course covers general concepts (e.g., personality, information-processing, social class, family decision-making) as well as their applications to specific examples of consumer behavior (e.g., information search, product choice, purchase). Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 29200 - Topics In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Various introductory-level topics in Psychology that may be offered on a semester-by-semester basis by Purdue Psychological Sciences faculty or by non-Purdue faculty/instructors as part of a student’s study abroad program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. To provide breadth of coverage across the diverse field of Psychological Sciences.
|
| PSY 30600 - Statistical Analysis For Experiments |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to familiarize students with various statistics routinely used in analyzing data from psychological experiments. The course will focus on t-tests and Analysis of Variance (ANOVA), though other types of analysis may also be used to illustrate the nature of the research and analysis process. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Be able to understand when and how to use various statistics for between-subjects, with-in subjects, and mixed designs.
2. Be able to generate an appropriate analysis strategy and know how to carry it out using statistical software (SPSS).
|
| PSY 30900 - Educational And Psychological Assessment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Undergraduate Experiential/Research/Seminar. Theoretical foundations and applied experiential research opportunity. Requires presentation to key stakeholders and 45 hours of individual or group experiential research during the semester. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Conduct and interpret a reliability analysis.
2. Conduct and interpret a factor analysis.
3. Construct an assessment tool, and know the relevant issues surrounding its creation.
4. Discuss general issues and critiques of assessment and testing.
5. Reflect upon, and to evaluate the strengths and weaknesses, of the process of assessment.
|
| PSY 31000 - Sensory And Perceptual Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the study of psychological experiences caused by stimulation to the senses. Topics include theory and research in seeing, hearing, touching, smelling, and tasting as experienced by humans and other animals. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 31100 - Human Memory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of theories and research about how humans remember information and why they often forget. Topics include research on amnesia, forgetting, and sensory memory systems as well as on practical issues such as how to improve memory. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 31200 - Research In Experimental Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced research in experimental psychology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY 31400 - Introduction To Learning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course attempts to make clear the theoretical and practical implications of learning principles and findings. Various theories of learning are examined and the implications of these theories, and the learning approach generally, for a variety of practical problems are emphasized. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 31600 - Animal Learning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and research in basic processes of animal learning, including habituation, sensitization, classical conditioning, operant conditioning, discrimination and generalization, schedules of reinforcement, choice behavior, and aversive control. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PSY 31700 - Addictions: Biology, Psychology And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. It is an interdisciplinary, introduction course taught by a team from the Biology and Psychology Departments. The course will focus on using the processes of addiction to alcohol, marijuana, nicotine, and psychomotor stimulants to teach the basics of biological and psychological science. Example topic areas include neurological/brain function, impact on cognitive function, biochemistry, genetics, immunology, emotion, and motivation, learning and memory, physiology and pharmacology, and the psychosocial aspects of addictions.
. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PSY 31800 - Problem Solving And Decision Making |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course integrates topics from the fields of psychology, artificial intelligence, and decision sciences with an emphasis on psychology. The course will cover problem solving, decision making, inference, and categorization. The course will stress both research and practical techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 31900 - Research Methods In Infancy And Childhood |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (SLHS 34500) This is a laboratory-based course that focuses on methods to test childhood cognitive and language development. As part of the course, students will be working in the Purdue University Infant Labs. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PSY 32000 - Behavioral Neuroscience of Sensation And Arousal |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Brain structure and function underlying sensation, perception, cognition, and arousal. Topics include space, time, color, and pattern recognition, agnesias, agnosias, infant experience, habituation, attention, sleep, dreaming, and consciousness. This course is most accessible to students familiar with natural science concepts. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 32200 - Neuroscience Of Motivated Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Neuroanatomical analyses of behavioral functions. Topics include movement, sexual behavior, maternal behavior, hunger, thirst, emotion, pain; addiction, biological rhythms, memory, evolution of the brain, language, hemispheric specialization, brain damage, brain remodeling during development and aging, correlates of cognitive processing. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 32400 - Introduction Cognitive Neuroscience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the neural bases of complex human mental abilities. Emphasis on integrating research from cognitive science, brain-scanning techniques, and the lesion technique. Topics include perception, attention, memory, language, motor control, planning/decision-making and consciousness.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 32500 - Professional And Ethical Issues In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of ethical and professional issues in the field of psychology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate awareness of the ethical issues that can arise in the various areas of psychological practice including: psychotherapy, assessment, research, teaching, and consultation.
2. Develop career goals, resumes & interview techniques necessary to secure an internship & future employment.
|
| PSY 32900 - Psychobiology II:Principles of Psychobiological Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The relationship of physiology and basic anatomy, with special emphasis on the central nervous system, to variables fundamental to the study of psychology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PSY 33000 - Psychology Of The Arts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of perceptual and cognitive processes involved in music and the visual arts. Topics include musical information processing, music reading, musical memory, the nature of musical ability and its relationship to other abilities, development of musical and artistic ability, the nature of artistic ability, the artistic process, and processing of visual-arts information. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PSY 33200 - Forensic Pyschology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of the production and application of psychological knowledge and research findings within the civil and criminal justice systems, including the use of psychological science to resolve legal issues. Typically offered Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. The nature of forensic psychology, including its major subfields.
2. How psychology knowledge is produced and applied within the civil and criminal justice systems to improve their functioning and quality.
3.The application of psychological science to effectively resolve specific and legal issues and questions with major areas of the law.
4. The professional and ethical responsibilities of the forensic psychologist.
|
| PSY 33300 - Motivation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of current research and theory in motivation. The effects of both learned and unlearned motives on behavior are discussed. Examples of topics covered are: hunger, sex, aggression, pain, emotion, stress, frustration, conflict, and needs for achievement, affiliation, and power. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 33400 - Cross Cultural Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination and restructuring of the major psychological principles from a cultural perspective. A study of the diversity of development of the individual across Asian, African-American, Latino/a, and American Indian/Alaskan Native cultures will be presented. The experience of self, role of the family and community, and the psychology of prejudice will be emphasized. Issues related to the workplace, religion, sexual orientation, ability status, and gender will also be discussed. It will be assumed that the student already has some familiarity with major psychological theories and terminology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PSY 33500 - Stereotyping And Prejudice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the topics of stereotyping, prejudice, and discrimination from a social psychological perspective. Relying on empirical findings and relevant theoretical approaches, the course moves beyond lay opinions to explore the social psychological foundations and forms of stereotyping and prejudice, and to examine various strategies for reducing intergroup biases. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 33600 - Issues In Developmental Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of current issues in developmental psychology and methods for studying these problems. The topics selected for intensive examination reflect contemporary developmental research issues and may involve different-aged children or adults. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 33700 - Social Cognition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of theory and research on the role of thought processes in social behavior (a combination of social and cognitive psychologies). Topics include causal attribution, person perception, stereotyping, impression formation, event memory, and social judgment. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 33900 - Advanced Social Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An in-depth survey of selected topics in social psychology such as aggression, attraction, social influence, social attribution, helping behavior, leadership, cooperation, competition, and attitudes and attitude change. (Not open to students with credit in SOC 34000). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. To recognize and describe major theories and concepts in social psychology.
2. To describe the history of and research methods commonly used in social psychology.
3. To evaluate the current state of, and trends in, the field of social psychology.
4. To interpret the results of social psychological studies.
5. To conduct and report the results of social psychological studies.
|
| PSY 34200 - Introduction To Psychology Of Personality |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course integrates empirical studies (observational, correlational, experimental) with classical and current personality theories. Topics include the biological foundations of personality, self-esteem, extraversion, sex role orientation, authoritarianism, and personality disorders. Minimum competence is assumed in basic experimental design and correlations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 34400 - Human Sexuality |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A nonjudgmental approach to the study of sexuality through attempts to bring to students' awareness their own sexual values. Topics include evaluation of research, BIOLOGICAL aspects, varieties of expression, inadequacies, violence, love, erotica, gender identity, aging, and sex laws. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| PSY 34500 - Psychology Of Women |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theories and current research on the psychological nature of women and their roles in society, including topics such as sex differences and similarities, sex-role socialization, sex-role stereotyping, female sexuality, achievement motivation, role conflict, mental-health issues, feminist therapy, rape, menstruation, pregnancy, childbirth, motherhood, and topics of related interest. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PSY 34900 - Psychology Of Women |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the history and sources of concepts which have defined the psychological functioning of women and a critical evaluation of current evidence regarding women and their behavior, examining the influences which affect them in contemporary society, as set within the context of the life cycle. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| PSY 35000 - Abnormal Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Various forms of mental disorders from the standpoint of their origin, treatment, prevention, social significance, and relation to problems of normal human adjustment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:ISH 1023 Abnormal Psychology
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 35100 - The Psychology Of Criminal Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Taking a behavioral approach to criminal behavior, the primary focus of this course is accounting for repetitively violent conduct with attention to: scientific description, developmental factors, contemporaneous causal factors, and the effects of incarceration and other interventions on offender's behavior.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 35300 - Social And Personality Development In Children |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of major theories and current research on the development of social behavior and personality in children. Parent-child and family relationships, peer relations, aggressive and prosocial behavior, gender typing, self-concepts, moral reasoning, social cognition, and other topics are covered. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PSY 35500 - Child Abuse And Neglect |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A historical and conceptual overview of violence against children, from infancy through adolescence, is presented. Definitions and models of violence are evaluated with respect to existing research findings. Assessment techniques, treatment (intervention) approaches and legal issues are examined. The major forms of violence against children to be emphasized include: physical child abuse, sexual child abuse, emotional (psychological) child abuse, child neglect and failure-to-thrive infants. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| PSY 36000 - Developmental Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Not open to students with credit in PSY 23500. An examination of behavioral ontogeny: differences and similarities arising out of successive transactions of organism with environment over time. Specification of processes and outcomes from conception through maturity. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 36100 - Human Development I: Infancy And Childhood |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A consideration of the formative years in human development with primary attention given to the processes of socialization, individualization, and adaptation, initiated by retrospective self-examination and furthered by an analysis of systematic life history data. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 36200 - Human Development II Adolescence |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A behavioristically-oriented analysis of social, personality, and cognitive development in adolescence and youth. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| PSY 36300 - Human Development III: Adulthood |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of growth trends in adulthood as arising from the experiences of childhood and adolescence and as manifesting themselves in the performance of a variety of adult roles. The realization of maturity, as seen in self assessment and examination of systematic life history data. The prospects for later adulthood: involvement versus disengagement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| PSY 36400 - Determinants Of Individual Differences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A review of biological, environmental, and cultural factors that influence how children develop. Emphasis is placed on the relationship to normal development of genetics, biomedical stress, nutrition, home environment, and cultural-environmental influences occurring outside the family. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 36500 - Development Of Gender Roles In Children |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Considers basic concepts and the varying theoretical interpretations for the development of gender roles, with special attention given to recent empirical findings with children. Measures used in this area will be demonstrated in class and critically evaluated. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 36700 - Adult Development And Aging |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and research on adult development from young adulthood through the elderly years. Course covers biological, cognitive, personality, and social issues. Topics include vocational choice, marriage, parenthood, the empty nest, menopause, memory and aging, retirement, widowhood, longevity, and death and dying. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 36800 - Children's Development In Cross-Cultural Perspective |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Surveys the development of children from different cultures. Topics include: Studying the development of children from other cultures, cultural similarities and differences in children's development, what leads to cultural differences in development, implications for children of clashes in cultural values. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 36900 - Development Across The Lifespan |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Considers theoretical, empirical, and methodological issues relevant to the study of human development from conception to death. Biological, cognitive, personality, and social aspects of development are covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PSY 37000 - Environmental Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The psychological influence of immediate environment on human and, to a lesser extent, animal behavior. Environmental factors will be considered from the viewpoints of social psychology, applied experimental psychology, consumer psychology, community psychology, and ethology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 37100 - Death And Dying |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A multidisciplinary, empirically-based consideration of emotions, behaviors, and cognitions related to death and the process of dying. Topics include: cultural and historical differences in concepts of dying, death, grief, and bereavement; individual differences related to preparation, adjustment and coping, as well as discussions of special topics (e.g., hospice care, physician-assisted suicide, media coverage of death and dying). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PSY 37300 - Psychology In Industry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of applications of psychological principles and research methods to personnel selection, training, and appraisal; societal context of work including study of work motivation, satisfaction and alienation, small group dynamics, and leadership. Not open to students with credit in PSY 570. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| PSY 37400 - Organization And Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of basic behavioral science research and thought on organizational behavior as evidenced in individual group, intergroup, and societal phenomena. The reciprocal relationship between individual work behavior and institutional factors are stressed and analytically reviewed. Not open to students with credit for PSY 57200. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| PSY 37500 - Approaches To Counseling And Psychotherapy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course engages students in the issues, skills and best practices of counseling and psychotherapy. Through various learning activities, students examine the theories involved in the delivery of counseling and psychotherapy. PSY 34200 is recommended as a prerequisite. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe best practices involved in the delivery of counseling and psychotherapy.
2. Demonstrate mastery of discipline-specific professional communication skills.
3. Analyze ethical issues that may arise in the delivery of counseling and psychotherapy.
4. Describe counselor characteristics that promote ethical professionalism.
5. Begin formulating a personal model of counseling.
|
| PSY 38000 - Behavior Change Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of behavioral learning principles to problems in living. Self-paced learning format covers design and evaluation of behavior modification programs, with practical and ethical issues. Relevant to work with children, adults, clinical patients, athletes, etc., in schools, institutions, and everyday situations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 38600 - Consumer Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic concepts and methods of psychology as used to understand consumer behavior. Course covers general concepts (e.g. personality, information-processing, social class, family decision-making) as well as their applications to specific examples of consumer behavior (e.g. information search, product choice, purchase). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| PSY 39000 - Research Experience In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Involvement in an ongoing research project in the Department of Psychological Sciences. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY 39100 - Readings In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. In-depth reading on a specific topic in psychology under the guidance of a faculty member, often in preparation for PSY 49800. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| PSY 39200 - Special Topics In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Various topics that may change from semester to semester are presented by Psychological Sciences department faculty. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY 40400 - Honors Research Seminar I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Part one of a research series aimed at providing a structured learning experience to help students develop the basic research skills needed in order to conduct psychological research. Students will be expected to develop a research plan to be completed in concert with PSY 40500. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 40500 - Honors Research Seminar II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Part two of a research series aimed at providing a structured learning experience to help students develop the basic research skills needed in order to conduct psychological research. Students will be expected to develop a research plan to be completed in concert with PSY 40400. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 41000 - Animal Memory And Cognition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This advanced undergraduate seminar will provide an in-depth look at how memory and other cognitive processes are studied in nonhuman animals. Some of the topics covered are expectancies, concept formation, memory representations, imagery, and counting. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 41100 - Psychology And Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Issues in the interface between psychology and law are presented and discussed in depth. Topics included are culpability in criminal law, jury decision making, rights of mental patients, the psychologist and the law, and privacy. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 41600 - Cognitive Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to be a survey course covering a variety of research and theories within the field of cognitive psychology. A number of different topic areas will be reviewed including attention, perception, human memory, knowledge representation, language, problem solving, reasoning, intelligence, skill acquisition, and expertise. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PSY 41900 - Psychopharmacology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the chemical substrates of behavior and the influences of various drugs (experimental, clinical, and recreational) on the nervous system and on behavior. Pharmacological principles, behavioral procedures, neurophysiology, and synaptic transmission are reviewed. Major neurotransmitter systems in the brain are discussed in terms of the behaviors in which they are involved and the drugs that affect them. Emphasis is placed on using drug effects to understand the brain's control of behavior. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PSY 42000 - Introduction To Personality Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Personality theories selected from the traditions of psychoanalysis, behaviorism, and phenomenology-existentialism are presented and contrasted in the fundamental assumptions made by each outlook. Theorists surveyed include Freud, Adler, Jung, Dollard and Miller, Skinner, Bandura, Rogers, Boss, Binswanger, and Kelly. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 42200 - Genes and Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of genetic influences on behavior, including the mechanisms of genetic influence, methods of gene manipulation, and the role of genes in development and evolution. Genetic influences on mental illness, learning, memory, and intelligence are considered. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 42600 - Language Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (SLHS 30900) Specific nature, sequence, and pattern of oral language development from birth through adolescence. Nature of language acquisition and approaches to the study of children's language are presented. Linguistic and psychological explanations of the sequence of development are discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 42800 - Drugs And Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discussion of the variety of drugs that affect the nervous system and behavior. Emphasis will be upon a discussion of the physiological and pharmacological bases for the use and misuse of drugs in our society. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 42900 - Hormones And Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discussion of the mechanisms and effects of endocrine hormones and brain peptides on sexual differentiation, sexual behavior, learning, response to stress, maternal behavior, and weight regulation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 43000 - Systems And Theories Of Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A review of major systems of thought and theories contributing to current developments in psychology. Special emphasis placed on broad approaches to building an understanding of man, both scientific and humanistic including behaviorism, psychoanalysis and humanistic-cognitive approaches. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| PSY 43300 - Theories in Human Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of current major issues of developmental psychology and relevant and evolving methodological approaches to these problems. The emphasis is on developmental processes and factors affecting these processes. Not open to students with credit in PSY 34300. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| PSY 43500 - Introduction to Marriage and Family Therapy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides the student with an intorduction of general systems theory with a special emphasis on applications within marriage and family therapy. Course topics include the historical roots of family therapy, descriptions of treatment modalities and clinical interventions used by marriage and family therapists. A variety of theraputical approaches to marriage and family therapy are explored. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| PSY 44100 - Advanced Research In Personality And Social Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this course, students will have the opportunity to develop an advanced understanding of the principles, concepts, theories, and research methods used by personality and social psychologists. This course will demand a high level of student participation and responsiblity in two broad ways. First, in place of standard lectures, students will be asked to actively participate in class discussions and demonstrations of central topics. Second, students will gain "hands-on" experience by conducting an empirical study pertaining to personality and social psychology, and by engaging in a variety of laboratory exercises. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PSY 44300 - Aggression And Violence |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intensive examination of the nature of human aggression. Among the topics covered will be (1) theoretical perspectives concerning such behavior; (2) social conditions that encourage its performance; and (3) means for its prevention and control. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 44400 - Human Sexual Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of research in human sexuality with the primary focus at the social psychological level. Problems in sex research and theoretical issues will be considered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 45000 - Crisis Intervention |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Major life crises in areas such as death, suicide, substance abuse, loneliness, sexuality, marital and family relationships, and situational loss are analyzed by means of crisis theory and crisis intervention approaches. Both individual and societal responses are considered primarily from a nonpathological viewpoint. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 45100 - Assessment And Treatment Of Child Behavior Disorders |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A review of assessment and treatment procedures in selected areas of child psychopathology. Problems are viewed from several theoretical positions. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 46000 - Advanced Abnormal Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced course in abnormal psychology allowing for more thorough coverage of selected disorders which were introduced in PSY 35000. Topics covered will typically include the affective disorders, schizophrenia, anxiety and stress-related disorders, and personality disorders; but may vary somewhat with each offering of the course. Outside material related to description and diagnostic indicators of the disorders, latest research on etiology, and current treatment methods will be included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PSY 46400 - Responsible Conduct Of Scientific Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discussion of issues in research ethics including such topics as informed consent, plagiarism, data fabrication and falsification, whistle-blowers, animals in experiments, and restricting research. A case study approach will be used. Previous research experience recommended. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 46600 - Field Experience In Industrial Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Supervised field work experiences in an industrial, governmental, or public service organization. Reading and class discussion to explore applications of psychology in the kind of settings where the field experience takes place. Nine or 18 hours a week in field work will be required. Primaarily intended for those majoring in the industrial option in psychology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| PSY 47300 - Selection And Performance Appraisal In Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Classic and current issues in employee selection and the appraisal of employee performance will be discussed. Topics addressed will include: Equal Employment Opportunity and unfair discrimination, developing effective selection and placement strategies, evaluating employee performance, and understanding the performance appraisal process. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 47500 - Work Motivation And Job Satisfaction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Psychological processes and current theories of work motivation and job satisfaction and their practical implications. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 48000 - Field Experience In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Supervised volunteer field work experiences in a setting appropriate to students' interest and goals. Intended as an opportunity to integrate theory and practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY 48400 - The Psychology Of Consciousness |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of psychological experiments and theory in consciousness. An emphasis is placed on altered states of consciousness such as dreaming, hypnosis, drug-induced changes in consciousness, and meditation; and comparison with ordinary consciousness is made. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 48600 - Seminar In Human Development And Disability |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (BHS 48600) The Seminar On Human Development and Disability will expose students multiple perspectives related to the issues in human development and disability related issues. The purpose of the course is to provide an interdisciplinary experience for students preparing for work in the human services specifically with individuals with disability. Students will participate in a seminar originating at the Riley Child Development Center at the Indiana University School of Medicine. Students will participate in seminar presentations provided by pediatricians, psychologists, psychiatrists, social workers, special educators, and occupational therapists. Students will also gain experience in critiquing disability related research in the context of guided class discussions. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Expose students to the world of best practice in the field of human/disability services.
2. Provide students with the opportunity to interact with researchers involved in cutting edge research on a variety of human development and disability related topics.
3. Provide students with opportunities to enhance their critical thinking skills through critical reviews of existing research and the critical review of presentations convened throughout the seminar.
4. Provide students with professional related practice experiences through clinical observation, the participation in clinical team processes, conversations with program administrators and professionals from a variety of disciplines (i.e. psychology, psychiatry, genetics, social work, speech pathology, occupational therapy, nursing, etc.).
5. Provide students with the opportunity to reflect and debrief about their observations/experiences in a group seminar setting and using electronic discussion threads.
|
| PSY 49000 - Practicum In Psychotherapy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students are introduced to the theories and practice of psychotherapy through seminar discussion, role-played practice, supervision, and live observation of on-going psychotherapy cases in the departmental clinic. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| PSY 49100 - Topics In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY 49200 - Internship In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Experiential, supervised training in various areas of psychology-related fields including human factors, human resources, mental health-related organizations, research labs, and supervised living institutions. Usually taken in junior or senior year. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PSY 49400 - Introduction To Ethology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (BIOL 49300) Animal and human behavior is presented from an ethological perspective. Emphasis on observation and description of natural behaviors, motivation, behavioral aspects of ecology, the evolution of behavior, and the domestication of animals. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 49500 - Issues In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Specific topics announced each semester the course is offered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY 49600 - Readings And Research In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Opportunity for students to study particular problems in any field of psychology and/or to initiate themselves into research techniques under the guidance of a member of the psychology faculty. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY 49800 - Senior Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Student conducts and writes a report on an individual research project under the guidance of a faculty member. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PSY 49900 - Honors Thesis In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Individual, original research especially encouraged for students considering graduate school. May be based on either data collection or a theoretical synthesis of previous research. The topic is selected by the student with approval from a thesis advisor who, along with a thesis advisory committee, evaluates the finished paper according to departmental standards. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| PSY 50000 - Statistical Methods Applied To Psychology, Education, And Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Descriptive statistics and an introduction to sampling statistics. Applied to psychological, sociological, and education data. Pre-college level course work in Algebra and Number Theory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 50500 - Mental Measurement |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the general area of mental measurement. Theory and content of measuring device in the fields of intelligence, interests, personality, and special aptitudes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 51100 - Psychophysics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ECE 51100) An examination of the relationship between physical stimuli and perception (visual, auditory, haptics, etc.). Includes a review of various methods for studying this relationship and of the mathematical and computational tools used in modeling perceptual mechanisms. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 51200 - Neural Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (SLHS 50700, BIOL 56200) Background in cell biology, psychobiology, physiology, or anatomy is recommended. Overview of the structure and function of neural systems including those involved with motor, somatosensory, visual, auditory, learning, memory, and higher cortical processes. Molecular and cellular aspects of neural function are integrated with discussion of relevant neuroanatomy. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 51400 - Introduction To Mathematical Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the student to the field of mathematical modeling of psychological processes. Mathematical techniques employed in modeling are learned, and a number of mathematical models and theories that have been developed and employed in various important areas of experimental psychology are explained. An introduction to problems in theory and model testability also is given. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 52000 - Attention And Performance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the relation between the world humans perceive and the actions humans perform. Topics include: (1) the integration of sensory information; (2) attention; (3) compatibility between stimuli and responses; (4) analysis of reaction times and accuracies; and (5) decision making. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 52200 - An Introduction To Pediatric Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is designed for the clinical psychologist who desires to become acquainted with the field of pediatrics as it is seen by the practicing pediatrician. The student will be introduced to common medical terminology, literature, and interrelated pediatric and psychological problems. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 52600 - Psycholinguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (SLHS 50800) An introduction to the descriptive devices, central issues, and varying methodologies of psycholinguistics. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 53200 - Psychological Disorders Of Childhood |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A review of the nature, causes, and consequences of deviations from normal childhood development. Emphasis is placed on the two most common types of psychological problems in childhood: mental retardation and behavior disorders. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 53500 - Psychology Of Death And Dying |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of psychological research and theory related to death and the dying process. Topics include death concepts, attitudes, and fears, psychosocial predictors of death, effects of death on survivors, psycho-social factors related to individual differences and normative dying behaviors, stages of dying, effects of pain and drugs, and managing the dying process. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 54000 - History Of Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A review of the philosophical, theoretical, and methodological issues that entered into the development of modern psychology. Emphasis is placed on historical themes that continue to be active in the science and profession of psychology. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 55000 - Introduction To Clinical Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The case-study method, including a discussion of the importance of historical information, the contribution of clinical tests to diagnosis, and a general survey of prevention and treatment techniques. Typically offered Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 55500 - Cognitive Engineering Of Interactive Software |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (I E 559) Theory and applications of software design to improve productivity and job satisfaction on information processing and cognitive tasks in the workplace. Human information processing models and cognitive theories will be used to provide a theoretical basis for how to choose and display information to the user. Other topics include user-friendly displays and empirical approaches to software design. Applications of the design theory are stressed by class projects. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 55600 - Job Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (I E 556) Task analysis, personnel selection and training, job and organizational design, and criteria development and use. Human factors related to job design in order to increase job satisfaction and productivity. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 56000 - Cognitive Functioning In Older Adults |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides the student with understanding of cognitive functioning in older adults. Although age differences in sensory systems, attention, perception, and memory will be reviewed, the course will focus on higher order cognitive functioning, such as individual and collaborative problem solving, reasoning, decision making, intelligence, creativity, and wisdom. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 56100 - Personality And Social Functioning In Older Adults |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Personality and social behavior of the aged are examined. Emphasis is placed on understanding how stability for certain psychological functions and behaviors is maintained and how change occurs in others. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 57000 - Industrial Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of the applications of psychological principles and of research methodology to the various human problems in industry, such as: personnel selection and appraisal; the organizational and social context of human work; the job and work situation; human errors and accidents; and psychological aspects of consumer behavior. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
|
| PSY 57200 - Organization Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of basic behavioral science research and thinking as these contribute to the understand-ing of individual, dyadic, group, intergroup, and other large organization behavioral phenomena. The topics covered include motivation, perception, attitudes and morale, communication, leadership, conflict, problem solving, behavior change, and organizational effectiveness. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
|
| PSY 57600 - Compensation And Training |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide information and to stimulate thinking in two areas: compensation and training. Beginning with compensation, 8 weeks are devoted to each of these two topics (i.e., two sequential 8-week modules). In the compensation module, the major focus is on presenting information about how organizations determine job worth and provide financial rewards to individuals to achieve organizational objectives. A pay model provides the framework for this module and for understanding compensation systems. The three main components of the model are compensation objectives, policy decisions and techniques that make up the pay system. These goals will be met through class readings, discussions, applied exercises and one exam. In the training module, the objective is to obtain knowledge concerning the major processes, components, and issues related to training in organizations. It is also to master knowledge of the psychological processes involved in obtaining, maintaining, and transferring learned knowledge and skills. These goals will be met through class readings, class discussion, a research review paper, and an exam. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Master knowledge connected with direct and indirect pay mechanisms, and to understand the psychological processes related to these mechanisms.
2. Master knowledge of the psychological processes involved in obtaining, maintaining, and transferring learned knowledge and skills.
|
| PSY 57700 - Human Factors In Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (I E 577) Survey of human factors in engineering, with particular reference to human functions in human-machine systems, and consideration of human abilities and limitations in relation to design of equipment and work environments. Primarily for engineers and other nonpsychology majors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 58500 - Psychological Foundations Of Consumer Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the concepts and methods of psychology as they apply to the study of consumer behavior. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 59000 - Individual Research Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. (IUPUI can offer variable credit 1.00-6.00). Opportunity for students to study particular problems in any field of psychology or initiate themselves into research techniques under the guidance of a member of the staff. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY 59100 - Topics In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Various topics that may change from semester to semester are presented by faculty in the Department of Psychological Sciences. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY 59200 - Advanced Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Various topics that may change from semester to semester are presented by psychology faculty. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY 60000 - Statistical Inference |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis is given to principles underlying both parametric and nonparametric inference. Prerequisite: PSY 50000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 60100 - Correlation And Experimental Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of PSY 600 with emphasis upon the design and analysis of experiments. Prerequisite: PSY 60000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 60300 - Psychopharmacology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will cover core pharmacology concepts and principles, such as neurotransmitters, receptors, drug classes, and mechanisms of drug action, while highlighting recent findings related to pharmacogenetics and sex/gender differences in psychopharmacology. There will also be a primary focus on drug therapy for major psychiatric disorders including addiction, depression, anxiety and schizophrenia. Prerequisites: (BIOL 56200 and PSY 51200) or PSY 61500 or MCMP 57000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Acquire knowledge about the primary biological systems through which drugs act to produce changes in behavior.
2. Learn basic principles of pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics.
3. Learn the primary signs/symptoms of major mental disorders and how these disorders are classified with the DSM.
4. Discuss and differentiate the primary methods currently used to treat mental disorders.
5. Critically evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of primary research papers in psychopharmacology.
6. Explain the use of animal models in psychopharmacology.
7. Explain and discuss the methods used in the "drug discovery pipeline", from target identification to FDA approval and beyond and model the application of new drugs through this pipeline..
8. Communicate proficient knowledge about a single psychiatric disorder and its pharmacological treatment through oral presentation and writing (white-paper style).
|
| PSY 60500 - Applied Multivariate Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the most frequently employed multivariate research techniques, such as multivariate generalizations of univariate tests and analysis of variance, principal components, canonical analysis, and discriminant analysis. A central theme of the course is the general linear model, both univariate and multivariate. A multipurpose program for this model provides the student with practical experience in conducting multivariate research. Some prior exposure to elementary matrix algebra is recommended. Some prior exposure to elementary matrix algebra is recommended. Prerequisite: PSY 60000. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 60600 - Special Topics In Quantitative Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A seminar covering such topics as linear models, statistical decision making, and multidimensional scaling. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY 60700 - Scaling And Measurement |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the theory of measurement and a survey of modern scaling methods (unidimensional and multidimensional, metric and nonmetric) within the framework of the modern theory of measurement. Some prior exposure to elementary matrix and set algebra is recommended. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 60800 - Measurement Theory And The Interpretation Of Data |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The theory of measurement and the development of reliability and the Spearman-Brown equations, true scores and variables, and correction for attenuation. Variance or covariance of combinations of variables. Item analysis and test construction strategies. Reliability and validity of measurements and the influence of measurement error and measurement threats to research design. Prerequisite: PSY 60000. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 61000 - Multivariate Analysis In Organizational Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an advanced doctoral-level statistics course that examines the application of multivariate methods to the analyses of organizational data. Topics include: matrix algebra, the general linear model, multivariate analysis of variance, canonical correlation, discriminant function analysis, and factor/component analysis. Prerequisite: Grade of B or higher in (PSY 60000 and PSY 60100) or (STAT 51200 and STAT 51400) or (HDFS 68500 and PSY 63100). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop a broad theoretical understanding of multivariate analyses, applied skills necessary to incorporate multivariate analytic techniques into their research activities, and mathematical foundations of these topics that will allow the student to pursue advanced training and research in these areas.
|
| PSY 61101 - Multilevel Theory, Measurement And Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide doctoral students with an introductory treatment of multilevel theory building and testing. Issues to be discussed include: multilevel theory building, composition and compilation models, aggregation, aggregation bias, the role of within-group agreement in multilevel modeling, cross-level inference, cross-level interactions, and hierarchical linear modeling. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Acquire an understanding of the basic elements of multilevel theories & multilevel validation and how those theories and validation processes differ from single-level theories/processes.
2. Acquire an understanding of the roles of data aggregation & cross-level inference in multilevel measurement and analysis.
3. Acquire an understanding of the various ways to estimate interrater agreement & reliability and how those statistics are used to inform multilevel measurement.
4. Acquire an understanding of the hierarchical linear model applied to traditional nested data structures. Emphasis will be placed on model specification and interpretation of parameter estimates.
5. Acquire an understanding of the hierarchical linear model applied to longitudinal data structures. Emphasis will be placed on model specification and interpretation of parameter estimates.
6. Acquire an understanding of various “special topics” in multilevel theory, measurement, and analysis. Examples include: multilevel mediation, multilevel moderation, multilevel analysis of dyadic data, and the impact of centering decisions on the interpretation of multilevel models.
|
| PSY 61401 - Special Topics In Ingestive Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (NUTR 61600) Explore, in –depth, important and current issues in ingestive behavior: enhance critical thinking skill; and acquire professional skills (e.g., organizational, interpersonal) and develop rapport with scholars in the field. Typically offered in even ending years. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To explore, in-depth, important and current issues in ingestive behavior.
2. To enhance critical thinking skills.
3. To acquire professional skills (e.g., organizational, interpersonal) and develop rapport with scholars in the field.
|
| PSY 61500 - Introduction To Behavioral Neuroscience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the integrated neurosciences for nonconcentrators emphasizing human physiological psychology. Neural processes of sensory and motor function, arousal and sleep, motivation, learning and memory, language function, and personality disorders will be presented with selected coverage of neuroanatomy, neurophysiology, neuropharmacology, and neuroendocrinology. Both normal and pathological functions will be covered. Not intended for students in the neurobiology program. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Define the primary goals of scientific research related to behavioral neuroscience
2. Describe the biological processes the underlie normal and abnormal behavior
3. Discuss the use of animal models in scientific research
4. Critically evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of primary research papers in behavioral neuroscience
5. Communicate proficient knowledge about methods and concepts in behavioral neuroscience through oral presentation and writing
|
| PSY 61801 - Ingestive Behavior Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. (NUTR 61700) Fosters an exchange of ideas and promotes greater familiarity among individuals from different laboratories and departments with interests related to ingestive behavior, and gives students opportunities to build their communication skills and lead/mediate discussions at a high scholarly level. Typically offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To foster an exchange of ideas and promote greater familiarity among individuals from different laboratories and departments with interests related to ingestive behavior.
2. To give students opportunities to make and critique scholarly presentations and lead/mediate discussions with other graduate students and faculty.
|
| PSY 61900 - Sensory Coding Mechanisms |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Psychobiology of coding of sense information in the nervous system. Intensive treatment of several topics including: structural and functional characteristics of neural coding units, types of neural codes, transducer properties, adaptation, lateral inhibition, feature analysis, central control, and effects of early experience. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 62200 - Animal Learning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the methods, problems, and research in Pavlovian, instrumental, and operant conditioning. Current issues and attempts at theoretical integration are highlighted. Emphasis is also given to the empirical and conceptual foundations underlying the present views on the mechanisms governing learned behavior. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 62400 - Human Learning And Memory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected survey of important problems in the encoding, storage, and retrieval of laboratory and naturalistic events. Prerequisite: Coursework in Human Development, Family Studies and related services. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 62700 - Advanced Topics In Visual Perception |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. All important aspects of visual perception are covered: neurophysiology and neuroanatomy, psychophysics, color, perceptual organization, size, shape, depth, motion, and binocular disparity. Emphasis is on mathematical and computational models and on experimental verification of the models. Course work in Mathematics; including matrix algebra, calculus, probability, and elementary geometry. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 62800 - Perceptual Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an advanced introduction to the psychology of perception. The course emphasizes visual and auditory perception, reviewing basic concepts, methodologies, research findings, and theoretical approaches. Theories of direct perception, constructivist perception, and computational vision are discussed in detail. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 63000 - Sterotyping And Prejudice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides an in-depth examination of issues related to stereotyping, prejudice, and discrimination. After a general introduction and historical overview, students will be exposed to a detailed study of the social psychological foundations of stereotyping and prejudice to include their impact and reduction strategies. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. This course not only will enhance students’ knowledge but will facilitate their oral and written communication skills and their critical thinking skills.
2. Greater appreciation of research ethics, methodology, design, and data analysis will also be gained through careful consideration of original empirical works.
|
| PSY 63100 - Applied Multiple Regression Analysis For The Behavioral Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This "data analytic" course provides an examination of the conceptual underpinnings and advanced application of multiple regression analyses to psychological data. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 63300 - Seminar In Experimental Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Critical analysis of current problems in experimental psychology. Emphasis upon reviewing literature, preparing and presenting papers. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY 63400 - Evolutionary Determinants Of Cognition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the developing literature on evolutionary determinants of cognition. Students will be exposed to the methodology of evolutionary analyses, its applications in empirical domains, as well as the major criticisms that surround the enterprise. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students are expected to read the assigned material, in depth, prior to each class period; actively participate in seminars; lead at least one class discussion; and arrive each week with demonstrated “proof” that they have, in fact read the material (e.g., notes, outlines, sets of questions, etc.). Students will also be asked to produce an updated reference (or reading) list for the topic area that they present in class- one that goes beyond the articles listed on the reading list. The updated reference list will be due at the end of the semester.
|
| PSY 63700 - Human Information Processing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course develops the methodological tools required for an information processing approach to human behavior. These techniques are applied to such topics as reaction time, signal detection, attention, and skilled behavior, with emphasis upon unifying empirical findings. Prerequisite: PSY 60000, 60100. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 63900 - Seminar In Cognition |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Analysis of current research findings in cognitive psychology. Emphasis is upon design of experiments and theoretical unification of existing data. Prerequisite: PSY 60000, 60100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY 64000 - Survey Of Social Psychology I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An extensive survey of methods, research, and theory in social psychology. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 64200 - Social Influence |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students are immersed into the exciting sub-field of social psychology: social influence through lively discussions and readings on the subject. Students will evaluate what is meant by social influence, what it includes, what it doesn’t include, as well as current trends in social influence. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1.The course not only will enhance students’ knowledge but will facilitate their oral and written communication skills and their critical thinking skills. Greater appreciation of ethical research (e.g., through coverage of Milgram’s original research on social influence in the form of obedience to authority) and research methodology will also be gained.
|
| PSY 64300 - Attitudes And Attitude Change |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Considers relation of attitudes to beliefs and to behaviors. Surveys major theories of attitude formation and change as well as empirical research related to these theories. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 64400 - Close Relationships |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Acquaints participants with the major social psychological approaches to the study of close, interpersonal relationships, including evolutionary, attachment, and interdependence perspectives. Methodological and data analytic issues relevant to relationships research also are examined. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 64500 - Social Cognition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Cognitive approaches to social psychology. Topics to be covered include attribution theory, impression formation, stereotype formation, perceptual salience, memory for persons and interpersonal events, and the processing of emotionally significant information. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 64600 - Seminar In Social-Personality Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A seminar covering a special topic in personality or social psychology. Specific topic varies from seminar to seminar. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY 64700 - Group Processes And Performance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides a survey of research concerning small group interaction and performance. Covers topics such as group problem-solving, group decision-making, group polarization, and group structure. Will also discuss group interaction and communication patterns. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 65100 - Development In Infancy And Childhood |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Critical review of physical-motor, cognitive, and social development with special emphasis on infancy and early childhood. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 65300 - Social Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of major theories and current research on the development of social behavior and personality. Parent-child relationships, peer relations, aggressive and prosocial behavior, sex typing, self-concepts, moral reasoning, social cognition, and other topics are considered. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 65500 - Cognitive Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of research findings and current theories relevant to the development of cognitive processes. Emphasis is placed upon the changing characteristics of some fundamental cognitive processes. Special attention is given to verbal behavior and language. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 66400 - Research Methods In Clinical Psychology I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A review of scientific and correlational research methods appropriate for clinical psychologists. Topics include philosophy of science, ethical issues in research with human subjects, hypothesis formulation, measurement, correlational and manipulational designs, and the analysis and interpretation of data. Prerequisite: 6 credit hours at the lower division undergraduate level in Mathematics, or Statistics, 6 credit hours in Clinical Psychology. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 66700 - Clinical Assessment I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Presentation of general assessment principles and methods. Supervised practice in general diagnostic and treatment procedures as applied to both children and adults. Emphasis is placed on laboratory practice in the administration and interpretation of intelligence tests; behavioral observation techniques and operant remediation procedures. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 66800 - Clinical Assessment II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Presentation of methods of clinical assessment including structured and unstructured personality tests, physiological recording, behavioral observation, and interview techniques. Emphasis is placed on laboratory practice in the administration and interpretation of personality tests and training in the basic clinical interview techniques. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 67000 - Principles And Techniques Of Psychotherapy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discussion and elaboration of the main theories and techniques of psychotherapy, the application of these techniques to the change of behavior, and the analysis of clinical cases for therapy planning. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 67300 - Psychology Of Behavior Disorders |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced abnormal psychology. Consideration will be given to research and theory of psychopathology. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PSY 67800 - Seminar In Clinical Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Discussion of special topics in clinical psychology. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY 67900 - Practicum In Clinical Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. This is a practicum in clinical psychology, whereby students see individuals for therapy. These cases are supervised by faculty in clinical psychology. This is a requirement for the graduate program, and students must do both adult and child practicum. Students enrolled in this program must register for this course a minimum of four times. Prerequisite: Master's student standing and Psychology majors only. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Practicum, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY 68000 - Survey Of Industrial/Organizational Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This two-semester sequence extensively surveys the various areas of industrial/organizational psychology. The first semester surveys those topics generally classified as dealing with industrial psychology (e.g., selection, placement, training, performance appraisal), and the second semester surveys organizational psychology topics (e.g., job satisfaction, motivation, leadership, decision making, role making). Course provides a critical and up-to-date review of recent and classical research in these areas. Prerequisite: Any undergraduate Statistics course and any undergradate Social Science Research Methods course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PSY 68100 - Seminar In Research Methodologies Of Industrial/Organizational Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive analysis of application of various research and statistical methods to the study of human behavior in organizational settings. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY 68200 - Advanced Seminar In Industrial Organizational Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Special topics in industrial and organizational psychology are offered on a two-year rotating basis. The special topics are: work motivation, leadership, advanced selection and placement, and performance appraisal. One topic will be treated each semester. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY 68300 - Seminar In Industrial/Organizational Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY 68400 - Practicum In Industrial-Organizational Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Practicum. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PSY 69000 - Individual Research In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Involvement in research design, execution, and analysis under the guidance of a faculty member. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY 69100 - Readings In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. In-depth reading into specific topic area in psychology, under the guidance of a faculty member. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY 69200 - Special Topics In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Various topics which may change from semester to semester are presented by faculty in the Department of Psychological Sciences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY 69600 - Seminar In Neurobiology, Endocrinology, And Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An examination of advanced research findings in the interdisciplinary areas of neurobiology, endocrinology, and behavior by means of colloquium presentations by outside speakers and students. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY 69700 - Clinical Psychology Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 12.00. Clinical psychology internship. Open only to Clinical Psychology students in approved internship facilities. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
Course Attributes: Internship
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Psychological Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY B1000 - General Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to various branches of psychology and the contributions of each to understanding the behavior of people as they interact with their environment
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY B1030 - Orientation To A Major In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will help students establish goals for their academic experience in three areas: career, relationships, and personal life. They will be introduced to psychological resources on campus, the faculty, and student organizations. They also will make a curriculum plan to meet their learning objectives. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY B1040 - Psychology As A Social Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to scientific method, individual differences, personality, developmental, abnormal, social, and industrial psychology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY B1050 - Psychology As A Biological Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Research methods and content areas of learning, sensation-perception, psychophysiology, motivation, emotions, and statistics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY B1100 - Introduction To Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This foundational course introduces students to psychology as a systematic and scientific way to think about the biological and social aspects of behavior and mental processes. Topics include Research Methods, Behavioral Neuroscience, Sensation/Perception, Learning, Memory, Cognition and Language, Motivation/Emotion, Personality, Social, Stress and Health, Psychological Disorders and Treatment, and Life-Span Development. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| PSY B1900 - Human Behavior And Social Institutions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Develps insights into human nature, the nature of social institutions, the social processes that have shaped the world of the twenty-first centruy. In an interdisciplinary way, intorduces the distinctive perspectives ofthe social sciences, empahsizing frameworks and tecniques used in explaining causes and patterns of individual and institutional behavior. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY B2010 - Foundations Of Neuroscience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to neuroscience that explores how our brains develop, how they work, and how they are changed by life experiences. Topics include neural communication, localization of brain function, neural systems, and control of behavior. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PSY B2030 - Ethics And Diversity In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces students to values and professional issues in psychology, with an emphasis on ethics and diversity. Students will learn to recognize the importance of ethical behavior in all aspects of science and practice of psychology and that sociocultural factors and personal biases may shape research and practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PSY B2100 - Studies In Life-Span Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will be used to facilitate transfer credit from the Community College of Indiana System. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PSY B2520 - Topics In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics in psychology and interdisciplinary applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PSY B2800 - Studies In Abnormal Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will be used to facilitate transfer credit from the Community College of Indiana System. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PSY B2920 - Readings And Research In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Independent readings and research on psychology problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| PSY B3010 - Systems Neuroscience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will focus on how our brains allow us to sense, move, feel, and think, with an emphasis on modern concepts and methods in integrative neuroscience. Topics include sensory and motor systems, motivation and emotion, brain rhythms, language, brain development, and learning and memory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate familiarity with the major concepts, theoretical perspectives, empirical findings, and historical trends in integrative neuroscience.
2. Understand research methods in integrative neuroscience.
3. Use critical thinking in the scientific approach to problem solving.
|
| PSY B3030 - Career Planning For Psychology Majors |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students will explore careers, practice job search skills, and learn about graduate and professional school application processes. Students will utilize resources across campus and in psychology, map an academic and co-curricular plan, and develop an understanding of how knowledge gained from the discipline of psychology can be integrated into their career. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PSY B3050 - Statistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to basic statistical concepts; descriptive statistics and inferential statistics. Introduction to data analytic software. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY B3070 - Tests And Measurement |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to psychological measurement, including psychophysics, scaling techniques, psychological testing, and individual differences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| PSY B3100 - Life Span Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasizes the life span perspective of physical and motor, intellectual and cognitive, language, social and personality, and sexual development. Commonalities across the life span, as well as differences among the various segments of the life span, are examined. Theory, research, and practical applications are stressed equally. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY B3110 - Research Methods In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory laboratory in experimental methods and statistical treatment of data in several areas of psychology; introduction to experimental report writing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| PSY B3160 - Social Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of conditions that affect a person in a social context: attitudes, impression formation, interpersonal relations, and group membership. Examines current theories and relevant research.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY B3200 - Behavioral Neuroscience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of necessary background in neurophysiology and neuroanatomy followed by the relationship of physiology to sensory processes, motivation, and learning. Emphasis on research with animals. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| PSY B3220 - Introduction To Clinical Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course surveys various aspects of the practice of clinical psychology from a scientist-practitioner perspective. The historical framework, the present state, and the future directions of clinical psychology will be discussed. Topics to be discussed include health psychology, trends in diagnosis and assessment, changing health care patterns and the impact of managed care, and specific areas of case management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PSY B3280 - Working With Families |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course introduces strategies and methods for professional assistance to families to develop effective family functioning. Various philosophies of working with at risk families will be introduced. Basic skills for assisting families will be practiced. The knowledge and skills acquired in this course are commonly expected in BA/BS practitioners. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
|
| PSY B3340 - Perception |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Consideration of the concepts and research in perception. Relation of sense organ systems to human behavior. Some attention to social and cultural factors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| PSY B3400 - Cognition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of information-processing theories from historical antecedents through current theories. Research methodology and theory will be emphasized throughout the discussion of issues such as perception, attention, memory, reasoning, and problem solving. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY B3440 - Learning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. History, theory, and research involving human and animal learning and cognitive processes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| PSY B3460 - Theories Of Personality |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Methods and results of the scientific study of personality, including the development, structure, and functioning of the normal personality. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PSY B3560 - Motivation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of motivational processes in human and animal behavior, how needs and incentives influence behavior, and how motives change and develop. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY B3580 - Introduction To Industrial/ Organizational Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course surveys various aspects of behavior in work situations using the scientist-practitioner perspective. Traditional areas covered from personnel psychology include selection, training, and performance appraisal; areas surveyed from organizational psychology include leadership, motivation, and job satisfaction. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY B3600 - Child And Adolescent Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of behavior in infancy, childhood, and adolescence, including sensory and motor development and processes such as learning, motivation, and socialization. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| PSY B3640 - Introduction To Community Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Begins with historical and conceptual underpinnings, community mental health practices, and alternative conceptions of deviance. Models of social intervention, including rational planning, organizational development, alternative institutions, community organizing, and experimental reform are discussed in the context of public education, mental health, criminal justice and urban housing. Also included are community research, evaluation and training issues for the helping professions. (Credit not given for both B3640 and PSY P4340.). Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY B3650 - Stress And Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Stress is examined from biological, psychological, and social perspectives. Topics include sources of stress, factors that influence stress and coping, effects of stress on psychological and physical well-being and performance, and stress-management techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY B3660 - Concepts And Applications In Organizational Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Some organizational psychology topics introduced in the I/O psychology survey course are covered in more depth. Advanced information is presented for each topic, and students have the opportunity for several different hands-on applications including case projects and computer exercises. Example topics are organizational culture, employee attitudes, motivation, and leadership. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY B3680 - Concepts And Applications In Personnel Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Some personnel psychology topics introduced in the I/O psychology survey course are covered in more depth. Advanced information is presented for each topic, and students have the opportunity for several different hands-on applications including case projects and computer exercises. Example topics are job analysis, selection, performance appraisal, and training. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| PSY B3700 - Social Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the individual in social situations including socialization, social perception, social motivation, attitudes, social roles, and small group behavior. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY B3740 - Group Dynamics Theory And Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intensive survey of research and theory on the behavior of small groups and the research methods by which groups are studied. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY B3750 - Psychology And Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an overview of the U.S. legal system from a behavioral science perspective. Topics routinely covered include: careers in pscyhology and law; theories of crime; police investigation and interrogations; eyewitness accuracy; jury decision-making; sentencing; assessing legal competence, insanity, and dangerousness; and the psychology of victims. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| PSY B3760 - The Psychology Of Women |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of topics in psychology as related to the biological, social, and psychological development of women in modern society. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| PSY B3780 - Introduction To Industrial Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study and application of psychological principles to understand human behavior in the work setting. Emphasis on the role of psychological theory and research methodology in solving human behavior problems in the workplace. Specific areas of coverage include work motivation, job satisfaction, employee involvement, communication, leadership, team effectiveness, work and well-being, organizational structure and culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-New Albany
|
| PSY B3800 - Abnormal Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Various forms of mental disorders with emphasis on cause, development, treatment, prevention, and interpretation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY B3820 - Practicum In Community Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Experience working with individuals who may have a wide range of psychological problems. Focus is upon both the individual and helping agency as factors in the community. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY B3860 - Introduction To Counseling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will help students acquire a repertoire of basic counseling interview skills and strategies and expose students to specific helping techniques. This will be an activity-based course and students will enhance the general education goals of listening and problem solving. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY B3880 - Human Sexuality |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course presents a biopsychosocial model of sexual function and dysfunction. Factors influencing sexual functioning such as chronic illness, substance abuse, and fear of AIDS are explored. Sexual paraphilias will also be discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY B3940 - Drugs And Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to psychopharmacology, the study of drugs that affect behavior, cognitive functioning, and emotions, with an emphasis on drugs of abuse. The course will explore how drugs alter brain function and the consequent effects, as well as the long-term consequences of drug exposure. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| PSY B3960 - Alcohol, Alcoholism, And Drug Abuse |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides introduction to the use, misuse, and dependent use of alcohol and other mood-altering drugs. Topics include basic principles of drug action, the behavioral and pharmacological effects of drugs, and the factors that influence use, abuse, and addiction. Addiction assessment, treatment, and treatment outcome also will be covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| PSY B3980 - Brain Mechanisms Of Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced topical survey of the neurobiological basis of behavior, focusing on the neural substrates and the cellular and neurochemical processes underlying emotions, motivation and goal-directed behavior, hedonic experience, learning, and cognitive function. Integrates experimental research across different levels of analysis genetic, molecular, cellular, neural systems. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PSY B4200 - Humanistic Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comprehensive survey of the field of humanistic psychology. Explores human experience as a focal point in the study of psychology. Use of didactic and experiential teaching methods. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| PSY B4210 - Internship In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A professional internship that allows students to apply psychological knowledge and skills to a specific work setting, develop work related skills, explore career options, and gain experience in a field of interest. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| PSY B4220 - Professional Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Can include a professional internship in the community, peer advising in the Psychology Advising Office, or teaching internship in the department. Faculty mentor must approve and oversee activity. Academic work will be required to earn credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY B4240 - Theories Of Personality |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Methods and results of the scientific study of personality, including the development, structure, and functioning of the normal personality. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY B4250 - Capstone Laboratory In Personality |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Demonstrations and experiments in personality research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| PSY B4330 - Capstone Laboratory In Applied Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This advanced research course builds on the skills and knowledge students have acquired during their undergraduate education that will enable them to conduct a team research project in order to further develop and consolidate their understanding of psychology as an applied science. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| PSY B4520 - Seminar In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics in psychology and interdisciplinary applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PSY B4540 - Capstone Seminar In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics in psychology and interdisciplinary applications, which have been approved to fulfill the capstone course requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PSY B4610 - Capstone Laboratory In Developmental Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principal research methods in developmental psychology and their application to selected problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PSY B4620 - Capstone Practicum In Industrial/Organizational Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides students with work experience, one day per week, in local organizations. Practice will be obtained in using the applied skills of industrial psychology to solve actual organizational problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PSY B4710 - Capstone Laboratory In Social Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Observational, correlational, and experimental studies in social psychology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| PSY B4720 - Practicum In Group Dynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application in the field of group dynamics through experience as a participant in group sensitivity training. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY B4810 - Capstone Laboratory In Clinical Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will familiarize students with research methods used within the field of clinical psychology. As a capstone course, it requires students to access the information and skills learned throughout their undergraduate studies, especially in the courses listed as its prerequisities. As a laboratory, it requires students to use their knowledge and skills to conduct an independent research study to further develop and consolidate their understanding of psychology as a science. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PSY B4820 - Capstone Practicum In Clinical Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students are placed in a clinical/community setting and gain applied practicum experience working with individuals who have psychological, medical and/or physical health problems. Releveant multi-cultural issues will be addressed. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| PSY B4920 - Readings And Research In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Independent readings and research on psychological problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY B4970 - Capstone Individual Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Independent research project. This course requires the student to develop a research question, design a research study, and complete a research paper. Additionally, students are required to present their research at an approved conference. This activity has been approved to fulfill the capstone course requirements. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| PSY B4990 - Capstone Honors Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Independent readings and research resulting in a research paper. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY I5350 - Clinical Neuroscience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A primary goal of the course is to examine how psychology, neuroscience, pharmacology, and medicine come together to manage mental illness. Mental illness will be examined systematically and the nature of how biological alterations lead to aberrant behaviors that define psychopathology will be examined. The course will heavily discuss the ethics involved in the field of Clinical Neuroscience. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate knowledge of the field of Clinical Neuroscience and how it is placed in history and current findings in medicine, psychiatry, neuroscience, and psychology.
2. Demonstrate an understanding of the architecture of the nervous system, including the brain, and how altered function of this architecture translates into clinical disorders
3. Demonstrate an understanding of how neurons communicate and how abnormalities in neural communication relate to mental disorders.
4. Demonstrate knowledge of how neurotransmitters are implicated in mental disease, and how psychopharmacology is used to treat such disorders.
5. Name and describe the major classes of mental disorders presented in the course, both in terms of neurological underpinnings of the disorders, and the most effective treatments for such disorders.
6. Discuss the ethical and political concerns relevant to the field of Clinical Neuroscience.
7. Have an understanding of future directions and roles of Clinical Neuroscientists in research and practice.
8. Have an introductory knowledge of approaches to research in Clinical Neuroscience.
|
| PSY K3000 - Statistical Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to statistics; nature of statistical data; ordering and manipulation of data; measures of central tendency and dispersion; elementary probability. Concepts of statistical inference and decision: estimation and hypothesis testing. Special topics include regression and correlation, analysis of variance, non-parametric methods. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P1010 - Introductory Psychology I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to psychology; it's methods, data, and theoretical interpretations in areas of learning, sensory psychology, and psychophysiology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P1020 - Introductory Psychology II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course continues the introduction to the study of mind and behavior begun in P101. The second semester focuses on psychology's efforts to understand behaviors that reflect the interaction of the organism with its environment. Our purpose in this course is not only to learn what researchers have discovered, as though we were casual consumers of psychological advice. Instead, because we are students of the science, we will pay at least as much attention to the methods by which questions are formulated and answered in Social, Developmental, and Abnormal psychology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P1030 - General Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to psychology: its methods, data, and theoretical interpretations in areas of learning, sensory psychology, psychophysiology, individual differences, personality, development, abnormal and social psychology. May not be taken by students who have previously taken P101 or P102. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P1550 - Introduction To Psychological And Brain Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to psychological and brain sciences for psychology majors. Introduces students to the history of psychology and its place in science, to the experimental method, and to the broad range of topics studied by psychological scientists. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PSY P1990 - Planning Your Psychology Career |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Intended for psychology majors only. Where do you want to be 10 years from now? How can you get there? Information for undergraduate majors to help them intelligently organize their undergraduate studies. Information about what psychologists do, professional and practical issues in career choice, course selection, intern/research experience, and planning a course of study. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
|
| PSY P2050 - Understanding Research In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A combination of experimental research methods and statistics for minors and other non-majors. This course offers instruction in critical thinking, different research designs, execution of simple experiments, interpretation of statistical outcomes, and understanding research reports. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P2110 - Methods Of Experimental Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This required course for all psychology majors provides an introduction to experimental methods. Students will conduct three experiments to gain hands-on experience in: experimental design, critical thinking, statistical analysis, reasoning from data to conclusions, ethics of human and animal research, and writing. The major determinants of final grades in all sections are performance on the three experimental projects and performance on a departmental final exam. This final exam measures students' literacy in the basics of experimental design and counts for 20% of the final grade.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P2160 - Life Span Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey course of human development from infancy through old age, emphasizing the life span perspective of development. Classical stage theorists, current popular conception, major research findings, and implications for all life stages from birth to death. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P2200 - Drugs And Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to drug use and misuse. The use of psychoactive drugs is considered from a biopsychosocial perspective. The effects of drugs on the nervous system and the behavioral adaptations that support drug use are reviewed. The therapeutic uses of drugs to treat mental illness and programs of drug education/prevention are considered.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P2330 - Industrial Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of psychological principles and research techniques to industrial and personnel problems, including selection, training efficiency, safety, and design of equipment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P2340 - Principles Of Mental Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of psychological theory to the development, maintenance, and adjustment of individual personality; including environmental and social factors that complicate that development.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P2410 - Functional Analysis Of Behavior I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic concepts and procedures in the experimental analysis and control of behavior. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P2800 - Psychology Applied to Teaching |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. The study and application of psychological concepts and principles are related to the teaching-learning process. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P3160 - Psychology Of Childhood And Adolescence |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of behavior in infancy, childhood, and youth; factors which influence behavior. Credit not given for both PSY-P 2160 and PSY-P 3160. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P3190 - The Psychology of Personality |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Methods and results of scientific study of personality. Basic concepts of personality traits and their measurements, developmental influences, and problems of integration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P3200 - Social Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of scientific psychology applied to the individual in social situations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P3210 - Group Dynamics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of group process, group decision, group relations, group development, and interrelations with individuals, other groups, and larger institutions.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P3240 - Abnormal Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theories of abnormal behavior, research methods in abnormal psychology; discussion of specific disorders, substance use disorders, and personality disorders. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P3250 - The Psychology Of Learning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Facts and principles of human and animal learning, especially as treated in theories attempting to provide a framework for understanding what learning is and how it takes place.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P3270 - The Psychology of Motivation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Research and theory concerning the factors that cause and/or direct behavior in human and nonhuman animals. Topics include: basic philosophical issues, the evolutionary and neural bases of motivational processes, and the contributions of learning, emotion, development, cognition, and social factors. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P3290 - Sensation and Perception |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to the study of sensation and perception in experimental psychology. Although all of the sensory and perceptual systems will be discussed (vision, audition, touch, taste and smell), the emphasis will be on vision and audition. Topics in vision will include pattern, perception, color perception, motion perception, depth perception, and object recognition. Topics in audition will include pitch perception, loudness perception, and sound localization. Basic anatomy and physiology of the sensory and perceptual systems will be discussed. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P3310 - Psychology Of Aging |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the psychological aspects of aging, including psychological theories of development, learning, memory, cognition, personality, sensation and perception, intelligence, psychopathology and its treatment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P3350 - Cognitive Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to the topic of human cognitive psychology. Cognitive psychology is concerned with how the mind acquires, processes, and represents information. The lectures focus on the fundamental theories, concepts, and empirical findings in the field. Topics include pattern recognition, memory, attention, language, imagery, decision-making and problem solving. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P3360 - Psychological Tests And Individual Differences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of psychological testing. Representative tests and their uses for evaluation and prediction. Emphasis on concepts of reliability, validity, standardization, norms, and item analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P3460 - Neuroscience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of the field of cognitive neuroscience. The neural basis of cognition is studies by considering the impact of neuropsychological case studies, neuroimaging (ERP and fMRI), and behavioral investigations on our understanding of sensory-motor systems, learning, memory, emotion, and spatial behavior. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PSY P3500 - Human Factors/Ergonomics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theories and data of experimental psychology applied to the problems of the interaction of people and technology. The course emphasizes the solution of problems in industrial settings, educational institutions, the transportation system, medical practice, and so forth. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P3540 - Statistical Analysis In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to statistics, including measures of central tendency and dispersion, elementary probability, and concepts of statistical inference, decision making, and hypothesis testing. Other topics covered include regression and correlation, analysis of variance and nonparametric methods. I, II, S
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P3650 - Psychology Of Religion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 Provides exposure to theoretical bases (e.g., behavioral, humanistic, phenomenological) and empirical research programs (e.g., biology, conversion, coping, health, human development, mental disorder, mysticism) developed by psychologists in an attempt to elucidate the role of religion in the human psychological experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P3900 - Special Topics In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY P3910 - Psychology Of Gender, Race And Ethnicity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores the impact of social and political forces on psychological development and adjustment. Focus is on black women, but includes both genders and all races. Contemporary theory on race, gender, and class is examined. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P4020 - Honors Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P4030 - Non-Experimental Research Methods In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides an overview of the various non-experimental methods used in psychology. Topics include (1) basic survey methodology including survey construction and sampling issues; (2) interviewing techniques; (3) basic correlational research including the basics of structural equation modeling; (4) secondary/archival data analysis; (5) observational data and sociometric techniques; (6) applied research techniques such as needs and program assessment; (7) participant observations; case studies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P4070 - Drugs and the Nervous System |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the major psychoactive drugs and how they act upon the brain to influence behavior. Discussion of the role of drugs as therapeutic agents for various clinical disorders and as probes to provide insight into brain function. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P4110 - Neural Base Of Learning And Memory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Comprehensive survey of the cellular and molecular bases of associative and nonassociative forms of learning and memory. Vertebrate and invertebrate model systems and preparations as well as data obtained from the human neuropsychology literature will be studied. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Presentation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PSY P4170 - Animal Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Animal behavior is a broad, integrative, field of study, combining elements of evolution and genetics, development, learning, behavioral ecology, ethology, sensory psychology and neuroscience, and a little anthropology and evolutionary psychology. The course will survey broad elements of animal behavior, including methods, models, and theories. A paper by each student will help integrate these topic areas by focusing on how they related to a particular chosen species or animal. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P4180 - Behavior Genetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Broad overview of the application of genetic methods to the study of human behavior. Emphasis is placed upon the use of family, twin, and adoption studies to address psychologically relevant questions concerning the nature and etiology of individual differences in behavior. No prior knowledge of genetics is assumed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P4200 - Laboratory In Community Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced laboratory in community psychology that focuses on students engaging in systems analysis, program development and evaluation, utilization review, service delivery, and similar projects while working at a community agency. A series of tasks designed as capstone experiences for each training module in the course is required and evaluated by the instructor; additional evaluation is provided by the on-site supervisor and students perform a self-evaluation. The course is restricted to psychology majors. Meets liberal arts and sciences junior/senior-level writing requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P4210 - Laboratory In Social Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Research methodology in the study of social behavior. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P4340 - Community Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A social orientation to problems of mental health, social adaptation, delivery systems and community change.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P4350 - Laboratory: Human Learn and Cognition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This section of P435 focuses on introducing students to the experimental techniques involved in studying the behavioral aspects of human visual perception. The course will involve a series of laboratory exercises and projects related to various aspects of visual processing, such as motion perception, depth perception, pattern identification and object recognition. It is strongly recommended that students take P329 (Sensation and Perception) before taking this section of P435. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P4570 - Topics In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Studies in special topics not ordinarily covered in other departmental courses. Topics vary with instructor and semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSY P4590 - History And Systems Of Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Historical background and critical evaluation of major theoretical systems of modern psychology: structuralism, functionalism, associationism, behaviorism, Gestalt psychology, and psychoanalysis. Methodological problems of theory construction and system making. Emphasizes integration of recent trends. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| PSY P4660 - Molecular And Cellular Neurobiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is intended to provide a general background into the cellular and molecular processes that give the nervous system its unique character. In this course we will cover the cell biology of neurons and glia and the structural and molecular elements that distinguish these cells from others in the body. It explores the development of both the peripheral and central the nervous system from early stages to the generation of neurons and glia. We also study some developmental processes such as cell adhesion, migration and axonal outgrowth, as well as the establishment of synaptic connections, and the elimination of cells and synapses. We will explore the cellular processes and molecules involved in activity dependent synaptic rearrangements and mechanisms of synaptic plasticity. We will also explore the genetic and molecular approaches that have been used in model organisms including the mollusk Aplysia, the fly Drosophila and rodents, to uncover the biological basis for learning and memory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PSY P4930 - Supervised Research |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Active participation in research. An independent experiment of modest magnitude, participation in ongoing research in a single laboratory. Students who enroll in P4930 will be expected to enroll in P4940. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Gain a working knowledge of research.
|
| PSY P4950 - Readings And Research In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. May be repeated twice for a maximum of 9 credits. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times or for a maximum of 9 credits
|
| PSYI 54500 - Psychopharmacology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the effects of drugs on behavior, cognitive functioning, and emotions. Emphasis will be placed on the practical advantages of understanding how psychotropic drugs work and on how the brain functions in health and disease. Students will be exposed to the most current theories and research in the field. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PSYI 56000 - Behavioral Genetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of behavioral genetics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. To learn the classical and current tools and approaches of quantitative behavioral genetics and their application to behavioral neuroscience and psychopharmacology.
2. To learn fundamental aspects of the molecular basis of inheritance and methods of study, with emphasis on processes that link genetic inheritance to expression and variability in behavior.
3. To learn the current methods of gene targeting as applied in transgenic and knockout animals.
4. To gain broad understanding of some of the techniques used to study quantitative genetics in human populations.
5. To apply the knowledge learned throughout the course to evaluate critically and in detail, the strengths, limitations, and relative merits of animal and human behavioral genetic studies.
|
| PSYI 59100 - Psychopathology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intensive survey of the methods, theories, and research concerning the nature, causes, and development of psychopathology. An evaluation of current systems of assessment and classification of abnormal behavior is emphasized. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PSYI 59500 - Seminar In Teaching Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. A problem-solving approach to teaching psychology. Faculty members present their innovative techniques. Participants evaluate each other's classroom performances. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSYI 61300 - Psychiatric Rehabilitation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A seminar examining recent developments in the rehabilitation of persons with severe psychiatric disabilities. Covers assertive case management, vocational approaches, clubhouse models, residential alternatives, psycho education, and the consumer movement. Field observations complement classroom instruction. Issues in program planning and cost effectiveness will be discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PSYI 61400 - Behavioral Medicine In Rehabilitation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The theory and practice of behavioral medicine will be explored. Emphasis is on the application of behavioral principles to individuals suffering from various chronic diseases or disabilities including spinal-cord injury, chronic pain, cancer, diabetes, strokes, cardiovascular diseases, and epilepsy. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PSYI 61800 - Interventions In Health Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will familiarize students with clinical interventions and research relevant to health problems and lifestyle. This will enable students to critically evaluate the work that has been accomplished and to design and implement intervention protocols. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PSYI 64300 - Field Methods and Experimentation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course will cover methods appropriate for field experimentation and program evaluation. Topics will include quasi-experimental designs, sampling procedures, and issues associated with program evaluation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PSYI 65000 - Developmental Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Major concepts, principles, and facts concerning the biological and environmental influences on behavioral and psychological development. Particular emphasis given to essential principles of ontogenetic development (life span) emerging from current research in genetics and psychology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PSYI 66400 - Psychological Assessment In Rehabilitation I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Presentation of general principles of psychological assessment, professional practice, interviewing, intelligence/cognitive assessment, and psychological report writing. Supervised practice in the development of direct service skills in interviewing, behavioral observation and psychometric assessment of cognitive abilities. Emphasis will be on functional implications of test results for rehabilitation populations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PSYI 66500 - Intervention I: Counseling Approach |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will introduce the doctoral student to intervention procedures used in rehabilitation psychology. The course has both a didactic and clinical skills component, involving traditional counseling interventions, behavior therapy, and biofeedback. Applications to disabled populations will be emphasized. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PSYI 66600 - Intervention II: Cognitive-Behavioral Intervention |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory, research, and clinical application of cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT). Addresses the history and development of CBT, assessment, and intake interview process, CBT intervention techniques, and CBT treatment of several disorders. Relevant multicultural issues also will be discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PSYI 66900 - Psychological Assessment in Rehabilitation II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Presentation of psychometric foundations and the basic prediction model in personality/interest assessment. Coverage of the history of personality, assessment, personality development and supervised clinical practice in personality/interest assessment in rehabilitation. Emphasis is on prediction of everyday functioning. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PSYI 67000 - Ethical, Legal, And Cultural Issues In Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of models of ethical decision making. Examination of ethical principles and legal mandates that apply to professional psychology, including psychologists' roles in healthcare service delivery, consultation (clinical and organizational) research, and teaching. Examination of cultural issues, including issues related to ethnicity, age, gender, religion, and sexual orientation. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PSYI 67500 - Human Neuropsychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of essential neuroanatomy, survey of experimental and correlational research methods in the study of brain-behavior relationships, and overview of the history of neuropsychology. Critical examination of neural models for human behavior: hemispheric specialization and integration, sensation/perception, motor skills, language, spatial processing, attention, memory, executive operations, and sex differences. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PSYI 68900 - Practicum In Clinical Rehabilitation Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 6.00. Supervised clinical experience working with individuals who have physical, medical, and/or mental health problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSYI 69100 - Seminar In Rehabilitation Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Current trends, problems, and developments in rehabilitation. Students pursue a special interest and mutually share information and experience with the group. Individual report and group discussions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PSYI 69700 - Internship In Clinical Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 9.00. Opportunities for application of theory and practice of rehabilitation psychology and case management in a rehabilitation setting under supervision of the psychology department and agency. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PTGS 10100 - Portuguese Level I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A beginning course in Portuguese. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PTGS 10200 - Portuguese Level II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of PTGS 10100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| PTGS 10500 - Accelerated Portuguese |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Accelerated acquisition of basic Portuguese for speakers of Spanish or another romance language. Capitalizes on students' backgrounds in related languages to build skills in listening comprehension, reading comprehension, basic writing, and conversation. Knowledge of a romance language. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PTGS 11200 - Elementary Portuguese Conversation I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Development of oral skills for self-expression. Guided practice in conversation to enhance communicative competence. Small group (enrollment limited to 10 per section) discussions in Portuguese on practical topics. May be taken concurrently with PTGS 102. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PTGS 20100 - Portuguese Level III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Readings from the works of nineteenth-century and contemporary Portuguese writers; practice in speaking and writing Portuguese. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Discussing personal relations and academic studies.
2. Giving and receiving directions to a destination and/or in order to complete a task.
3. Preparing short oral presentations on topics related to Portuguese and Brazilian cultures.
4. Writing short essays on specified topics.
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| PTGS 20200 - Portuguese Level IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of PTGS 20100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PTGS 21100 - Elementary Portuguese Conversation II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Continuation of PTGS 11200. May be taken concurrently with PTGS 20100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PTGS 21200 - Elementary Portuguese Conversation III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Continuation of PTGS 21100. May be taken concurrently with PTGS 20200. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PTGS 24100 - Introduction To The Study Of Luso-Brazilian Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading and discussion of selected poetry, prose and theatre from Portugal, Brazil and other Portuguese-speaking countries; introduction to critical discourse and basic concepts of literary theory. Texts, discussion and written assignments in Portuguese. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PTGS 30100 - Portuguese Level V |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continued development of Portuguese speaking, listening, reading and writing abilities, using materials dealing primarily with everyday life and civilization in the Portuguese-speaking countries from a variety of sources (e.g., newspapers, magazines, TV, recent literature, etc). Conducted primarily in Portuguese. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PTGS 30200 - Portuguese Level VI |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Further work to develop speaking, listening, reading, and writing abilities in Portuguese on the basis of materials dealing primarily with the ideas and events that have shaped present-day Portuguese-speaking countries. Conducted primarily in Portuguese. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PTGS 33000 - Brazilian, Portuguese, And African Cinema |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Screening and analysis of selected films from Portuguese- speaking countries: Brazil, Portugal, Angola, Mozambique, Cape Verde, Guinea-Bissau, S. Tome and Principe, with discussion of their cultural contexts (colonial/post-colonial societies; cross-Atlantic relationships; racial diversity; minority/majority issues). Knowledge of Portuguese not required.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PTGS 39800 - Topics In Portuguese |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced studies of particular aspects of Portuguese (e.g. culture, civilization, literature, linguistics, film, art, politics, etc.) by examining a varied selection of works. Readings, discussion, and papers in Portuguese. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PTGS 39900 - Special Study Abroad Credit In Portuguese |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. This course number is for assignment after the fact of credits in Portuguese earned while enrolled at a foreign university on a Study Abroad program which cannot be appropriately accommodated under an established Purdue course number. It is not for use for courses offered at or conducted by Purdue. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
|
| PTGS 49800 - Advanced Topics In Portuguese |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced studies of particular aspects of Portuguese (e.g. culture, civilization, literature, linguistics, film, art, politics, ect.) by examining a varied selection of works. Readings, discussion, and papers in Portuguese. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| PTGS 55100 - Brazilian Poetry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the major currents and most important writers of Brazilian poetry. Readings include Gregorio de Matos, Goncalves Dias, Castro Alves, Mario de Andrade, Manuel Bandeira, and Cecilia Meireles. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PTGS 55500 - Brazilian Drama |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the primary movements and most important works of Brazilian theatre. Readings include plays by Nelson Rodrigues, Dias Gomes, Ariano Suassuna, and Jorge Andrade. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PTGS 55700 - Brazilian Fiction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the development and major texts of Brazilian fiction. Readings include novels or short stories by Jose de Alencar, Machado de Assis, Graciliano Ramos, and Clarice Lispector, among others. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| PTGS 59000 - Directed Reading In Portuguese |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Directed readings in Portuguese. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PTGS 59400 - Special Topics In Luso-Brazilian Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| PULM F3030 - Introduction To Human Disease For Respiratory Therapists |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course gives respiratory therapy students a general introduction to a broad variety of human diseases. Etiology, diagnosis, and treatment will be discussed. Typically offered Summer, Fall, Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PULM F3110 - Cardiorespiratory Physiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the normal anatomy and physiology of the cardiorespiratory system, including lung mechanics, ventilation, perfusion, diffusion, gas transport, and acid-base balance. Typically offered Summer, Fall, Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PULM F3150 - Cardiorespiratory Assessment And Patient Care |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic cardiorespiratory assessment, vital signs, laboratory studies, and charting. Includes required preclinical skills and practice. Typically offered Summer, Fall, Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PULM F3250 - General Respiratory Care |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course focuses on basic respiratory therapy procedures. Physiologic applications, effects on the cardiopulmonary system, and hazards for each therapeutic procedure are discussed. Topics include physical principles, airway care, humidity and aerosol therapy, medical gas therapy, hyperinflation therapy, and chest physical therapy. Typically offered Summer, Fall, Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PULM F3260 - Respiratory Care Techniques I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course focuses on the most important clinical laboratory procedures and on procedures used by the respiratory therapist. Specifically, this course instructs students in patient assessment, oxygen administration, humidity and aerosol therapy, chest physical therapy, hyperinflation therapy, and monitoring expired gas. Typically offered Summer, Fall, Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| PULM F3330 - Cardiorespiratory Pharmacology I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course provides an overview of the basics of pharmacology therapeutics, focusing on dosages and solutions and bronchodilator drugs. Indications, side effects, mechanism of action, and route of administration are discussed. Typically offered Summer, Fall, Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| RADI R1080 - Medical Terminology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to origin and derivation of medical words as well as their meaning. This course uses a self-instructional format.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| RADI R1100 - Introduction to Radiography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the functions and basic procedures of a diagnostic radiography department. Emphasis is placed on radiographic equipment, radiation protection, positioning terminology and procedures used on typical radiographic examinations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| RADI R1120 - Introduction To Radiography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to Radiography. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| RADI R1140 - Radiographic Procedures I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Concepts radiography with emphasis on the radiographic procedures used to demonstrate the skeletal system and major contrast media procedures. Includes image study. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| RADI R1150 - Radiographic Procedures I Lab |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Practice and instruction in methods of performing radiographic examinations presented in R114. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| RADI R1180 - Principles of Radiography I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic concepts of radiation, its production, and its interactions with matter. Introduction to imaging production including digital radiography. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| RADI R1520 - Basic Clinical Experience I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Clinical application of radiographic positioning, procedure, and exposure on cooperative, uncomplicated patients, while under the supervision of a registered radiologic technologist. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| RADI R1530 - Pediatric Clinical Experience I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00.Clinical application of radiographic positioning, procedure, and exposure on cooperative, uncomplicated patients in a pediatric practice environment, while under the supervision of a registered radiologic technologist. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| RADI R1850 - Medical Terminology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to the origin, derivation, and meaning of medical words. . Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| RADI R4080 - Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 0.5 to 4.0. This is a variable topics course on Radiology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.500 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| RADX R1050 - Orientation To Radiography And Medicial Imaging |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to the field of radiology and its history. Ethical and professional Practice Standards are introduced. Professional organizations, accrediting and credentialing agencies will be explored. Basic radiation protection practices for the patient, personnel and general public will be addressed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RADX R1060 - Fundamentals Of Patient Care For Medical Imaging |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Concepts in patient care including the physical and psychological needs of the patient and the radiographer's role in patient assessment and education. Infection control, sterile techniques, body mechanics, immobilization and vital signs will be incorporated through lecture and practice exercises. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RADX R1110 - Radiography I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The knowledge, skills and application of aligning body parts, image receptors and radiographic tube in routine radiographic examinations. Emphasis given to skeletal, chest and abdominal procedures. Correlation will be made between anatomy, physiology, principles of radiography and radiographic image critique. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RADX R1900 - Introduction To Clinical Education |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An introduction to clinical education as applied to medical imaging. Issues such as patient confidentiality including but not limited to HIPAA, teamwork, self-assessment, communication and interaction with healthcare providers, patients and caregivers will be addressed. Observational rotations in the clinical settings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RADX R1910 - Medical Imaging Clinical Education I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00: Clinical application of medical imaging techniques including patient assessment, positioning, technical exposure selection, patient education and documentation. Procedures observed or performed under applicable level of supervision. Students demonstrate mastery of clinical objectives appropriate to didactic and clinical experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RADX R1920 - Medicial Imaging Clinical Education II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00: Clinical application of medical imaging techniques including patient assessment, positioning, technical exposure selection, patient education and documentation. Procedures observed or performed under applicable level of supervision. Students demonstrate mastery of clinical objectives appropriate to didactic and clinical experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RADX R2060 - Advanced Patient Care In Medical Imaging |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Advanced concepts in patient care including the identification of physical and psychological needs of the patients through assessment, patient education, and emergency care procedures and pharmacology. Contrast media, indication, contraindications and adverse reactions will be explored. Response to medical emergency will be simulated in lab setting. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RADX R2110 - Radiography II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Anatomy, physiology and positioning for the vertebral column, gastrointestinal system, urinary system and cerebral visceral and vascular cranium. Correlation will be made between anatomy, physiology, principles of radiography and radiographic critique. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RADX R2150 - Medical Imaging Modalities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to current and emerging advanced imaging and therapeutic modalities in the radiologic sciences. Diagnostic and therapeutic modalities utilizing contrast media will be explored. Analysis of indications and contraindications for specific procedures based on pathology and patient condition. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RADX R2550 - Radiation Biology And Protection In Radiography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Radiation safety issues critical to medical imaging practice will be analyzed. A study of the effects of ionizing radiation on cells, organs and the whole body. Organizations and regulations which influence radiation exposure will be discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RADX R2700 - Radiologic Physics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Radiologic Physics includes the fundamental principles of radiation physics, x-ray generating equipment and equipment quality control. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RADX R2710 - Foundations Of Image Acquisition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Foundation of image acquisition. Introduces the principles of radiographic image production, image capturing devices and image characteristics and quality. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RADX R2910 - Medical Imaging Clinical Education III |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00: Clinical application of medical imaging techniques including patient assessment, positioning, technical exposure selection, patient education and documentation. Procedures observed or performed under applicable level of supervision. Students demonstrate mastery of clinical objectives appropriate to didactic and clinical experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RADX R2920 - Medical Imaging Clinical Education IV |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00: Clinical application of medical imaging techniques including patient assessment, positioning, technical exposure selection, patient education and documentation. Procedures observed or performed under applicable level of supervision. Students demonstrate mastery of clinical objectives appropriate to didactic and clinical experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RADX R2930 - Medical Imaging Clinical Education V |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00: Clinical application of medical imaging techniques including patient assessment, positioning, technical exposure selection, patient education and documentation. Procedures observed or performed under applicable level of supervision. Students demonstrate mastery of clinical objectives appropriate to didactic and clinical experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RADX R3010 - Procedures In Computed Tomography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. CT procedures will be taught for differentiation of specific structures, patient symptomology and pathology. Includes selectable scan parameters, filming and archiving of the images. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RADX R3040 - Cross Sectional Anatomy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of human anatomy and physiology as identified in cross sectional imaging. Relationships between adjacent anatomical structures will be analyzed in axial, coronal, and sagittal planes. Computer Tomography (CT) Magnetic Resonance (MR) and sonographic images will be incorporated in lecture and case study. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RADX R3050 - Radiographic Image Critique |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Overview of assessment factors utilized to determine diagnostic quality of radiographic images. Analysis of images using clinical assessment techniques to identify anatomy for all body systems and to ascertain proper and improper positioning, image quality and acceptability based on established professional protocol. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RADX R3060 - Radiographic Pathology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of diseases including causes, symptoms, and methods of diagnosis and treatment. Emphasis is given to the various diagnostic modes in Radiology and the identification of pathologic variances on radiographs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RADX R3070 - Pharmacology For Medical Imaging |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An exploration of pharmacology discussing the impact of drugs and the utilization in medical imaging. Classification and types of drugs, administration routes and possible adverse effects will be analyzed. Discussions will integrate the selection of drugs with their appropriate use and possible effects. Pharmaceutical regulation will be reviewed. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RADX R3100 - Seminar In Radiography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of current trends in medical imaging and comprehensive overview of Radiography including ethical and professional performance standards assessed through a series of projects, examinations and clinical competency performance activities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RADX R3200 - Professional Development In Medical Imaging |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Personal and professional development methods and career pathways for medical imaging professionals with be analyzed. Discussion of opportunities for professional development including professional organizations, community service and personal growth. Professional networking opportunities. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RADX R3710 - Advanced Image Acquisition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced Image Acquisition is the continuation of Foundations of Image Acquisition with emphasis on the application of radiologic principles applied to image formation, imaging equipment and image quality. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RADX R3910 - Clinical Education VI |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 5.00. Clinical application of medical imaging techniques including patient assessment, positioning, technical exposure selection, patient education and documentation. Procedures observed or performed under applicable level of supervision. Students demonstrate mastery of clinical objectives appropriate to didactic and clinical experience. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RADX R4000 - Leadership In Medical Imaging |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an opportunity to explore and analyze leadership in medical imaging. Leadership theory, team-building, and change management will be discussed. The leader-follower relationship and leader behaviors and attributes will be investigated. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RADX R4010 - Legal And Ethical Issues In Medical Imaging |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of legal and ethical issues affecting the medical imaging environment. Sources and types of law including constitutional, statutory, regulatory, administrative, contract, criminal and common law and associated legal theories will be discussed. Ethical issues related to professional ethical standards will be discussed as applied to actual clinical scenarios. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RADX R4040 - 3D Reconstruction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Develop an understanding of multiplanar images of anatomy and correlated pathology and digital image post processing for the performance of critical assessment of volumetric image renderings. Procedures and quality assurance in 3-D image post processing will be analyzed. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RADX R4100 - Picture Archiving And Communications Systems/Radiology Information Systems (RIS) |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of picture archiving and communications systems utilized in medical imaging. Radiology information systems including security and privacy will be analyzed. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RADX R4500 - Quality Management In Medical Imaging |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of quality management as related to medical imaging will be analyzed. Data collection and analysis will be discussed. Students will develop a quality management project for application in imaging facility. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RADX R4510 - Principles Of Computed Tomography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Physical principles and instrumentation involved in computed tomography will be covered. Data acquisition and manipulation techniques, computed tomography systems and operations will be explored. CT image processing and display will be examined. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RADX R4810 - Medical Imaging Internship Capstone |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Opportunity for student to develop a project in either clinical or leadership concentration focused on an appropriate area of study in conjunction with a mentor in the field. Aspects of the professional coursework and bachelor degree framework will be included in project assessment. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| RAON J4060 - Radiation And Cancer Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Emphasis on the modern principles of cellular and molecular biology as they relate to normal and cancer cell response both in vitro and in vivo to various radiation types, e.g., X/gamma rays, neutrons, and charged particles. Topics include dose time, fractionation, repair, tumor kinetics, hyperthermia, and radiation protection. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| RECR 10000 - Leisure And Recreation In Contemporary Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of the functional roles of leisure and recreation in cultural contexts. Evaluation of leisure behavior in Western society; the Protestant work ethic; utilitarianism; class-based variations; social, economic, and psychological perspectives in leisure and recreation activity. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Dept of Health & Kinesiology
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| REG 92000 - Welcoming Convocation |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Registrar
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| REG 99200 - Special Requirement Completed |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. This course will be used for posting purposes only. It will be added to a student's class schedule then posted to the transcripts when the EXL requirement has been completed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| REG ISS - Weeks Of Welcome |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Weeks of Welcome for International Students.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: No College Designated
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| REL 11200 - Religion And Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (PHIL 11200) An introduction to modern academic theories regarding the origin, form, and function of religion in human life supported by case studies drawn from various world religious traditions. Credit not given for both REL 11200 and PHIL 11200. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| REL 20000 - Introduction To The Study Of Religion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will introduce students to the academic study of religion through an exploration of various methodologies available for a critical, reflective investigation of the study of religion. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| REL 20100 - Interpretation Of The New Testament |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An investigation of the religious content of the Christian Scriptures in light of the historical, social, and intellectual contexts out of which they emerged. Other canons and extra-canonical interpretations of the New Testament will also be investigated. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| REL 20200 - Interpretation Of The Old Testament |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An investigation of the religious content of documents Christian call the "Old Testament" in light of the historical, social, and intellectual contexts out of which they arose. The student will be introduced to problems and methods in their interpretation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| REL 20300 - Theology Of Paul |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A critical examination of the Pauline and Deutero-Pauline epistles, the book of Acts, and other first century texts associated with Paul of Tarsus. Students will be introduced to problems and methods in the interpretation of ancient texts. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| REL 20400 - Introduction To Christian Theology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introductory survey of the goals and aims of theology in the Christian tradition. Focus is on the content of Christian theology, its methodological presuppositions and principles of development. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| REL 23000 - Religions Of The East |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (PHIL 33000) A study of the history, teaching, and present institutions of the religions of India, Southeast Asia, China, and Japan. This will include Hinduism, Jainism, Sikhism, Buddhism, Confucianism, Taoism, Shintoism, and Zoroastrianism. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| REL 23100 - Religions Of The West |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (PHIL 33100) A comparative study of the origins, institutions, and theologies of the three major Western religions, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| REL 25000 - A History Of The Christian Afterlife |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An exploration of the ways Christians have envisioned the afterlife, including New Testament descriptions. Apocryphal notions, Patristic conceptions, mystical and 19th century descriptions of heaven as sexual union, and 20th century understandings of the afterlife as a "process of education". Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| REL 29300 - Topics In Religious Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected topics and issues in the academic study of religion. May be repeated with a different topic for a maximum of 9 credit hours. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| REL 30000 - Religions Of The Ancient World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Historical survey of the religious life of the peoples inhabiting the wider Mediterranean world from the Early Bronze Age through the end of the classical antiquity, especially as expressed in Egyptian, Mesopotamian, Syro-Canaanite, Israelite, Hittite, Iranian, Greek, Roman, and early Christian traditions. Topics addressed include myths and ritual, deities and the afterlife, ethics and law codes, divination and prophecy, concepts of pollution and purity, literary and artistic expression, theological and philosophic discourse, and the nature of borrowing and syncretism. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Introduce students with little or no prior knowledge of the religious life of the ancient world to its main contours, especially in terms of the range of interactions and borrowings which obtained between different peoples cross the oikoumene stretching from the Mediterranean heartlands to the eastern reaches of Southwest Asia.
2. Introduce students to the study of religion as a modern academic discipline, primarily by guiding them in thinking, speaking, and writing analytically about religion not as some abstract essence or thing “out there”, but rather as a force which is shaped by human experience in time and space.
3. Encourage students to think seriously about the meaning of polyphony and heterogeneity in historical human experience generally, and in religion in particular, by calling upon them to “account for diversity” through critically reflecting upon its role in the religious lives of ancient peoples.
|
| REL 30100 - Islam |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A historically-oriented examination of the unfolding of the Islamic tradition from its origin in seventh-century Arabia to the present day, paying particular attention to the key moments, institutions, and actors which exemplify its historical diversity as both a world religion and transnational civilization. Typically offered Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| REL 30200 - Christianity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide extensive background to the historical development of Christianity. Students will explore the complexity of Christian belief systems and demonstrate the various ways belief is applied to the politics of everyday life. We will survey the rituals and practices of Christian communities, with a focus on the varieties of scriptual interpretation, historical experience, doctrine, and behavior. Typically offered Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| REL 30500 - Judaism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A historical and thematic survey of the varied religious, social, cultural and intellectual traditions of Judaism from origins to the present day emphasizing the major events, practices, movements, and traditions which have informed the lives of Jewish communities from the Near East and the Mediterranean, to Europe and the New World from antiquity to the early twenty-first century. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Introduce students with little or no prior knowledge of Judaism to its major themes, movements, practices, and values.
2 Lead students to critically evaluate the historical, social, cultural, and political contexts framing the varied forms and expressions of Jewish religiosity past and present.
3. Assist students in improving their critical thinking, speaking, and writing skills through exposing them to the norms and values of the academic study of religion and asking them to apply its methods to the subject at hand.
|
| REL 30600 - Hinduism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An exploration of the central components of the wider Hindu worldview through a thematic and historical study of the tradition’s major texts, myths, beliefs, rituals, institutions, and forms of religious and philosophical expression from the Vedic period to the present. Special attention will be given to understanding the wider implications of foundational religious concepts such as dharma and caste. Atman and Brahman, karma and samsara, avatara and divine descent, rebirth and liberation, as well as the role of women within and across Hindu traditions. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. To furnish students with little or no prior knowledge of Hinduism with a broad understanding of its major features.
2. To lead students to an informed understanding of a variety of Hindu traditions in both their historical and contemporary manifestations.
3. To help students develop their critical thinking, reading, and writing skills through a variety of graded assignments.
|
| REL 30700 - Buddhism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examinination of the history of Buddhism from its beginnings in India through its diffusion across Central, East, and Southeast Asia, and eventually the West. Topics covered include the historical diversity of Buddhist belief and practice, literary production, philosophical discourse, and the varied articulations of the tradition in different social and cultural settings, including contemporary Europe and North America. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Undertsand the basic development of Buddhist traditions from their inception in India to the present day.
2. Become conversant with emic concepts essential to the understanding of “religion" in Asia.
3. Compare philosophical, ritual, contemplative, monastic, and popular traditions in different geographical, cultural, and historical contexts.
4. Challenege commonly held assumptions about Buddhist traditions by integrating the study of living traditions of practice with the study of primary texts.
|
| REL 31100 - African Traditional Philosophy And Religion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course offers a general survey of aspects of African traditional philosophy and religious beliefs and practices. Emphasis will be on themes rather than on individual national tribal religions. Case studies will be limited to West Africa with a focus on the Akan of Ghana, the Yoruba of Nigeria, and the Mendes and Creoles of Sierra Leone. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| REL 31200 - The Black Religious Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to help students gain an appreciation for the ways African Americans have used religion as resistance to oppression. We begin with an exploration of religions in West Africa prior to the trans-Atlantic slave trade, including the role of Muslim slaves in the formation of slave religion in the Americas. We will also look at syncretism and the development of new religions in slave communities (Voodoo, Santeria, Shango, Candomble, etc.). We will also discuss the role of Christianity in the lives of African Americans, particularly in the segregated South. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| REL 31400 - Religion And Violence |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comparative study of religiously-motivated violence across the world's religious traditions with special attention given to the social, political, psychological, and philosophical dimensions of contemporary global religious conflict. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| REL 31500 - Religion And Women |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comparative study of the position of women across the world's religious traditions with special attention given to the impact of the women's movement and feminist thought on the religious life of women in contemporary societies and the development of woman-oriented spiritual movements and religious practices. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| REL 31700 - Ancient Judaism And Early Christianity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a study of the emergence of Judaism and the rise of Christianity out of roots in the history of ancient Israel. This will include noticing the effects of Greek culture, evidence of anti-Semitism and admiration of the Jews, conversion in a setting of religious pluralism, and the development of Jewish and Christian self-definition in this climate. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| REL 31800 - The Bible And Its Early Interpreters |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will start with observation of the development of early themes in later parts of the Hebrew Bible and proceed to the on-going influence of these themes in Jewish literature outside the Hebrew canon (apocrypha, pseudepigrapha, targums, midrash, Josephus, Philo, and other Hellenistic Jewish authors), as well as in pagan literature of this era and in early Christian literature, particularly the New Testament. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| REL 32100 - Religion And The Civil Rights Movement |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the religious dimensions of the Civil Rights Movement in America from the Second World War through the Vietnam War. We will examine the interracial, interdenominational, and interfaith aspects of the movement as they took shape in three areas: American streets (civil disobedience and non-violent direct action), American churches (denominational conflict over race), and American courts (civil rights litigation and legislation). Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| REL 32300 - Religion And Popular Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will focus on the portrayal and treatment of religion in popular culture and will examine some of the ways in which religious and mythic themes are expressed in such pop culture forums as television shows, films, mass-market fiction, and music. Students will be asked to think about the various ways in which traditional religious themes, symbols and images, and texts make their way into our cultural consciousness through mass media, as well as how popular religious ideas are reflected in mainstream cultural outlets. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Lead students to a critical and informed understanding of the many ways in which religious and mythic themes are present in influential pop culture forums.
2. Expose students to some for the analytic and interpretive methods currently used in the academic study of religion through the in-depth examination of the place of religion in particular pop culture forums.
3. Assist students in refining their critical thinking skills, which is evaluated though both oral and written assignments, including a high-stakes group presentation.
|
| REL 35000 - History Of Christian Theology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the development of Christian theology in light of the opposing philosophical ideas and movements that challenged it. Specifically, the development of theology will be understood in light of Western conceptions of science. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| REL 35100 - Christian Mysticism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A critical, historical examination of the development of Christian mystical thought, beginning with its earliest intimations in the Hebrew Scriptures, the thought of Plato and Aristotle and continuing through Patristic, Medieval, Renaissance, Reformation, Counter-Reformation and Modern periods to the present. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| REL 38100 - Islam And Modernity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the ways in which Muslim societies have responded to the challenges of modernity in varied social, cultural, political, and embodied contexts. Special attention will be paid to issues of social change, the nation state, globalization, diaspora, and the rise of reform, revivalist, and other modern movements. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| REL 40100 - Studies In Sacred Texts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In-depth scholarly study of a selected scripture or classic text or texts from one of the major world religious traditions alongside relevant secondary literature. May be repeated with a different topic for a maximum of 9 credit hours. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| REL 40200 - Mysticism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In-depth examination of the religious, literary, cultural, and social dimensions of mysticism within and across the major world religious traditions with particular attention paid to modern academic theories regarding mystical experience and its interpretation. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| REL 45000 - Christian Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course explores the historical development of Christian moral theology, from pre-Christian times to the present. It includes a study of Biblical moral conceptions, patristic, medieval, Enlightenment, modern, and contemporary understandings of Christian ethics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| REL 45100 - Christology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course examines the historical development of Christological doctrine in the Christian faith from the age of the New Testament to the late 20th/early 21st century, paying special attention to the New Testament and conciliar formulations. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| REL 45200 - Systematic Theology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the nature, tasks, and methods of what Christians have called "systematic theology", historically conceived through an exploration of the writings of figures such as Augustine, Aquinas, Melancthon, John Calvin, Barth, and Paul Tillich. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: College of Liberal Arts Admin
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| REL 49300 - Undergraduate Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive examination of selected topics in religious studies. Topic varies. May be repeated with a different topic for a maximum of 9 credit hours. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the primary concerns, objectives, and modes of argumentation found across a diverse body of philosophical literature.
2. Understand the basic historical development of Buddhist philosophical traditions from their inception in India to their subsequent development and proliferation in Tibet.
3. Contextualize Buddhist philosophical traditions within the cultural milieu in which they arose and thrived.
4. Become conversant with emic concepts essential to the understanding of “philosophy” and “religion” in Asia.
5. Challenge commonly held assumptions about Buddhist traditions by integrating the study of living traditions of practice with the study of primary texts.
|
| REL 49500 - Individual Readings In Religious Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individual readings under the guidance of a faculty member. May be repeated for up to six credits with different topics. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| REL 49900 - Senior Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Senior-level directed studies course devoted to the research, writing, and presentation of an original project in the field of religious studies under the direction of one or more faculty members. May be repeated for up to 9 credit. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
Learning Objectives:
1. The refinement and display of research skills appropriate to the successful completion of an undergraduate program of study in the field of religious studies.
2. The refinement and display of written communication skills appropriate to the successful completion of an undergraduate program of study in the field of religious studies.
3. The refinement and display of oral communication skills appropriate to the successful completion of an undergraduate program of study in the field of religious studies.
|
| REL B1510 - Religions Of The World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory survey of the major religions of the world (Hinduism, Buddhism, Judaism, Islam, Christianity, and others), emphasizing how people live out their faiths in their daily lives.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| REL R1000 - Studies In Religion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Select introductory issues in religion. Interdisciplinary in emphasis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| REL R1100 - Biblical Narratives In Western Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of several major biblical stories, plus an examination of the ways in which these stories live on as they have triggered the modern imagination of artists, writers, and composers.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| REL R1110 - The Bible |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A critical introduction to the major periods, persons, events, and literatures that constitute the Bible; designed to provide general humanities-level instruction on this important text. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| REL R1200 - Images Of Jesus |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to introduce students to the variety of traditions about the figure of Jesus. It will acquaint students with the wide array of images of the Jesus character through a historical analysis of these images portrayed in texts, art, music, film, and TV. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| REL R1330 - Introduction To Religion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the study of religion through analysis and reconsideration of the core question "What is religion?". Major theories of religion are assessed and applied to recent case studies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| REL R1520 - Religions of the West |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The purpose of the course is for students to develop ways of understanding the religions of the West (Christianity, Judaism, and Islam) in the context of Western (American) society and culture. To do this, the course will focus on three aspects of Western religion: notions of God, scripture, and ritual. We will approach these phenomena from a comparative perspective, meaning that we will be interested in looking at both the similarities between the religions of the West as well as those differences that mark each as distinctive. A major component of our approach to religion will be examining how each tradition is treated in popular American culture, media, and literature. We will use various animated series, such as The Simpsons, Futurama, and King of the Hill as our guide to each of the topics covered in the course. We will also read three novels that will exemplify the aspects of Western religion discussed in class. Fiction is particularly important in helping us gain appreciations for religious meaning since it allows us to "walk in the shoes" of other people-to see the world through eyes different than our own. Typically offered Fall Summer Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| REL R1530 - Religions Of Asia |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Modes of thinking, views of the world and the sacred; the human predicament and paths to freedom; human ideas and value systems in the religions of India, China and Japan.
. Typically offered Fall Summer Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| REL R1600 - Introduction To Religion In America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to religious traditions and practices that influenced American history and culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| REL R1730 - American Religion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A consideration of American religion, with particular emphasis on the development of religious diversity and religious freedom in the context of the American social, political, and economic experience. Special attention will be directed to changes in Roman Catholicism and Judaism as well as to alterations in the nature of American Protestantism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| REL R1800 - Introduction To Christianity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of beliefs, rituals, and practices of the Christian community with a focus on the varieties of scriptural interpretation, historical experience, doctrine, and behavior. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| REL R2020 - Topics In Religious Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected topics, issues, and movements in religion. May be repeated once with a different topic for a maximum of 6 credit hours. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| REL R2100 - Introduction To Old Testament/Hebrew Bible |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of its beliefs, practices, and institutions from the Patriarchs to the Maccabean period. Introduction to the biblical literature and other ancient Near East documents.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| REL R2120 - Comparative Religions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Approaches to the comparison of recurrent themes, religious attitudes, and practices found in selected Eastern and Western traditions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| REL R2200 - Introduction to the New Testament |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces students to the historical study of earliest Christianity as found in the New Testament. How did a group of Jewish followers of a prophet names Jesus become a religion that worshipped Jesus as ?Son of God?? After an introduction to the Greco-Roman world, we will study the letters of Paul; Jesus and the gospels; and the development of the early churches. Students will read the entire New Testament as well as the Gospel of Thomas and the Acts of Paul and Thecla. Textbooks: Wayne A. Meeks, ed., "The Harper Collins Study Bible"; Bart Ehrman, "The New Testament: A Historical Introduction to the Early Christian Writings"; Burton Throckmorton, "Gospel Parallels";. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| REL R2230 - Religion And Imagination |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory studies of the nature, function, and significance of myths, symbols, and images in religious and cultural systems, with examples drawn from various traditions and with special attention devoted to their relationships to the contemporary imagination. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| REL R2330 - Introduction To The Hebrew Bible (Old Testament) |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A critical examination of the literary, political, cultural, and religious history of Israel from the period of the Patriarchs to the Restoration, with emphasis on the growth and formation of the major traditions contained in the Hebrew Bible.
Introduction to audio, field, and studio production. Bridges the theoretical and practical aspects of production through
written hands-on exercises.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| REL R2430 - Introduction To The New Testament |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Origins of the Christian movement and development of its beliefs, practices, and institutions in the first century. Primary source is the New Testament, with due attention to non-Christian sources from the same environment.
. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| REL R2570 - Introduction To Islam |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the "religious world" of Islam: the Arabian milieu before Muhammad's prophetic call, the career of the Prophet. Qur'an and hadith, ritual and the "pillars" of Muslim praxis, legal, and theological traditions; mysticism and devotional piety, reform and revivalist movements. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| REL R3000 - Studies In Religion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected topics and movements in religion, seen from an interdisciplinary viewpoint. May be repeated twice under different titles. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| REL R3010 - Women And Religion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A critical examination of the roles of women in religion, looking at a range of periods and cultures in order to illustrate the patterns that characterize women's participation in religious communities and practices. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| REL R3050 - Islam And Modernity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the issues and events that have shaped Muslims' understanding of the place of Islam in the modern world. It focuses on the way Muslim thinkers have defined the challenge of modernity-politically, technologically, socially and religiously-and the responses that they have advocated. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| REL R3090 - Contemporary Middle East |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will be taught in Jordan as part of a study abroad experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| REL R3100 - Prophecy In Ancient Israel |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The prophetic movement and its relationship to religious, social, and political traditions and institutions in the ancient Near East. The thought of major prophetic figures in Israel, such as Hosea, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| REL R3120 - American Religious Lives |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of selected persons who shaped the religious ideas and practices of the American people. The course correlates the lives, ideas, and social contexts of influential religious leaders in the United States. Figures such as Jonathan Edwards, Abraham Lincoln, Dorothy Day, Isaac M. Wise, and Martin Luther King Jr. will be included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| REL R3130 - Religion And American Ideas |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Studies of the major figures and works of the American literary and theological traditions, with focus on the ways the literary imagination has variously expressed, explored, and challenged the religious meanings of the American experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| REL R3140 - Religion And Racism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores the interaction of religion and racism. Selected case studies may include the Bible and racism, racial reconciliation among evangelical Christians, the Ku Klux Klan in Indiana, and Islamophobia. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| REL R3150 - Hebrew Bible |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A critical examination of the literary, political, and religious history of Israel from the period of the Patriarchs to the Restoration, with emphasis on the growth and formation of the major traditions contained in the Hebrew Bible. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| REL R3250 - Paul And Its Influence In Early Christianity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Life and thought of Paul, in the context of first-century Christian and non–Christian movements. Development of radical Paulinism and anti-Paulinism in the second century; their influence on the formation of Christianity. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| REL R3270 - Christianity, 50-450 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The history and literature of Christianity from its origins to the end of antiquity. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| REL R3280 - Afro-Diasporic Religions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Afro-Diasporic Religions. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| REL R3290 - Early Christianity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the religious world of early Christianity by examining its formation and development. The course emphasizes intellectual history while placing religious ideas in historical, cultural, social, and economical contexts. It underscores diversity and explores how ideas shape religious faith, how religious practice guides religious thinking, and how culture and religion interact. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| REL R3310 - Religion Since the Reformation: Christianity 1500 to Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. It is often said that we live in a secular age. Among those who believe this, some say that secularism began with the Protestant Reformation while others point to the influence of the Enlightenment. In this course we will use these debates about the causes of secularization as a framework for analyzing our assumptions about religion in the modern western world. The course will focus primarily on Christianity as we look at modern trends from both "insider" and "outsider" perspectives--i.e., trends of religious thought within Christian communities as they adjust to change, and critical perspectives on religion that were taking shape between the 16th and the 18th centuries. Thus, in the course of surveying Christian history from the 16th century to the 20th century, we shall try to understand what phenomena lead people to describe our age as "secular" and what that description assumes about being "religious." Readings will include such primary sources as Luther, Calvin, Galileo, Spinoza, Voltaire, Marx, Dostoevsky, and M.L. King, Jr. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| REL R3390 - Varieties Of American Religion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Approaches to the diversity and complexity of that part of American religion that has existed outside of the mainstream of U.S. church life. Emphasis on the origin, history, organizational structures, beliefs, and devotional practices of such groups as the Quakers, Shakers, Millerites and other millenarian sects, Mormons, Christian Scientists, Pentecostals, as well as groups whose orientation is Eastern rather than Western. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| REL R3430 - Religion And Contemporary Thought |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Contemporary religious and anti-religious thinkers, with emphasis on those whose writings have significantly influenced modern thinking about human beings, God, society, history, and ethics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| REL R3440 - Reformations Of The Sixteenth Century |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces students to the religious reformations of sixteenth-century Europe. It examines the historical background to the Reformation and surveys a number of reformation movements. While intellectual history is emphasized, the ideas of religious thinkers are placed in broad historical, cultural, social, and economic contexts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| REL R3530 - Judaism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of the history of Judaism and its relationship to the Jewish special claim to chosenness. Primary emphasis placed on modern Judaism. Typically offered Fall, Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| REL R3610 - Hinduism And Buddhism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of the origins and cultural developments of classical Hinduism and Buddhism through studies of selected lives and writings, religious practices, and symbolism in the arts through explorations of these two worldviews as reflected in historical, literary, and ritual forms. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| REL R3670 - American Indian Religions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. American Indian Religions is a course designed to explore the religious traditions of the Indian tribes of the Americas with a focus on the tribes of North America and specifically Indiana. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| REL R3700 - Religion And Social Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Religion and Socail Issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| REL R3790 - Religion And Philanthropy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores relationships between religious traditions and philanthropic ideas and activities. Selections from important traditional texts and biographical examples and similarities of a variety of religious worldviews regarding their ways of sharing goods and performing acts of service. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| REL R3810 - Religion And Violence |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the relationship between religion, violence, and society in light of recent global events, drawing on a range of classical and modern texts concerning religious justifications for non–ritualistic bloodshed. Focusing on Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, themes addressed include otherness, transgression, revenge, torture, retribution, with special attention paid to religious terrorism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| REL R3830 - Religions, Ethics, U.S. Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The foundations for and applications of religious ethical positions on social justice issues in education, economics, family life, government, and politics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| REL R3840 - Religions, Ethics, And Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The positions of religious ethical traditions on issues such as the control of reproduction, experimentation with human subjects, care of the dying, delivery of health care, physical and social environments, and heredity. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| REL R3860 - The Ethics Of Consumption |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. What is good consumption? Do consumers have moral duties? Combining the ethical perspectives of religion and philosophy with the empirical realities of economics and public policy, this course examines the social and environmental costs of consumption while valuing individual tastes and economic incentives. Course fulfills junior-senior integrator requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| REL R3930 - Comparative Religious Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Comparisons of key figures, issues, and themes in the social-ethical systems of the world religions. To include intracultural studies of American Jewish and Christian positions on social questions and cross-cultural studies of similar positions in Asian and Western traditions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| REL R3940 - Militant Religion: Cosmic Warfare And The Apocalyptic Imagination |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the various ways Jewish, Christian, and Muslim apocalyptic literature has shaped, fostered, and contributed to the current rise in global militant religion. Themes include cosmic warfare, just war traditions, jihad, ancient and modern apocalypticism, messianism, millennialism, and the new wars of religion. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| REL R3970 - Mormonism And American Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the history, beliefs, and practices of the Latter-day Saints (Mormons); exploration of the Book of Mormon and other LDS scriptures; exploration of Mormonism's relationship to American culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| REL R3980 - Women In American Indian Religions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Women in American Indian Religions is a course designed to examine the roles of women in American Indian Religions and practice and the expressions of the feminine aspects in their world views. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| REL R4000 - Studies In Religion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Specialized and intensive studies in religion with an interdisciplinary emphasis. May be repeated twice under different titles. Typically offered Summer, Fall, Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| REL R4330 - Theories Of Religion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theorists of religion explore the what, why, and how of religions. What is religion? Why are people religious? How do religions shape meaning in people’s lives, cultures, and societies? This advanced seminar examines classical to contemporary theories. Open to all majors. Fulfills Religious Studies senior capstone. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| REL S1110 - The Bible - Honors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A critical introduction to the major periods, persons, events, and literatures that constitute the Bible; designed to provide general humanities-level instruction on this important text.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| RUSS 10100 - Russian Level I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. A beginning course in standard Russian. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| RUSS 10200 - Russian Level II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Continuation of RUSS 10100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| RUSS 11100 - Conversation Supplement To Russian Level I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Basic development of intonation patterns, formulas for question and response in a variety of situations. Activization of basic Russian vocabulary and grammar. May be taken concurrently with RUSS 10100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| RUSS 11200 - Conversation Supplement To Russian Level II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Guided practice in conversation based on vocabulary and grammar learned in RUSS 10200. May be taken concurrently with RUSS 10200. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| RUSS 20100 - Russian Level III |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Readings from the works of nineteenth-century and contemporary Russian writers; practice in speaking and writing Russian. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| RUSS 20200 - Russian Level IV |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Continuation of RUSS 20100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| RUSS 21100 - Conversation Supplement To Russian Level III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Guided practice in conversation based on vocabulary, grammar, and readings covered in RUSS 20100. May be taken concurrently with RUSS 20100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| RUSS 21200 - Conversation Supplement To Russian Level IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Guided practice in conversation, based on vocabulary, grammar, and readings covered in RUSS 20200. May be taken concurrently with RUSS 20200. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| RUSS 24100 - Introduction To The Study Of Russian Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading and discussion of selected Russian poetry, prose, and drama; introduction to critical discourse and basic concepts of literary theory. Texts, discussion, and written assignments largely in Russian. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| RUSS 28100 - Post-Soviet Experiences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to three distinct "post-Soviet" cultures: Russia, one former satellite of Eastern Europe and one former Soviet republic of Central Asia. The course draws on diverse cultural texts, including art, architecture, film, song, essays, and fiction. Conducted in English. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| RUSS 28900 - Russia: Yesterday, Today, And Tomorrow |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comprehensive interdisciplinary view of Russia, stressing those issues in the political, economic, technological, and cultural spheres that are most relevant to the current situation. This team-taught course is accessible to beginning undergraduates. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| RUSS 29800 - Special Topics In Russian |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Studies of particular aspects of Russian (e.g. culture, civilization, linguistics, literature, film, etc.) by examining varied selection of works. Readings, discussion, and papers in English. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| RUSS 30100 - Russian Level V |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continued development of Russian speaking, listening, reading, and writing abilities, using material dealing primarily with everyday life and civilization in the Soviet Union from a variety of sources (e.g., newspapers, magazines, TV, recent literature, etc.). Conducted primarily in Russian. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| RUSS 30200 - Russian Level VI |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Further work to develop speaking, listening, reading, and writing abilities in Russian, on the basis of materials dealing with the ideas and events that have shaped present-day Russia and the Soviet Union. Conducted primarily in Russian. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| RUSS 33000 - Russian And East European Cinema |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Viewing and analysis of significant Russian and East European films. Evolution of the Russian and East European cinema, its place in world cinema, and its relation to cultural, political, and social trends. Cinematic adaptation of literary and theatrical works. Knowledge of Russian or East European languages not required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| RUSS 34100 - Russian Literature I: From The Beginnings To 1900 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected Russian poetry, prose, and drama from the Kievan period to 1900 in historical and cultural context. Students will write critical essays on literary topics. Conducted largely in Russian. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| RUSS 34200 - Russian Literature II: From 1900 To The Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected Russian poetry, prose, and drama of the 20th century in historical and cultural context. Students will read and discuss major authors and texts and will write critical essays on literary topics. Conducted largely in Russian. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| RUSS 36100 - The Structure Of Russian I: Sound System And Sentence Structure |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course treats the sound system and sentence structure of Russian, dealing with the structural pattern on various levels (phonetic, phonemic, syntactic) and with problems of pronunciation and word order. One weekly class is devoted to practical phonetics and intonation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| RUSS 36200 - The Structure Of Russian II: Wordforms And Word Formation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will present a systematic study of Russian morphology, dealing both with the various categories of inflected words (nouns, pronouns, adjectives, verbs) and with word formation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| RUSS 39900 - Special Study Abroad Credit In Russian |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. This course number is for assignment after the fact of credits in Russian earned while enrolled at a foreign university on a Study Abroad program which cannot be appropriately accommodated under an established Purdue course number. It is not for use for courses offered at or conducted by Purdue. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
|
| RUSS 40100 - Russian Level VII |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced work on development of Russian speaking, listening, reading, and writing abilities, focusing on materials dealing primarily with culture and the arts in Russia and the Soviet Union. Conducted primarily in Russian. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| RUSS 40200 - Russian Level VIII |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Further advanced work on speaking, listening, reading, and writing abilities in Russian. Course materials will cover a variety of topics illustrated by film and other media, both print and nonprint. Conducted primarily in Russian. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| RUSS 42400 - Business Russian |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the terminology and techniques used in commercial transactions, including the interpretation and writing of business materials. Development of the four language skills, with emphasis on writing and speaking. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| RUSS 48000 - Russian Civilization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of Russian life (intellectual, social, and cultural) with emphasis on the modern period. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| RUSS 56100 - The Structure Of Russian I: Phonology And Syntax |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course treats the sound system and sentence structure of Russian, dealing with the structural pattern on various levels (phonetic, phonemic, syntactic) from various points of view. One weekly class is devoted to theoretical issues affecting Russian phonology and syntax. Credit will not be given for both RUSS 36100 and 56100. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| RUSS 56200 - The Structure Of Russian II: Morphology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will present a systematic study of Russian morphology in the light of current linguistic research, dealing both with the various categories of inflected words (nouns, pronouns, adjectives, verbs) and with word formation. Credit will not be given for both RUSS 36200 and 56200. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| RUSS 58100 - Russian Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The development of the cultural life of the Russian people as reflected in the geography, history, music, art, and architecture of Russia. Lectures in Russian and English. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| RUSS 59000 - Directed Reading In Russian |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Directed readings in Russian. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| RUSS 59600 - Special Topics In Russian Linguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10101 - London Internship Program |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10102 - Sydney Internship Program |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10103 - Purdue Summer Program In Sydney |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10104 - Purdue Summer Program In Florence |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10105 - Beijing Internship Program |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10106 - Purdue Summer Program In London |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10107 - Gobal Leadership For Freshmen |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10108 - Horizons Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Purdue students involved in the Horizons Program are offered the opportunity to complete one academic course in an overseas location. Permission of department required.Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10109 - Purdue Summer Program In Beijing |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10110 - Global Leadership In Peru For Freshman |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10201 - International Service Marketing In Dubai And Oman |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10202 - The Culture And Food Of France |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10203 - International Influences On Retail And Fashion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10204 - International Marketing By Non-Profit Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10205 - Culture And Tourism East Asia |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered summer.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10206 - Culture And Tourism Of Greater China |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10207 - Culture And Tourism South America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10208 - CDFS Summer: Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10209 - Culture Tourism And Management In Central Europe |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10210 - Culture Tourism Australia |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10211 - Children And Families In Latin America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10212 - Global Economy Italy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10213 - Health Care And Nutrition In Costa Rica |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10214 - CDFS To Europe |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10215 - Nursing In Europe |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Short-term study abroad program in Europe. Typically offered Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10216 - Speech Language And Hearing Sciences Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10217 - HDFS Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10218 - Evidence-Based Nursing In Ireland |
|
Credit Hours: 7.00. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
7.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10220 - HHS Cross Cultural Issues Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10301 - Global Health Perspectives |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10302 - Global Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10303 - Introduction To Intercultural Teamwork In China |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10304 - Communication In Global Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10305 - English Education Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10306 - Afro-Brazilian Culture And Civilization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10307 - Anatolian Archaeology Field School |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10308 - The City In History: Constantinople And Istanbul From Antiquity To Early Modernity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10309 - Global Perspectives Health And Kinesiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10310 - Spanish In Madrid |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10311 - Visual Communications Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10312 - Global Perspectives Sports Medicine |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10313 - Visual Communication Abroad - Chile |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10314 - Latin American And Latino Studies Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10315 - Purdue Music Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10316 - Purdue A&D Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10317 - Purdue Anthropology Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10318 - IDIS Linguistics And LALS In Nicaragua |
|
Credit Hours: 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10319 - Professional Writing Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10320 - Women's Studies Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Short-term study abroad program in various locations. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10321 - Communication In A Global Context: Italy |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. A short-term study abroad program for Communication students in various locations. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10322 - Portuguese In Brazil |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10323 - AAS Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. African American Studies Abroad. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10324 - Purdue Philosophy Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10325 - School Of Languages And Cultures And Interdisciplinary Studies In France |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10326 - Classics Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10328 - Latin American And Latino Studies Abroad II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10329 - Purdue History Abroad II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10330 - Purdue Anthropology Archeology Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10331 - Purdue History Abroad I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10332 - Arabic Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10333 - International Communications In Rome |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10401 - Education Block II Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10402 - EDU Summer In Europe |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10403 - EDU Summer In C America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10404 - Education Block I - Jamaica |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10405 - Mathematics Education Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10406 - Education Abroad Germany |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
0.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10407 - EDCI Research Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10501 - Earthquake Engineering Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10502 - Global Engineering And Leadership In Mexico |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10503 - ECE Study Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10504 - Sustainability Of Civil Engineering In China |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10505 - Civil Engineering Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10506 - Engineering Cultures Of East Asia |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10507 - Global Design Teams |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10508 - BME Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10509 - Civil Engineering Abroad In The Middle East |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10510 - Materials Engineering Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Short-term study abroad program for MSE students in various locations. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10511 - Civil Engineering Practices Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Short-term study abroad program for engineering students in various locations. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10512 - Civial Engineering And The Global Impact |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Short-term study abroad program for civil engineering students in various locations. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10513 - Global Climate Change: Brazil |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A short-term study abroad program for engineering students in various locations. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10514 - Engineering Services Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10515 - AAE Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10516 - Environmental And Ecological Engineering Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10517 - Biomedical Engineering Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10518 - EEE Research Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 12.00. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10601 - Contemporary Issues In International Public Health |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10602 - Nursing Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10701 - Asian Emerging Markets |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10702 - Doing Business In China For Undergraduates |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10703 - Business Studies In London |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10704 - International Internship In Taiwan |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10705 - Global Entrepreneurship |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10706 - Management In The Middle East |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10707 - Business Strategies And Political Populism In Latin America |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10708 - Krannert Marketing Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10710 - Entrepreneurship In Southeast Asia Module I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10711 - Entrepreneurship In Southeast Asia Module II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10712 - Entrepreneurship In Southeast Asia Module I And II |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10802 - Glaciation Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10803 - Alpine Geology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10804 - Combined Geology Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10901 - Aviation Tour Of Europe |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10902 - Aviation Technology Summer Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10903 - Sustainable Energy Technologies: An International Perspective |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10904 - Applied Automation Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10905 - International Construction Management In Ireland |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10906 - Computer Graphics Technology In China |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10907 - CNIT Summer Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10908 - Innovation Energy Entrepreneurship |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10909 - Careers Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10910 - Engineering Problem Solving In Mexico |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10911 - OLS Study Abroad Europe |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10912 - Aviation Technology In China |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10913 - Technology Careers Abroad-Undergraduates |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10914 - CNIT In Asia |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10915 - MET Problem Solving In China |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10916 - CIT And ECET In India |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10917 - Building Construction Management In The Middle East |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10918 - Building Construction Management In Latin America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Building construction management in Latin America. Typically offered Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10919 - Computer Graphics Technology Interactive Media Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Short-term study abroad program for College of Technology students in various locations. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10921 - Computer Information Technology Abroad: Norway |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10922 - TLI Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offerd Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10923 - Purdue Computer Graphics Technology Abroad In Latin America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10924 - Purdue Technology Leadership And Innovation Abroad In Latin America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 10925 - Computer Graphics Technology At Harbin Institute Of Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 9.00. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 11001 - CAFTA Fair Trade For Costa Rica And The United States |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 11002 - Transylvania Study Tour |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20101 - Curtin University Of Technology-Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20102 - Deakin University-Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20103 - Griffith University-Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20104 - James Cook University-Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20105 - Monash University-Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20106 - Murdoch University-Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20107 - Queensland University Of Technology-Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20108 - Royal Melbourne Institute Of Technology-Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20109 - University Of Adelaide-Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20110 - University Of New South Wales-Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20111 - UNSW-Australian Environment, Wildlife And Conservation |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 8.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20112 - UNSW-Beyond The Fatal Shore: Australian History |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 8.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20113 - UNSW-Energy Tomorrow: An Engineering And Management Perspective |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 8.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20114 - UNSW-Imaging Australia: Australian Film, Literature And Media |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 8.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20115 - UNSW-Tourism And Recreation Management: Sustaining The Attraction Of Australia |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 8.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20116 - Australian National University-Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20117 - UNSW Summer International Business |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 8.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20118 - UNSW Conservation In Australia And Bhutan |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20119 - Curtin University Of Technology Direct Enroll Program |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20120 - University Of Notre Dame Austrialia At Broome |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20121 - University Of Notre Dame Australia-Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20122 - University Of Queensland Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20123 - University Of South Australia-Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20124 - University of Sydney-Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20125 - University Of Western Australia-Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20127 - Universidade Federal De Vicosa Brazil Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20128 - University Of Laval |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20129 - Universidade de Sao Paulo Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 12.00. Students are selected by application. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20131 - City University Of Hong Kong |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20132 - Civil Aviation University Of China |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20133 - Hong Kong Baptist University |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20134 - Hong Kong Polytechnic University |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20135 - Hong Kong University Of Science And Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20136 - Institute For Tourism Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20137 - Shanghai Jiao Tong University |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20138 - GEARE Shanghai |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20139 - Tsinghua University |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20140 - Engineering Term Abroad- Shanghai Jiao Tong Univeristy |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20141 - Shanghai Jiao Tiong University Direct Enroll |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20144 - University Of Hong Kong Business And Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20145 - Aarhus School Of Business |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20146 - Copenhagen Business School |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20147 - Technical University Of Denmark |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20148 - University Of Lapland |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20150 - Alsatian Universities Consortium |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20151 - C P E Lyon |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20152 - CPE Lyon International Summer School |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20153 - CPE Chemical Engineering Summer School |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20154 - E S T A C A |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20155 - Grenoble Institute Of Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20156 - Grenoble Institute Of Technology Summer Program |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 OR 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20157 - NEGOCIA |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20158 - Universite' Joseph Fourier Grenoble |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20170 - European Business School |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20171 - Fachhochschule Braunschweig Wolfenbuettel |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20172 - International University Of Applied Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20173 - Ruhr University Bochum |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20174 - Technical University Braunschweig |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20175 - Technical University Of Dresden |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20176 - University Of Applied Sciences Darmstadt |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20177 - University Of Hannover |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20178 - Engineering Internships In Hannover Or Clausthal |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20179 - University Of Karlsruhe |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20180 - GEARE Karlsruhe |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20181 - University Of Stuttgart |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20182 - Stuttgart Summer University |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20183 - University Of Magdebug Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 12.00. Permission od department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20185 - GEARE Braunschweig |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20186 - Munich University Of Applied Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Student exchange program with partner university. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20187 - Reutlingen University ESB Business School |
|
Credit Hours 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20189 - Birla Institute Of Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20190 - Indian Institute Of Technology Bombay |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20191 - GEARE Bombay |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20192 - Vienna University Of Economics And Business |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20193 - Experiencing German Engineering In Hannover |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20194 - Experiencing German Engineering In Stuttgart |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20195 - Dublin Institute Of Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20196 - University College Dublin |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20197 - University College Dublin Internship Program |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20198 - University Of Galway Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20199 - Experiencing German Engineering in Hannover And Stuttgart |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20201 - Universita Bocconi |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20202 - Wonders Of Venice |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 15.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 TO 15.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20205 - Chuo University |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20206 - Nanzan University |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20207 - Ochanomizu University |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20208 - Osaka University |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20209 - Tohoku University |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20210 - University Of Tsukuba |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20214 - ISM University Of Management And Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20215 - Panamerican University |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20216 - Tec De Monterrey-Cuernavaca |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20217 - Tec De Monterrey-Guadalajara |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20218 - Tec De Monterrey-Mazatlan |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20219 - Tec De Monterrey-Mexico City |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20220 - Tec De Monterrey-Monterrey |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20221 - Tec De Monterrey-Queretaro |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20222 - GEARE Mexico |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20224 - University Nacional Autonoma Mexico Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20231 - Global Engineering Education Exchange (Global E3) |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20232 - TASSEP |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20240 - Leiden University |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20241 - Maastricht University |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20242 - Stenden University CHN Retail Business School |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20243 - Tilburg University |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20250 - University Of Canterbury-Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20251 - Victoria University Of Wellington-Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20255 - University Of Bergen |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20260 - Nanyang Technological University |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20261 - National University Of Singapore |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20263 - Technical University Of Catalonia |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20264 - Universidad Carlos III De Madrid |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20265 - Seoul National University |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20266 - Yonsei University |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20270 - Linkoping University |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20271 - Mid-Sweden University |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20272 - Uppsala University |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20273 - Swedish Royal Institute Of Technology (KTH) |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20275 - Lucerne University Of Applied Sciences And Arts |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20276 - Swiss Federal Institute Of Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20280 - National Chengchi University |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20281 - National Cheng Kung University Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20285 - Bilkent University |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20286 - Bogazici University |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20290 - Imperial College |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20291 - Lancaster University |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20292 - Loughborough University |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20293 - Oxford Brookes University |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20295 - University College London |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20296 - University Of Bath |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20297 - University Of Bristol |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20298 - University of Essex |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20299 - University Of Kent |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20301 - University of Strathclyde Business School |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20302 - University Of Sussex |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20303 - University Of St Andrews |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20304 - University Of Leeds Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20305 - University Of Dundee Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20310 - Monash University South Africa |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 20311 - U Of Notre Dame Australia - Sydney |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21201 - Agriculture Independent Research Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21202 - Swedish University Of Agricultural Science |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21203 - University Of New England At Armidale (AG) |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21204 - IN Holland University Of Applied Sciences-Delft |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring .
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21205 - University Of Wales Aberystwth |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21206 - University Of Queensland Agriculture |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21207 - University Of Hannover Horticulture |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21208 - Lincoln University New Zealand AG |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21209 - University Of Copenhagen |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21210 - TEI Crete |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21211 - Leeds Metropolitan University AG |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21212 - Laval University AG |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21213 - University Of Manitoba |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21214 - National University Of Ireland At Dublin AG |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21215 - University of Agricultural Sciences Austria BOKU |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21216 - TEC Monterrey AG |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21217 - CATIE Costa Rica |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21218 - University Of Hohenheim |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21219 - Semester At China Agricultural University |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21220 - National Taiwan University Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.0. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21225 - PURPAN France |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21228 - Zamorano Honduras |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21229 - Ireland Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21230 - China Agricultural University |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21231 - Biodiversity In The Tropics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21232 - Food, Wind Culture Of Italy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21233 - Organic Agriculture In Western Europe |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21234 - International Animal Agriculture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21235 - Agriculture In Italy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21236 - Tropical Agriculture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21237 - In The English Landscape |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21238 - Agriculture Economics In China |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21239 - Youth Development And Agriculture Education Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21240 - Polish Horse Industry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21241 - Sustainable Village Ecuador |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21242 - International Natural Resources |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21243 - Agricultural And Biological Engineering And Botany Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21244 - Discovering Tropical Agriculture Brazil |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21245 - Monarchs In Mexico |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21246 - Agriculture In Ireland |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21247 - Agriculture In Honduras |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21248 - Animal Science And Service Learning Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21249 - FS And Horticulture South America |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21250 - Tropical Botany |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21251 - Agronomy In Africa |
|
1.00-3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21252 - Animal Science And Food Security |
|
1.00-3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21253 - Tropical Biology Practicum |
|
1.00 to 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21254 - Agricultural Economics International Food Production |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Short-term study abroad program for Agricultural Economics students in various locations. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21255 - Agriculture Environmental And Community Sustainability Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21256 - Veterinary Medicine, Research And Animal Production |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21257 - Forestry And Natural Resources Global Sustainability |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21258 - Agricultural Economics: Food Security Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21259 - Small Farm Production And Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 21261 - Agriculture Communications Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 23300 - Spring Break Agriculture In Italy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: International Programs
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 24900 - National Student Exchange Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 or 1.00. An eight-week course designed to introduce NSE students to Fort Wayne and the surrounding areas. Topics may vary from semester to semester. May be repeated once for credit with a different topic. Available to non-exchange students based on availability. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| SA 30001 - American University Cairo |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30002 - Accademia Italiana Florence |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30003 - Arcadia Center For Hellenic Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30004 - CAPA-Florence |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30005 - CIC-Latin American Health Nutrition And Environmental Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30006 - CIC-Quebec: Laval University |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30007 - CIC-University Of Guanajuato |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30008 - CIMBA |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30009 - College Year In Athens CYA |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30010 - Complutense University Madrid |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30011 - Freiburg University Program |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30012 - Hansard Scholars Internship Program |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30013 - Indiana University In Graz |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30014 - Organization For Tropical Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30016 - Studio Art Centers International SACI |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30017 - Semester At Sea |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00 to 18.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30018 - Siena Summer School In Italian Deaf Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30019 - SIT-Public Health And Traditional Chinese Medicine |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 8.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30020 - University Of Iowa In Brazil |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30021 - University Of Minnesota At Toledo |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30022 - University Of Minnesota Program At Montpellier |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30023 - University Of Aberdeen Program |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30024 - American Intercontinental University-London |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30026 - Sponsored Hotel Internship And Study Abroad In China |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30027 - Study Abroad In Italy - Milan |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30028 - FU-BEST Berlin |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30029 - Spanish Immersion And Service Learning In Mexico |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30030 - ACTR Russian Language |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30031 - London College Of Fashion |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30032 - BSU Primate Field Study |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30033 - Direct Enroll City U Hong Kong |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30034 - CAPA London |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30035 - SEA Semester |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30036 - University Of Minnesota In Morocco |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30039 - University Of Maryland Brazil Anthropology Program |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30040 - AMIDEAST |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30041 - VIDA Vet Med Program |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
2.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30042 - Academic Year In Freiburg |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30044 - Neuroscience In Salamanca |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 OR 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30046 - Interfuture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 15.00. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 15.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30047 - SEA Summer In The Pacific |
|
Credit Hours: 9.00 to 12.00. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Summer.
9.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30048 - SIT Geoscience In The Himalayas |
|
Credit Hours: 9.00. Permssion of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30049 - SEA Summer In The Atlantic |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30050 - FZD School Of Design |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 30200 - University Of Illinois: Parliamentary Internsihps |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: International Programs
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31001 - CIEE - Bahia |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31002 - CIEE-Sao Paulo Liberal Arts |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31003 - CIEE-Beijing |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31004 - CIEE-Shanghai: China In A Global Context |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31005 - CIEE - Santiago |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31006 - CIEE - Monteverde |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31007 - CIEE-Prague |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31008 - CIEE-Paris Critical Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31009 - CIEE-Rennes |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31010 - CIEE-Ghana |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31011 - CIEE-Budapest |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31012 - CIEE-Tokyo |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31013 - CIEE-Warsaw |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31014 - CIEE-St Petersburg Russian Language Program |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31015 - CIEE-Cape Town |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31016 - CIEE-Alicante Language And Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31017 - CIEE-Alicante Language In Context |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31018 - CIEE-Alicante Liberal Arts |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31019 - CIEE-Barcelona Business And Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31020 - CIEE-Palma De Mallorca |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31021 - CIEE-Seville Business And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31022 - CIEE-Seville Language And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31023 - CIEE-Seville Liberal Arts |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31024 - CIEE-Taipei |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31025 - CIEE - Vietnam |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31026 - CIEE-Brussels |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31027 - CIEE Alicante Summer Program |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 OR 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31028 - CIEE Amman, Jordan |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31029 - CIEE Istanbul |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31030 - CIEE Palma de Mallorca Business And Tourism Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31100 - Tropical Ecology Costa Rica |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: International Programs
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31200 - Honors Program International |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 31800 - Science Short Term Study Abroad Programs |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 32001 - DIS-Copenhagen: Architecture And Design |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 32002 - DIS-Copenhagen: Biology And Science Programs |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 32003 - DIS-Copenhagen: International Business & Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 32004 - DIS-Copenhagen: Nursing In Northern Europe |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 32005 - DIS-Copenhagen: Social Science Programs |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 33001 - IES-Amsterdam |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 33002 - IES-Arles |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 33004 - IES-Auckland |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 33005 - IES-Berlin |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 33006 - IES-Christchurch |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 33007 - IES-Delhi |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 33008 - IES-Dublin |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 33009 - IES-Dublin Trinity |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 33010 - IES-Freiburg: European Union |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 33011 - IES-London |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 33012 - IES-London City University |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 33013 - IES-London UCL |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 33014 - IES-Milan |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 33015 - IES-Nagoya |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 33016 - IES-Nantes |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 33017 - IES-Paris |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 33018 - IES-Rome |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 33019 - IES-Tokyo |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 33020 - IES-Vienna |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 33021 - IES-Adelaide |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 34001 - IFSA-Argentine Universities Program In Buenos Aires |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 34002 - IFSA-Chilean Universities Program In Santiago |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 34003 - IFSA-Chilean Universities Program In Valparaiso |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 34005 - IFSA-National University Of Ireland |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 34006 - IFSA-Oxford University |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 34007 - IFSA-Universidad de Valparaiso Intermediate Program |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 34008 - IFSA-Universidad Nacional Costa Rica |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 34009 - IFSA-Universidad Nacional De Cuyo Of Mendoza |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 34010 - IFSA-University College Cork |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 34011 - IFSA-University Of East Anglia |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 34012 - IFSA-University Of Limerick |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 34013 - IFSA-Argentine Summer Language And Culture Program |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 34015 - IFSA Summer Program At St Peters Oxford |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 34016 - IFSA Buenos Aires Intermediate Spanish |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 34017 - IFSA Australia Summer Public Health |
|
Credit Hours: 9.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
9.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 34018 - IFSA Inside Chile |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 34019 - IFSA-Universidad de Costa Rica |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 34020 - IFSA- University College Dublin |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 34021 - IFSA Exploring Business In Latin America |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 34400 - CIEE Amsterdam Netherlands |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: International Programs
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 35001 - SFS-Australia And New Zealand: Natural Resource Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 35002 - School For Field Studies Australian Rain Forest Research Program |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 35003 - SFS-Costa Rica: Sustaining Tropical Ecosystems |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 35004 - SFS-Kenya |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 35005 - SFS-Mexico: Preserving Coastal Diversity: Sea Turtles And Bay Resources |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 35006 - SFS-Turks And Caicos Islands: Marine Protected Areas |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
4.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 35007 - SFS - Tanzania |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 35008 - SFS-Bhutan |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 35009 - SFS Kenya Public Health |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 36001 - Study Australia-Deakin University |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 36002 - Study Australia-James Cook University |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 36003 - Study Australia-Monash University |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 36004 - Study Australia-Murdoch University |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 36005 - Study Australia - Queensland University Of Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 36006 - Study Australia-Royal Melbourne Institute Of Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 36007 - Study Australia-University Of New South Wales |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 36008 - Study Australia-University of Notre Dame Perth |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 36009 - Study Australia-University Of Notre Dame Sydney |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 36010 - Study Australia-University Of Sydney |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 36011 - Study Australia-University Of Western Australia |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 36012 - Study Australia-University Of Wollongong |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 36013 - Study New Zealand-Victoria University Of Wellington |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 36014 - Study Australia At The University Of Queensland |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 36015 - Education Abroad-Tsinghua |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 36016 - TEAN Thailand |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 36017 - TEAN Cambodia And Thailand |
|
Credit Hours: 6.0 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 36018 - TEAN Environment Wildlife Conservation |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 36019 - TEAN Energy Tomorrow |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 38100 - IES:Freiburg |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: International Programs
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 39300 - IES Dijon, France |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: International Programs
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 40301 - Anthropology Field Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 42200 - Hebrew University |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: International Programs
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 42300 - ACTR |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 45000 - IFSA Middlesex |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00 to 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
5.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 47600 - University Of Laval Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 48200 - Victoria University Australia Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 12.00. Typically offered Fall Spring.
12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 48600 - Al Akhawayn University Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00 or 12.00. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
6.000 OR 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: International Programs
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 49800 - Overseas Study Program |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 18.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 49900 - Student Exchange Program |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 21.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 21.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 21 credits
|
| SA 50200 - Alsatian Consortium Graduate |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 51300 - Graduate University of Hohenheim Exchange |
|
Credit Hours: 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 51400 - Copenhagen Business School Exchange For Grad COM |
|
Credit Hours: 8.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 51600 - MBA Program At Reutlingen University Business School, Germany |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 59000 - Graduate Short Term Programs |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 59001 - Business Between Europe And South America |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 59002 - International Marketing Dealing With Diversity |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 59100 - Graduate Short-Term Study Abroad Programs II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 9.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 9.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SA 80000 - Veterinary Medicine International Externships |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Professional
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: No College Designated
Department: Study Abroad
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SCI 10000 - Multicultural Leadership Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Exposes students to career opportunities via presentations from corporate and academic representatives; provides an opportunity for minority science students to share concerns and to become aware of existing academic and non-academic support systems on campus. Provides an overview of the significant contributions to the sciences by minority groups; reinforces good study habits for academic success. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Presentation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: College of Science Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SCI 10300 - Survey Of The Biological World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This laboratory science course is designed for non-biology majors to satisfy the general education science requirement. Topics in this course include history of planet earth, evolution and natural history of living organisms. This course cannot be used for biology elective credits by biology majors. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SCI 10400 - Introduction To Environmental Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of human impacts on natural environments. This course assumes very little prior knowledge in ecology, and thus serves for non-biology major students who wish to satisfy their lab science requirements. Topics include basic concepts of ecology, interactions between human and natural environment, human wellness in relation to environmental pollution, natural resource conservation and management, modern environment technology, and current environmental issues in our society. Lecture material is reinforced and expanded upon in laboratory exercises and field trips in ecology, environmental health, pollution, and resource conservation. This course will not count toward a biology degree. Typically offered Summer Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SCI 10500 - Invitation To Human Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course assumes very little prior specific knowledge of biology, and thus serves for non-biology students who wish to satisfy their lab science requirements. Topics include basic structure and function of the structure of the human body, human genetics, human wellness issues, human evolution, and human impact on the environment. Lecture material is reinforced and expanded upon in laboratory exercises. This course will not count toward a biology degree. Typically offered Summer Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SCI 10601 - Food Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces fundamental chemistry concepts and then covers the basic properties of water, protein, carbohydrates, lipids, minerals and vitamins and their roles in food systems. Additionally the course covers enzymes in foods and food additives. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students should gain knowledge of how individual food components contribute to the overall quality of foods.
2. Students should achieve an understanding of the chemical changes that take place with food components during processing and storage.
3. Students should recognize reactions and changes important in food chemistry.
4. Students should be capable of designing and conducting experiments and interpreting data to understand important food chemistry principles.
|
| SCI 11000 - Science Honors Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Wide-ranging lectures on contemporary science and current research by faculty members and alumni from throughout the School of Science. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: College of Science Admin
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SCI 11100 - Science Honors Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Continuation of SCI 110. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: College of Science Admin
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SCI 11200 - Introducton To The Physical Sciences I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to science and the scientific method as evidenced by the physical and chemical aspects of nature. Physical and chemical concepts and processes will be studied in the context of everyday life. General topics will include: motion, energy, heat, electromagnetism, atoms and molecules. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SCI 11300 - Introduction To The Physical Sciences II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to science and the scientific method as evidenced by the physical and geological aspects of nature. General topics will include: Planetary geology, chemical concepts of mater including classification, chemical reactions, bonding and energy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Course satisfies General Education objective and requirements for graduation. Course covers a more practical selection of material better suited for the targeted groups served such as elementary education majors and others needing a non-technical laboratory based science course.
|
| SCI 11400 - Introduction to Life Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to life science for non-biology majors. This inquiry-based course will take an investigative approach to various topics in biology that are related to everyday life. Topics include evolution and life history of animals and plants, cells, human health, biotechnology, and ecology. Although offered primarily for elementary education majors, this course is open to all qualified students. This course cannot be counted as biology elective credits for a biology degree. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SCI 12000 - Windows On Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Designed for new and prospective science majors, the course covers an integrative overview of science, examining science and society, the scientific method and community of scientists, undergraduate research, professional ethics, an exploration of science-based careers, and strategies for success as a science major. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SCI 13100 - Science And Environmental Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the application of chemical principles to the world around us (our environment). It may be used to satisfy the general education laboratory science requirement and serve as an introductory course for further study in the field of environmental science. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SCI 14000 - Introduction To Forensic Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the theories and practices of scientific techniques as applies to crime detection. Some focus areas will include crime scene processing, physical evidence, the examination and evaluation of evidence, and laboratory procedure. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SCI 15000 - Brewing Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Following the brewing process from "grain-to-glass", this course uses the biological and chemical principles of brewing to teach science to the non-science major. While based solely on malted barley, water, hops, and yeast, beer and the brewing process provide a wealth of examples of basic science. In addition to these basic ingredients, scientific discussions on malting, mashing, fermentation, and the making of different beer styles will also be included. In the laboratory, students will gain hands-on experience with important aspects of the brewing process. An emphasis on the responsibility we must take for our behavior when consuming beer will be stressed. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SCI 19000 - Special Topics In Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory, integrated science course for engineering and science students. Beginning lectures will cover the basic chemistry of life, the organization of cells. This will be followed by more advanced topics such as photosynthesis. Each topic will emphasize how understanding the biological system requires concepts and tools from other disciplines such as chemistry and physics. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SCI 19100 - Part-Time Curricular Practical Training |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. A part-time scientific work experience for Science majors. This internship experience is intended to complement the student's academic plan of study and help prepare for a future role as a practicing scientist. A letter from the prospective employer stating the period of employment, hours per week, job title, job qualifications, and job description must be provided to the Dean of Science's office for approval before registration will be permitted. A minimum period of employment is required. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: College of Science Admin
Course Attributes: Coop, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SCI 19500 - Special Topics In Science |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. This is a special projects course that will be used for special circumstances with individual study or for experimental courses, pointed toward students who are first- or second-year students. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: College of Science Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SCI 20100 - Special Topics: Integrated Science And Engineering Learning Community |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will expose students to interdisciplinary problems scientists and engineers routinely need to solve. Students will gain an appreciation for working with individuals from diverse disciplines and backgrounds. Participation in hands-on activities is a key component of the course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: College of Science Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SCI 20200 - Environmental Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers basic issues in environmental sciences including life and environment of the earth, management of renewable and non-renewable resources (air, water, soil, food, minerals, energy, etc.) problems and prevention of pollution, and strategies for sustainable economic development. A multidisciplinary approach, based on teamwork, is emphasized. The course will possibly be team-taught by PUC faculty members. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students are expected to understand the processes of scientific methods for testing hypotheses about the natural world, able to apply mathematical skills to quanitative and analytical problem solving in environmental issues, and gain basic knowledge in science of human population dynamics, natural resources, renewable and nonrenewable energy, and environmental pollution.
|
| SCI 21000 - Teaming Principles |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. College of Science students will learn the principles and concepts involved in teaming, such as recognizing different learning styles, developing shared goals, addressing conflict, utilizing collaborative problem solving and utilizing strengths of team members. These foundations will allow students to enter collaborative situations, such as lab groups and study sections, fully prepared to maximize the value of their educational experiences as well as develop positive working relationships with their fellow students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Science
Department: College of Science Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will demonstrate the ability to work on a team. College of Science students will learn the concepts involved in team building and collaboration, such as leadership, developing shared goals, and utilizing strengths of team members. These foundations will allow students to enter collaborative situations, such as lab groups and study sections, fully prepared to maximize the value of their educational experiences as well as develop positive working relationships with their fellow students. These foundations and experiences can be satisfied by course work, lab courses, research experiences, or internships.
|
| SCI 22000 - Health And Safety |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A course on laboratory safety, health related issues and laboratory stockroom management in the physical sciences for science education majors. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SCI 29000 - Special Topics In Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory, integrated science course for engineering and science students. Beginning lectures will cover the basic chemistry of life, the organization of cells. This will be followed by more advanced topics such as photosynthesis. Each topic will emphasize how understanding the biological system requires concepts and tools from other disciplines such as chemistry and physics. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: College of Science Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SCI 31000 - Ubuntu Service Learning Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Ubuntu Service Learning Experience is a two week Maymester/summer service learning/study abroad experience in South Africa hosted by the Ubuntu institute. This program includes full days (9am-6pm) of service learning with evenings devoted to group presentation, discussions and reflection centered around the day's events. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: College of Science Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SCI 31500 - Environmental Science For Elementary Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This project-based course integrates knowledge and skills in physical and biological sciences to develop workable scientific solutions for environmental-related problems in everyday life. Topics may include, but are not limited to, pollution prevention and control, natural resource conservation and management, human health and wellness. Although offered primarily for elementary education majors, this course is open to all qualified students. This course cannot be counted as biology elective credits for a biology degree. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SCI 32400 - Physical Science And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the chemicals, chemical and physical principles and phenomena of environmental consequence. Societal issues are incorporated largely in historical relevance. topics include ozone depletion, greenhouse effect, air pollution, water pollution, acid rain, toxics, energy flow, and environmental technology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SCI 36000 - Great Issues In Science And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides a survey of Great Issues facing our global society. The focus of the course is on the integration of different perspectives and the need for interdisciplinary approaches to solve the challenges facing students’ local, national, and global communities. The course format is discussion intensive, team-oriented ,and stresses the need to continually ingest and integrate new information, as the technologies and social proposed action that can contribute to the solution of a Great issue. The course also provides a forum to show how Purdue faculty from across the university (scientist and non-scientists) are addressing Great issues in their research and engagement programs. This course satisfies the CoS team experience. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: College of Science Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will apply relevant models, such as Tragedy of the Commons, Prisoner’s Dilemma, Common Pooled Resources, and Lifecycle Analysis to understand and analyze Great issues.
2. Students will be able to discuss the main social and scientific issues surrounding sustainability of Earth’s resources, such as energy, food, water, population, and climate.
3. Students will be able to critically evaluate its validity and applicability, and integrate it into their previous knowledge of a topic.
4. Students will use statistics, data, and information accurately and ethically to analyze Great Issues.
5. Students will be able to work effectively in teams.
|
| SCI 46000 - Science And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course consists of two (75-minute) class meetings per week. The first meeting will be used to introduce the scientific and societal issues related to a particular technological development. In the second meeting, students will work in teams to make presentations that explore these issues in greater depth. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: College of Science Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SCI 49000 - Topics In Science For Undergraduates |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Selected interdisciplinary topics. Offered as a scheduled course when appropriate. Also available for supervised reading and reports of an interdisciplinary nature. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: College of Science Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will demonstrate the ability to communicate well, both orally and in writing.
2. Students will demonstrate the ability to work on a team.
|
| SCI 49100 - Environmental Science Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Directed in-service training in government agencies or programs, industry, community organizations, or private-public joint organizations on environment subjects. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand core concepts and methods in environmental problem-solving.
2. Appreciate the ethical, cultural, and historical context of environmental issues and the links between human and natural world.
3. Appreciate that one can analyze and understand interactions between social and environmental processes.
3. Reflect critically about their roles in a complex and interconnected world.
|
| SCI 90100 - Biol New Stdnt Session |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Science
Department: College of Science Admin
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SCI 90200 - Chem New Stdnt Session |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Science
Department: College of Science Admin
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SCI 90300 - C S New Studnt Session |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Science
Department: College of Science Admin
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SCI 90400 - E&AS New Stdnt Session |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Science
Department: College of Science Admin
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SCI 90500 - Math New Stdnt Session |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Science
Department: College of Science Admin
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SCI 90600 - Phys New Stdnt Session |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Science
Department: College of Science Admin
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SCI 90900 - Sci New Stdnt Session |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Science
Department: College of Science Admin
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SCI 91000 - Integrated Science And Engineering Learning Community Orientation |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Science
Department: College of Science Admin
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SCI I1200 - Windows On Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Designed for new and prospective science majors, the course covers an integrative overview of science, examining science and
society, the scientific method and community of scientists, undergraduate research, professional ethics, an exploration of science-based careers, and strategies for success as a science major.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SCI I2200 - Introduction To Research Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is an introduction to research. Topics include learning the language of scholarly research; research ethics; laboratory safety; and research approval processes. Students will learn how to design, write, and present research for variety of audiences and disciplines. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SCI I2250 - Mentor-Based Research Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 0.0 to 3.0. This course is designed to introduce a student to fundamental research. It will link to a program through which the student is participating. e.g. Diversity Research Scholars Program (DSRP) or Multidisciplinary Undergraduate Research Institute (MURI). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SCI I2940 - Beginning Science-Based Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. A semester of full- or part-time beginning internship experience in an industrial, government, or business setting matching student's academic/career objective. A comprehensive written report on the experience is required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SCI I4940 - Internship In Science-Based Fields |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 6.00. A semester of full- or part-time internship experience in an industrial, government, or business setting watching student's academic/career objective. A comprehensive written report on the experience is required.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| SCI I4950 - Readings And Research In Science |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Independent, interdisciplinary study and research in science and science-related fields. A major paper must be submitted. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| SE 51000 - Systems Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Systems Engineering (SE) is a structured approach to developing interdisciplinary and complex products. This course introduces SE methodologies spanning the product development lifecycle from initial scope definition through delivery of the prototype or first production article. SE techniques are used to define and manage requirements, analyze and optimize product architectures, develop comprehensive designs, plan and supervise manufacturing, test and evaluation, and implement the production line. SE also provides techniques for ensuring that system-level requirements (i.e., reliability, maintainability, safety, etc.) are incorporated into the final product. Spanning all these activities are a set of SE analysis and control functions that continuously assess and manage the product scope, quality, configuration, interfaces, and performance. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| SE 52000 - Engineering Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides an overview of financial accounting principles and basic economic concepts that drive project selection, design, and development. Topics include the time-value of money, investment return, depreciation, budgeting, cash flow, risk, and cost management. The course will emphasize the linkage between project scope and cost management with special attention to cost estimation and earned-value cost management techniques. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| SE 53000 - Systems Engineering Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The systems engineering (SE) management team is responsible for planning and managing all systems engineering activities that are required to successfully develop complex products and systems. It is in charge of ensuring that all system elements are compatible, available on-schedule and on-budget, must work together seamlessly, and satisfy customer requirements. This course addresses the role and activities of the systems engineering team in managing and coordinating product development. Topics include systems engineering planning, management of scope, risk and cost, configuration, interfaces and human resources, project control, reviews, performance measures, standards, and documentation. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| SE 54000 - Systems Architecture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Systems engineering best practices prescribe a set of methodologies for architecting and designing complex systems. This course covers requirements analysis, functional analysis and allocation, and synthesis and their interaction with systems analysis and control functions, including system trades, management of risk, configuration, interfaces and data, and development of performance measures. The lectures are complemented by a class design project to architect a complex system leading to development of a functional and physical architecture and associated functional and allocated baselines. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| SE 59500 - Selected Topics In Systems Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Specialty topics in systems engineering, such as requirements management, specialty engineering (i.e., reliability, manufacturability, survivability, etc.), risk management, and system integration and verification. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SERV 10100 - Service Learning/Civic Engagement - Level I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Experience at the entry level in community service or civic organization(s) that builds student skills and knowledge and requires active engagement and critical reflection. Volunteerism of five hours per week (75 hours per semester) in an off-campus Community Service or Civic site in work related to the student's major and organized around specific learning objectives. Emphasis on collaboration between the student, the University and the Community. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 4 times
|
| SERV 10200 - Service Learning/Civic Engagement - Level II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Experience at the intermediate level in community service or civic organization(s) that builds student skills and knowledge and requires active engagement and critical reflection. Volunteerism of ten hours per week (150 hours per semester) in an off-campus Community Service or Civic site in work related to the student's major and organized around specific learning objectives. Emphasis on collaboration between the student, the University and the Community. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SERV 10300 - Service Learning/Civic Engagement - Level III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Experience at the advanced level in community service or civic organization(s) that builds student skills and knowledge and requires active engagement and critical reflection. Volunteerism of 15 hours per week (225 hours per semester) in an off-campus Community Service or Civic site in work related to the student's major and organized around specific learning objectives. Emphasis on collaboration between the student, the University and the Community. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SERV 20100 - Service Learning/Civic Engagement II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Experience at the mid-level in community service or civic organization(s) that builds student skills and knowledge and requires active engagement and critical reflection. Volunteerism of 10 hours per week (150 hours per semester) in off-campus Community Service or Civic site in work related to the student's major and organized around specific learning objectives. Emphasis on collaboration between the student, the University and the Community. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| SERV 30100 - Service Learning/Civic Engagement III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Experience at the advanced level in community service or civic organization(s) that builds student skills and knowledge and requires active engagement and critical reflection. Volunteerism of 15 hours per week (225 hours per semester) in off-campus Community Service or Civic site in work related to the student's major and organized around specific learning objectives. Emphasis on collaboration between the student, the University and the Community. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SERV 40100 - Service Learning/Civic Engagement IV |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Experience at the mastery level in community service or civic organization(s) that builds student skills and knowledge and requires active engagement and critical reflection. Volunteerism of 20 hours per week (300 hours per semester) in off-campus Community Service or Civic site in work related to the student's major and organized around specific learning objectives. Emphasis on collaboration between the student, the University and the Community. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SHRS N2650 - Nutrition And Exercise |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will allow the student to apply the principles of physiology, chemistry, and biology to describe the role of nutrition and exercise in the human body and to explore the interrelated and protective role of nutrition and exercise in wellness, health promotion, and disease prevention. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| SHRS N4200 - Human Nutrition Through The Lifespan |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of nutritional needs during different stages of the human life cycle from pregnancy and lactation through infancy, childhood, adolescence and adulthood to later maturity, including an introduction to cultural food patterns, principles of nutrition assessment and agencies offering nutrition services. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SHRS T5530 - Topics In Occupational Therapy |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Topics in Occupational Therapy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SHRS W1100 - Diversity Issues In Health And Rehabilitation Services |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to prepare students to appreciate diversity and understand the interrelationship of race, gender, culture, and ethnicity and how they affect access and use of health and rehabilitation services. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SHRS W2100 - Introduction To Rehabilitation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Understanding the historical, philosophical, and organizational context of the rehabilitation profession within the context of the health care delivery system. Based on the premise that understanding of and respect for health professionals is critical for effective functioning as a member of a health care team. Emphasizes expectations of students as beginning health professionals. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SHRS W2110 - Orientation To Health And Rehabilitation Professions |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The major purpose of this course is to provide students with information to assist them in becoming acquainted with selected undergraduate and graduate health and rehabilitation science disciplines. Students will obtain information to develop realistic educational and career goals. Not open to students who enrolled in a Health Careers Learning Seminar. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SHRS W2500 - Health And Rehabilitation Systems Across The World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course presents issues in global health and rehabilitation delivery systems from the viewpoint of many different disciplines with an emphasis on economically less developed countries. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SHRS W2700 - Seminar In Global Rehabilitation And Health |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to cover current topics in international management and organization of health and rehabilitation services, governance, ethics, impact of donor organizations, and emerging global primary and public health care issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SHRS W3100 - Aging And The Older Person |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the interdisciplinary study of gerontology as a social, behavioral, and biological science. Other issues to be covered will include participation of older persons in therapeutic recreation and leisure activities and current health issues and patterns of health in the aging process. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SHRS W3200 - Survey Of Adaptive Rehabilitation Technology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Assisting students in the knowledge/awareness of available high-tech/low-tech equipment, or product systems that are used in rehabilitation settings to increase, maintain, or improve functional capabilities of individuals with disabilities, emphasizing the application of clinically-based strategies for determining an individual’s need for and acceptance of adaptive technology to improve functional outcomes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Concepts and issues related to the use of adaptive and assistive technology in rehabilitation and other aspects of life.
2. History and legal definition of assistive technology.
3. Process used to assist people with disabilities in the selection and use of adaptive and assistive technology.
4. Impact of adaptive and assistive technology on people with disabilities.
5. Funding sources and processes of acquiring adaptive and assistive technology devices and products.
6. Analyzing the costs and benefits of specific adaptive and assistive technology.
7. Role of clients in the acquisition of adaptive and assistive technology.
8. Role of rehabilitation professionals in identifying and evaluating specific adaptive and assistive technologies.
9. Ethical, cultural, and legal issues in the use of adaptive technologies.
10. Access and use of adaptive and assistive technology among minorities and other underserved populations.
11. Factors impacting the availability and utilization of adaptive technology.
12. Present and demonstrate how patients can use adaptive and assistive technology to cope with activities of daily living.
13. Safety factors while using adaptive devices.
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| SHRS W3300 - Approaches To Rehabilitation Case Management |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploring the historical perspective, technological and humanitarian advances, and major issues in the rehabilitation administrative environment; discussing and analyzing the legislative mandates relative to their effects on shaping the administrative environment in rehabilitation; acquiring knowledge of the process and significance of administrative competency in delivering services to rehabilitation consumers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SHRS W3400 - Psychological Aspects Of Disability |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will review medical terminology and gain an understanding of major disabling conditions, the psychological and vocational aspect of adjustment to disability and chronic long term illness, and examine psychological and social theories related to disability and chronic illness and Code of Ethics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and discuss the historical roots of psychosocial theories of disabilities.
2. Describe psychological aspects of development and physical disabilities.
3. Explore the implications of psychological and societal knowledge of disabilities relative to the philosophy and goals of rehabilitation.
4. Develop perspectives and knowledge for current and future rehabilitation practices.
5. Discuss the Code of Ethics for Rehabilitation Counselors.
6. Identify current psychosocial adaptation and coping practices.
7. Review current research on individual response to stress and negative life events as well as mind/body interaction in promoting health and wellness and coping with disability.
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| SHRS W3610 - Health Promotion And Disease Prevention |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Understanding the personal, cultural, and environmental factors affecting participation in health promotion and disease prevention activities; examining the application and relevance of the concepts of health, wellness, health promotion, and health education and a wide range of content specific topics in health promotion and disease prevention. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SHRS W3620 - Legal And Regulatory Aspects In Rehabilitation |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Assisting students in the understanding of legal and regulatory challenges faced by rehabilitation professionals, covering legal issues in counseling and case management, and significant rehabilitation-related legislation in the United States from 1917 to the Present. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SHRS W3630 - Ethical Issues In Rehabilitation Services |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Examining contemporary ethical/moral considerations in the organization and management of rehabilitation agencies and the delivery of rehabilitation services. Practical applications of ethical principles to the delivery of rehabilitation service and client-provider relationships will be covered. The course will be a combination of lectures, case studies, debates, and guest speakers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SHRS W3640 - Disability And Society |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Focusing on the psychological, social, political, and economic circumstances of individuals with disabilities in American society and to broaden students' perspectives on disability issues through exposure to the personal accounts and writing of persons with disabilities, examination of professional practices, discussion of public policies, and completion of class projects. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SHRS W3700 - Psychosocial Aspects Of Aging |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides a broad overview of adult development and aging with an emphasis on the changes that occur across physical, cognitive, emotional, perceptual, and social domains of functioning. Analysis of the effects of and theoretical approaches of these changes on the occupational, social, and personality adjustment of the aging adult. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SHRS W3800 - Health And Rehabilition Professionals In Developing Countries |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The primary purpose of this course is to help students understand the roles and expectations and the scope of training and educational preparation of health and rehabilitation professionals across the world with emphasis on economically less developed countries. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SHRS W4200 - Proposal Writing For Community-Based Rehabilitation Programs |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An interactive educational opportunity to develop skills related to fund development in a community rehabilitation setting, providing an overview of the grant development process. Students will research local and national funding sources and learn about traditional and non-traditional sources to develop and maintain community-based rehabilitation programs. Includes guest speakers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SHRS W4300 - Practicum In Rehabilitation And Disability |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to give students direct work experience in various private and public sector rehabilitation agencies, this experiential component allows the student an opportunity to apply his/her newly acquired normative and cognitive skills and knowledge in an actual work setting. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SHRS W4400 - Medical Aspects Of Disabilities |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The primary emphasis of this survey course is on medically determined aspects of disabling impairments and disabilities. Students will learn the functional limitations associated with major disabling conditions particularly as they relate to the delivery of rehabilitation services. Current trends and methodologies involved in rehabilitation processes will be covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SHRS W4500 - Seminar In Gerontology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an interdisciplinary investigation of selected facets of gerontology drawn from biological, behavioral, and social science. Topics covered will include mental health, housing, economics, transportation, preventive health and rehabilitation programs, long-term care insurance, retirement, work/leisure activities, and adult women and health. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SLA I3600 - Individualized Major Plan |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. A tutorial in which a student develops a plan for an individualized major. Upon aproval of this plan, the student is admitte to the Individualized Major Program. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SLA I4600 - Individualized Major Senior Project |
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Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. A variable credit tutorial devoted to a capstone project that culminates and integrates the individualized major. Normally taken in the senior year as a two semester 6-credit course. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SLA S1000 - First Year Success Seminar |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. First Year Success Seminar. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SLAV M1010 - Elementary Romanian I |
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Credit Hours: 5.00. Introduction to basic structure of contemporary Romanian language and to culture. Typically offered Fall Sprng Summer.
5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SLAV M1020 - Elementary Romanian II |
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Credit Hours: 5.00. Introduction to basic structure of contemporary Romanian language and to culture. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SLAV M2010 - Intermediate Romanian I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of work in structure and vocabulary acquisition through written exercises, study of word formation, drills, reading, and discussion of short stories. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SLAV M2020 - Intermediate Romanian II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of work in structure and vocabulary acquisition through written exercises, study of word formation, drills, reading, and discussion of short stories. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SLAV P3630 - Survey Of Polish LIterature And Culture I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Polish literature in English translation from its origins to the end of the 1900 century in its historical and sociopolitical context. Knowledge of Polish not required. No credit towards a major in Russian. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SLAV P3640 - Survey Of Polish Literature And Culture II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Polish literature in English translation from the end of the 19th century to the present in the larger European context. Knowledge of Polish not required. No credit towards a major in Russian. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SLAV R1000 - Elementary Russian I |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to contemporary Russian and aspects of Russian culture. Intensive drill and exercises in basic structure; development of vocabulary. First contact with Russian expository prose. Classes supplemented by one hour of drill and optional lab. Credit not given for both R1000 and R103; R1500 and R1330. Majors required to take R1210-R1510 simultaneously. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SLAV R1110 - Elementary Russian I |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. Courses in the fundamentals of Russian, both written and spoken, for beginners. Drill in pronunciation, fundamental grammatical structures of the language, and reading of easy materials. Extensive practice in spoken Russian. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| SLAV R1120 - Elementary Russian II |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. Courses in the fundamentals of Russian, both written and spoken, for beginners. Drill in pronunciation, fundamental grammatical structures of the language, and readings of easy materials. Extensive practice in spoken Russian. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| SLAV R1210 - Oral Russian I |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. One-hour conversation course to reinforce oral skills introduces in R1010. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SLAV R1310 - Beginning Russian I |
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Credit Hours: 5.00. Introduction to contemporary Russian and aspects of Russian culture. Intensive drill and exercises in basic structure; development of vocabulary. First contact with Russian expository prose. Classes supplemented by one hour of drill and optional lab. Credit not given for both R1000 and R103; R1500 and R1330. Majors required to take R1210-R1510 simultaneously. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SLAV R1450 - Introductory Studies In Russian Literature I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of major works of Russian literature, read in English translation. Each semester the course will be organized around a unifying them, which will determine the selection of works to be read. W1430 may be taken concurrently with R1450 to fulfill Area I composition requirements. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SLAV R1460 - Introductory Studies In Russian Literature II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of major works of Russian literature, read in English translation. Each semester the course will be organized around a unifying them, which will determine the selection of works to be read. W1430 may be taken concurrently with R1460 to fulfill Area I composition requirements. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SLAV R1500 - Elementary Russian II |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to contemporary Russian and aspects of Russian culture. Intensive drill and exercises in basic structure; development of vocabulary. First contact with Russian expository prose. Classes supplemented by one hour of drill and optional lab. Credit not given for both R1000 and R103; R1500 and R1330. Majors required to take R1210-R1510 simultaneously. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SLAV R2140 - Second-Year Russian I |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. Review of first-year materials. Intermediate morphological and syntactic pattern of modern Russian. Drills in classroom and audio laboratory, written exercises and reading in modern fiction and nonfiction. Extensive practice in spoken Russian. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| SLAV R2150 - Second-Year Russian II |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. Review of first-year materials. Intermediate morphological and syntactic pattern of modern Russian. Drills in classroom and audio laboratory, written exercises, and reading in modern fiction and nonfiction. Extensive practice in spoken Russian. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| SLAV R2630 - Pushkin To Dostoevsky |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The Golden Age of the Russian Novel; its social, Cultural, and economic context; the flowering of art and music; the rise of the metropolis in associations with poverty, alienation, quest for identity (both national and personal), as reflected in the Romantic and Realistic works of Pushkin, Gogol, Turgenev, and Dostoevsky. Knowledge of Russian not required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SLAV R2640 - Tolstoy To Solzhenitsyn |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. 1880 to Present – a period of profound political, social, and intellectual ferment; the Bolshevik Revolution, Civil War, collectivization, the Stalinist purges, World War II, the collapse of the Soviet Union and the rise of a "New" Russia. Knowledge of Russian not required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SLHS 11500 - Introduction To Communicative Disorders |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Nature, systems, and causes of communicative disorders and the principal methods used for remediation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 21500 - Exploring Audiology And Hearing Science |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will introduce students to the discipline of hearing science and to the clinical profession of audiology, with a focus on the unique and exciting aspects of the auditory system. Students will be introduced to the acoustic properties of environmental and speech sounds in relation to hearing loss, the fundamental anatomical and physiological bases of hearing, normal development of hearing and auditory behaviors, history and scope of practice in Audiology, hearing disorders across the life span and assessment and intervention techniques used to manage hearing disorders in children and adults. Guest speakers will include hearing researchers from Purdue University who will talk about their specific research, audiologists from Purdue University and the community who will talk about clinical practice and individuals with hearing disorders who will speak about their personal stories. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 22700 - Elements Of Linguistics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (ENGL 22700) Credit will not be awarded for both AUSL 22700 and LC 26100. A summary of what is known about human language, its structure, its universality, and its diversity; language in its social setting; language in relation to other aspects of human inquiry and knowledge. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 30100 - Introduction To Cognitive Neuroscience |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (PSY 32400) Introduction to the neural bases of complex human mental abilities. Emphasis on integrating research from cognitive science, brain-scanning techniques, and the lesion technique. Topics include perception, attention, memory, language, motor control, planning/decision-making, and consciousness. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 30200 - Acoustic Bases Of Speech And Hearing |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The physical characteristics of speech sounds and the psychophysical processes involved in hearing. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 30400 - Anatomy And Physiology Of The Speech And Hearing Mechanism |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. An introduction to the anatomical and physiological bases of normal and abnormal voice, articulation, and hearing. Laboratory includes demonstrations to support lecture material. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 30600 - Introduction To Phonetics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Credit will not be given for both AUS 30600 and LING 31500. An introduction to articulatory phonetics, speech sounds in languages of the world, and principles and symbols of the International Phonetic Alphabet. Extensive practice in phonetic transcription. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 30900 - Language Development |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (PSY 42600) Specific nature, sequence, and pattern of oral language development from birth through adolescence. Numerous examples illustrating the nature of language acquisition and approaches to the study of children's language are presented. Linguistic and psychological explanations of the sequence of development are discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 34500 - Research Methods In Infancy And Childhood |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (PSY 31900) This is a laboratory-based course that focuses on methods to test childhood cognitive and language development. As part of the course, students will be working in the Purdue University Infant Labs. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
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| SLHS 40100 - Language And The Brain |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to neurolinguistics: evidence for language organization in the brain drawn primarily from lesion studies, behavioral experiments, direct cortical stimulation, WADA test, dichotic listening, tachistoscopic and functional neuroimaging techniques. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 41900 - Topics In Audiology And Speech Pathology |
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Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Study of selected topics, varying from semester to semester. Course content will be drawn from areas for which there are no permanent courses. Typically offered Fall Summer Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| SLHS 42000 - Introduction To Developmental Speech And Language Disorders |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students cannot receive credit for both AUS 42000 and AUS 42200. Introduction to disorders of speech and language in children. Characteristics of these disorders, methods of evaluation, and intervention procedures are discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 42200 - Introduction To Developmental Speech And Language Disorders Of Exceptional Children |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A beginning study of speech and language disorders in exceptional children. Topics include characteristics of these disorders as well as evaluation and intervention methods. (Students in the EMR, ED, LD, or TMR certification programs should register for this course rather than AUS 42000. Students cannot receive credit for both AUS 42000 and 42200). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 43000 - Speech-Language Disorders In Health Care Settings |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Presents speech-language disorders across the lifespan, encountered in a variety of health care settings. Discusses the etiology, evaluation, and management of these disorders; addresses administrative structures, team approaches, and reimbursement issues in health care settings. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 44400 - Introduction To Research In Communication Sciences And Disorders |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to fundamental concepts of research in the basic and clinical disorder aspects of speech, language, and hearing processes. Among topics to be covered are research design/strategies, model and theory development, research ethics and data collection and interpretation. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 44900 - Introduction To Clinical Practice In Communication Disorders |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A course designed to provide instruction in basic diagnostic procedures and therapeutic approaches to speech, language, and hearing disorders. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To expose students to clients who have a variety of speech, language, and/or hearing disabilities in order to develop an understanding of the nature of communication disorders across a wide age-span and diverse cultures
2. To familiarize students with clinical methods in Audiology and Speech-Language Pathology through video and live observations, lectures, discussions, and readings.
3. To assist students in developing a professional approach to inter-personal interactions and practices in the field of communication disorders
4. To help students gather and organize resources related to the assessment and treatment of individuals with communication disorders
5. To provide opportunities for students to complete and document 25 hours of observation in the field of communication disorders
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| SLHS 45000 - Introduction To Aural Rehabilitation Across The Lifespan |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. The effects of hearing disorders on communication, psychosocial development, academic achievement, and employment will be explored. The roles of residual hearing, vision, signing, and technology in increasing communication proficiency will be discussed, and models of assessment and intervention will be examined. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 46000 - Introduction To Assessment Audiology |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. History of audiology; normal and abnormal processes of hearing; basic methods of audiological assessment; and introduction to the development and management of hearing conservation programs. Laboratory provides practical instruction in the procedures discussed in class. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 49000 - Directed Study Special Problems |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Designed for student to work with individual instructors on special topics of interest. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| SLHS 49800 - Undergraduate Research Experience |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. The course allows students an opportunity to obtain first-hand experience with research in speech, language, and hearing sciences. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 12 credits
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| SLHS 50100 - Neural Bases Of Speech And Hearing |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of normal human neuroanatomy and neurophysiology related to speech, language, and hearing functions. Includes material concerning normal and abnormal neurological development over the lifespan. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 50200 - Fundamentals Of Speech Production And Perception |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The physical, biological, and behavioral correlates of normal speech production and perception. Includes an exposure to the measures and methods of speech science. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The student will be able to describe how the muscles and nerves (cranial and spinal) of the respiratory, laryngeal, and supralaryngeal systems are involved in normal speech production.
2. The student will be able to describe how the acoustic speech signal is formed by the speech production system and understand the resulting acoustic signal for consonants and vowels.
3. The student will understand the underlying principles of speech perception.
4. The student will demonstrate acceptable writing skills.
5. The student will demonstrate how research principles can be integrated into evidence-based practice.
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| SLHS 50300 - Auditory Perception |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Behavioral measurement of the capabilities of the normal and impaired auditory system. The laboratory experience includes an exposure to the measures and methods of hearing science. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 50900 - Language Acquisition |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of research and theory dealing with first language acquisition in children. A linguistic framework is used to describe developing language. Topics considered include speech perception, grammatical development, meaning, and language in nonmodal populations. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 51100 - Seminar In Aging And Communication |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines normal age-related changes to the systems of communication. This includes anatomic and physiologic changes to the respiratory, laryngeal, and supralaryngeal systems and the resulting functional changes to speech production and changes to speech perception, language, cognition, emotional processing, and memory. A background that includes basic anatomy and physiology, neurophysiology, and linguistics is preferred. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 51200 - Acoustics And Perception Of Speech - Honors |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Acoustics of speech for SLHS prerequisite AuD and SLP students, honors undergraduates, and interested students from outside SLHS. This course provides an overview of the science of acoustics from the perspective of the study of spoken language, including discussion of basic aspects of speech perception, with particular attention paid to methods for analyzing and manipulating digital recordings of speech sounds. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Define the physical parameters of sound waves.
2. Describe how sounds are created and how they propagate through a medium.
3. Explain the concepts of resonance and filtering as applied to speech production.
4. Explain and apply the acoustics theory of speech production.
5. Explain digital signal processing as applied to the analysis of speech.
6. Identify the spectrographic representations of consonant and vowel sounds.
7. Explain standard methods for measuring loudness of speech sounds.
8. Use your understanding of acoustics to explain aspects of the perception of speech.
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| SLHS 51800 - Counseling In Speech-Language Pathology And Audiology |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Application of counseling models, theories, and methods to persons with communicative disorders and their families. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 51900 - Special Topics In Audiology And Speech Pathology |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Study of special topics, drawn from areas not covered in permanent courses. Topics may vary from semester to semester. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| SLHS 52100 - Phonetic And Phonological Disorders In Children |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. A detailed study of phonetic and phonological aspects of speech sound disorders in children. Recent research findings dealing with normal and disordered development are reviewed. Advanced procedures for diagnosis and intervention are discussed. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 52200 - Language Disorders Of Exceptional Children |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Description and diagnosis of children with language disorders and procedures for management. Students in a certification program for EMR, ED, LD or TMR should register for this course rather than AUS 52300. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 52300 - Language Disorders In Children: Basic Principles |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of description assessment and intervention for children with language disorders. Specific language evaluation and treatment procedures for children in the preschool years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 52400 - Infant Communication Disorders |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Theories of normal and disordered communication development (including related areas of cognitive and social development) are studied. Theoretical knowledge is applied to a range of clinical populations to generate assessment and treatment approaches for infants and their families. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 52500 - Language And Communication In Autism Spectrum Disorders |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDPS 52500) This course will address development and impairment of language and communication in individuals with autism spectrum disorders (ASD). In addition to language and communication characteristics, this course will review the behavioral, cognitive, sensory, and social –emotional abilities of individuals with ASD. Differential diagnosis, assessment, and intervention strategies will be emphasized with a focus on empirically supported treatments and evidence-based practices. Current developments and research findings will be highlighted related to etiology and diagnosis of ASD, advances in biomedical research, augmentative and alternative communication strategies, assistive technology solutions, behavioral, cognitive, and physiological interventions, and comprehensive treatment approaches. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the diagnostic criteria of autism spectrum disorders.
2. Identify the theorized etiologies of the ASD’s, including the role of genes, environment, and gene/environment interaction.
3. Discuss when autism spectrum disorders may become apparent and how early their identification can be done.
4. Devise an early autism screening tool .
5. Descibe the characteristics and issues surrounding autism from early childhood to adulthood including the impact of social-communicative skills, speech and language characteristics and cognitive and play skills.
6. Descibe neurocognitive theories of autism and their criticisms.
7. Descibe the characteristics of autism in middle childhood including impact on social-communicative skills and cognitive skills.
8. Discuss some of the educational issues related to autism.
9. Descibe characteristics and issues surrounding autism in adolescence and adulthood, including implications for speech and language, and also for employment and independence.
10. Descibe the outcome data on adults with autism.
11. Discuss the different interventions available for autism spectrum disorders, the appropriateness of the interventions, and the pros and cons of each. Some of the interventions describes will be behavior analysis, social-pragmatic language approaches, pharmacological treatment, sensory integration among others.
12. Identify empirically supported treatments and implement evidence-based practices in clinical work.
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| SLHS 52900 - Stuttering: Nature, Diagnosis, And Treatment |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Reviews applications of research findings and theoretical developments to our understanding of the onset, development, perpetuation, and amelioration of stuttering. Demonstrates and discusses methods and procedures for diagnosing and treating stuttering across the lifespan. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn the characteristics of stuttering in preschool and school-age children, adolescents, and adults.
2. Students will learn assessment and treatment procedures for preschool children, school age children, adolescents, and adults who stutter.
3. Students will become familiar with the major theoretical and clinical approaches to stuttering treatment.
4. Students will learn how to read research articles in the area of fluency and will be familiar with the major research findings in the field.
5. Students will learn about the nature and treatment of stuttering in diverse populations and will learn to use clinical methods that are sensitive to developmental and cultural differences
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| SLHS 53100 - Language Disorders In Adults |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the causes, assessment, and treatment of acquired language disorders in adults, including aphasia, right hemisphere syndromes, and dementia. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 53200 - Voice Disorders |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of differential diagnosis and clinical management for children and adults presenting voice disorders, based on a working knowledge of normal laryngeal structure and function. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 53300 - Medical Speech-Language Pathology |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduces the graduate speech-language pathology student to issues encountered in the medical environment in preparation for a healthcare externship and a career in the healthcare setting. Topics will include collaborative models in the medical setting, clinical documentation, ethical issues, equipment and instrumentation, medications, among others. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To increase understanding of the medical speech-language pathology environment.
2. To learn about various departments, professionals, and their collaborative roles with speech-language pathologists.
3. To develop an understanding of solutions to ethical dilemmas related to the medical field.
4. To understand and explain medications and their effects on swallowing and communication disordered individuals.
5. To become familiar with equipment, instrumentation, and medical tests in the intensive care unit and other acute care settings.
6. To discuss future trends related to the medical and speech pathology healthcare arena.
7. To comprehend and explain information obtained from a medical record.
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| SLHS 53600 - Traumatic Brain Injury |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. The mechanisms, effects, assessment, and re-habilitation of traumatic brain injury in children and adults, with emphasis on a team approach to remediation. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 53700 - Developmental Motor Speech And Feeding Disorders |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Normal aspects of speech motor and feeding development are studied. Theories derived from normal processes are applied to designing assessment and intervention approaches for infants and children with a range of clinical diagnoses (e.g., cleft palate, tracheostomy, or Down Syndrome). Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 53800 - Motor Disorders Of Speech |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the neuropathologies that affect the speech production system. Emphasizes the differential diagnosis and management of acquired motor speech disorders. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The student will be able to describe how the types of dysarthria relate to damage in the brain and how the cranial nerves are involved in dysarthria.
2. The student will be able to describe and different views of disability and the levels at which individuals are affected by their difficulties and be able to implement these issues when assessing individuals with dysarthria and when setting goals for treatment.
3. The student will be able to correctly identify dysarthrias, based on case information and symptoms.
4. The student will be able to explain and describe appropriate intervention procedures given specific dysarthrias or speech, voice, resonance, and respiratory symptoms.
5. The student will demonstrate acceptable writing skills.
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| SLHS 53900 - Dysphagia |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the normal and disordered anatomy and physiology of the swallowing process. Principles of evaluation and treatment of dysphagia are discussed. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Knowledge of the anatomy of the respiratory, laryngeal, and articulatory subsystems.
2. Understanding of the normal physiology of the repertory, laryngeal, and articulatory subsystems.
3. Basic knowledge of the cranial nerve system.
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| SLHS 54000 - Augmentative And Alternative Communication |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDPS 56200) Introduction to augmentative and alternative communication. Cognitive, educational, physical, psycho-social, and linguistic aspects are considered together with symbol characteristics, teaching strategies, and research issues. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 54400 - School-Clinical Methods In Communication Disorders |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Organization, materials, and methods for conducting speech, language, and hearing services in elementary and secondary schools. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 54900 - Clinical Practice In Speech-Language Pathology I |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. The second in a series of practicum courses designed to provide instruction and practical experience in fundamental diagnostic and therapeutic approaches to speech and language disorders. AUS 43000 is recommended. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| SLHS 55200 - Educational Audiology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of classroom acoustics, hearing, hearing loss, and auditory processing, and their impact on language, academic, and psychosocial development. Discussion of hearing conservation programs and assistive hearing technologies into academic areas. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 55300 - Cochlear Implants |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides fundamental principles to assist audiologists and speech-language pathologists in the understanding of candidacy, principles of signal processing, and audiologic rehabilitation for children and adults who use cochlear implants. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 56000 - Basic Procedures In Assessment Audiology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Audiometers, audiometric standards, and the use of pure tone and speech signals in the measurement of auditory abilities. Laboratory provides practical instruction in the procedures discussed in class. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 56100 - Medical Audiology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the etiology, pathogenesis, symptomology, epidemiology, diagnosis and treatment of diseases, and injuries to the auditory system. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 56300 - Pediatric Auditory Assessment |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of protocols for the identification and evaluation of infants and children with hearing loss, using behavioral, physiologic, and electro-physiologic assessment methods. Course content places an emphasis on clinical decision-making and problem-solving skills. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 56400 - Hearing Aids I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of amplification systems as applied in audiological rehabilitation; acoustic, electroacoustic, electronic, and clinical considerations. Laboratory exercises in measurement, modifications, maintenance, selection, and dispensing of hearing aid systems. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 56700 - Auditory Evoked Responses I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Evaluation of peripheral and brainstem auditory system function using evoked potentials. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 56800 - Tinnitus Assessment And Rehabilitation |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Ringing in the ears (tinnitus) is a common problem among millions of individuals with sensorineural hearing loss. This course will review the physiology, measurement, and treatment for tinnitus. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 57000 - Noise And Man |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of noise as a health hazard and as a nuisance; an examination of the ways in which hearing problems related to noise may be reduced. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 57700 - Auditory Evoked Responses II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Administration and interpretation of auditory evoked responses generated in the auditory thalamus and cortex. Emphasis is on application of auditory evoked potentials in clinical diagnosis and intra-operative monitoring. Topics include middle (AMLR), late (AEP), and steady-state (SSEP) evoked responses. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 57900 - Clinical Practice In Audiology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 12.00. Supervised clinical practicum in evaluation of hearing and communication status and in remediation of communication problems. Clinical practices include, but are not limited to, auditory site of lesion, sensory aid selection, fitting and evaluation and communication training for children and adults. Clinical practicum is available in the M. D. Steer Audiology Center and off-campus facilities. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| SLHS 58400 - Seminar In Hearing Aids |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Advanced study of hearing aid technology and its appropriate applications to the various signal processing needs of persons with hearing loss, with emphasis on critical review and analysis of research and proposals for future research. Typically offered Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 58500 - Engineering Projects In Community Service: AuD I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Audiology clinical doctoral students, engineering, and speech, language, and hearing sciences undergraduate students work in a team-oriented research and development service-learning process. Students with faculty advisors collaborate with community partners to develop technology meeting adaptive and educational needs. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SLHS 58600 - Engineering Projects In Community Service: AuD II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Second semester registration in EPiCS for audiology clinical doctoral (AuD) students. AuD students complete collaboration with engineering students, other undergraduate students, and community project partners in the development of technology meeting adaptive and educational needs.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SLHS 59000 - Directed Study Of Special Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SLHS 60500 - Signal Processing For Hearing And Speech Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides an overview of the fundamental theory of signals and systems analysis with applications to hearing and speech sciences. Topics include: Introduction to MATLAB, time and frequency domain characterizations of signals and systems, analyses of signals through systems, time/frequency relations, spectrograms, applications to hearing (e.g., hearing-aid and cochlear-implant signal processing), applications to speech, and digital signal processing. Practical experience with digital signal processing (primarily in MATLAB) will supplement lectures. No explicit background in signal processing or MATLAB is assumed. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1) To develop a basic understanding of the principles of signals and systems analysis for application to hearing and speech sciences.
2) To develop hands-on experience with signal processing, data analysis, and programming using MATLAB.
3) To use MATLAB as a tool to develop a greater depth of understanding of issues in signals and systems analysis and in hearing and speech sciences.
4) To work with each student to identify the types of applications MATLAB could be useful for in their future path.
|
| SLHS 60600 - Experimental Phonetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review and critical study of current experimental literature in acoustics and perception of speech. Offered in alternate years. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SLHS 60900 - Seminar In Language Acquisition |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Critical review of current research in selected areas of typical and atypical language acquisition. Prerequisite: SLHS 50900. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SLHS 61900 - Advanced Topics In Audiology And Speech Pathology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Study of advanced topics, varying from semester to semester. Course content will be drawn from areas for which there are no permanent courses. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SLHS 64800 - Speech-Language Pathology Education Externship |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Full-time school-clinical experience to provide speech, language, and hearing services in elementary and secondary schools, under the supervision of a school clinician and university staff holding the ASHA Certificate of Clinical Competency. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SLHS 64900 - Speech-Language Pathology Healthcare Externship |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. An advanced-level clinical practicum in speech and language disorders. Prerequisite: SLHS 54900. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SLHS 65800 - Advanced Topics In Audiology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Detailed study of selected topics in audiology. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SLHS 65900 - Audiology Practice Management |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An examination of business and professional issues related to audiology. Practice management topics include conducting a feasibility analysis, writing a business plan, employee management, marketing, reimbursement, and practice growth. Professional issues include licensing, certification, liability issues, and career planning. Prerequisite: SLHS 57900 and Doctor of Audiology majors only. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SLHS 67800 - Audiology Educational Externship |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. School clinical experience to provide audiology services in elementary and secondary schools under the supervision of a school clinician and University staff holding the Certificate of Clinical Competence in Audiology from the American Speech-Language and Hearing Association. Prerequisite: SLHS 55200, 57900. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SLHS 67900 - Advanced Clinical Practice In Audiology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. An advanced-level clinical practicum in audiology. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Practicum
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SLHS 69000 - Directed Study Of Special Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SLHS 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SLHS 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
Department: Speech, Lang and Hearing Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SLIS L1610 - Library Skills and Resources |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Designed for undergraduates. Techniques and skills for researching term papers, speeches, and other library projects.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SLIS L4010 - Computer-Based Information Tools |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This skills-based course introduces basic applications that will be used throughout the student's coursework and beyond. Students' experiences in this course should be seen as a basis for further skill development and learning throughout their careers. The course covers computing platforms, access tools, and management tools. Demonstration of skills will be by a mastery test or an assignment in each unit of the course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| SLIS L5090 - Introduction to Research and Statistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The research process, including concepts, design, conduct, and evaluation. Principles and characteristics of approaches and methodologies relevant to research in the field. Examples of data sources and introduction to methods of statistical description and analysis; ethical issues.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SLIS L5200 - Bibliographic Access and Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Historical development and principles essential to the understanding of the conceptual foundations of providing bibliographic access and control of materials and information. Discussion and examples in the appliation of AACR2r will be presented to illustrate and reflect current practice. Emphasis is on monographic publications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SLIS L5220 - Perspectives on Librarianship, Literacy, Communication, and Reading |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of the library as a social institution-historically, currently, and for the future-within social, economic, political, and cultural contexts. Focuses on the institution, the collections and formats, and the users, to create an understanding of the role and importance of libraries.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SLIS L5240 - Information Sources And Services |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces students to the basic information sources and services among different types of libraries and information centers, including academic, public, special, and school media. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SLIS L5260 - Library Automation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles for the design, selection, implementation, and management of automated systems of all types in libraries, including systems for technical services processing, reference and user services, and mangaement. Focus is on present and future applications of technology in libraries, their technical features, and their implications for library services and management. When possible, some ptractical experience with a particular application will be provided. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SLIS L5270 - Management of Libraries and Information Centers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Management and administration of all types of libraries. Covers basics of organizational structure, planning, budget management, human resources issues and skills, and an understanding of the manager in the context of the organization. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| SLIS L5280 - Collection Development and Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theoretical and pragmatic aspects of the selection, evaluation, and management of collections in all types of libraries. Acquisitions, publishers and publishing, policy making, and intellectual freedom and censorship are also covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| SLIS L5330 - Library Materials For Children And Young Adults |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Evaluation and use of books, magazines, recordings, films, radio and television broadcasts, and other sources of information and recreation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SLIS L5350 - Library Services for Children and Young Adults |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course emphasizes the history, philosophy, and description of children and young adult library services. It takes a holistic look at the role of the youth services librarian, from planning and evaluation to specific services and programs, and examines the current and future outlook for this type of librarianship. Emphasis is on the public library, but cooperations with appropriate services and programs such as school media centers is also discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SLIS L5510 - Information Inquiry for School Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is intended to be an opportunity for teachers and future teachers (including school library media specialists as teachers) to practice methods in critically thinking about information/media, and to use that process as a means to teach their students to be critical reviewers and communicators. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SLIS L5530 - The School Media Specialist |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Establishes the professional teaching and administrative role of the certified school library media specialist in K-12 settings. Situations are examined that pertain specifically to policy development, budgeting, collection development, instructional design, support staff training, facility design, district supervision, and information networking within the modern school corporation. Students make site visits to leading school information centers, conferences, and media fairs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SLIS L5960 - Internship in Library and Information Science |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 6.00. Supervised internship in an information management environment. Professionals in library and information management mentor each graduate student. Forty on-site hours must be completed for each credit earned. Students should plan through their advisor the course work leading to an internship. Normally, at least 21 credits must be completed before enrollment. Graded S/F. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SLIS L6510 - Evaluation of Library Sources and Services |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the applied evaluation of library resources and services, including collections, document delivery, technical services, reference services, and overall library performance. Emphasis is placed on the available methods and methodological issues. The checklist method, availability studies, document delivery tests, use studies, applied bibliometrics, and the use of automation are covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SLIS S4010 - Computer-Based Information Tools |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Computer-Based Information Tools. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SLIS S5110 - Database Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Concerned with a comprehensive view of the processes involved in developing formal access to information from a user-centered point of view. Considers various database models (such as flat file, hierarchical, and relational), and hypertext (in terms of text, sound, numeric, image, and geographic data). Students will design and implement databases using several commercial database management systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SOC 10000 - Introductory Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey course designed to introduce the student to the scene of human society. Fundamental concepts, description, and analysis of society, culture, the socialization process, social institutions, and social change. Students of junior or senior standing should take SOC 31200, unless they are sociology or law and society majors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:ISH 1060 Introduction To Sociology
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Required Materials:
|
| SOC 22000 - Social Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Contemporary problems at the community, society, and international levels, focusing on patterns of social organization and social change in American society, with concentration on such topics as technological militarism and war, poverty, racism, political protest, and cybernation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:ISH 1061 Social Problems
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC 24500 - Field Of Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Examination of educational and career opportunities in the field of Sociology, major theoretical and research approaches are briefly presented to assist student preparation for subsequent courses and options in Sociology. The application process and experience of post-graduate education are reviewed. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SOC 26100 - Basic Helping Skills For Human Services |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of the various human services. This course introduces students to the history of the helping professions, professional values and ethics, and the myriad of settings in which such services are offered. Current frameworks, methods, settings, of these services are included. Not open to students with credit in SWRK 26100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SOC 27500 - Social Gerontology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the basic points of view and a review of the accumulated body of knowledge specific to gerontology. Consideration of the problems of population change, housing, social adjustment, retirement, mobility, family living arrangements, and finances of older people in the United States. Comparison with other countries. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 30100 - Sociology Of International Change |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of recent international developments from the sociological perspective. Topics include such issues as ethnic conflicts, trade wars, population growth, technological changes, environmental issues, famine, the collapse of the USSR, and the formation of new political/ economic rivalries. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SOC 30200 - Group Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course investigates the relationship between the individuals and the groups to which they belong. Classic and contemporary research on group processes will be discussed. Topics will include group formation, evolution, and dissolution; leadership and authority; social influence; decision making; productivity, and relationships among groups. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Be able to explain the characteristics and forms of groups in modern life.
2. Understand how group dynamics shape personal experience and how individuals influence groups.
3. Understand how larger social patterns and inequalities are perpetuated through groups.
4. Be able to apply group theory and research to understanding and addressing contemporary social issues.
|
| SOC 30300 - Sociology Of Violence |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This class explores sociological explanations of violence in the United States. Topics under study include: personal violence, sexual and intimate violence; prejudice, violence and hate crimes; violent crime; state violence; corporate violence and victimology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the sociological perspective on the nature, causes, and consequences of violence.
2. Understand how sociological explanations of violence are distinct from biological and individualistic explanations.
3. Be aware of the patterns and trends of violence in the United States.
4. Examine how institutional responses (e.g., social service organizations, medical and legal systems) can both perpetuate and alleviate violence.
|
| SOC 30600 - Methods In Human Services |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The class will focus on case mangement techniques that will be used in format systems such as welfare programs, health care and mental health agencies, child care programs, agencies serving the elderly and the corrections industry. Emphasis will be placed on multidimensional assessment techniques, information and referral services and the skills necessary to act as a change agent, educator and facilitator. Other essential elements of the course include crisis intervention, the dynamics involved in family systems, health promotion, and the needs of special populations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SOC 30700 - Field Experience In Human Services |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The field experience component of the Human Services curriculum provides a supervised learning experience in a professional practice setting. The participants in the field practicum include the student, faculty and agency supervisor. This will give students the opportunity to integrate carefully selected and approved individualized experiences as they actively engage in professional tasks which complement and reinforce classroom learning. The seminar that accompanies the course will provide opportunities for student peer relationships and for the development of beginning competencies as students learn to use supervision and focus on specific practice areas. The course will place particular emphasis on the needs of each student. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Provides a supervised learning experience in a professional practice setting.
2. Gives students the opportunity to integrate carefully selected and approved individualized experiences as they actively engage in professional tasks which complement and reinfoce classroom learning.
3. Provide opportunities for student peer relationships and for the development of beginning competencies as students learn to use supervision and focus on specific practice areas.
4. Places particular emphasis on the needs of each student.
|
| SOC 31000 - Racial And Ethnic Diversity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines racial and ethnic pluralism in America: ways groups have entered our society; their social and cultural characteristics; and their relationships with other groups. Groups include the English, Germans, Irish, Jews, Chinese, Japanese, Blacks, Hispanics, and Native Americans. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
|
| SOC 31200 - American Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An exposure to sociology, focused on American sociology and society (the
U.S.), recommended for juniors and seniors who are not sociology or law and society majors. Students with freshman standing or who have had SOC 10000 may not enroll in this class without special permission. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 31400 - Race And Ethnic Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the social, psychological, political, economic, and cultural factors that influence society's treatment of members of various racial and ethnic groups, and those factors that influence the ways those factors that influence the ways those groups interact with each other. Not open to students with credit in SOC 51400. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SOC 31501 - Gender In Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course focuses on the ways in which society influences individual experiences and understandings of gender and the impact this has on larger social institutions, including education, marriage and family, health, and work. This course also considers the intersections of gender, race and ethnicity, and social class. The influence of feminist theory on our understanding of gender is also discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| SOC 31600 - Industry And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the social content and consequences of industrial development and introduces key issues in industrial sociology, including technological change, management systems, labor organization, community development, and international relations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 31700 - Sociology Of Sex And Sexualities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on sociological understandings of sex and sexualities by identifying existing tensions and paradoxes in how sex and sexualities are socially understood, discusses, experienced, and portrayed. Topics under study may include: distinctions between sexual behaviors and sexual identities; the historical invention of sexual-identify categories; sex work; sexualized violence; and interactions of other social identities (e.g., race/ethnicity, class, age, gender) with sex and sexualities. This course also examines the ways in which U.S. social laws, policies, education, public opinion, media, religion, and technology work to construct, shape, recognize, and regulate the existing diversity of sex and sexualities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Critique binaries of sex using evidence from the physical and social sciences.
2. Describe and differentiate between the concepts of sex, gender, gender identity, gender expression, sexual orientation, and sexuality.
3. Identify and distinguish between, political, moral, and empirical understandings of sex and sexualities.
4. Consider the ways in which sex, race/ethnicity, gender, class, sexual orientation, age, ability and other factors intersect to shape the experiences and opportunities of individuals and groups.
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| SOC 31800 - Sociology Of Sport |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides a sociological understanding of the institution of sports. It particularly investigates the role of politics, the economy, and the media in the creation of sports as an institution. The variables of race class and gender are emphasized, as are the links between sports and basic American values. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| SOC 32000 - General Social Organization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of selected areas of social organization. Institutions as special forms of organizations and bureaucracies. Theories and empirical studies of power and decision making in organizations. Case studies of American organizations and institutions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| SOC 32400 - Criminology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Nature and cause of crime; methods of dealing with adult and juvenile offenders, consideration of present programs for the social treatment of crime in the light of needed changes. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Lafayette
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| SOC 32500 - Social Forces And Social Movements |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the social, political, economic, and social psychological conditions that give rise to social movements, the ideological perspectives of major social movements, and the inter-relationships between social movement and social change. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| SOC 32600 - Social Conflict And Criminal Justice |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the dynamics of social conflict, with a special focus on legal institutions and criminological processes. Students will learn to think more analytically about the causes of social conflict, its dynamics, and strategies for resolution. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SOC 32700 - Crime, Deviance And Mass Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Various forms of mass media are used to explore the sociology of crime and deviance. Topics may include white collar crime, juvenile delinquency, street crime, sexuality and sexual orientation, hate crimes, deviance and community. Assignments include quizzes and short papers. Typically offered Fall, Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
To build students' capacities in the areas of critical thinking, written and verbal communication, and to apply abstract concepts. On the quizzes, students will be able to identify concepts associated with specific theoretical perspectives and be able to describe these concepts. On their paper assignments, students will be able to use these concepts to the media forms presented in the class. Specifically, they will be able to: 1) use the concepts to craft explanations for characters' actions in the fictional films and 2) be able to conduct analyses of the news that conform to accepted methodological standards of quantitative and qualitative research.
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| SOC 32800 - Criminal Justice |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to institutionalized responses of society to the problem of crime. Analysis of the administration of justice in each of the major components of the criminal justice system and laws regulating their operations. Some consideration given to comparative criminal justice. Typically offered Fall Spring.
CTL:ISH 1030 Introduction To Criminal Justice
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an understanding of the Criminal Justice System in the United States, including the relationships between federal, state and local units of government.
2. Demonstrate an understanding of the pathway which an individual follows from first arrest to incarceration.
3. Demonstrate an understanding of the differential criminalization and sanctions connected to domestic, street, and corporate forms of violence and crime.
4. Demonstrate an understanding of the influence of class, race/ethnicity and gender in criminal justice.
5. Demonstrate an understanding of the major policy debates regarding crime control and criminal justice.
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| SOC 33000 - Culture, Arts, Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The relations of the arts to society; the production, diffusion, institutionalization, democratization of the arts, with attention to the consequences of diverse media structures organization, marketing, and support structures. Emphasis will be placed on related emerging social roles, the connection between art and politics, elite versus mass arts, and the arts and cultural values. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| SOC 33400 - Urban Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of the city and its functions; types of social behavior in cities; influences of city life on personality; city planning. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| SOC 33800 - Global Social Movements |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores dynamics of social movements in the world; emphasizes movements in non-western world. Examines emergences of movements, mobilization, tactical actions and consequences, and formal and informal organizations within movements to understand how international, national and local structures affect people. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SOC 33900 - Introduction To The Sociology Of Developing Nations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of the causes of development in the Third World. Topics include: the food crisis; population growth; poverty and inequality; industrialization, including the role of multinational corporations; debt; and the International Monetary Fund. Regional differences in patterns and causes analyzed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
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| SOC 34000 - General Social Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Social influences on the individual and processes of social interaction. Individual attitudes and behavior as related to socialization, social norms, social roles, communication and propaganda, and other social influences. Among the interaction processes considered are interpersonal attraction, influence, leadership, cooperation, and conflict. Not open to students with credit in PSY 24000. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Lafayette
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| SOC 34100 - Culture And Personality |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A cross-cultural survey stressing differing basic personality types and the processes by which adult personality is acquired. Case studies of selected non-Western cultures will be used to provide comparative perspectives. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| SOC 34300 - Introduction To The Criminal Justice System |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the agencies and processes involved in the criminal justice system: legislature, the courts, the police, the prosecutor, the public defender, and corrections. An analysis of the roles and problems of each component with an emphasis on their inter-relationship. Not open to students with credit in POL 34300. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| SOC 35000 - Social Psychology Of Marriage |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to provide an understanding of contemporary courtship, marriage, and family interaction as cultural, social, and social-psychological phenomena. Consideration of the major sources of marital strain and conflict within a heterogeneous, rapidly changing society. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| SOC 35200 - Drugs, Culture, And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ANTH 35200) The course provides an overview of the social and cultural underpinnings of drug use across societies. Students engage with various topics, including addiction, global markets, drug epidemics, public policy, and cross-cultural differences in drug use. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SOC 35201 - Drugs Culture And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ANTH 35201) The course provides an overview of the social and cultural underpinnings of drug use across societies. Students engage with various topics including addiction, global markets, drug epidemics, public policy, and cross-cultural differences in drug use. Typically Offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the trends, patterns, and types of drug use in the U.S. and cross-culturally.
2. Analyze the various social responses to drug use, displaying an understanding of the emergence of these responses being linked to particular cultural and social structural shifts.
3. Analyze the social construction of drug use as a social problem.
4. Differentiate the contributing factors in the process of evaluating substance abuse and dependence.
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| SOC 35600 - Hate And Violence |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the causes of and solutions to hatred and violence. Concepts such as anti-Semitism, discrimination, hate crimes, prejudice, racism, bullying, homosexual prejudice, terrorism and other topics will be addressed. This course uses experiential activities, videos, guest speakers and classroom discussion. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SOC 36100 - The Institution Of Social Welfare |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic concepts and activities of social service organizations. Field trips to selected institutions. Not open to students with credit in SWRK 36100. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| SOC 36400 - Child And Family Welfare |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A review of the family as it is influenced by societal and personal forces. The impact of culture, society, and economics on the family is reviewed; additionally, the personal and interpersonal factors including family crises, breakdowns, unemployment, and alcoholism are considered. Not open to students with credit in SWRK 36400. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| SOC 36500 - Constructing American Families |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course considers changes and variations in the forms and portrayals of family and family life in the U.S. across time. Topics under study may include: how gender, race, and class shape family roles and family labor (care work); processes of courtship, dating, cohabitation, partnership, marriage, parenthood, and divorce; multiracial/multiethnic families; gay and lesbian families; and family violence. This course also examines the ways in which U.S. social laws, policies, economy, public opinion, media, religion, and technology work to construct, shape, recognize, and regulate the diversity of family forms that exist. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Utilize social science empirical evidence to analyze the shape, form, and structure of families and family life in the U.S.
2. Develop an awareness if the ways in which families are socially constructed in both history and the present.
3. Develop a critical response to the notion that there has been a “golden age” of family life in the U.S.
4. Develop awareness of the ways in which gender, race/ethnicity, class, sexual orientation, and other identities intersect to produce and limit possibilities for the formation and success of particular families.
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| SOC 36700 - Religion In America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the social dimensions of religion in American life; religion in American culture; social profiles of America's religious groups, trends in individual religious commitment; and religion's impact on American life.
. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| SOC 36800 - The Social Significance Of Religion |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines religion's relationship with family, work, politics, gender, war and peace, race and ethnicity, health, crime and deviance, education, law, and poverty. Content differs each time course is taught. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
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| SOC 37300 - Gender And Interaction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to the social psychology of gender. In this course we will examine how gender shapes our everyday experiences and interactions. The social psychology of gender is inherently an interdisciplinary field and so over the course of the semester we will be drawing on both sociology and psychology to consider the reciprocal relationship between the social environment and individual experiences and understandings of gender. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Be able to understand and critique the influence of society on our understanding of gender.
2. Be able to understand and critique the impact gender has on both women and men in society in both theoretical and practical terms.
3. Be able to understand and apply theories of social psychology (i.e. status characteristics theory, social cognition) and gender (i.e. doing gender, two culture theory, social role theory, gender difference, gender similarities) to understand how gender influences everyday interactions.
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| SOC 37400 - Medical Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides an overview of the sociological determinants and consequences of health, the patient experience, health care providers, the organization of the health care system. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| SOC 38200 - Introduction To Statistics In Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the basic techniques of statistical analysis applicable to sociological data. Elementary descriptive statistics and statistical inference. Introduction to multivariate analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| SOC 38300 - Introduction To Research Methods In Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the methods of data collection and analysis and to the use of the scientific method of social research. Formulation of hypotheses and research designs for their testing. Elementary principles for the conduct of experiments, observation and interviewing, documentation, content analysis, and surveys. Relationship between social research and social theory. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| SOC 39000 - Individual Research In Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individual research or reading in an area of sociology under the guidance of a sociology faculty member. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
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| SOC 39100 - Selected Topics In Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Various topics in sociology that may change from semester to semester are presented by sociology faculty members. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
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| SOC 40200 - Sociological Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced critical treatment of the theories, concepts, and methods of sociology. A basic course required of undergraduate majors in sociology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| SOC 40300 - Sociology Of Developing Countries In Era Of Globalization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to acquaint students with the conditions in and faced by people in “developing” countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America and the “Middle East”. This will be done with an overview of “development” and how that has affected these countries, and how that is changing in the shift from development to globalization. This course will also examine these countries’ interactions with the United States. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Be able to think and write critically about issues concerning developing countries in the world.
2. Acquire a better understanding of the meaning and consequences of social change currently taking place, both in the US, and around the world.
3. Learn the meanings of major concepts in sociology, and will get to consider the ramifications of our understanding of social phenomena by using the different models that have been developed to describe social reality.
4. Learn of social development within a global context that has developed historically.
5. Examine their values, attitudes and relations to other people, whether in small groups, different ethnic, racial and/or gender grouping, or nations.
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| SOC 40400 - Sociology Of The Environment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to give students a sociological look at the social interaction between human beings and their physical environment-accordingly, it will not focus on the physical environment alone. Course will provide different theoretical frameworks to understanding society, and will take a global approach to the subject. Course will discuss a number of environmental issues that are especially important in the world, as well as subjects of more immediate concern in Northwest Indiana. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Be able to think and write critically about issues concerning environmental issues.
2. Acquire a better understanding of the meaning and consequences that environmental issues hold in Northwest Indiana, across the entire United States, and around the world.
3. Learn the meanings of major concepts in looking at the issues around the interactions between human beings and the environment.
4. Examine their values, attitudes and relations to the environment, other human beings, and other specifics of life.
5. Learn about possible factors to improve the human-environment interactions, and to minimize the impact of humans on the planet.
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| SOC 40500 - Sociology Of The Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to give students an introductory, macrosociological look at the mass media in society today. This will examine the mainstream media, as well as the newly emerging media-including the internet-as used both by mainstream and alternative outlets, and examines the impact of media on social existence. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Be able to think and write critically about issues concerning media and related issues.
2. Comprehend the role of advertising and its effects on the free flow of information in society.
3. Acquire a better understanding of the meaning and consequences that the media has on contemporary American society.
4. Understand the importance of social location of various media within established media networks.
5. Appreciate the importance of models of society used to represent society, and importance in interpreting news in the media.
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| SOC 40600 - Social Movements |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will introduce students to the study of social movements, which are a major source of social change in the world today. Will look at a number of social movements from a global perspective. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Be able to think and write critically about issues concerning social movements in the US and globally.
2. Become aware of the role social movements have played in social changes processed in the US and around the world.
3. Understand major theoretical approaches to the study of social movements.
4. Acquire an understanding of the impact that social movements have had historically on US society.
5. Comprehend the global nature of social movements.
6. Be able to understand the relationship between social movements and individuals.
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| SOC 40700 - Sociology Of Religion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will provide students with an opportunity to think about religious experience and religious organizations as a part of a larger social order by providing a sociological overview of the nature and functions of religious beliefs and institutions in modern societies. Topics will include: the nature of religious organizations and the process of secularization; the role of religious organizations in social change and social stratification; the development and influence of religiosity and religious identity in the lives of individuals; and the relationship between religion and science. Typically offered Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Become familiar with and learn to apply classical sociological work on religion to modern social life.
2. Learn to distinguish between types of religious organizations.
3. Develop the ability to look at religion using a sociological perspective.
4. Explore the difference between religious affiliation and religiosity.
5. Explore the development of religious identity and religiosity in the social context.
6. Explore the ways that religion influences daily life at the micro-level.
7. Explore the role of religious organizations in the process of social change.
8. Explore the debates surrounding contemporary issues connecting science and religion.
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| SOC 40800 - Inequality And The Individual Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course will examine how structural inequalities such as those related to race, class, and gender are created and reproduced and sometimes challenged through social interaction. Students will learn to apply social psychology to combat contemporary social inequalities in diverse settings such as education, family, government, and the workplace. Typically offered Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Have developed a further understanding of basic concepts within social psychology and stratification.
2. Have examined how social inequality is reproduced through interaction.
3. Have examined how beliefs about categories of people based on characteristics such as disability, sexual orientation, age, as well as race, class and gender people are internalized and confirmed through selective perceptions.
4. Have explored how interaction can also challenge and alter beliefs about categories of people.
5. Have learned to utilize social psychological research and theory to overcome existing patterns of inequality.
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| SOC 41100 - Social Stratification |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of systems of class and caste, with special attention to the United States; status, occupation, income, and other elements in stratification. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| SOC 41200 - Social Change |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of social change in premodern and modern societies. The following topics will be included: theories of social change, current patterns of social change in the developing and industrial worlds, changes in socialization patterns, interpersonal relations, social institutions, the impact of social change, the desirability of growth and development and the dilemmas of modernization. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| SOC 41600 - Industrial Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides an overview of the historical development of industrial organizations from craft production through the factory to multinational corporations. Examines changes in managerial practices and ideologies and workers' reactions. Explores other institutions (including government, schools, mass media) affecting industrial development. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
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| SOC 41900 - Sociology Of Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides an overview of American legal thought and legal processes. Major topics include definitions of law; anthropological studies of law; origin and development of law; jurisprudence; police behavior; lawyers and courts; deterrent and labeling effects of legal sanctions. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 42000 - Sociology Of Criminal Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigates substantive and procedural criminal law. Emphasizes common law crimes, the major defenses, search and seizure, and the privilege against self-incrimination. Professor Miller. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 42100 - Juvenile Delinquency |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of social and psychological factors influencing individual delinquent behavior patterns. Emphasis on preventive and rehabilitative programs and the role of community agencies such as social service agencies, juvenile courts, and youth authorities. Visits to selected organizations and institutions. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 42200 - Criminology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Nature and cause of crime; methods of dealing with adult and juvenile offenders; consideration of present programs for the social treatment of crime in the light of needed changes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SOC 42300 - Field Practicum In Criminal Justice |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Field experience in criminal justice system. Students serve as "interns" in a criminal justice agency one day (or its equivalent) per week, under the supervision of agency personnel. Application of theory and empirical research findings to field problems. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 42600 - Social Deviance And Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Sociological and social psychological study of social control and social deviance. Emphasis on theoretical frameworks and empirical research. Consideration also given to specific areas such as substance abuse, suicide, violence, and deviant collective behavior. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 42900 - Sociology Of Protest |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the sociological study of protest. Topics include protest emergence, individual reasons for participation in protest, and outcomes. Course readings cover protest in the United States as well as other cultural contexts. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 43000 - Sociology Of Aging |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of the theories of aging, problems confronting older persons, and programs designed to assist the elderly. Consideration of social aspects of aging in the U.S. in the areas of retirement, employment, housing, income, health care, and the family relationships with cross-cultural and a historical comparisons. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SOC 43100 - Services For The Aged |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course describes current and alternative models for providing community and institutional-based services for the aged. Intervention theories and strategies for providing human services are discussed. Students are expected to apply course concepts when developing ideas for an evaluating existing services for older people. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SOC 44000 - Sociology Of Health And Illness |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of the social aspects of health beliefs, the definition of disease, and decisions regarding the seeking of medical care. Identification of major changes in patterns and frequencies of health, sickness, disease, and death in the 20th and 21st centuries and factors influencing these patterns. Analysis of characteristics of U.S. medical care systems with particular emphasis on the economics and ethics of health care delivery, the production and distribution of medical personnel, and comparisons with other systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SOC 44300 - Field Experience In Criminal Justice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Observation and supervised participation in the criminal justice system. Readings and class meetings to integrate theory and experience. Intended for students who plan to become employed in the criminal justice system upon receiving the bachelor's degree. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Ability to utilize skills and techniques acquired through previous courses and apply them to their chosen agency’s culture and function in assisting the community.
|
| SOC 45000 - Gender Roles In Modern Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A critical examination of the complementary roles of men and women, with particular attention to problems of role adjustment in the contemporary United States. The neofeminist movement and countermovements. Role conflicts and adjustments in such areas as family, education, employment, and the political arena. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 45300 - Intimate Violence |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines violence between intimates across the life span starting with child abuse and ending with abuse against the elderly. The perspectives used include social learning theory, gender role socialization and sociocultural values. Current research as well as emerging themes about the transmission of violence, learned behavior, and victimization will be used in this class. Assessment techniques are a major part of the class. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SOC 45400 - Family Violence |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Child abuse, intimate partner violence, and elder abuse are examined with a focus on correlates, treatments and prevention strategies. Definitions of family violence and the social contexts related to family violence are assessed. Legal and medical models to explain family violence are compared. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 46000 - Field Experience In Gerontology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Supervised volunteer field experience in a gerontological setting. Intended as an opportunity for practical experience in an organization providing services to older adults, where theoretical concepts can be applied with skills and techniques for dealing with older adults can be developed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Provides a student secured, supervised learning experience in a professional practice setting for 110 hours.
2. Gives students the opportunity to integrate carefully selected and approved individualized experiences as they actively engage in professional tasks which complement and reinforce classroom learning.
3. Provide opportunities for student peer relationships and for the development of beginning competencies as students learn to use supervision and focus on specific practice areas.
|
| SOC 49100 - Topics In Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SOC 49300 - Interdisciplinary Undergraduate Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An undergraduate seminar devoted to an interdisciplinary examination of social, economic, political, and intellectual movements, using the faculty resources of the participating departments. Subject matter will vary. Each offering of the seminar will be approved by a committee of department heads from the sponsoring departments. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SOC 49700 - Senior Honors Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A critical examination of some major works in sociology and anthropology, both classical and modern, and of some current theoretical and substantive issues in these disciplines. Open only to students in the departmental honors program. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 49800 - Senior Honors Paper |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The production of a major paper on a topic selected by the student in consultation with the instructor. The students will meet early in the semester for orientation and discussion of topics; in the middle of the semester for progress reports; and late in the semester for presentation and critique of their papers. Open only to students in the departmental honors program. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 51400 - Racial And Cultural Minorities |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. America's minority groups; immigration; interracial and intercultural conflicts; assimilation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 52000 - Work In Contemporary America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines meaning and organization of work in technological society, including job satisfaction, alienation, mobility, conflict, stratification, and unemployment and the impact of race-sex composition of occupations on mobility and politics. Also considers relations with colleagues, organization, clients, and public. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 52500 - Social Movements |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Origins and developmental stages of revolutionary and reform movements and communitarian societies; relation between social structure and political attitudes; personality needs and affinity for social and political ideologies. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 52900 - Introduction To Political Economy: A Sociological Perspective |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines and evaluates concepts, propositions, and theories within Marxian approaches to an analysis of contemporary society. Topics include (but are not limited to) class structure and class formation, the labor theory of value, historical materialism, and surplus value. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 53000 - Political Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of the social and social psychological sources of routine political participation such as voting and interest group activity, and nonroutine political action such as protest movements and revolution; the organization of power at the community, national, and international level; and political ideology. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 53100 - Community Organization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of the local community in terms of its institutional structure, relationships among institutions, political and economic power relationships, and the role of voluntary organizations and interest groups. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 55400 - Social Psychology Of The Family |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of interactional aspects of the modern American family emphasizing variation in family patterns, marital roles, power, influence, attraction conflict and control. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 56700 - Religion In Social Context |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the social bases of religion at the societal, organizational, and individual levels. Topics include the formation of religious groups and ideas; social dynamics within religious groups; religion's persistence over time; and the conditions under which religion tends to change. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 56800 - Religion And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines religion's relationships with other spheres of social life. Other areas include family life, education, economy, politics, health, media, inequality, deviance, and social movements. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 57000 - Sociology Of Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of the American public school as a social organization. Includes: interrelations among community power structure, social stratification, and the school; the roles of superintendent, principal, and teacher in community and school; the classroom as a social system; student culture; and teaching as a profession. Typically offered Summer Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 57100 - Health And Social Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A sociological examination of health and illness that emphasizes the patient and his or her relations to others. Considers the distribution of illness, stress, health and illness behavior, patient-practitioner relationships, and treatment modes. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 57200 - Comparative Healthcare Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Using cost, quality, and access to care as core concepts, this course explores healthcare in comparative context. Special topics are health and gender, the environment, epidemics, long-term care, technology, and rationing, among others. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 57300 - The Human Side Of Medicine |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on sociological theory and research related to social conflicts over the delivery of healthcare in the U.S. Considers social issues pertaining to abortion, AIDS, human experimentation, reproductive technologies, euthanasia, and others. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 57400 - The Social Organization Of Healthcare |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of the determinants and consequences of the social organization of medical care. Considers morbidity and mortality, costs and utilization of medical services, healthcare occupations and institutions, and change in programs and policies. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 57600 - Health And Aging In Social Context |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of the social and cultural influences on health in adulthood and later life. Considers distribution of illness among older adults, health behavior, and health services use, including long-term care. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 57800 - Disability And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course analyzes the phenomenon of disability from a sociological frame of reference. The course focuses on the role of language and social roles, the effect of public policy upon individuals with disability, the portrayal of disability in popular cultures, the role of technology on the lives of individuals with disability and the challenges confronting our society and its treatment of disability. Students will experience the impact of disability on individuals through an array of educational activities. The structure of the course is designed to facilitate direct contact by students with a disability. The course is also designed to enhance students learning through various readings, assignments, and videos. The students should have regular and consistent access to the Internet and should have the basic skills to navigate the Blackboard site for the course, as well as Word processing software. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Acquire an understanding of how social roles and language define disability through written descriptions of this phenomenon.
2. Demonstrate an understanding of the role of public policy in the lives of individuals with disability. This will be demonstrated through the completion of five reflection papers as well as different discussion threads.
3. Become acquainted with the role that media plays in the portrayal of disability in our society and how people with disabilities have adapted to these portrayals. This will be demonstrated through the completion of five reflection papers as well as different discussion threads.
4. Become aware of how technology is affecting the lives of individuals with disability. This will be demonstrated through the completion of five reflection papers as well as different discussion threads.
5. Understand the ethical debates that confront society related to valuing individuals with disability. This will be demonstrated through the completion of five reflection papers as well as different discussion threads.
|
| SOC 58000 - Methods Of Social Research I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An intermediate-level examination of research designs, measurement, and sampling with emphasis on issues of problem formulation and the logic and application of methodological procedures. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 58100 - Methods Of Social Research II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis on statistical inference applied to sociological problems; topics include the binomial distribution and the logic of inference, one and two sample tests, confidence intervals, and chi-square. Introduction to bivariate correlation and regression, analysis of variance. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 58300 - Application Of Social Research Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Specific methods of survey research, including questionnaire construction, and sampling techniques, as well as case studies and field experiments are covered. Emphasis is on the use of such methods and their implications for the nature of social data. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 59000 - Individual Research Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individual research or reading in an area of sociology under a sociology department staff member. Does not include thesis work. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SOC 59100 - Selected Topics In Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| SOC 60000 - Development Of Sociological Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The development of sociological thought in Western Europe and subsequently in the United States from the publication of Marx's early manuscripts through the sociological writings of the 1940s. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 60200 - Contemporary Sociological Theories |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A companion course to SOC 60000. Examination of the works of recent and contemporary sociological theorists such as Durkheim, Weber, Pareto, Parsons, and Merton, and of major theorists in related disciplines such as Marx, Freud, and Malinowski. Includes an examination of major "schools" or frames of reference such as ecology, structural-functionalism, etc. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 60300 - The Individual In Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines social influences on the individual. Socialization, social class, racial and ethnic memberships, organizational and occupational memberships, and mass media are among the social influences considered. Prerequisite: SOC 34000. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 60900 - Seminar In Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SOC 61000 - Seminar On Teaching Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Acquaints students with the literature on teaching sociology and its issues and provides practice instruction through videotaped microteaching, syllabus and examination construction, etc. A theoretical or research paper is required. Prerequisite: Master's student standing. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 61100 - Social Inequality: Class, Race, And Gender |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of major approaches (functional, status attainment, labor market, class, culture) to the sociological study of inequality, including qualitative and quantitative, historical and comparative studies. Students will be asked to complete a project analyzing inequality, which might provide the basis for a publishable paper. Prerequisite: Master's student standing and Sociology majors only. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 63000 - Seminar In Political Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive consideration of a selected topic or set of topics in political sociology such as political socialization, political movements, comparative political analysis, political ideology in the industrialized West. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| SOC 65900 - Seminar In Marriage And The Family |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Seminar in Marriage and the Family. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| SOC 66700 - Seminar In The Sociology Of Religion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines topics of traditional or emerging interest in the sociology of religion. Topics covered depend on the theoretical research interests of participating faculty and students. Prerequisite: SOC 56700 or 56800. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| SOC 67400 - Seminar In Medical Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Seminar in Medical Sociology. Prerequisite: SOC 57100, 57400. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| SOC 67700 - Research Seminar On Aging And The Life Course |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An interdisciplinary seminar examining recent research on aging and the responsible conduct of research. Emphasis is given to professional development in gerontology and related fields. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
|
| SOC 68000 - Advanced Social Research Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey analysis using regression models. Emphasizes ordinary least squares model applied to sociological problems. Also considered are path analysis and logit and logistic regression. A series of projects are required using the PUCC mainframe computer applying course concepts. Prerequisite: SOC 58100 or 60000. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 68100 - Selected Problems Of Social Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Working with already available data, each student will conduct one or more research projects, including conceptualization, operational procedures, analysis of the data, and report writing. The data to be used may be from surveys, small group studies, organizational studies, or written documents. Prerequisite: SOC 60000 or 68000. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| SOC 68600 - Qualitative Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Surveys qualitative research methods. Considers methods of data collection and data analysis, including computer-assisted techniques. Critical examination of perspectives, assumptions, and issues, including protection of human subjects. Students conduct research projects and write papers using techniques encountered in class. Prerequisite: SOC 58000. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SOC 69500 - Analytic Project In Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 6.00. Designed to provide experience in defining a research problem, in assessing knowledge and research about the problem, and in analysis. Prerequisite: SOC 58000, 58100. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 OR 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SOC 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Sociology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SOC B1000 - Principles Of Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to sociology. Gives an understanding of theories and research on social structures, processes, and problems.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC B1900 - Human Behavior And Social Institutions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Develops insights into human nature, the nature of social institutions, the social processes that shaped the world of the twenty-first century. In an interdisciplinary way, introduces the distinctive perspectives of the social sciences, emphasizing frameworks and techniques used in explaining causes and patterns of individual and institutional behavior. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC B2420 - Social Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discussion and analysis of current social problems within American society. Examines political, economic, and social dimensions of problems, their causes, and possible solutions.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC P5100 - Seminar On Organizations And The Individual |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on the interplay between social structural factors and individual actions. Examines basic principles of social organizations as well as variations in types of organizational arrangements. Explores impact of organizational structures on individual behavior and attributes, and the implications of various behavioral strategies adopted by individuals functioning within organizations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC P5140 - Health And Healthcare Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An investigation of health and the health care system in the U.S. with focus on issues, problems, and alternatives for policy reform. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC P5170 - Social Stratification And Social Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines social stratification as both an area of scientific inquiry and sociological practice. Course content covers the historical and cross-cultural variations in social stratification, systems of inequality, and the social policies associated with addressing inequality. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC P5400 - Sociological Theory And Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will introduce graduate students to the theoretically informed practice of sociology. Students will develop the ability to use social theory in the analysis of society and social life. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC P5500 - Statistical Techniques For Sociological Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course focuses on how to use statistical analysis to answer common questions in the practice of sociology, as well as on what statistical techniques are useful to answer sociological practice questions, how to apply them and interpret their results. Specific methods to be covered include documentary, ethnographic, survey, experimental design, secondary data analysis, social indicators, focused literature reviews, and library research techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC P5600 - Topics In Sociological Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a graduate seminar in selected topic areas in sociology, exploring the nature of sociological practice within each area (e.g., policy issues and/or intervention strategies as applied to health). May be repeated for credit with different topics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SOC P5620 - Topics In Policy Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Graduate seminar in selected topic areas in sociology, focusing on the analysis of social policy within each area. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC P5700 - Applied Research Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course covers the methodological tools and practical knowledge needed to conduct applied social research. Students will be exposed to a variety of methods and will learn how to choose the most appropriate method for specific research problems and settings, and understand advantages and disadvantages for each. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC P5710 - Clinical Methods In Sociological Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the student to the range of methods and practices used in the field of clinical sociology, which focuses on the non-research roles of sociologists. Methods included in this course can be employed in work settings as consultants or staff. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC P5760 - Graduate Seminar In Sociological Pedagogy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Develop and refine personal teaching philosophy, learn the standards of good course development, explore learning styles, and examine best practices in course delivery. Exposure to the field of the scholarship of teaching and learning. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC P5780 - Mediation/Conflict Res |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores the nature of conflict in human social relations and strategies for conflict resolution. Students will learn and practice techniques for proactively and constructively dealing with interpersonal and intergroup conflict. Successful completion of course will enable student to be a certified community mediator in a variety of disputes. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC P6500 - Statistical Techniques For Sociological Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to be a continuation of the study of statistics as they are used by practitioners of social science. Explores intricacies of statistical procedures most likely to be needed by practitioners including factor analysis and index construction, measures of association, and simple and multiple regression. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC P6700 - Advanced Applied Resource Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to provide greater depth of knowledge for topics discussed in P570 such as focus groups, case studies, survey research, needs assessment and outcome evaluations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC P6950 - Individual Research In Sociological Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Provides the student an opportunity to engage in independent research under the guidance of a faculty member. The student works with a faculty member in developing and carrying out a research plan. Course requirements are negotiated between the student and the supervising faculty member. May be repeated for credit with different topics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SOC P6970 - Professional Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Covers professional socialization into the practice of sociology, including professional ethics, grant writing, development of various types of proposals, professional organizations and services, and developing a career as a practicing sociologist. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| SOC P6980 - Practicum In Sociological Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. First semester, students will develop a research proposal and obtain necessary approvals. Second semester, students work with a client organization, produce a report, present findings. May be taken multiple times; only six hours count toward degree requirements. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SOC P6990 - Masters Thesis Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. First semester, students develop a research proposal and obtain necessary approvals. Second semester, students carry out applied research, produce a thesis, and present findings. May be taken multiple times; only six hours will count toward degree requirement. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| SOC R1000 - Introduction To Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Consideration of basic sociological concepts, including some of the substantive concerns and findings of sociology, sources of data, and the nature of the sociological perspective. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC R1210 - Social Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected current "problems" of American society are analyzed through the use of basic sociological data and the application of major sociological frameworks. Policy implications are discussed in light of value choices involved in various solutions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC R2200 - The Family |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The family as a major social institution and how it relates to the wider society. Formation of families through courtship, marriage, and sexual behavior; maintenance of families through childrearing and family interaction; and dissolution of families by divorce or death. Social change and the emergence of new familial patterns. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC R2340 - Social Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Sociological approach to human character, with emphasis on the psychology of the individual in social situations. Topics include socialization and the self, language and communication, interpersonal relations, attitude formation, conformity and social influence, and group processes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC R2400 - Deviance And Social Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to major sociological theories of deviance and social control, analyzes empirical work done in such areas as drug use, unconventional sexual behavior, family violence, and mental illness. Explores both "lay" and official responses to deviance, as well as cultural variability in responses to deviance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC R2850 - Aids And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the HIV/AIDS epidemic from a sociological perspective. Students will explore how social factors have shaped the course of the epidemic and the experience of HIV disease. The impact of the epidemic on health care, government, and other social institutions will also be discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC R2950 - Topics In Sociology |
|
Credit Hours 3.00. Exploration of a topic in sociology not covered by the regular curriculum but of interest to faculty and students in a particular semester. Topics to be announced. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SOC R3120 - Sociology Of Religion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of religion from the sociological perspective. Religious institutions, the dimensions of religious behavior, the measurement of religious behavior, and the relationship of religion to other institutions in society are examined. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC R3140 - Families And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The family is a major social institution, occupying a central place in people's lives. This course explores formation and dissolution of marriages, partnerships, families; challenges family members face, including communication and childrearing; reasons for and consequences of change in American families; how family patterns vary across and within social groups. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| SOC R3150 - Sociology Of Power |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of the nature and basis of political power on the macro level-the community, the national, and the international arenas. Study of formal and informal power structures and of the institutionalized and noninstitutionalized mechanisms of access to power. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| SOC R3170 - Sociology Of Work |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of the meaning of work, the dynamic social processes within work organizations, and environmental constraints on organizational behavior. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC R3200 - Sexuality And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides a basic conceptual scheme for dealing with human sexuality in a sociological manner. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC R3210 - Women And Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A review of the relationships among cultural values, social structure, disease, and wellness, with special attention focused on the impact of gender role on symptomatology and access to health care. Selected contemporary health problem areas will be examined in depth. Alternative models of health care delivery will be identified and discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| SOC R3250 - Gender And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A sociological examination of the roles of women and men in society, analysis of the determinants and consequences of these roles, and assessment of forces likely to bring about future change in these roles. Although focus will be on contemporary American society, cross-cultural variations in gender roles will also be noted. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| SOC R3270 - Sociology Of Death And Dying |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines inevitable and salient features of the human condition. Historical evaluation of images and attitudes toward death, the medicalization of death, the human consequences of high-tech dying, the role of the family in caring for dying loved ones, the emergence and role of hospices, the social roles of funerals, grief and bereavement, euthanasia and suicide, the worlds of dying children and grieving parents, and genocide are major issues that are addressed. Two of the major themes of the course revolve around the idea that the way we die is a reflection of the way we live; and, that the study of dying and death is an important way of studying and affirming the value of life. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-New Albany
|
| SOC R3290 - Urban Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The social dynamics of urbanization, urban social structure, and urban ecology. Theories of urban development; the city as a form of social organization; macroprocesses of urbanization both in the U.S. and other countries. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| SOC R3300 - Community |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Social, psychological, and structural features of community life. Topics include microphenomena such as the neighborhood, networks of friendship and oppositions, social participation, community power structure, and institutional framework. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SOC R3330 - Sports And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will examine the importance sports and leisure activities play in society. From local examples such as Indiana motorsports and high school basketball, to international examples such as the Olympics and World Cup, we will examine sports from the perspective of athletes and fans, look at how sports as an increasingly important business, and discuss how sports have been a significant agent for social change (including Title Nine, and the integration of major league baseball).
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Examine, from a sociological perspective, the social, cultural, political, and psychological importance of sports and leisure activities.
|
| SOC R3350 - Sociological Perspectives On The Life Course |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on the human life course as a product of social structure, culture, and history. Attention is given to life course contexts, transitions, and trajectories from youth to old age; work, family, and school influences; self-concept development, occupational attainment, and role acquisition over the life course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| SOC R3380 - Comparative Social Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. History and general theories of comparative sociology. Major focus on comparative analyses of social structure, kinship, policy and bureaucracy, economics and stratification, and institutionalized belief systems. Some attention is given to culture and personality and to cross-cultural methodology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SOC R3440 - Juvenile Delinquency And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Legal definition of delinquency, measurement and distribution of delinquency. Causal theories considered for empirical adequacy and policy implications. Procedures for processing juvenile offenders by police, courts, and prisons are examined. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC R3450 - Crime And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of the creation, selection, and disposition of persons labeled criminal. Emphasis on crime as an expression of group conflict and interest. Critique of academic and popular theories of crime and punishment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC R3460 - Control Of Crime |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. History, objectives, and operation of the crime control system in relation to its sociopolitical context. Critical examination of philosophies of punishment and programs of rehabilitation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| SOC R3490 - Practicum In Victimology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The role of the victim in the criminal justice system is examined through both course work and practical experience as a volunteer with the Marion County Prosecutor's Witness-Victim Assistance Program. Recommended for students with interest in deviance, criminology, law, criminal justice, and social service. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SOC R3510 - Social Science Research Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of methods and techniques used by sociologists and other social scientists for gathering and interpreting information about human social behavior. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| SOC R3550 - Social Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers several traditions of classical, contemporary, and post-modern social thought e.g., social Darwinism, conflict theory, functionalism, symbolic interactionism, critical theory, and feminist theory. The social context, construction, and application theories are included.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| SOC R3560 - Foundations Of Social Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of the fundamental issues and perspectives in classical theories. Special focus will be on analysis of the major nineteenth-century theories that influenced later sociological thought. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC R3570 - Contemporary Sociological Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis on theoretical developments of the twentieth century and the relationships of current theories to classical theories. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SOC R3590 - Introduction To Sociological Statistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Measures of central tendency, dispersion, standardizing and normalizing procedures, and simple index numbers. Simple notions of probability as related to statistical inference (means, proportions, binomial distribution, chi-square, simple regression). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| SOC R3810 - Social Factors in Health and Illness |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the social aspects of health and illness, including variations in the social meanings of health and illness, the social epidemiology of disease, and the social dimensions of the illness experience.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC R3820 - Social Organization Of Health Care |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Surveys the nature of and recent changes in the health care delivery system in the United States. Patient and professional roles and the characteristics of different health care settings are explored. Current debates about the nature of the professions and professional work are emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| SOC R3850 - Aids And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the HIV/AIDS epidemic from a sociological perspective. Students will explore how social factors have shaped the course of the epidemic and the experiences of HIV disease. The impact of the epidemic on health care, government, and other social institutions will be discovered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SOC R4100 - Alcohol, Drugs And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a survey of the use and abuse of alcohol, including extent of use, history of use and abuse, ''biology'' of alcohol, alcoholism as a problem, legal actions, and treatment strategies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| SOC R4150 - Sociology Of Disability |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of current models of disability and of disability at the interpersonal and societal level. Topics include recent legal, social, and educational changes; the ways in which people with disabilities interact with the nondisabled; the role played by relatives and caregivers; and the image of people with disabilities in film, television, and other media. Recommended for students in nursing, education, physical and occupational therapy, and social work, as well as for the medical sociology minor. Available for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| SOC R4200 - Sociology Of Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of sociological approaches to the study of education, covering such major topics as education as a social institution, the school in society, the school of as a social system, and the sociology of learning. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SOC R4250 - Gender And Work |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the changing roles that women and men play in paid and unpaid work, and how these roles are socially constructed, through socialization practices, social interaction, and actions of social institutions. The interaction of gender, race, ethnicity, and social class on individuals' involvement in work will also be explored. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SOC R4300 - Families And Social Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This seminar explores how the state and labor market currently affect family structure and the quality of family life in the U.S. and the role the state and labor market could play in the future. Family policies in other parts of the world will be considered for possible applicability to the U.S. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SOC R4610 - Race And Ethnic Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Comparative study of racial, ethnic, and religious relations. Focus on patterns of inclusion and exclusion of minority groups by majority groups. Discussion of theories of intergroup tensions-prejudice and discrimination-and of corresponding approaches to the reduction of tensions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC R4630 - Inequality And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Presentation of conservative and radical theories of class formation, consciousness, mobility, and class consequences. Relevance of social class to social structure and personality. Emphasis on the American class system, with some attention given to class systems in other societies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SOC R4670 - Social Change |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic concepts, models, and individual theories of social change; historical and contemporary analysis of the structural and psychological ramifications of major social trends. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SOC R4780 - Formal Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Sociological inquiry into the nature, origin, and functions of bureaucratic organizations. Emphasis on bureaucratic organizations as the predominant mode of contemporary task performance and on their social-psychological consequences. Theoretical and empirical considerations in organizational studies from Weber to contemporary findings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SOC R4850 - Sociology Of Mental Illness |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of current problems in psychiatric diagnosis, the social epidemiology of mental illness, institutional and informal caregiving, family burden, homelessness, and the development and impact of current mental health policy. Cross-cultural and historical materials, derived from the work of anthropologists and historians, are used throughout the course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| SOC R4900 - Survey Research Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this practicum, students will design and conduct a survey, learn how to code survey results, enter data, and analyze data with the mainframe computer. A report will also be written. The advantages and disadvantages of survey methodology will be highlighted and ethical issues will be discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SOC R4940 - Internship Program In Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. This course involves students working in organizations where they apply or gain practical insight into sociological concepts, theories, and knowledge. Students analyze their experiences through work logs, a paper, and regular meetings with the internship director. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SOC R4950 - Topics In Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of a topic in sociology not covered by the regular curriculum but of interest to faculty and students in a particular semester. Topics to be announced. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| SOC R4970 - Individual Readings In Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Investigation of a topic not covered in the regular curriculum that is of special interest to the student and that the student wishes to pursue in greater detail. Normally available only to majors through arrangement with a faculty member. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SOC R4980 - Sociology Capstone Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to help graduating senior sociology majors to synthesize and demonstrate what they have learned in their major while readying themselves for a career and/or graduate study. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SOC R5150 - Sociology Of Health And Illness |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Surveys important areas of medical sociology, focusing on social factors influencing the distribution of disease, help-seeking, and health care. Topics covered include social epidemiology, the health care professions, socialization of providers, and issues of cost and cost containment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SOC R5170 - Sociology Of Work |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Sociology of work. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SOC R5560 - Advanced Sociological Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is the first part of a two-semester graduate course in contemporary sociological theory and theory construction. The first semester will involve the student in detailed study and analysis of sociologists belonging to the positivist tradition in sociology. Students will be expected to comprehend contemporary sociology in terms of its historical roots and to demonstrate their understanding of theory construction. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SOC R5850 - Social Aspects of Mental Health and Mental Illness |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is a graduate-level course on the sociology of mental illness and mental health. Provides a thorough grounding in the research issues and traditions that have characterized scholarly inquiry into mental illness in the past. Students will become familiar with public policy as it has had an impact on the treatment of mental illness and on the mentally ill themselves. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SOC R6970 - Individual Readings In Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Investigation of a topic not covered in the regular curriculum that is of special interest to the student and that the student wishes to pursue in greater detail. Available only to sociology graduate students through arrangement with a faculty member. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SOC S1000 - Introduction to Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Can children ever become "normal" after long periods of isolation? When making decisions, are two or more heads really better than one? Would people like you and me electrocute a stranger? Why do men tend to invade women's personal space? Are some people "more equal" than others in the United States? Is racial hostility a thing of the past, or does it continue today? These are some of the questions we will attempt to tackle in Sociology 100. The substance of this course is broad and draws insights from other social sciences and humanities, most notably psychology, social psychology, political science, economics, and history. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC S1010 - Social Problems and Policies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to medical sociology. Health, illness, and medical care are important social issues. While the profession of medicine has at its disposal the most powerful technology ever known and the most generous financial support ever provided by the public sector, why has it failed to cure society?s ills? We will closely examine how social factors influence individual health and the quality of medical care. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC S1090 - Community And The Built Environment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the built environment as both an expression and shaper of human culture, historically and in contemporary society. Lays out criteria for an organized community and examines how the built environment contributes to or inhibits community development. Explores social and environmental sustainability as it relates to community development. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC S1610 - Principles Of Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Nature of interpersonal relationships, societies, groups, communities, and institutional areas such as the family, politics, education, the economy, and religion. Includes social process operating within these areas; significance for problems of social organization, social change, and social stratification. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC S1630 - Social Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Major social problems in areas such as the family, religion, economic order, crime, mental disorders, civil rights; racial, ethnic, and international tensions. Relation to structure and values of larger society. Although no prerequisite is required, it is strongly recommended that students have some previous social science course work and/or familiarity with basic sociological concepts and methodology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC S1640 - Marital Relations And Sexuality |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of courtship, marriage and its alternatives, and the basic issues of human sexuality, with an emphasis on contemporary American society. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC S2110 - Topics In Social Organization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Specific topics to be announced, e.g., social stratification, formal organizations, urban social organization, education, religion, politics, demography, social power, social conflict, social change, comparative social systems, race and ethnic relation, rural sociology, urban sociology, and work reorganization. May be repeated; however, only 6 hours may be applied to the requirements of the sociology major or minor. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SOC S2160 - Soc Of American Ethnic Diversity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Themes discussed include Old World origins, current conditions, family, work, power, gender, and art. The approach is interdisciplinary. Readings are largely original accounts and include autobiographies, novels, and essays. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC S2170 - Social Inequality |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In this course we ask: Who gets what and why? How are power and privilege distributed among individuals and groups in society and why do some enjoy more than others? Who benefits from inequities? We examine how various inequalities (e.g., in income, wealth, property) have evolved over time, and ask how these inequalities shape the life chances of individuals in different socioeconomic, racial/ethnic, and gender groups. Throughout the course we give particular attention to contemporary U.S.A. and to the challenges that recent developments pose for American society. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Richmond
|
| SOC S2210 - Topics In Deviance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Specific topics to be announced, e.g., crime, juvenile delinquency, law enforcement, corrections, mental illness, sexual deviance, drug use, and violence. May be repeated; however, only six hours may be applied to the requirements of the sociology major or minor. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SOC S2250 - Violence |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Considers violence in society: its origins, forms, and consequences. Emphasis on describing the social forces that create patterns of violence in societies throughout the world. Forms examined include interpersonal, institutional and structural violence. Purpose of the course is to help the student better understand the role played by violence in modern society. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC S2300 - Society And The Individual |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Personality and its development; relationship to culture and communication and to social settings; deviant types. Credit not given for both S230 and S232. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC S2400 - Social Informatics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to key social research perspectives and literatures on the use of information and communication technologies. Discusses current topics such as information ethics, relevant legal frameworks, popular and controversial uses of technology (for example, peer to-peer file sharing), digital divides, etc. Outlines research methodologies for social informatics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC S2500 - Methods And Statistics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. First semester of a two-semester course integrating methods of research and statistical analysis. Includes logic of scientific inference, theory construction, research design, and data collection. Credit given for only one of the following: S250; Criminal Justice P291; Economics, E270, S270; or Mathematics K300. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC S2600 - Intermediate Sociological Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the analysis of social issues. Emphasis on the development of writing skills appropriate to the discipline. Approved by Arts and Sciences for use in fulfilling the sophomore level English writing requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC S2950 - Selected Topics In Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Specific topics to be announced, e.g., Conflict Resolution and Mediation, Sociological Practice in the Community. May be repeated; however, only six hours may be applied to the requirements of the sociology major or minor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SOC S2980 - Colloquium In Sociology And Women's Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Extensive analysis of selected topics in sociology from a women's studies perspective, e.g., sexism and men, family violence, rape. Specific topics to be announced. May be repeated; however, only six hours may be applied to the requirements of the sociology major or minor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| SOC S3000 - Race And Ethnic Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Detailed examination of relations between and among racial and ethnic groups; sociological theories of prejudice and discrimination; comparative analysis of diverse systems of intergroup relations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC S3030 - Industrial Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Relationship of modern industrial organization and of labor and management organizations to political system, social class system, and other aspects of the society and community; formal and informal organizations within industry; inter-group conflict and processes of adjustment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC S3050 - Population |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Population composition, fertility, morality, natural increase, migrations; historical growth and change of populations; population theories ad policies; techniques in manipulation and use of population data; and the spatial organization of populations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC S3060 - Urban Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of cities and urbanization in the modern world; special consideration of ecological patterning, urban lifestyles, and urban problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC S3080 - Introduction To Comparative Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Social organization of modern societies. Distinctions and broad cross-cultural comparisons between Western and non-western social systems. Methods of cross-cultural analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Richmond
|
| SOC S3090 - The Community |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Sociological definitions of community; theories of community and community organization; social, political and economic factors that contribute to community organization and disorganization; alternative models of community development and planning. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC S3120 - Education And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The role of educational institutions in modern industrialized societies, with emphasis on the functions of such institutions for the selection, socialization, and certification of individuals for adult social roles. Also covers recent educational reform movements and the implications of current social policies on education. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
PU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC S3130 - Religion And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Considers the functions and dysfunctions of religion generally, its economic and cultural patterns, religious group evolutions (cults, churches, sects, denominations), leadership deviance, and conversion/faith maintenance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC S3140 - Social Aspects Of Health And Medicine |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Group characteristics in the causation, amelioration, and prevention of mental and physical illness, and the social influences in medical education, medical practice, and hospital administration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC S3150 - Work and Occupations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Treats work roles within such organizations as factory, office, school, government, and welfare agencies; career and occupational mobility in work life; formal and informal organizations within work organizations; labor and management conflict and cooperation; problems of modern industrial workers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC S3160 - The Family |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Cross-cultural perspectives on family systems; structure and process of the conjugal family in modern and emerging societies. Focus on relationships of the family to other subsystems of the larger society and on interaction within the family in connection with these interrelationships. Emphasis on development of systematic theory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC S3170 - Social Stratification |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Nature, functioning, and maintenance of systems of social stratification in local communities and societies. Correlates and consequences of social class position and vertical mobility. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC S3180 - Social Change |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to theoretical and empirical studies of social change. Explores issues such as modernization; rationalization; demography, economic and religious causes of change; reform and revolution. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC S3200 - Deviant Behavior And Social Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of deviance in relation to formal and informal social processes. Emphasis on deviance and respectability as functions of social reactions, characteristics of rules, and power and conflict. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC S3210 - Variations In Human Sexuality |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Sociological examination of patterns and variations in several dimensions of human sexuality; sexual definitions, incidence of various behaviors, intensity of sexual response, sexual object choice, and other modes of sexual expression. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC S3240 - Social Aspects Of Mental Illness |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Social factors in mental illnesses; incidence and prevalence by social and cultural categories; variations in societal reaction; social organizations of treatment organizations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC S3250 - Criminology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the patterns of crime, strategies for control, and theories of crime causation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC S3280 - Juvenile Delinquency |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the patterns of juvenile delinquency, strategies for control, and theories of juvenile delinquency causation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC S3300 - Sociological Social Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the reciprocal link between the individual and the larger society. Topics covered include self-concept and its development, deviant types, status, power, exchange, justice issues, human motivation, attribution, equity. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC S3310 - Sociology Of Aging |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Social aspects of aging and older adulthood. Topics include myths about aging, the processes of aging; sexual behavior, social relationships, family relationships, religious activities, and leisure of the elderly.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC S3330 - Collective Behavior And Social Movements |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Considers various types of non-institutionalized collective behaviors (such as rumors, urban legends, panics, riots) in past and modern American history as well as theories and cases of the "why" and "how" of social movements, counter movements, and revolutions. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC S3350 - Racial And Ethnic Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of racial and ethnic groups and relations in the United States and worldwide, focusing on identity, interaction, conflict, and social stratification. Approved as an American Culture II requirement for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC S3380 - Sociology Of Gender Roles |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of the properties, correlates, and consequences of gender roles in contemporary societies. Emphasis on defining gender roles, tracing their historical development, considering their implication for work, marriage and fertility, with cross-cultural comparisons. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC S3400 - Social Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Sociological theory, with focus on content, form, and historical development. Relationships among theories, data, and sociological explanation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Richmond
|
| SOC S3480 - Introduction To Sociological Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Sociological theory beginning with Auguste Comte and Herbert Spencer. Theorists and their works considered from the standpoint of basic issues in sociological thinking. Emphasis on convergences of separate streams of thought. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the Western tradition culture studies requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC S3490 - Topics In Contemporary Sociological Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics announced in the Schedule of Classes. An in-depth analysis of one or two key areas or trends in contemporary sociology. Examples include American theory, deconstruction, critical theory, feminist theory, hermeneutics, neo-Marxism, post modernism. May be repeated for credit with a different topic. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SOC S3510 - Social Statistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to statistics, including measures of central tendency and dispersion, probability, statistical inference, hypothesis testing, regression, correlation, analysis of variance, and crosstabulation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC S3520 - Methods Of Social Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to methods of sociological research. Topics covered include qualitative and quantitative research methods, research design and implementation, experiments, survey research techniques, field research techniques, data collection, data analysis, and the ethical techniques, field research techniques, data collection, data analysis, and the ethical concerns of social research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC S3600 - Topics In Social Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Specific topics to be announced, e.g., environmental affairs, urban problems, poverty, population problems. May be repeated; however, only six hours may be applied to the requirements of the sociology major or minor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SOC S3620 - World Societies And Cultures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Topics announced in the Schedule of Classes. An analysis of the social, cultural, political, and historical foundations of societies and cultures from around the world. Can be conducted in the field or on campus. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SOC S3750 - Issues In Human And Social Service Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will help prepare students to work in human and social service agencies by examining sociological and human/social service literature regarding the oversight, management, and day to day practices encountered. Students will examine theories in social sciences relevant to human services delivery. Students will learn about ethical and professional issues of workers in human/social service agencies with clients from diverse populations. Students will examine sociological concepts, theories, and methods as they apply to the management, practice, and evaluation of human/social service agencies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
|
| SOC S3950 - Selected Topics In Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC S3980 - Internship In Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students are placed in an organization or agency to receive experience in an applied sociology setting. Work is supervised by a sociology faculty member and the organization/agency. Research and written reports are required. Evaluations by the organization/agency and sociology faculty member. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| SOC S4020 - The Empire Of The United States Of America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course focuses on the history of the Empire of the United States of America from its founding with the second republic to modern times. The course also describes the nature of the economic, military, political, and cultural linkages within the empire. The course also focuses on the impact of empire on class and ethnic relations in the imperial center and periphery. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC S4030 - Industry, Labor And Community |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Interdependence of business, labor and community; how industry shapes the community; community and union-management relations. Role of business and labor in community power structure. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC S4050 - Selected Social Institutions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of one or more institutional areas, e.g., religion, education, the military. May be taken more than once with instructor’s permission. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SOC S4070 - Society Of The Future |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of social, cultural and technological trends in the modern world. Creation of the society of the future through class discussions and game playing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC S4100 - Advanced Topics In Social Organization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced course in social organizations, allowing for a more thorough coverage of selected topics, e.g. social stratification, formal organizations, urban social organization, education, religion, politics, demographics, social power, social conflict, social change, comparative social systems, race and ethnic relations, rural sociology, urban sociology, and work reorganization. May be repeated; however, only six hours may be applied to the requirements of the sociology major or minor.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| SOC S4130 - Sex Inequality In Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Major theories of sex inequality; historical and cross-cultural variations in systems of sex inequality; social, economic, political, and cultural processes perpetuating sex inequality in U.S. society; interrelationships between racial, class, and sex inequality; strategies for social change. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC S4150 - Sociology Of Education |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The role of educational institutions in modern industrialized societies, with emphasis on the functions of such institutions for the selection, socialization, and certification of individuals for adult social roles. Also covers recent educational reform movements and the implications of current social policies on education. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC S4190 - Social Movements And Collective Action |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Change-oriented social and political collective action and consequences for groups and societies. Resource mobilization, historical and comparative analysis of contemporary movements, and collective action. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
|
| SOC S4200 - Advanced Topics In Deviance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced course in deviance, allowing for a more thorough coverage of selected topics, e.g., crime, juvenile delinquency, law enforcement, corrections, mental illness, sexual deviance, drug use, and violence. May be repeated; however, only six hours may be applied to the requirements of the sociology major or minor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| SOC S4250 - Violence And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Considers violence in society: its origins, forms, and consequences. Aspects of violence considered include biological, psychological, social, and cultural. Forms examined include revolution, terrorism, family violence, religious conflict, and mobs/riots. Purpose of the course is to help the student better understand the role played by violence in modern society. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC S4290 - Crime And Community |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the ways social, political and economic factors contribute to community disorganization and the role this disorganization plays in the generation of crime. The course will also investigate, compare, and develop ways in which the community can be organized to prevent and/or control crime. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC S4310 - Topics In Social Psychology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Specific topics to be announced, e.g., socialization, self-concept development, small group structures and processes, interpersonal relations, language and human behavior, attitude formation and change, collective behavior, public opinion, inter-group relations. May be repeated; however, only six hours may be applied to the requirements to the sociology major or minor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SOC S4400 - History Of Social Thought |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Social theories from the Greeks to the close of 19th century, with emphasis on relation of social thought to social forces. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the Cultural Studies (Western Tradition) requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC S4410 - Topics In Social Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Specific topics to be announced, e.g., structuralism, evolutionary theory, symbolic interaction theory, functionalism, social action theory, exchange theory, history and development of social theory, sociology of knowledge. May be repeated; however, only six hours may be applied to the requirements of the sociology major or minor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SOC S4470 - Theories Of Social Change |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Idea of progress; linear philosophy of history; social and cultural evolution; contemporary theories. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC S4480 - Sociology Of Marx |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of Marx's writings with emphasis on their implications for sociological theory and the analysis of society. Marx's work will be viewed as a synthesis of English political economy, French socialism, and German philosophy. Application of a Marxian sociology to a contemporary society. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SOC S4500 - Topics In Methods And Measurements |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Specific topics to be announced, e.g., scaling, logic of inquiry, model construction and formalization, research design, data collection, sampling, measurement, statistical analysis. May be repeated, however, only six hours may be applied to the requirement of the sociology major or minor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SOC S4600 - Topics In Non-Western Cultures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This variable topics course will analyze different aspects of non-western cultures. It will be organized as a seminar and require significant writing and research. The readings will expose students to different theoretical perspectives and empirical approaches. Topics will be announced in the Schedule of Classes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SOC S4680 - Research Problems In Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An independent research project formulated and conducted in consultation with a faculty sponsor, culminating in an analytical paper. May be repeated for credit, up to a maximum of 9 credit hours, although only 3 credit hours may be applied to a major or a minor in sociology. This course cannot substitute for the 400-level seminars required of majors and minors. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| SOC S4700 - Senior Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Capstone seminar in sociology; integrates knowledge on theory and practice from previous sociology courses, with emphasis on historical, contemporary, and future issues in sociology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SOC S4940 - Field Experience In Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Faculty-directed study of aspects of sociology based on field experience in conjunction with directed readings and report writings. Students are trained in using their sociology understanding and skills in working at diagnosing and developing research projects and/or social change interventions for social organizations in the community.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SOC S4950 - Individual Readings In Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individualized approach to selected topics through the use of guided reading, research and critical evaluation. Prior arrangement required; conducted under the supervision of a member of the sociology faculty. May be repeated; however, only six hours may be applied to the requirement of the sociology major or minor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SOC S4990 - Honors Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SOC S5600 - Topics In Sociology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SOC W1000 - Gender Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course surveys the field of Gender Studies, looking at the role that gender plays in people’s life experiences and their interactions with social institutions. Topics of gender’s interactions with class, race, sexual orientation, age, international issues, and ethnicity will also be explored. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| SPAN 10100 - Spanish Level I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A beginning Spanish course with emphasis on communicative skills (listening and speaking), literacy skills (reading and writing) and culture. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:IWL 1910 Spanish Level I
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 10200 - Spanish Level II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of SPAN 10100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:IWL 1911 Spanish Level II
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 10300 - Review Of Spanish Levels I And II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Required beginning course for students with at least two years of high school Spanish who fail to place into SPAN 20100 or higher. Students passing SPAN 10300 also earn 3 additional hours of departmental credit (without grade) for SPAN 10100. Typically offered Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| SPAN 10600 - Spanish For Business I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A Spanish for Special Purposes course. Realistic situations and specialized vocabulary that business and finance professionals need to communicate in the course of daily work. Opportunities to apply grammatical structures in a variety of practical contexts. Highlights on Hispanic customs and practices relevant to business professionals in their interactions with Spanish speakers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SPAN 10700 - Spanish For Business II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A Spanish for Special Purposes course. A continuation of SPAN 106. Realistic situations and additional specialized vocabulary that business and finance professionals need to communicate in the course of daily work. Further opportunities to apply grammatical structures in a variety of practical contexts. Highlights on more Hispanic customs and practices relevant to business professionals in their interactions with Spanish speakers. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SPAN 11000 - Spanish For Health Care Providers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A Spanish for Special Purposes course. Basic terminology for health care professionals. Practice in Spanish communication in assessment and intervention settings with patients/families. General medical history and symptoms are covered as well as special individual topics. Practice in language skill development in health history interviews. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Conduct basic-level communication with Spanish-speaking patients.
2. Obtain relevant medical information.
3. Identify body parts and physical conditions.
4. Communicate information about common illnesses and side effects.
|
| SPAN 11100 - Spanish For Health Care Providers II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of SPAN 11000. Additional basic terminology for health care professionals. Practice in Spanish communication in assessment and intervention settings with patients/families. Expanded general health history and symptoms are covered as well as special individual topics. More practice in language skill development in health history interviews. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Conduct basic/intermediate-level communication with Spanish-speaking patients.
2. Discuss health and wellness activities and routines.
|
| SPAN 11200 - Elementary Spanish Conversation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Development of oral skills for self-expression. Guided practice in conversation to enhance communicative competence. Small group; discussions in Spanish on various topics. Not open to students enrolled in or having credit for SPAN 20100 or above. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 2 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop listening skills and improve oral Spanish proficiency.
2. Acquire new vocabulary and grammar through discovery in various media and conversation.
3. Read, view, listen to and discuss relevant texts in the target language.
|
| SPAN 19000 - Special Topics In Spanish |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Special topics related to Spanish and to Spanish-speaking cultures and literatures. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPAN 20100 - Spanish Level III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Readings from the works of nineteenth-century and contemporary Spanish writers. Practice in speaking and writing Spanish. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:IWL 1912 Spanish Level III
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 20200 - Spanish Level IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of SPAN 20100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
CTL:IWL 1913 Spanish Level IV
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Core Transfer Library, Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 20600 - Practicum In Spanish |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Directed practice in Spanish settings that offer contact with the Hispanic community. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| SPAN 21100 - Elementary Spanish Conversation II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Continuation of SPAN 11200. May be taken concurrently with SPAN 20100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 21200 - Elementary Spanish Conversation III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Continuation of SPAN 21100. May be taken concurrently with SPAN 20200. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 21500 - Spanish Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Spanish Composition. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| SPAN 22400 - Spanish Level IV: Business Spanish |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Practical reading, writing, speaking, and listening comprehension skills directed towards use of Spanish for business purposes. Course materials cover a variety of business aspects in several professions. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 23000 - Contemporary Spanish American Literature In Translation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading and discussion of selected masterpieces of 20th century Latin American prose fiction and essays in translation. Emphasis on works written after World War II. Knowledge of Spanish not required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SPAN 23100 - Cervantes' Don Quixote |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading and discussion of Cervantes' masterpiece. All readings, discussion, papers, and examinations will be in English. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 23500 - Spanish American Literature In Translation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading and discussion of selected masterpieces of Spanish American literature. The course context will change from semester to semester. Knowledge of Spanish not required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPAN 24100 - Introduction To The Study Of Hispanic Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading and discussion of selected poetry, prose, and theatre from Spain and Spanish-speaking America; introduction to critical discourse and basic concepts of literary theory. Texts, discussion, and written assignments in Spanish. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 26100 - Spanish Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The essentials of Spanish grammar as applied in composition. (Not open to students who have credit for SPAN 31300). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SPAN 28000 - Second-Year Spanish: Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected topics on the civilization, culture, and literature of Spain and Spanish America. Lectures and readings primarily in English, but knowledge of Spanish at the first-year level necessary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPAN 29000 - Special Topics In Spanish |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Special topics related to Spanish and to Spanish-speaking cultures and literatures. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPAN 30100 - Spanish Level V |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continued development of Spanish speaking, listening, reading, and writing abilities, using materials dealing primarily with everyday life and civilization in the Spanish-speaking countries from a variety of sources (e.g., newspapers, magazines, TV, recent literature, etc.). Conducted primarily in Spanish. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 30200 - Spanish Level VI |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Further work to develop speaking, listening, reading, and writing abilities in Spanish on the basis of materials dealing with the ideas and events that have shaped the present-day Spanish-speaking countries. Conducted primarily in Spanish. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 30400 - Readings From The Hispanic World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will focus on the development of interpretive skills in Spanish by emphasizing reading, listening strategies, analytical skills and knowledge about the perspectives, practices, and products of the Hispanic world. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| SPAN 30500 - Spanish For Heritage Speakers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is intended for the student whose home language is Spanish, but whose education has been exclusively in English. The students will first learn to read and write their native dialects and then the standard language using the orthographic norms of the standard language. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 30600 - Spanish Grammar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course integrates the four basic language skills (reading, writing, listening and speaking) into a review of the major points of Spanish grammar from Span 101 through 202 plus practice of additional grammar points. The objectives of this course are to increase the student's accuracy in the four basic language skills through acquisition of vocabulary, application of grammar rules, and use of coherent structures. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| SPAN 30700 - Commercial Spanish |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will provide students with the fundamentals of effective expression and communication as these apply to Spanish business situations in particular. It will concentrate on commercial vocabulary, reading, writing, and speaking as related to international business. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| SPAN 30801 - Advanced Spanish For Heritage Speakers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a continuation of SPAN 30500. It is an advanced grammar course designed for Spanish-English bilinguals exposed to Spanish as a minority/native language during early childhood or adolescence but who have not received formal instruction or education in the language. It aims to develop advanced grammar and writing skills. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Gain more advanced writing and composition skills in Spanish.
2. Gain more advanced knowledge of Spanish grammar.
3. Gain more enhanced ability to understand, critically evaluate and summarize written texts.
4. Gain more enhanced sociolinguistic competence of their heritage language.
5. Be much better prepared for upper-level courses in Spanish linguistics and literatures.
|
| SPAN 31200 - Advanced Spanish Conversation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. One credit hour advanced Spanish conversation course focused on guided practice in conversation to enhance communicative competence. Discussions in Spanish on various topics. Course may be taken concurrently with SPAN 30100, 30200, 40100 or 40200. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 2 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop advanced listening skills and improve oral Spanish proficiency.
2. Acquire advanced vocabulary and grammar through discovery in various media and conversation.
3. Read, view, listen to and discuss assigned materials in Spanish.
|
| SPAN 31300 - Spanish For Spanish Speakers I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The presentation of the structure and phonology of Spanish in Spanish for those who come from native-speaking backgrounds but who require the formal training. Grammar, composition, and standard Spanish fluency. Not open to students who have had SPAN 26100 or SPAN 36500. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| SPAN 31400 - Spanish For Spanish Speakers II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of SPAN 31300 with the presentation of levels of Spanish speech, intellectual readings and compositions, grammar problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| SPAN 33000 - Spanish And Latin American Cinema |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Screening and analysis of selected Spanish and Latin American films with readings and discussions relative to their historical, social, political, aesthetic, literary, and linguistic contexts. No knowledge of Spanish required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, GTC-Written Communication, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Written Communication, UC-Humanities, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 33500 - The Literature Of The Spanish-Speaking Peoples In The United States |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of selected poetry, fiction, theatre, and essays written in the United States by Spanish-speaking writers; includes readings in the literature written in Spanish and English as well as bilingual poetry and prose. Conducted in Spanish and English. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 34100 - Hispanic Literature I: Poetry And Drama |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading of selected poetic and dramatic texts from Spain and Spanish-speaking America in their historical and cultural contexts. Readings, discussion, and papers in Spanish. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 34200 - Hispanic Literature II: Prose |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading of selected novels and short fiction from Spain and Spanish-speaking America in their historical and cultural contexts. Readings, discussion, and papers in Spanish. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 36000 - Spanish Conversation |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Spanish Conversation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| SPAN 36100 - The Structure Of Spanish I: Phonetics And Phonology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Linguistic analysis of Spanish phonology, phonetics, and dialectology. Selected topics within the areas of Spanish sociolinguistics and language acquisition. Each of these topics will be approached from a contrastive Spanish/English perspective. One session per week devoted to pronunciation improvement. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 36200 - The Structure Of Spanish II: Morphology, Lexicology, And Syntax |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Linguistic analysis of Spanish, focusing on morphology, lexicology, and syntax. This course will present the grammatical structure of Spanish dealing with word-level phenomena (derivational and inflectional morphology, the lexicon) and phrase- and sentence-level phenomena (constituents, word order, sentence structure, etc.). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 36500 - Spanish Conversation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive practice in Spanish conversation. Pattern practice, preparation and delivery of dialogues and topical talks. Practice in pronunciation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SPAN 37300 - Spanish Translation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A introduction to the principles of translation. Practice in translation from Spanish to English and vice versa. Selected, graded materials from simple to moderate difficulty, illustrating a variety of styles. Acquaintance with reference materials concerning Spanish and English and translations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| SPAN 39000 - Special Topics In Spanish |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Special topics related to Spanish and to Spanish-speaking cultures and literatures. May be repeated provided topics are different. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPAN 39800 - Special Topics In Spanish |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Studies of particular aspects of Spanish (e.g., culture, civilization, literature, linguistics, film, art, politics, etc.) by examining a varied selection of works. Readings, discussion, and papers in Spanish. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPAN 39900 - Special Study Abroad Credit In Spanish |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. This course number is for assignment after the fact of credits in Spanish earned while enrolled at a foreign university on a Study Abroad program which cannot be appropriately accommodated under an established Purdue course number. It is not for use for courses offered at or conducted by Purdue. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
|
| SPAN 40100 - Spanish Level VII |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced work on development of Spanish speaking, listening, reading, and writing abilities, focusing on materials dealing primarily with culture and the arts in the Spanish-speaking countries. Conducted primarily in Spanish. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 40200 - Spanish Level VIII |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Further advanced work on speaking, listening, reading, and writing abilities in Spanish. Course materials will cover a variety of topics illustrated by film and other media, both print and nonprint. Conducted primarily in Spanish. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 40500 - Introduction To Spanish Literature I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the periods of Spanish literature from the beginning through the 18th century. Reading and discussion of representative works. The rudiments of literary criticism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| SPAN 40600 - Introduction To Spanish Literature II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the periods of Spanish literture from the 18th century to the present. Reading and discussion of representative works. The rudiments of literary criticism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| SPAN 40800 - Language Practicum In Business |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course will consist of actual on-the-job experience in international corporations, industry, commerce, government, or health and social agencies where Spanish is used. The course is designed to expose students to their chosen vocational field. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Become familiar with workplace demands.
2. Acquire and use specialized target language.
3. Reflect on the experience to maximize the relationship between work and previous education.
|
| SPAN 41300 - Culture Of Spanish -Speaking Americans |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the cultural heritage and customs of groups of Spanish-speaking Americans, such as Mexican-Americans, Puerto-Rican Americans, Cuban Americans. The nature of the social processes, points of interference between cultures. Historical and geographical perspectives of Spanish-speaking Americans. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| SPAN 41400 - Literature Of Spanish Speaking Americans |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of the literature of Chicano and Puerto Rican authors. Poetry, plays, short stories and novels presented in survey form so as to cover fairly themes from each Spanish-speaking population segment in contemporary American life. Intermediate knowledge of Spanish is needed because of dialecticism in many of the contemporary works. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| SPAN 41500 - Spanish Translation And Interpretation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the Translation and Interpretation Studies field for Spanish speakers. High level of competence in Spanish required. Overview of translation theory, methodology, and practice both in class and in real settings. Includes a service learning component. Conducted in English and Spanish. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Upon successful completion of the course students will:
Have an overview of the translation studies field in its relation to Linguistics, Literature, Media, Sciences, and Second Language Acquisition;
Understand the different methodologies used for translation and interpretation;
Learn the ethics, standards and rules of the profession;
Practice different types of translation (technical, scientific, literary, legal medical, etc.) and interpretation (simultaneous, consecutive, over the phone, conference, etc.);
Understand the basic principles of cross-cultural communication.
|
| SPAN 41900 - Directed Tutoring In Spanish |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Guided practicum in tutoring Spanish, operation of a tutorial laboratory, and the rationale for audiotutorial second language learning. Students learn tutorial techniques, grade homework, and maintain records under the supervision of the SPAN10100-10200 course chairperson and experienced teaching assistants. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPAN 42400 - Business Spanish |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the terminology and techniques used in commercial transactions, including the interpretation and writing of business materials. Development of the four language skills, with emphasis on writing and speaking. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 42600 - Spanish Linguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will serve as an introductory course to Spanish linguistics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| SPAN 43500 - Spanish American Literature To Modernism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of the development of Spanish American literature from the early chronicles to the end of the 19th century with consideration of the pre-Hispanic background. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| SPAN 43600 - Spanish American Literature From Modernism To Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of SPAN 43500. The study of the development of Spanish American literature beginning with the Modernist period to the present. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| SPAN 45100 - Spanish Civilization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of modern Spanish life with regard to the social institutions and customs. Lectures in the language. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| SPAN 46100 - Intermediate Spanish Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of SPAN 26100. In this course, stress is given to the development of more complex grammar and its application in the written language. Emphasis is placed on the structure of composition and basic refinement and precision brought about by grammar and vocabulary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SPAN 46500 - Intermediate Spanish Conversation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continued practice in Spanish conversation and the study of phonetics for accuracy in pronunciation and intonation. students are encouraged to study contemporary culture as a basis for their conversations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| SPAN 47300 - Intermediate Spanish Translation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The continuation of SPAN 37300 to include more extensive and more difficult translations. Also, a presentation of theoretical concepts concerning translation, and an orientation to research materials for translation purposes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| SPAN 48000 - Spanish Civilization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of modern Spanish life, with special emphasis on social institutions and customs. Lectures in Spanish. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 48100 - Spanish Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The development of the cultural life of the Spanish people as reflected in the geography, history, music, art, and architecture of Spain. Lectures in Spanish. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Student will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| SPAN 48200 - Latin American Civilization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Outline of Latin American history; the cultural heritage from Spain and from the pre-Spanish civilizations; the intellectual, social, and cultural progress of the Latin American countries. Lectures in Spanish. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Student will gain practical experience in the language.
|
| SPAN 48300 - Latin American Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of Latin American cultures and U.S. Latino culture, from pre-Columbian times to the present. The course will focus on selected aspects of the cultures of Latin American groups. Conducted in Spanish. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 49000 - Topics In Spanish |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| SPAN 49800 - Advanced Topics In Spanish |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced studies of particular aspects of Spanish (e.g. culture, civilization, literature, linguistics, film, etc) by examining a varied selection of works. Readings, discussion, and papers in Spanish. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPAN 51100 - Advanced Spanish Conversation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Additional practice in speaking and understanding Spanish. Extensive listening (outside of class) to recordings of natives from various parts of the Spanish-speaking world. Talks based on this material given in class. Graduate students other than M.A.T. candidates may not include this course in the plan of study. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Student will gain practical experiences in the language.
|
| SPAN 51500 - Advanced Spanish Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Additional training in writing and speaking Spanish; introduction to the study of style. Recommended for prospective teachers. Graduate students other than MA T. candidates may not include this course in the plan of study. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Student will gain practical experiences in the language.
|
| SPAN 51900 - Teaching College Spanish |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course designed to provide a forum for ideas connecting theory and research to teaching practice. Explores issues related to how learning and teaching can be enhanced and presents practical ideas that can be implemented in the classroom. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 54100 - Spanish Literature Of The Golden Age |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of Spanish literature from 1500 to 1681. Reading and discussion of representative prose, dramatic and poetic works. Lectures and supplemental readings on literary criticism and on various aspects of the period useful to an understanding of the literature it produced. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Student will gain practical experiences in the language.
|
| SPAN 54200 - Cervantes' Don Quijote |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading and discussion of Don Quijote in the context of Spanish Renaissance literature and subsequent developments in the genre of the novel. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 54300 - Spanish Literature Of The 18th And 19th Centuries |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The development of Spanish peninsular literature from Neoclassicism to Realism. Reading, analysis, and discussion of a representative selection of works of the periods. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 54500 - Spanish Literature Of The 20th Century |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of major trends in Spanish peninsular literature from the generation of 1898 to the present. Reading, analysis, and discussion of a representative selection of works of the period. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 55000 - Spanish American Literature Of The Colonial Period |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of Spanish American literature of the colonial period. Reading and discussion of a number of representative works as well as excerpts from several others. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 55100 - Spanish American Literature Of The 19th Century |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of Spanish American literature of the 19th century. Reading and discussion of a number of representative works as well as excerpts from several others. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 55200 - Spanish American Literature From 1900 To 1970 |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of Spanish American literature from 1900 to 1970. Readings and discussion of a number of representative works, as well as excerpts from several others. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Student will gain practical experiences in the language.
|
| SPAN 55300 - Spanish American Literature From 1970- Present |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of Spanish American literature from 1970 to the present. Readings and discussion of a number of representative works, as well as excerpts from several others. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Student will gain practical experiences in the language.
|
| SPAN 55400 - Hispanic Caribbean Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on various topics pertaining to Hispanic Caribbean literature. The particular works included will change each time the course is offered. All coursework and discussion is in Spanish. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 55700 - Argentine Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of Argentine literature. Reading and discussion of a number of representative works as well as excerpts from several others and from standard anthologies. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 56100 - The Structure Of Spanish I: Phonetics, Phonology, And Dialectology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Linguistic analysis of Spanish phonology, phonetics, and dialectology. Selected topics within the areas of Spanish sociolinguistics and language acquisition. Each of these topics will be approached from a theoretical and contrastive Spanish/English perspective. Credit will not be given for both SPAN 36100 and 56100. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 56200 - The Structure Of Spanish II: Morphology, Lexicology, And Syntax |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Linguistic analysis of Spanish focusing on morphology, lexicology, and syntax. This course will present the grammatical structure of Spanish dealing with word-level phenomena (derivational and inflectional morphology, the lexicon) and phrase- and sentence-level phonomena (constituents, word order, sentence structure, etc. ). Credit will not be given for both SPAN 36200 and 56200. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 56300 - History Of The Spanish Language |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of Spanish since the Ancient Latin period, taking into account influences of other cultures and languages; Spanish in relation to Latin and other Romance languages; basic principles of language change; language change underlying differences between American and Peninsular Spanish. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 59000 - Directed Reading In Spanish |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Directed readings in Spanish. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPAN 59400 - Special Topics In Hispanic Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPAN 59600 - Special Topics In Spanish Linguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPAN 60300 - Second Course To Establish Reading Knowledge |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Readings in the physical and biological sciences, mathematics, and engineering. Prerequisite: SPAN 60100. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 60500 - Second Course To Establish Reading Knowledge |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Readings in the humanities and social sciences. Prerequisite: SPAN 60100. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 63000 - Bibliography And Literary Criticism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The use of general and specific reference materials and bibliographical aids in literary research; the basic concepts and terminology of literary criticism. Required of all MA candidates in Spanish. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| SPAN 64200 - Seminar In Spanish Theater |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study of Spanish theater. Content will vary depending on the choice of periods, authors, works, and themes. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPAN 65900 - Seminar In Hispanic Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study of special subject. Topics to be announced in advance. Content varies. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPAN 67900 - Seminar In Spanish Linguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study and research on a significant topic in Spanish linguistics. Topic to be announced in advance. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPAN 68200 - Topics In Latin American Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected facets of Latin American culture through the eyes of the continent's artists, creative writers, essayists, and social scientists - and in view of current theories of the arts, literatures, multiculturalism, and postcolonialism. Typically offered Spring Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPAN 69800 - Research MA Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MA Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPAN 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: School of Languages & Cultures
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPAN B1010 - Beginning Spanish I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The first course in the Spanish language. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPAN B1020 - Beginning Spanish II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. These are first-year introductory courses, taught over two semesters, in which little or no prior experience with the language is necessary. These courses target all four skills of language learning -- listening, speaking, reading, and writing. Goals include: acquisition and practice of new vocabulary and structures; focus on oral (listening, speaking) and written (reading, writing) communication in the target language; increased knowledge and appreciation of Francophone cultures. Placement test or other prerequisite may be required.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPAN S1000 - Elem Spanish I-Begin |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This introductory Spanish Program presents an interactive approach to the language within a cultural context. The program consists of a variety of materials that promote functional use of the language. Each chapter of the book is organized around a theme related to a place or situation that is likely to be encountered by a person studying, working, or traveling in a Spanish-speaking country. Each of the four skills of listening, speaking, reading, and writing are given equal importance throughout the components of this program. Cross-cultural information reflects the diversity of the Hispanic world today. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPAN S1010 - Elementary Spanish I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. These are first-year introductory courses, taught over two semesters, in which little or no prior experience with the language is necessary. These courses target all four skills of language learning -- listening, speaking, reading, and writing. Goals include: acquisition and practice of new vocabulary and structures; focus on oral (listening, speaking) and written (reading, writing) communication in the target language; increased knowledge and appreciation of Francophone cultures. Placement test or other prerequisite may be required.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPAN S1020 - Elementary Spanish II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. These are first-year introductory courses, taught over two semesters, in which little or no prior experience with the language is necessary. These courses target all four skills of language learning -- listening, speaking, reading, and writing. Goals include: acquisition and practice of new vocabulary and structures; focus on oral (listening, speaking) and written (reading, writing) communication in the target language; increased knowledge and appreciation of Francophone cultures. Placement test or other prerequisite may be required.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPAN S1050 - Community and Culture Spanish I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An introduction to Spanish for those with a personal interest in Spanish-speaking countries. Develops comprehension skills, cultural awareness, and elementary speaking ability. Classroom focus on communicative activities rather than grammar analysis. Does not duplicate S111. S105-S106 may substitute for S111, but credit not given for both. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SPAN S1060 - Community and Culture Spanish II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An introduction to Spanish for those with a personal interest in Spanish-speaking countries. Develops comprehension skills, cultural awareness, and elementary speaking ability. Classroom focus on communicative activities rather than grammar analysis. Does not duplicate S111. S105-S106 may substitute for S111, but credit not given for both. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SPAN S1110 - Elementary Spanish I |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to Spanish language as well as to Hispanic cultures. Emphasis on development of communicative competence in speaking, listening, reading and writing. S111 is a course for beginners. Students with two years of high school Spanish must take S113. Typically offered Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPAN S1120 - Elementary Spanish II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introduction to Spanish language as well as to Hispanic cultures. Emphasis on development of communicative competence in speaking, listening, reading and writing. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPAN S1130 - Accelerated First Year Spanish |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Required beginning course for students with at least two years of high school Spanish who did not place into S2030 or higher. Review of selected material from S1110 before proceeding to S1120 material. Credit will not be given for both S1120 and S1130. Typically offered Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SPAN S1170 - Beginning Spanish I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory language sequence of courses designed for students with no prior training in Spanish. Emphasis on developing basic speaking, writing, listening, and reading skills as well as awareness of Hispanic culture. Credit not given for SPAN S1170, SPAN S1180, SPAN S1190, and SPAN S1310-SPAN S1320. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPAN S1180 - Beginning Spanish II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory language sequence of courses designed for students with no prior training in Spanish. Emphasis on developing basic speaking, writing, listening, and reading skills as well as awareness of Hispanic culture. Credit not given for SPAN S1170, SPAN S1180, SPAN S1190 and SPAN S1310-SPAN S1320. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| SPAN S1190 - Beginning Spanish III |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Introductory language sequence of courses designed for students with no prior training in Spanish. Emphasis on developing basic speaking, writing, listening, and reading skills as well as awareness of Hispanic culture. Credit not given for SPAN S1170, SPAN S1180, SPAN S1190, and SPAN S1310-SPAN S1320. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPAN S1200 - Spanish For Professionals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Targets workplace scenarios, such as healthcare, public safety, and education. The aim is to increase community efficiency, cultural awareness, safety and productivity on the job as well as to develop a connection with clientele. Specific vocabulary, grammatical points, and cultural knowledge will be presented, including courtesy, safety, locations, schedules and equipment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SPAN S1310 - First-Year Spanish I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Introductory Spanish language course. Emphasis on developing bsaic speaking, writing, listening and reading skills as well as awareness of Hispanic cultures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPAN S1320 - First-Year Spanish II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Continuation of introductory Spanish language course. Emphasis on developing basic speaking, writing, listening and reading skills as well as awareness of Hispanic cultures.
Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPAN S1500 - Elementary Spanish II |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course continues the work of S100. Continued emphasis on all four skills and on critical thinking skills. Grading is based on exams and oral tests, written exercises, compositions, and a cumulative final exam. Students can expect to practice speaking in small groups in class, and read about and discuss materials in Spanish. Credit given for only one of S150 and S105.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPAN S1600 - Beginning Spanish For Health Care Personnel I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Beginning language instruction in Spanish with an emphasis on the communicative needs of health care personnel. Service-learning component available. Typically offered Fall, Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
|
| SPAN S2000 - 2nd Year Spanish I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course reviews some of the basic structures studied in the first year, and examines them in more detail. Emphasis remains on the four skills and on critical thinking skills. Readings are both journalistic and literary. Grades are based on exams, oral tests, homework, compositions, and a cumulative final exam. Homework load is substantial.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPAN S2030 - Second Year Spanish I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Meets three hours a week. Continuation of S111-S112/S113 with grammar review and increased emphasis on communication skills. Reading and discussion in Spanish of contemporary literature, essays, and/or cultural readings. Practice in composition. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPAN S2040 - Second-Year Spanish II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Meets three hours a week. Continuation of S111-S112/S113 with grammar review and increased emphasis on communication skills. Reading and discussion in Spanish of contemporary literature, essays, and/or cultural readings. Practice in composition. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPAN S2100 - 2nd-Year Spanish Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Intensive practice in writing expository, descriptive, and narrative prose, with weekly compositions to be discussed and corrected in class. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SPAN S2200 - Chicano And Puerto Rican Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The bicultural reality of the Hispanic people in the United States as seen in their literature. Taught in English. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SPAN S2290 - Spanish Cutlure And Civilization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. From the earliest times to the present. Survey of the development of Spanish civilization and culture showing trends in ideas, in arts and literature, in the economic, religious and political movements viewed within strict historical framework. Designed for foreign culture option. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Richmond
|
| SPAN S2410 - Golden Age Literature In Translation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Masterpieces of Spanish literature of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Representative authors will include: Lope de Vega, Cervantes, Garcilaso, Quevedo, Calderon, Fray Luis de Leon, San Juan de la Cruz and Gongora. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Richmond
|
| SPAN S2460 - Woman In Hispanic Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discussion of the roles of Spanish and Spanish-American women as reflected in literature in translation from the 17th century to the present and of works written by women. The works are considered both as literature and as documents of attitudes toward women in English. Lectures and readings in English. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the non-Western culture studies requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SPAN S2500 - Second-Year Spanish II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of S1100-S1500, with increased emphasis on communication skills and selected readings on aspects of Hispanic culture. Attendance in the Language Laboratory may be required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| SPAN S2750 - Introduction To Hispanic Culture And Conversation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Practice of language skills through reading, writing, and discussion of Hispanic culture. Treats facets of popular culture, diversity of the Spanish-speaking world, and the social and political importance. Conducted in Spanish. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPAN S2900 - Topics In Hispanic Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis on one topic, author or genre in Hispanic culture. May be repeated once for credit with different topic. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-Richmond
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| SPAN S2980 - Second-Year Spanish |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Non-native speakers may receive a maximum of 16 credits by completing a 300-level course with a C or higher (S298 plus 10 hours at the 100 level). Native speakers of Spanish are eligible for a maximum of 6 hours of “S” credit (S298) upon completion of S313 with a C or higher. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPAN S3010 - Hispanic World I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to Hispanic culture through literature. Study of representative literary works of both Spain and Spanish America in the context of Hispanic history, art, philosophy, folklore, etc. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
|
| SPAN S3020 - Hispanic World II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to Hispanic culture through literature. Study of representative literary works of both Spain and Spanish America in the context of Hispanic history, art, philosophy, folklore, etc. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
|
| SPAN S3110 - Spanish Grammar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to integrate the four basic language skills into a review of the major points of Spanish grammar. Coursework will combine grammar exercises with brief controlled compositions based on a reading assignment and class discussion in Spanish. Sentence exercises will be corrected and discussed in class. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
|
| SPAN S3120 - Written Composition In Spanish |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course integrates the four basic language skills into a structured approach to composition. Some review of selected points of Spanish grammar will be included. Each student will write a weekly composition, increasing in length as the semester progresses. Emphasis will be on correct usage, vocabulary building, and stylistic control. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
|
| SPAN S3130 - Writing Spanish |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Grammar review, composition, and themes in Spanish. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPAN S3140 - Writing Spanish II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Grammar review, composition, and themes in Spanish. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPAN S3150 - Spanish In Business World |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Introduction to the technical language of the business world with emphasis on problems of style, composition, and translation in the context of Hispanic Mores. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| SPAN S3160 - Commercial Spanish |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. The objective of this course is to teach the student to write the ordinary kinds of business letters and to become familiar with commercial documents. Spanish is used in class as much as possible. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SPAN S3170 - Spanish Conversation And Diction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive controlled conversation correlated with readings, reports, debates, and group discussions, with emphasis on vocabulary usage, word order, tense interrelationships, and discourse skills. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
TSW-New Albany
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| SPAN S3190 - Spanish For Health Care Personnel |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course specifically designed for those interested in learning Spanish in the context of material related to health care systems. Emphasis placed on vocabulary necessary for communicative competence in the medical fields. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPAN S3200 - Spanish Pronunciation And Diction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Thorough study of Spanish phonetics and intonation patterns. Corrective drills. Includes intensive class and laboratory work. Oral interpretation of texts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPAN S3230 - Introduction to Translating Spanish and English |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comparative study of the style and grammar of both languages with focus on the difficulties involved in translating. Introduction to the techniques and process of translation through intensive translation practice.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPAN S3250 - Oral Spanish For Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Intermediate conversation for formal and informal settings. Intensive practice in pronunciation and diction, with individual corrective work in language laboratory. Intermediate grammar review coordinated with cultural themes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPAN S3260 - Introduction To Spanish Linguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces the basic concepts of Hispanic linguistics and establishes the background for the future application of linguistic principles. The course surveys linguistic properties in Spanish, including honology, morphology, and syntax. Additional introductory material on historical linguistics, second language acquisition, semantics, and sociolinguistics will be included. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPAN S3600 - Introduction To Hispanic Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Using fiction, drama, and poetry from both Spain and Latin America, this course introduces strategies to increase reading comprehension and presents terms and concepts useful in developing the critical skills of literary analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPAN S3630 - Introduction To Hispanic Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the cultural history of Spanish-speaking countries with emphasis on its literary, artistic, social, economic, and political aspects. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPAN S4070 - Survey Of Spanish Literature I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A historical survey that covers major authors, genres, periods, and movements from the Spanish Middle Ages through the baroque period of the seventeenth century. Readings include prose works, poetry, and drama. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SPAN S4080 - Survey Of Spanish Literature II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A historical of Spanish literature that covers the main current of Spain's literary history in the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth centuries. Readings in prose, poetry, and drama by Larra, Perez, galdos, Unamuno, Garcia Lorca, and other representative writers. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
|
| SPAN S4110 - Spain: The Cultural Context |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course to integrate historical, social, political, and cultural information about Spain. Readings and discussions in Spanish. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| SPAN S4120 - Latin-American Culture And Civilization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course to integrate historical, social, political, and cultural information about Spanish America. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the Cultural Studies (Non-Western Culture) requirement. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| SPAN S4130 - Hispanic Culture In The United States |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Integrates hisorical, racial, political and cultural information about Hispanics in the United States. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| SPAN S4170 - Hispanic Poetry |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of major aspects, movements, or directions of Hispanic poetry from the Middle Ages to present. Period may vary. May be repeated with different period. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| SPAN S4180 - Hispanic Drama |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Forms, traditions, themes and periods of Hispanic drama from the Renaissance to the present. Topic may vary. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| SPAN S4200 - Modern Spanish-American Prose Fiction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Spanish-American prose fiction from late 19th century Modernism to the present. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| SPAN S4210 - Advanced Grammar And Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Selected grammar review and intensive practice in effective use of the written language. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
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| SPAN S4230 - The Craft Of Translation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic introductory course in translation. The problems and techniques of Spanish/English and English/Spanish translation using a variety of texts and concentrating on such critical areas as stylistics, tone, rhythms, imagery, nuance, allusion, etc. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPAN S4250 - Spanish Phonetics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to basic linguistics and phonology. Intensive patterned pronunciation drills and exercises in sound discrimination and transcription based on articulatory description of standard Spanish of Spain and Latin America. Attendance in audio laboratory required. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| SPAN S4260 - Introduction to Spanish Linguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. General aspects of Spanish linguistics: traditional, descriptive, historical, and dialectal. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
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| SPAN S4270 - The Structure Of Spanish |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course analyzes the structure of the Spanish language, including word and sentence formation, and how the language is used employed to produce specific meanings. This course will help students recognize the patterns underlying the Spanish language, and improve their grammatical accuracy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPAN S4280 - Applied Spanish Linguistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of linguistics and cultural elements of Spanish phonology, morphology, syntax, and semantics as they bear on teaching. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
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| SPAN S4290 - Medical Interpreting Spanish/English |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Medical Interpreting Spanish/English. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPAN S4300 - Legal Spanish |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an upper level course targeting native speakers or advanced students in Spanish who are considering careers in the legal professions; paralegals, attorneys, state or federal legal affairs positions and court interpreting. This course begins with general knowledge of legal Spanish focusing on reading, communicative activities, interpreting and translation. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPAN S4350 - Literature Chicana and Riquena |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Works in Spanish by representative Chicano and Puerto Rican authors of the United States. Cultural values and traditions reflected in both the oral and written literatures. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| SPAN S4500 - Don Quixote |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Detailed analysis of Cervantes' novel. Life and times of the author. Importance of the work to the development of the novel as an art form. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| SPAN S4700 - Women and Hispanic Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 5.00. Hispanic woman within her cultural context through literary texts. Topics such as women authors, characters, themes, and feminist critism. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| SPAN S4710 - Spanish-American Literature I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to Spanish-American literature from the colonial period to the beginning of the twentieth century. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the nonwestern culture studies requirement. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-New Albany
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| SPAN S4720 - Spanish-American Literature II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to Spanish-American literature from the beginning of the twentieth century to the present. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the nonwestern culture studies requirement. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
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| SPAN S4740 - Hispanic Literature and Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Writers and their works within the social, political, economic, and cultural context. Specific topic to be announced in the Schedule of Classes. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| SPAN S4770 - Twentieth-Century Spanish-American Prose Fiction |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Close readings of representative novelists and short story writers, including established authors (Borges, Asturias, Arreola, Carpentier) and promising young writers. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
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| SPAN S4780 - Modern Spanish Novel |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The Spanish novel from the beginning of Realism around 1850 through post-Civil War novels of the 20th century. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| SPAN S4790 - Mexican Literature |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Mexican literature from Independence to present. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the Cultural Studies (Non-Western Culture) requirement. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| SPAN S4800 - Argentine Literature |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Argentine literature from Independence to present. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the Cultural Studies (Non-Western Culture) requirement. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| SPAN S4870 - Capstone Internship In Spanish |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Capstone Internship In Spanish. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPAN S4880 - Spanish For Teachers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Only open to students completing teaching certification requirements. Focuses on major problem areas of teaching Spanish. Includes review, exercises, and information on current pedagogical trends. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| SPAN S4940 - Individual Readings in Hispanic Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. . Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| SPAN S4950 - Hispanic Colloquium |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topic and credit may vary. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| SPAN S4980 - Capstone Seminar In Spanish |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A senior-level course for all Spanish majors that integrates students' undergraduate study. Students showcase academic progress through a portfolio, a reflective journal, discussions with the faculty capstone director, and a final presentation to students and faculty.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPAN W3990 - Internship in Spanish |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Practical application of foreign-language skills. Credit may be counted toward the major with the approval of the department chair. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| SPCH C1100 - Fundamentals Of Speech Communication |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and Practice of public speaking; training in thought processes necessary to organize speech content for informative and persuasive situations; application of language and delivery skills to specific audiences. Lectures and recitations. A minimum of six speaking situations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPCH C2050 - Introduction To Oral Interpretation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic principles and practice in analysis and reading of selections from prose, poetry, and drama. Public presentation of programs.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| SPCH C3000 - Practicum In Speech |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. Practical experience in various departmental areas as selected by the student prior to registration, outlined in consultation with the instructor, and approved by the department. Must represent a minimum of 45 hours of practical experience per credit hour. A student shall take no more than a total of 9 credit hours of C 300 and C 398. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
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| SPCH C3210 - Persuasion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Motivational appeals in influencing behavior, psychological factors in speaker-audience relationship, principles and practice of persuasive speaking.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| SPCH C3250 - Interviewing Principles & Practices |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study and practice of methods used in business and industrial interviews, emphasis on the logical
and psychological bases for the exchange of information-attitudes.
. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| SPCH C3800 - Organizational Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The application of communication theory and research to the study of communication within the formal organization.
Communication behavior is examined in a variety of organizational settings: interpersonal, small group, and interorganizational units.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| SPCH C3910 - Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topic announced in prior semester; oriented to current topics in communication and theatre; readings,
projects, and papers as indicated by the topic and instructor.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| SPCH C3930 - Communication Research Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores major research methods used by communication scholars, including experimental research, survey research, textual analysis, and ethnography. Students learn how to interpret, evaluate and propose research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
Learning Objectives:
1. Students should understand and be able to explain the fundamental assumptions and methods of experimental research, survey research, textual analysis, and ethnographic research in the field of communication.
2. Students should become better consumers of the primary research in communication by being motivated to value primary research, by being better able to comprehend a wider range of research studies, and by being able to engage in a critical analysis of the strengths and limitations of communication research.
3. Students should be able to identify and access the research materials available in the field of communication.
4. Students should learn the style of scholarly writing used in communication studies and should achieve a satisfactory ability to write in that style.
5. Students should become familiar with a variety of contemporary phenomena studied by communication scholars and should understand ways in which our knowledge of those phenomena is dependent upon the research methodologies used to study them.
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| SPCH C4010 - Speech Communication Of Technical Information |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Speech Communication of Technical Information. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPCH C4440 - Political Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of communication in political campaigns and social movements. Campaign topics include speech making, advertising, news coverage, and debates. Case studies in social movements, including anti-war, civil rights, feminism, and others. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
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| SPCH S1210 - Public Speaking |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and practice of public speaking training in thought processes necessary to organize speech content; analysis of components of effective delivery and language.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| SPCH S1220 - Interpersonal Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Practical consideration of spontaneous human interaction in face-to-face situations. Special attention to perception, language, and attitudes in dyads and small groups.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| SPCH S2010 - Communicating In Public |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and advanced practice of public speaking. Designed primarily for, but not limited to, majors in communication-related fields.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| SPCH S2050 - Introduction to Speech Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of fundamental theoretical and methodological issues involved in the social scientific and critical study of human communication. Analyzes influences on and impact of communication in dyadic, group, public, and mediated contexts.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| SPCH S2230 - Business and Professional Speaking |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Preparation and presentation of speeches and oral reports appropriate to business and professional occupations; group discussion and parliamentary procedures. Does not count toward fulfillment of arts and sciences Group III distribution requirements.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPCH S2280 - Argumentation And Debate |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reasoning, evidence and argument in public discourse. Study of forms of argument. Practice in argumentative speaking. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
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| SPCH S2290 - Discussion and Group Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Leadership and participation in group, committee, conference, and public discussion; logical and psychological aspects of group processes.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPCH S2330 - Introduction To Public Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the historical antecedents and contemporary practice of public relations in the U.S. Emphasis is on the nature of day-to-day tasks and the communication responsibility of public relations practitioners in a variety of professional settings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPCH S2360 - Current Topics In Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Extensive analysis of selected problems in contemporary speech communication. Topics vary each semester and are listed in the Schedule of Classes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Richmond
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| SPCH S3030 - Propaganda &Persuasion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the theory and use of propaganda in contemporary society. The course will examine the difference between propaganda and more ethical forms of persuasion. Students will analyze a current propaganda campaign.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPCH S3210 - Rhetoric And Modern Discourse |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theories of rhetoric from the Greco-Roman period through Medieval and Renaissance periods and into the twentieth century. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPCH S3220 - Advanced Interpersonal Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced consideration of communication in human relationships. Emphasis given to self-concept, perception, verbal language, nonverbal interaction, listening, interpersonal conflict and communication skills in family, social, and work situations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPCH S3230 - Speech Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced speech writing; theories of style and written and spoken language; logical proofs; and emotional and ethical appeals. Practice in composition and delivery.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPCH S3240 - Persuasion |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Rhetorical and experimental theories of persuasion; persuasion as a social force.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPCH S3250 - Voice And Diction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Anatomy and functions of vocal mechanism; background for teaching normal speech patterns. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPCH S3330 - Public Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the principles of contemporary public relations, including ethics of public relations, impact on society, and uses by government, business, and social institutions for internal and external communication. Public relations as a problem-solving process utilizing theoretical and applied communication strategies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPCH S3360 - Current Topics in Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Extensive analysis of selected problems in contemporary speech communication. Topics vary each semester and are listed in the Schedule of Classes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPCH S3530 - Advanced Public Speaking |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of a Marked degree of skill in preparation and delivery of various types of speeches, with emphasis on depth of research, clarity of organization, application of proof, adaptation to audience, and felicitous style. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| SPCH S3800 - Nonverbal Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides a conceptual and theoretical foundation for understanding how nonverbal communication influences perceptions of others and the ways in which nonverbal communication reflects emotions, status, sex roles, etc. The course explores how nonverbal communication facilitates retention, comprehension, and persuasiveness of verbal information, including the ability to detect deceptive communication.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPCH S3980 - Independent Study in Speech Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Independent study or practicum experience. Projects must be approved by faculty member before enrolling. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| SPCH S4050 - Human Communication Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of contemporary theories of human communication, with emphasis on the nature of theory construction and contribution of allied disciplines to communication theory. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPCH S4270 - Cross Cultural Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey study of national, cultural, and cross-cultural communication in theory and practice. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPCH S4400 - Organizational Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of internal and external communication in business and other professional organizations, with emphasis upon theory, techniques, practices, goals, and the social environment in which such communication exists.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPCH S4500 - Gender and Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the extent to which biological sex and gender-role orientation and stereotypes influence in the process of communication. Focuses on gender differences in decoding and encoding verbal and nonverbal behavior, development of sex roles, cultural assumptions, and stereotypes in communication. Analyzes how the media present, influence, and reinforce gender stereotypes.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPEA E1000 - Environmental Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of selected issues in environmental affairs. Topics vary from semester to semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPEA E1620 - Environment And People |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Environment and people is an introductory course that examines how humans interact with their environment. This course covers multiple topics, centered-around human environment, dimensions of environmental change. The overarching objective is to develop an understanding of our impact on the planet and possible solutions to environmental degradation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPEA E2720 - Introduction To Environmental Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of principles from the life and physical sciences to the understanding and management of the environment. Emphases will be placed on (1) the physical and biological restraints on resource availability and use, and (2) the technological and scientific options to solving environmental problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPEA E3260 - Mathematical Methods In Environmental Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Mathematical modeling in environmental science. Expressing problems as equations. Applications and numerical evaluation of derivatives and integrals. Derivation and solution of differential equations. Use of package FORTRAN subroutines in problem solving. Statistics applied to environmental science. Typically offered Summer, Fall, Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPEA E4000 - Topics In Envirnmental Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An interdisciplinary consideration of specific environmental topics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPEA E4100 - Introduction To Environmental Toxicology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of toxic mechanisms, pathology, and disease development resulting from exposure to biological and chemical agents in the environment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA E4230 - Environmental Health Science Technology: Managing Water And Wastes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Technology approach to preventing the transmission of disease among humans through water and wastes. Course focuses on drinking water treatment and distribution; water quality and pollution; wastewater treatment; storm water management; municipal solid waste and hazardous waste management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA E4310 - Water Supply And Waste Water Treatment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Health and ecological premises for water and wastewater treatment; principles of water supply; treatment, distribution, and construction; basis for water standards and laboratory examinations; wastewater disposal methods and construction for private installations, institutions, municipalities, and industries; water quality control with respect to wastewater pollution. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| SPEA E4510 - Air Pollution And Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey course covering the chemistry, transport, and fate of air pollutants related to current issues of air quality, such as photochemical smog, ozone depletion, particulate matter, and indoor air quality. Topics include the types, sources, health and environmental effects, measurement, evaluation, control, regulation and modeling of air pollution concentrations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| SPEA E4520 - Solid And Hazardous Waste Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Types and sources of solid waste; collection methods; disposal techniques: sanitary landfill, incineration composting, reclaiming or recycling; advantages and disadvantages of each; special and hazardous waste handling; operation and management of solid and hazardous waste programs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| SPEA E5360 - Environmental Chemistry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Gas law calculations, stoichiometry, steady and non-steady state box models, stratospheric ozone, chemical kinetics, photochemical smog, greenhouse effect, CO2 equilibria, chemodynamics, pesticides, and toxic metals. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA E5490 - Environmental Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Concepts and methodologies in environmental planning. The planning process. Topics may include: environmental impact assessment, economic approaches to environmental decision making, use of computer models in environmental planning, geographic information systems in environmental planning, environmental perception, and construction of environmental indices. Team projects with planning agencies. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA E5600 - Environmental Risk Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Methods of probabilistic risk analysis applied to environmental situations. Event trees, fault trees, toxicological estimation, ecological risk analysis. Social and psychological aspects of risk. Individual and group projects assessing some real environmental risk are an important part of the course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA E5620 - Solid And Hazardous Waste Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The purpose is to provide students with a technical foundation in areas of solid and hazardous waste management which can be applied to the examination of policy options. Topic include characterization of the waste stream, regulations, health and environmental risks, liability issues, management technologies and treatment and disposal options. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA H1200 - Contemporary Health Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An examination of current public health, environmental health, and health service delivery issues in the U.S. Topics include the organization and costs of health systems, access to care, and the interrelationships between risk factors and health; also environmental challenges facing our society and their impact on health. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| SPEA H3160 - Environmental Health Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of human interaction with the environment and potential impacts of environmental agents on health and safety. Hazards from natural sources and human activities that contaminate our air, land, water, food, homes, neighborhoods, and workplaces are examined. Environmental control activities, including pollution control technology and policy, are also examined. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| SPEA H3200 - Health Systems Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of the U.S. health-care delivery system. Examines the organization, function and role of the system; current system problems; and alternative systems or solutions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| SPEA H3220 - Principles Of Epidemiology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A basic overview of epidemiologic methodology and techniques. Both communicable and chronic disease risk factors will be discussed, along with data acquisition, analysis techniques, and current published epidemiological studies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| SPEA H3520 - Health Finance And Budgeting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of the financial management of health-care facilities based on generally accepted business principles. Accounting and managerial control of cash, accounts receivable, inventory control, budgeting and cost control, as well as accounting and evaluation of short- and long-term debt will be examined. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA H3540 - Health Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course applies economics to the study of administrative and policy issues in the health care sector. Economic concepts are used to explain the system of health care financing and the organization of health care delivery in the U.S. The economic evaluation of health care programs is also discussed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA H4010 - Strategic Planning For Health Care Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines strategic planning techniques as they apply to health care organizations. Students will develop and defend a
comprehensive strategic plan for a case facility. One half of the course will be conducted in a workshop format. Typically offered Fall, Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA H4160 - Environmental Health Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of professional requirements and duties of the environmental health functions within health agencies; consideration of applicable laws and standards in each environmental health function; environmental evaluation, implementation, and personnel responsibilities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA H4200 - Health Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will focus on current health policy issues within the context of the U.S. health care system. The course will familiarize students with the political environment of public policy, introduce major health care policy perspectives, and apply those analytical models to a series of health policy issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA H4280 - Food Science And Sanitation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic concepts of food technology with emphasis on methods and procedures in food processing to minimize contamination and to prevent food-related illness. Federal, state, and local food laws and inspection procedures will be examined. Typically offered Fall, Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA H4320 - Health Care Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A practical study of marketing in health care institutions, health service organizations, and health insurers. A basic foundation in marketing principles, new methods in marketing products and services, and inexpensive marketing techniques will be examined. Typically offered Fall, Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA H4330 - Industrial Hygiene |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey of the technical and regulatory aspects of protecting the health and safety of workers. Topics include basic toxicology; skin, eye, and respiratory hazards; measuring hazardous atmospheres; ventilation systems; fire and explosion hazards; emergency response; occupational hearing loss; radiation; prevention of accidents; cumulative trauma; and personal protective equipment. Typically offered Summer, Fall, Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA H4410 - Legal Aspects Of Health Care Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of the liability and legal responsibility, as well as legal recourse health-care facilities may exercise. This course will discuss policies and standards relating to health facility administration. Also included is a discussion of financial aspects unique to the hospital/health-care facility environment, such as third-party payments and federal assistance. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA H4550 - Topics In Public Health |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Extensive discussion of selected topics in public health. The topic may change from semester to semester with resource availability and student demand. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPEA H4590 - Environmental Science And Health Data Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides students with an understanding of basic principles needed to perform sampling and analysis of field and laboratory environmental data. Topics include properties of chemical and biological constituents, detection limits, calibration, quality control, precision accuracy, and statistical analysis.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA H4600 - Techniques In Environmental Health |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Basic physical, chemical, and biological examinations and standards for potable water quality, wastewater treatment determinations, and stream pollution control. Basic physical, chemical, and biological (ergonometric) examinations used in industrial hygiene and air pollution control. Instruction in basic laboratory skills and techniques for performing these examinations. Typically offered Summer, Fall, Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA H4740 - Health Administration Ethics Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines healthcare ethical decision making challenges from managerial perspective and explores broader policy issues associated with ethical problems in healthcare institutions. It provides an overview of general theories of ethical challenges in everyday managerial activities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA H5010 - U.S. Health Care: Systems, Policies, And Ethical Challenges |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of health, illness, and disease trajectories and the systemic components that mold the health care system. Ideological paradigms predicting utilization and health behaviors are addressed as are guidelines or ethical decision making/problem analysis. Formulation and implementation of organizational and governmental policies and their associate theoretical assumptions are addressed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SPEA H5030 - Principles Of Health Systems Management And Policy Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores management roles in public, nonprofit, and for-profit health system environments. Application of management theories, concepts and principles; development of ethical, professional values; an understanding managerial roles in organizational and public policy development emphasized. Managerial process, resource dependence, population ecology, contingency theory, corporate culture, ethics and quality management processes examined. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SPEA H5140 - Health Economics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines the principles and application of economic analysis in the health field and the economist's approach to health care issues. Provides insights offered by economic analysis of specific health issues and problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SPEA H5160 - Health Services Delivery And The Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Medical-legal concepts related to hospitals and other health services organizations. Course provides an in-depth understanding of the relationship of the law and the legal processes affecting the health services system. Presentation of the elements of administrative and agency processes, torts, contracts, facilities, physicians, patients, and personnel. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SPEA H6020 - Mental Health Services Organization And Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the organizations and systems for delivery of mental health services; emphasis on the management and financing of psychiatric services. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SPEA J1010 - The American Criminal Justice System |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the criminal justice system of the U.S. and its function in contemporary society. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPEA J1500 - Public Safety In America |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The protection of persons and property involves a number of public and private organizations. This course examines the roles that agencies working within the fire service, emergency management, criminal justice, and the private security sector play in securing public safety in the United States. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| SPEA J2010 - Theoretical Foundations Of Criminal Justice Policies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the impact of sociological, psychological, biological, and economic theories of crime and the practice of criminal justice. Focus is upon the nature and importance of theory, context of theoretical developments, methods for the critical analysis of theoretical developments, and policy implications of the varying perspectives considered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| SPEA J2020 - Criminal Justice Data Methods and Resources |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course examines basic concepts of criminal justice. Students become familiar with research techniques necessary for systematic analysis of the criminal justice system, offender behavior, crime trends, and program effectiveness. Students will learn to critically evaluate existing research. Students will become familiar with existing sources of criminal justice data and will learn to assess the quality of that data. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Richmond
|
| SPEA J2220 - Murder In America:Cause And Consequences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An investigation of homicide in the United States. Focus on the level and nature of homicides as well as domestic homicides; serial and mass murder; race, ethnicity, and gender; drugs and alcohol; school and workplace homicides; investigation; profiling and the death penalty; and homicide prevention and intervention programs.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPEA J2600 - Topics In Criminal Justice |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Study of selected issues in criminal justice. Topics vary from semester to semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| SPEA J2720 - Terrorism And Public Policy |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course surveys terrorism in democratic societies, with an emphasis on public policy responses designed to combat terrorism. Overviews of terrorist organizations in various countries are interspersed with analyses of significant terrorist events and public policies, legal, and public safety responses the events create. Typically offered Fall, Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
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| SPEA J2750 - Diversity Issues In Criminal Justice |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the influence of diversity issues such as race, ethnicity, class, and gender on crime and the treatment of the underrepresented groups throughout the American criminal justice system. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
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| SPEA J3000 - Historical Development Of Criminal Justice Systems |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Historical and philosophical development of Criminal Justice Systems. Principals involved in the social control process with emphasis on legal systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPEA J3010 - Substantive Criminal Law |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The development, limitations, and application of substantive criminal law utilizing the case- study method. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| SPEA J3020 - Procedural Criminal Law |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Criminal law application and procedure from the initiation of police activity through the correctional process utilizing the case-study method. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| SPEA J3030 - Evidence |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The rule of law governing proof at trial of disputed issues of fact; burden of proof; presumptions and judicial notice; examination, impeachment, competency, and privileges of witnesses; hearsay rule and exceptions; all related as nearly as possible to criminal, as opposed to civil, process. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
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| SPEA J3050 - Juvenile Justice |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide an overview of the justice system's response to abused, neglected, and dependent children; juvenile misconduct, and delinquent behavior. An extensive review of the development of recent legal changes to the court, options for prevention, treatment of juvenile offenders, and possible system reforms. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
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| SPEA J3060 - The Criminal Courts |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An analysis of the criminal justice process from prosecution through appeal. The organization and operation of felony and misdemeanor courts are examined. Topics include prosecutorial decision-making; plea-bargaining; judicial selection; and the conduct of trials, sentencing, and appeal. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| SPEA J3200 - Criminal Investigation |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory of investigation, crime-scene procedures, interviews, interrogations, surveillances, and sources of information; collection and preservation of physical evidence; investigative techniques in specific crimes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| SPEA J3210 - American Policing |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will examine the history, evolution, and organization of policing in the United States. Emphasis is placed on such major contemporary issues as the police role, discretion, use of force, corruption, accountability, and community. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| SPEA J3220 - Introduction To Criminalistics |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The broad range of physical evidnece developed through the investigative process, and methods of identifying and establishing validity and relevance through forensic laboratory techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| SPEA J3240 - Technology, Crime And Public Safety |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Technology, Crime, and Public Safety. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPEA J3310 - Corrections |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the historical development of the U.S. correctional system; the study of administration of local, state, and federal corrections programs, including jails, probation, community corrections, and prisons. Includes the study of punishment rationales, current correctional policies, and possibilities for reform. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| SPEA J3700 - Seminar In Crimnal Justice |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Selected contemporary topics in criminal justice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Richmond
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| SPEA J3760 - Principles Of Public Safety |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of threats to public safety and of governmental response at various levels to those threats. Treatment of areas such as transportation and highway threats; occupational safety and health; criminal threats; emergency and disaster planning; consumer protection; and fire control and suppression. Discussion of techniques to identify and measure risk, the acceptability of risk, and governmental attempts to control risk. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
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| SPEA J3800 - Internship In Criminal Justice |
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Credit Hours: 0.00 to 6.00. Students may be placed with various criminal justice agencies for assignment to a defined tasks relevant to their educational interests. Tasks may involve staff work or research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Richmond
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
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| SPEA J3870 - Foundations Of Homeland Security |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of the theory and research driving homeland security and emergency management measures and an analytical look at the practices and principles of homeland security from an empirical perspective. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation, Research
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Kokomo
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| SPEA J4260 - Mapping And Analysis-Public Safety |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The use of the geographic information systems to map locations of events and analyze patterns for decision making in areas of public safety including criminal justice, fire services, emergency management, and homeland security. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPEA J4390 - Crime and Public Policy |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A detailed examination of the major efforts designed to control or reduce crime. A review of existing knowledge is followed by an investigation of current crime control theories, proposals, and programs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| SPEA J4400 - Corrections In The Community |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A detailed analysis of correctional alternatives to incarceration that focus on the reintegration of the offender while remaining in the community. Because of their extensive use, considerable attention is given to probation and parole. Other topics include diversion, community residential programs, restitution, halfway houses, and home detention. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
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| SPEA J4700 - Seminar In Criminal Justice |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Emphasizes current developments in legal, administrative, and operational aspects of the criminal justice system. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPEA J4800 - Research In Criminal Justice |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Individual research under guidance of faculty member. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Richmond
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| SPEA J5280 - Risk Analysis For Public Safety |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of theoretical foundations of risk analysis including the history of risk analysis, risk assessment, perception and communications; models for decision making, techniques for generating alternative courses of action and definitions of risk and opportunity within a context of local, state and federal regulatory guidelines, media and social context. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPEA J5500 - Topics In Criminal Justice And Public Safety |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Selected topics in criminal justice and public safety. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| SPEA J6660 - Criminal Justice Policy And Evaluation |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An empirical assessment of the foundations of contemporary and historical attempts to control or prevent crime. Major policies, programs, and strategies are reviewed and critically analyzed. Specific topics and policies will vary in this capstone seminar. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPEA K3000 - Statistical Techniques |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to statistics. Nature of statistical data. Ordering and manipulation of data. Measures of central tendency and dispersion. Elementary probability. Concepts of statistical inference decision. Estimation and hypothesis testing. Special topics discussed may include regression and correlation, analysis of variance, nonparametric methods. Credit given for only one of the following: K3000, ECON E2700, SOC S3510, POLS Y3950, PSY 20100 and STAT 30100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPEA K3010 - Statistics Laboratory |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Statistics Laboratory. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPEA S1620 - Honors - Environment And People |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for students of superior ability. Requires consent of SPEA Honors advisor. Course covers same materials as SPEA E1620. Honors students will complete advanced coursework. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPEA S2630 - Honors - Public Management |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for students of superior ability. Requires consent of SPEA Honors advisor. Course covers same materials as SPEA V2630. Honors students will complete advanced coursework. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPEA S2720 - Honors - Introduction To Environmental Sciences |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for students of superior ability. Requires consent of SPEA Honors advisor. Course covers same materials as SPEA E2720. Honors students will complete advanced coursework. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPEA S3160 - Honors - Environmental Health Science |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for students of superior ability. Requires consent of SPEA Honors advisor. Course covers same materials as SPEA H3160. Honors students will complete advanced coursework. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPEA S3200 - Honors - Health Systems Administration |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for students of superior ability. Requires consent of SPEA Honors advisor. Course covers same materials as SPEA H3200. Honors students will complete advanced coursework. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPEA S3620 - Honors - Nonprofit Management And Leadership |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for students of superior ability. Requires consent of SPEA Honors advisor. Course covers same materials as SPEA V3620. Honors students will complete advanced coursework. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPEA S3660 - Honors - Managing Behavior In Public Organizations |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for students of superior ability. Requires consent of SPEA Honors advisor. Course covers same materials as SPEA V3660. Honors students will complete advanced coursework. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPEA S3720 - Honors - Government Finance And Budgets |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for students of superior ability. Requires consent of SPEA Honors advisor. Course covers same materials as SPEA V3720. Honors students will complete advanced coursework. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPEA S3730 - Honors - Human Resources Management In The Public Sector |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for students of superior ability. Requires consent of SPEA Honors advisor. Course covers same materials as SPEA V3730. Honors students will complete advanced coursework. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPEA S3770 - Honors - Legal Process And Contemporary Issues In America |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for students of superior ability. Requires consent of SPEA Honors advisor. Course covers same materials as SPEA V3770. Honors students will complete advanced coursework. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPEA S3780 - Honors - Policy Processes In The United States |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for students of superior ability. Requires consent of SPEA Honors advisor. Course covers same materials as SPEA V3770. Honors students will complete advanced coursework. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPEA S4050 - Honors - Public Law And The Legislative Process |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for students of superior ability. Requires consent of SPEA Honors advisor. Course covers same materials as SPEA V4050. Honors students will complete advanced coursework. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPEA S4070 - Honors - Public Law And Government Relations |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for students of superior ability. Requires consent of SPEA Honors advisor. Course covers same materials as SPEA V4070. Honors students will complete advanced coursework. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPEA S4320 - Honors - Labor Relations In The Public Sector |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for students of superior ability. Requires consent of SPEA Honors advisor. Course covers same materials as SPEA V4320. Honors students will complete advanced coursework. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPEA S4350 - Honors - Negotiation And Alternative Dispute Resolution |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for students of superior ability. Requires consent of SPEA Honors advisor. Course covers same materials as SPEA V4350. Honors students will complete advanced coursework. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPEA S4410 - Honors - Legal Aspects Of Health Care Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for students of superior ability. Requires consent of SPEA Honors advisor. Course covers same materials as SPEA H4410. Honors students will complete advanced coursework. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPEA S4520 - Honors - Solid And Hazardous Waste Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for students of superior ability. Requires consent of SPEA Honors advisor. Course covers same materials as SPEA E4520. Honors students will complete advanced coursework. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPEA S4560 - Honors - Managed Care |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed for students of superior ability. Requires consent of SPEA Honors advisor. Course covers same materials as SPEA H4560. Honors students will complete advanced coursework. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPEA S4740 - Honors - Health Administration Ethics Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines healthcare ethical decision making challenges from managerial perspective and explores broader policy issues associated with ethical problems in healthcare institutions. It provides an overview of general theories of ethical challenges in everyday managerial activities. (Course covers same content as SPEA H4740; however Honors students will complete advanced coursework.) Requires consent of SPEA Honors advisors. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
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| SPEA V1000 - Current Topics In Public Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Readings and discussion of current public issues and problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| SPEA V1610 - Urban Problems And Solutions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Urban Problems and Solutions is an introduction to urban policy issues in the United States. The course will cover the history and development of urban areas and then will examine a number of substantive issues (e.g., poverty, crime, economic development) that are particularly relevant to urban areas today. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPEA V1700 - Introduction To Public Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Broad Coverage of public affairs through critical and analytical inquiry into policy-making at all levels of government. Particular emphasis on intergovernmental relations as they affect policy in the fedral system. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| SPEA V2210 - Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides a broad overview of the United States nonprofit sector. Topics include the sector?s size and scope; and its religious, historical, and theoretical underpinnings. It also examines perspectives on why people organize, donate to, and volunteer for nonprofit organizations, and looks at current challenges that the sector faces.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPEA V2220 - Principles Of Sustainability |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Meeting the needs of the present without jeopardizing the future involves an interrelationship between environmental, social, and economic systems. This course introduces and investigates the interrelationships between these approaches to synthesize a basic understanding that can lead to sustainable policies in the public, nonprofit and for-profit sectors. Typically Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SPEA V2520 - Career Development And Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Course highlights include: identification of work values and personality preference, a career research assignment, networking assignments designed to prepare students for contact with employers, indepth tutorial and feedback concerning how to craft a marketplace resume and cover letter and development of an overall career development plan. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V2600 - Topics In Public Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Study of selected issues in public affairs. Topics may vary from semester to semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPEA V2610 - Technology In Public Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to information technology and computing applications in public affairs. Topics include basic IT concepts, project proposals, network and infrastructure design, security and ethics, data and document management, cloud computing, and IT futures. Direct application of the above with office suites, website development, spreadsheets and statistics, and databases. Recommend basic understanding of computer operations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| SPEA V2630 - Public Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an examination of the management process in public organizations in the United States. Special attention will be given to external influences on public managers, the effects of the intergovernmental environment, and in particular, problems of management in a democratic, limited government system. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
|
| SPEA V2640 - Urban Structure And Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to urban government and public policy issues. Topics include: urban government structure and policy making, the economic foundations and development of cities, demography of cities and suburbs, land-use planning, and other selected urban policy problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
|
| SPEA V2680 - American Humanistic Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics covering specific American Humanics competencies reflecting the particular needs and interests of participating students and the local advisory board for the program. Topics may include risk management, fundraising, board and committee development, and nonprofit marketing. Topics vary from semester to semester. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPEA V2720 - Terrorism And Public Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the incidence of terrorism in democratic societies, with particular emphasis on public policy responses designed to combat terrorism in cities. Overviews of ongoing conflicts with terrorist organizations in various countries are interspersed with analyses of significant terrorist events and the public policies and responses such events create.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
|
| SPEA V2750 - Introduction To Emergency Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the background and nature of the profession, the central theoretical debates concerning natural and human-induced disasters, mitigating and reacting to these catastrophic events, and the major roles and responsibilities of emergency managers. Current practical problems and future directions will be explored.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V3110 - Natural Resources And Environmental Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course develops the role of the public sector to develop environmental policy at the national, subnational, and international level. The political, environmental, and economic aspects of pollution and pollution control will be assessed. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the politics of national and international environmental policy making.
2. Investigate how science enters the environmental policy process and how it competes with other policy-shaping forces.
3. Apply different analytic frameworks to view a given environmental problem and understand how it can produce different perceptions of the problem and its solutions.
|
| SPEA V3460 - Introduction To Government Accounting and Financial Reporting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to government accounting, including comparison with accounting for the private sector, intended as background for use by financial administrators. The course deals primarily with municipal accounting. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V3480 - Management Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to management-science models and methods for policy analysis and public management. Methods include decision analysis, linear programming, queuing analysis, and simulation. Computer-based applications are included. Prior familiarization with computers is recommended, though not required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V3520 - Personal Career Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Investigation of careers, the world of work, and the career-planning process. The focal point is the student and his/her goals. Provides assistance in developing practical, meaningful, and realistic insights into the nature of making a public career choice in today's world. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V3560 - Introduction to Nonprofit Accounting and Reporting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course covers concepts and processes of nonprofit accounting and financial reporting with exploration of differences between for profit, governmental and nonprofit systems. Examples will be drawn from health organizations, welfare agencies, charities, and educational institutions.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V3610 - Financial Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces students to accounting, financial management techniques, and financial reporting. Topics include accounting, debit/credit sheets and balance sheets, financial indicators, fund balances, fringe benefits and pensions, and payroll management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V3620 - Nonprofit Management And Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students in this course examine the management practices of nonprofit organizations. The course encourages students to take the perspectives of nonprofit managers, volunteers, board members, policy makers, donors, and clients. Course projects expand understanding of the nonprofit sector and develop students' management skills, analytical tools, and knowledge. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
|
| SPEA V3660 - Managing Behavior In Public Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to the management of people in public organizations. Focus is on behavioral science in management and related analytical and experiential applications. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
|
| SPEA V3680 - Managing Government Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of analytical techniques to operating decisions in the public-management sector. Cases are used extensively to illustrate the application of techniques (such as charting, capacity and demand analysis, forecasting, performance measurement, decision analysis, queuing/simulation, Markov modeling, and cost- effective analysis) to design, scheduling, inventory assignment, transportation and replacement decisions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V3690 - Managing Information Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis and discussion of information technology as applied to problem solving and management in public and non-profit sectors. Topics include management, infrastructures, policies, and concepts such as scalability, manageability, security, and cost of technology. Focus is on high-level issues surrounding IT and the strategic positioning of IT in all sectors of business. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V3710 - Financing Public Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of economic and political theories of market failures, public expenditure evaluation, economic stabilization, systems of redistribution and fiscal federalism. Examples and applications to contemporary government decisions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V3720 - Government Finance and Budgets |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of fiscal management in public agencies, including revenue administration, debt management, and public budgeting. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
|
| SPEA V3730 - Human Resources Management In The Public Sector |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The organization and operation of public personnel-management systems, with emphasis on concepts and techniques of job analysis, position classification, training, affirmative action, and motivation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
|
| SPEA V3750 - Seminar Emergency Service Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of management principles and functional components of emergency services, with special emphasis on emergency medical systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SPEA V3760 - Law and Public Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The purpose of this course is to provide a basic understanding of the origins, process, and impact of law in the making and implementing of public policy. The course's major objective is to provide students with the substantive concepts necessary to understand the judicial system and law in its various forms. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
|
| SPEA V3790 - Performance Measurement And Program Evaluation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an overview of program evaluation as it relates to public affairs, criminal justice, health policy, and environmental science, with particular emphasis on measuring program outcomes. The course is designed for students who envision themselves working in management, policy making, or research roles. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V3800 - Internship-Public Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 6.00. Open to interested students upon approval of the faculty. Students are placed with public agencies or governmental units for assignment to a defined task relevant to their educational interests in public affairs. Tasks may involve staff work or research. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| SPEA V3870 - Public Administration And Emergency Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the American federal system and how if affects policy making and emergency management. Topics include government programs, participation of agencies and actors from all three levels of government, the nonprofit sector, and the private sector. Administrative processes involved in managing major hazards and disasters will be presented. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V3890 - Risk And Hazard Mitigation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the principles and practice of risk and hazard mitigation at all levels of government and private industry. The tools, techniques, resources, programs, intergovernmental relationships, public-private partnerships, and the broader social context involved in planning for organizational and business continuity and implementing risk reduction strategies are covered. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V3900 - Independent Readings In Public Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Independent readings and research related to a topic of special interest to the student. Written report required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Kokomo
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPEA V4120 - Leadership And Ethics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to examine the complex leadership issues and challenges facing communities and explore how citizens and government can work together to address these challenges. This includes exploration of how the problems, conflicts, and dilemmas encountered by leaders when making decisions must be considered within an ethical framework.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V4350 - Honors-Negotiation and Alternative Dispute Resolution |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces students to the theories and techniques of alternative dispute resolution. The course covers interest-based negotiation, mediation, arbitration, fact finding, early neutral evaluation, and other techniques used in business, labor relations, environmental disputes, family relations, and international affairs.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V4360 - Communication For Government And Nonprofit Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will develop an appreciation regarding the critical nature of communication by managers in the public and nonprofit sector. I will introduce students to the skills critical to effective communication as professionals. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V4380 - Mass Media And Public Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course will analyze the role of the media in the formation of public policy, including the responsibility of journalists, legal and ethical constraints, business pressures and their effects, impact of technology, and similar issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V4420 - Topics In Fiscal Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Comprehensive study of techniques of public fiscal management, primarily at the state and local level, and discussion of current issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPEA V4430 - Managing Workforce Diversity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The composition and nature of the work force is changing. Managers must decide how to accommodate real differences among the members of their organizations. This course seeks to provide information for practitioners who hope to integrate an understanding of workforce diversity into their management style and professional behavior.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V4490 - Senior Policy Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discussion of the role of policy analysis in government. Applications of analytical tools to substantive policy areas such as transportation, community development, education, poverty, manpower, and health. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V4500 - Contemporary Issues In Public Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Extensive analysis of selected contemporary issues in public affairs. Topics vary from semester to semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPEA V4580 - Fund Development For Nonprofit Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course builds an understanding of the practice, philosophy, law, and theory of fundraising. Students establish an organization's value base and mission, prepare funding appeals, evaluate readiness for a campaign, assess funding sources, implement fundraising vehicles, evaluate effectiveness, and discuss stewardship of contributions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V4710 - Urban Management Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to extend the students' skill in applying a variety of qualitative and quantitative methods to the problems of urban government planning and management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V4720 - Policy Processes In The United States |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intended as an integrative senior course, primarily for SPEA students. Course content includes analytical perspectives of the policy process, the centers of policy, and the public interest. Selected cases involving problem analysis and decision making on public issues are included, as well as discussion of current policy issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SPEA V4730 - Management Applications Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The purpose of this seminar is to provide students with an opportunity to apply the techniques they have learned to an actual situation. Special attention will be paid to feasible, as contrasted to desirable, solutions. Emphasis will be given to the contextual factors involved in developing feasible solutions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPEA V4900 - Directed Research In Public And Environmental Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. To be arranged with the individual instructor and approved by the chairperson of the undergraduate program. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPEA V5000 - Quantitative Tools For Public Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A modular presentation of mathematical and statistical concepts designed to prepare students for SPEA V506 Statistical Analysis for Effective Decision Making. Representative module topics include basic algebraic concepts, probability, computer use, and matrix algebra. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SPEA V5010 - Professional Development Practicum: Information Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Provides an introduction to information technology and computing software skills in a problem-solving context. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SPEA V5020 - Public Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Analysis of concepts, methods, and procedures involved in managing public organizations. Problems of organization, planning, decision making, performance evaluation, and management of human resources are considered. Cases are drawn from a variety of public services found at federal, state, and local levels of government. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V5030 - Professional Development Practicum: Writing And Presentation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students use practical methods to develop professional-level writing and oral communication skills to engender an appreciation for the value of effective communication skills: learn to analyze a case study effectively, write policy memos, executive summaries, news releases, professional letters; critique presentations of outside professionals; and assess personal and peer presentations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SPEA V5050 - Professional Development Practicum: Teamwork And Integrated Policy Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students integrate courses and knowledge through team-based case analysis of complex policy problems. Teamwork is practiced using structured team-building exercises and discussions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SPEA V5060 - Statistical Analysis For Effective Decision Making |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Noncalculus survey of concepts in probability, estimation, and hypothesis testing. Applications of contingency table analysis and analysis of variance, regression, and other statistical techniques. Computer processing of data emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V5180 - Intergovernmental Systems Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Discussion of theories and approaches to systems management, including responsibilities and tasks of public systems. Examination of intergovernmental relationships and intralocal governmental relationships; treatment of organizational and systems design; as well as planning, decision making, and control of public systems. Discussion of applications to services such as environment, health, and human services. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SPEA V5200 - Environmental Policy Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The interrelationships among social, technical, and natural systems. Theories of growth. Causes and implications of environmental problems. Alternative policies and mechanisms for environmental control and bases for choice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SPEA V5210 - The Nonprofit And Voluntary Sector |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The theory, size, scope and functions of the nonprofit and voluntary sector are covered from multiple disciplinary perspectives including historical, political, economic, and social. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V5220 - Human Resource Management in Nonprofit Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an overview of the human resource management areas necessary for the productive functioning of nonprofit organizations. Theories of motivation applicable to the management of staff and volunteers and personnel topics of recruitment, selection, board-staff relations, compensation, training and development are covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V5230 - Civil Society And Public Policy |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of interaction of public policy and nonprofit organizations, drawing on history, political theory, and social science. Includes examination of regulations and taxation. Depending on instructor’s interests, course covers nonprofit role in selected policy arenas (such as environment and poverty) and industries (such as international development and health care). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V5250 - Management In The Nonprofit Sector |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of nonprofit organizations and their role in society. Management issues and public policy affecting these organizations are discussed. Primary emphasis is upon U.S. organizations, but attention is given to the global nature of the sector. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V5260 - Financial Management For Nonprofit Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course emphasizes a thorough understanding of the language and key concepts of nonprofit financial management. A working knowledge of the basic analytical tools used in financial decision making for nonprofit organizations will be examined through the use of computer software. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V5290 - Seminar In Career And Professional Development |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to career development in public and environmental affairs. Orientation to career development approaches and resources. Discussion and practice of professional skills and techniques. Orientation to career development opportunities. Grading is on an S/F basis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPEA V5470 - Negotiation and Dispute Resolution for Public Affairs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will learn the skill of interest-based negotiation through role play and simulation. Students will learn about dispute resolution techniques such as mediation, arbitration, fact finding, early neutral evaluation, ombudsmanship, and facilitation. The course covers dispute resolution in federal government and in the context of public, environmental, labor, and business disputes.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V5540 - Human Services Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focus is on policy, management, and organization relating to a variety of human service systems. Special attention is given to the management of social programs in the environmental system. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SPEA V5560 - Topics In Human Services Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Readings and research on selected topics in the field of the management of human services. Topics selected for study will vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPEA V5570 - Proposal Development and Grant Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides the opportunity for each student to develop a complete proposal through participation in the entire grant application process. The integration of case studies, visual media, printed materials, and class discussions provides students with practical knowledge for writing successful proposals.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V5580 - Fund Development For Nonprofits |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Important aspects of the fund raising process in nonprofit organizations are covered, including techniques and strategies for assessing potential sources of support; effective use of human resources; process management; theory to underlay practice; analysis of current practice; practice standards; and discussion of ethical problems. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V5600 - Public Finance And Budgeting |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. The fiscal role of government in a mixed economy; sources of public revenue and credit; administrative, political, and institutional aspects of the budget and the budgetary process; problems and trends in intergovernmental fiscal relations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V5650 - Environmental Conflict Resolution: Theory And Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theories of environmental conflict resolution are examined. Students will “practice by doing” through participation in a series of environmental conflict resolution simulation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V5680 - Management Of Urban Government Services |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. The course deals with selected topics in urban services. The course may focus on a specific urban service or provide an overview for several urban services. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SPEA V5710 - State And Local Environmental Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines a mix of management and policy issues. Included are civic environmentalism, alternatives to environmental regulation, unfunded mandates, environmental justice, public relations, outsourcing, ethical challenges, and managing scientific and technical personnel. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SPEA V5860 - Public Safety In The U.S. |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of criminal justice and public safety. Definitions of public safety and identification of major components. Functional description of major public safety agencies. Discussion of basic issues in public safety. Management in public safety system. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SPEA V5940 - Principles Of Urban And Regional Science |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discussion of the basic processes of change and development in regional systems, with emphasis on metropolitan regions. Includes economic, demographic, and environmental aspects of their interactions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SPEA V5950 - Managerial Decision Making |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Applications of decision-making tools to substantive public management problems. A variety of managerial cases and issues are selected for intensive discussion and analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SPEA V5980 - Governing And Leading In A Global Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This gateway course will increase the student's appreciation of the role of the profession in governance across multiple sectors of society within the global context. Students will learn norms associated with effective practice and frame a professional development plan to acquire the leadership skills to support these norms. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V6090 - Seminar In Revenue Theory And Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This seminar examines the basic objectives and the political and economic aspects of tax administration. In the course of an examination of the interrelationships of tax policy, tax laws, and tax administration, the course reviews the major economic issues raised by types of taxes and user charges. The seminar also examines the fundamentals of tax legislation. Major emphasis is on state and local administration, although some federal problems will be covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPEA V6100 - Seminar In Government Budget And Program Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study of management aspects of budgetary process. Special cases are analyzed, and budget problem-solving exercises are utilized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPEA V6220 - Seminar In Urban Economic Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Reading, discussion, and research into problems of urban economic development in the United States. Case study approach used to investigate job creation, financial incentives, development corporations, and other factors that have led to successful economic development plans and projects. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SPEA V6390 - Managing Government Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an introductory survey of operations management. Emphasis is placed on the analysis design, and management of operation systems using models from operations management. Reading, lectures, and structured exercises are used to present the models and demonstrate their application. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V6450 - Environmental Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of U.S. environmental law. Key environmental statutes are examined, as are court decisions interpreting those statutes. Topics include water and air pollution, hazardous waste, toxins, pesticides, and environmental impact statements. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SPEA V6500 - Topics In Public Personnel Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Readings and research on selected topics in the public personnel field. Topics may include such subjects as affirmative action, occupational health and safety, workforce forecasting and planning, and personnel approaches to position classification. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPEA V6520 - Managing Work Force Diversity In Public Organizations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores and applies theoretical and empirical research from a management perspective on workforce diversity. Topics include theories and constructs pertaining to diversity in work organizations, organizational postures toward workplace diversity, the interface between heterogeneity, work processes, and management practices; and the effects of heterogeneity on work-related outcomes. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| SPEA V6650 - Seminar In Policy And Administration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Politics of program development and management. Translation of plans into viable, administrable programs. Marshaling support, political processes, strategies, constraints, tradeoffs, etc. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPEA V6670 - Seminar in Public Capital and Debt Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This seminar examines the options open to governments, especially state and local, and why they resort to debt finance. The issues raised by the alternatives are examined in detail. Among the topics are public authority debt, revenue bonds, methods of placement, lease-purchase finance, and maturity choice. In addition, management of idle cash balance will be considered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPEA V6700 - Topics In Public-Sector Labor Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Selected research and discussion topics in the field of public-sector labor relations arranged on a semester-by-semester basis. Possible topics are collective bargaining in the public sector and dispute settlement in public-sector labor relations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SPH S4300 - Exploring Safety Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines approaches to the development of organizational safety culture. Examines and evaluates the characteristics, elements, tools and methodologies that surround the issues to continuously improve existing safety cultures. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| SRCT 10100 - Serbo-Croatian Level I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to basic skills in the language. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SRCT 10200 - Serbo-CroatianLevel II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of SRCT 101. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| STAR 10000 - STAR - Exceptions |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: No College Designated
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR AAE - STAR - Aero and Astro Engr |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: School of Aero and Astro Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR ABE - STAR - Agriculture & Biol Engr |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: School of Agr and Bio Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR AGR - STAR - College of Agriculture |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: College of Agriculture
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR AT - STAR - Aviation Technology |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: Dept of Aviation Technology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR BCM - STAR - Building & Const Mgmt |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: Dept of Bldg & Construct Mgmt
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR BIOL - STAR - Biology |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: College of Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR BME - STAR - Biomedical Engr |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: School of Biomedical Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR CDFS - STAR HHS ChldDevFam Stdy |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR CE - STAR - Civil Engineering |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: School of Civil Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR CEM - STAR - Const Engr Management |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: Construction Engineering Mgmt
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR CFS - STAR - HHS-Consumer Family Sci |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR CFSU - STAR - HHS - Undecided |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR CGT - STAR - Computer Graphics Tech |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: Dept of Computer Graphics Tech
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR CHE - STAR - Chemical Engineering |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: School of Chemical Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR CHEM - STAR - Chemistry |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: College of Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR CIM - STAR - Computer Intgr Manufact |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: Computer Integrated Manufctrng
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR CIT - STAR - Computer Info Tech |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: Dept of Computer & Inform Tech
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR CNE - STAR - Construction Engr |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: Construction Engineering Mgmt
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR CS - STAR - Computer Science |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: College of Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR CSR - STAR HHS Consumer Sci Ret |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR ECE - STAR - Electr & Computer Engr |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: School of Elec & Computer Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR ECET - STAR - Elec & Comp Engr Tech |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: Dept of Elec & Comp Engr Tech
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR EDUC - STAR - Education |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: College of Education
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR ENGR - STAR - First Year Engineering |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: First Year Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR EXPL - STAR - Exploratory Studies |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: Exploratory Studies
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR FN - STAR HHS Foods&Nutrition |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR HDFS - STAR HHS Human Dev Fam Study |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR HH - STAR - HHS- Health & Human Sci |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
|
| STAR HK - STAR HHS Health & Kines |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR HLSC - STAR HHS Health Sciences |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR HTM - STAR HHS Hosp & Tour Mgmt |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR IDE - STAR - Interdisciplinary Engr |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: School of Interdisciplnry Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR IE - STAR - Industrial Engineering |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: School of Industrial Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR IT - STAR - Industrial Technology |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: Dept of Industrial Technology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR LA - STAR - Liberal Arts |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR ME - STAR - Mechanical Engineering |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: School of Mechanical Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR MET - STAR - Mechanical Engr Tech |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: Dept of Mechanical Engr Tech
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR MFET - STAR - Manufact Engr Tech |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: Dept of Mechanical Engr Tech
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR MGMT - STAR - Management |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: School of Management
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR MSE - STAR - Materials Engineering |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: School of Materials Engr
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR NE - STAR - Nuclear Engineering |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: School of Nuclear Engineering
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR NURS - STAR - HHS - Nursing |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR NUTR - STAR HHS Nutrition Science |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR OLS - STAR - Orgnztl Ldrshp and Supv |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: Dept of Orgnztl Ldrshp & Supv
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR PHAR - STAR - Pharmacy |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR PP - STAR - Pre-Pharmacy |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: College of Pharmacy
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR PSY - STAR - HHS - Psychology |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR SLHS - STAR HHS SpchLngHear Sci |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: College of Health & Human Sci
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAR VT - STAR - Veterinary Technology |
|
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Presentation
Offered By: Veterinary Technology
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 11300 - Statistics And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to statistical ideas and their impact on public policy and the sciences. Sample surveys, design of experiments, measurement, analysis of data, simulating probabilities, concepts of inference. Application to current issues and controversies. Not available for credit toward graduation in the School of Science. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division, GTC-Information Literacy, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Information Literacy, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| STAT 11400 - Elements Of Probability And Statistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Probability, principles of choice, decision problems, use of data, examples in testing and estimation. STAT 113 may be helpful. Not available for credit toward graduation in the School of Science. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 12500 - Communicating With Statistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the basic concepts and methods in statistical reasoning that are commonly referenced in the print media. Topics include data collection methods, descriptive statistics, basic techniques of estimation, and theory testing. Students will analyze and interpret statistics relating to contemporary problems in politics, business, science and social issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| STAT 13000 - Statistics And Contemporary Life |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to statistical ideas and their impact on various aspects of modern life. Topics will include the organization, manipulation, and understanding of numerical data, the art of data presentation, interpretation of statistical information as presented in the media, the concept of randomness in gambling and lotteries, and some discusson of statistical fallacies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| STAT 17000 - Introduction To Actuarial Science |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. (MA 17000) An introduction to actuarial science from the point of view of practicing actuaries from life insurance, casualty insurance and consulting; introduction to insurance and the mathematical theory of interest; application of spreadsheets to problems related to actuarial science. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 18300 - Cooperative Work Experience I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Cooperative Work Experience. Must be accepted for the program by the cooperative program coordinator. For Cooperative Education Program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 18400 - Cooperative Work Experience II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Cooperative Work Experience. Must be accepted for the program by the cooperative program coordinator. For Cooperative Education Program students only. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 19000 - Topics In Statistics For Undergraduates |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Supervised reading course or special topics course at the freshman level for undergraduates are given under this number. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| STAT 21300 - Problem And Decision Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic set theory, elementary probability theory, discrete probability models, finite Markov chains. Applications to problems in the management and social sciences. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 22500 - Introduction To Probability Models |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to basic probability. Emphasis is placed on formulation of models and applications. Probability calculus, standard distributions, random variables, and moments. Credit cannot be given for more than one of STAT 22500, 31100, or 41600. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 24000 - Statistical Methods For Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the basic concepts and methods in a statistical analysis, with emphasis on applications in the life sciences. Descriptive statistics, discrete and continuous distributions, confidence interval estimation, hypothesis testing, and contingency tables. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| STAT 25000 - Problems Solving In Probability |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. (MA 25000) This course is designed to teach techniques for solving problems in probability theory which are relevant to the actuarial sciences. It is intended to help actuarial students prepare for the Society of Actuaries and Casualty Actuarial Society Exam P/1. Credit by Examination is not available for this course. MA/STAT 41600 is strongly recommended. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 28400 - Cooperative Work Experience III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Cooperative Work Experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 29000 - Topics In Statistics For Undergraduates |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Supervised reading course or special topics course at the sophomore level for undergraduates are given under this number. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| STAT 30100 - Elementary Statistical Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to statistical methods with applications to diverse fields. Emphasis on understanding and interpreting standard techniques. Data analysis for one and several variables, design of samples and experiments, basic probability, sampling distributions, confidence intervals and significance tests for means and proportions, correlation and regression. Software is used throughout. Credit cannot be given for more than one of STAT 30100, 30500, 35000, 43300 50100, 50300, and 51100. Prerequisite: college algebra. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: GTC-Information Literacy, UC-Information Literacy, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be introduced to statistical methods and be able to apply them to multiple fields of study.
2. Students will be able to understand, interpret standard statistical techniques, analyze data for one variable and for several variables, calculate and use confidence intervals and significance test for means and proportions, understand the design of samples and experiments, perform and understand basic probability calculations, perform simple and multiple regression procedures, and understand correlation.
|
| STAT 30200 - Elementary Statistical Methods II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of STAT 30100 Multiple regression and analysis of variance, with emphasis on statistical inference and applications to various fields. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
|
| STAT 31100 - Introductory Probability |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Formulation of probability problems, discrete and continuous random variables, expectation, standard distributions, applications to statistical problems, and problems in the physical sciences. Credit cannot be given for more than one of STAT 22500, 31100, or 41600. Prerequisite: two semesters of college calculus. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 34000 - Elementary Statistical Methods II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Statistical methods of simple linear regression, multiple linear regression, experimental design, analysis of variance, and nonparametric analysis. One or more statistical computer programs will be used. Student projects required, typically using data from the student's major. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| STAT 34500 - Statistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics from exploratory data analysis and inferential statistics will be covered, along with a necessary introduction to probability. Statistical and probabilistic simulations will be used to enhance students' understanding of randomness and variation. Extensive use of a statistical computer package will be required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| STAT 35000 - Introduction To Statistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A data-oriented introduction to the fundamental concepts and methods of applied statistics. Exploratory analysis of data. Sample design and experimental design. Probability distributions and simulation. Sampling distributions. The reasoning of statistical inference. Confidence intervals and tests for one and two samples. Inference for contingency tables, regression, and correlation. Introduction to regression with several explanatory variables. Essential use is made of statistical software throughout. Intended primarily for students majoring in the mathematical sciences. Credit cannot be given for more than one of STAT 30100, 30500, 35000, 43300, 50100, 50300, and 511000. Prerequisite: two semesters of college calculus. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| STAT 36100 - Applied Regression Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Simple linear regression, multiple linear regression, nonlinear regression, generalized linear models and correlation analysis are covered. Statistical computer programs are used. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| STAT 36200 - Experimental Designs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Single-factor analysis of variance (ANOVA), multifactor ANOVA, randomized block designs, nested designs, repeated measures, latin square and response surface methodology are covered. Statistical computer programs are used. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| STAT 36300 - Sampling Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Simple probability samples, ratio and regression estimation, stratified sampling, cluster sampling with equal probabilities, sampling with unequal probabilities, complex surveys, dealing with non-response. This course teaches statistical ideas that are useful in understanding and designing research in most areas of study, particularly for students in business, the social or behavioral sciences, communication and education. Statistical computer programs are used. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| STAT 37100 - Problem-Solving Calculus And Probability |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is intended to help actuarial students prepare for the new Actuarial Exam I. The course provides a review of theory and applications of probability and calculus. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| STAT 38600 - Cooperative Work Experience IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Cooperative Work Experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 39000 - Topics In Statistics For Undergraduates |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Supervised reading course or special topics course at the junior level for undergraduates are given under this number. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| STAT 40001 - Statistical Computing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The purpose of this course is to teach fundamental computing skills required by practicing statisticians. Students will use statistical software for analysis and model building of real world data. Topics include descriptive statistics, inferential statistics, model building, designing and performing simulation experiments, writing codes to perform common statistical tasks. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Design and perform simulations based on data.
2. Develop a statistical model from data.
3. Use statistical software to analyze data.
|
| STAT 41600 - Probability |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (MA 41600) An introduction to mathematical probability suitable as preparation for actuarial science, statistical theory, and mathematical modeling. General probability rules, conditional probability and Bayes theorem, discrete and continuous random variables, moments and moment generating functions, joint and conditional distributions, standard discrete and continuous distributions and their properties, law of large numbers and central limit theorem. Credit cannot be given for more than one of STAT 22500, 31100, or 41600. Prerequisite: multivariate calculus. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 41700 - Statistical Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the mathematical theory of statistical inference, emphasizing inference for standard parametric families of distributions. Properties of estimators. Bayes and maximum likelihood estimation. Sufficient statistics. Properties of test of hypotheses. Most powerful and likelihood-ratio tests. Distribution theory for common statistics based on normal distributions. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 42000 - Introduction To Time Series |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to time series analysis suitable for actuarial science, engineering, and sciences. Model building and forecasting with ARMA and ARIMA models. Resampling methods for confidence intervals. Multivariate, state-space, and nonlinear models. Volatility models (ARCH and GARCH). Smoothing in time series. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 46500 - Case Studies In Statistical Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A variety of different statistical methods are applied to data sets in a number of different fields. Statistical methods covered include applied regression analysis, experimental design, sampling, time series, categorical data analysis and applied multivariate analysis. This course provides a summary of how statistical ideas are useful in understanding and designing research in many areas of study. Each student investigates and reports on six case study projects. Statistical computer programs are used. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| STAT 47200 - Actuarial Models |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Mathematical foundations of actuarial science, emphasizing probability models for life contingencies as the basis for analyzing life insurance and life annuities and determining premiums. This course, together with its sequel, STAT 47300, provides the background for Course 3 of the Society of Actuaries and the Casualty Actuarial Society. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| STAT 47201 - Actuarial Models- Life Contingencies |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. Mathematical foundation of actuarial science, emphasizing probability models for life contingencies as the basis for analyzing life insurance and life annuities and determining premiums and reserves. This course provides the background for Course MLC of the Society of Actuaries and Course 3L of the Casualty Actuarial Society. Typically offered Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The students will be able to understand and use decrement models in conjunction with interest rate models to evaluate insurance, annuities, and investments.
2. The students will be able to apply models to calculate actuarial values, gross and net premiums, and benefit and expense reserves. Among the decrement models learned will be standard mortality, models, static mortality table models, and continuous time Markov chains in both a single decrement and multiple decrement environment.
|
| STAT 47300 - Actuarial Models II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of STAT 47200. Together, these courses cover contingent payment models, survival models, frequency and severity models, compound distribution models, stochastic process models, and ruin models. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| STAT 47301 - Introduction To Arbitrage-Free Pricing Of Financial Derivatives |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course exposes students to a number of financial economics concepts related to arbitrage-free option pricing in the binomial market model and the Black-Scholes model. Specific models include: (1) Options and parity relationship between options (2) Option Pricing under the Binomial model (3) Option Pricing under the Black-Scholes model (4) Option hedging and the market maker’s overnight profit (5) Black Scholes theory with Brownian motion and Ito calculus (6) Risk-neutral option pricing and Monte Carlo valuation (7) Stochastic interest rates and Stochastic Volatility. This course provides the background for Couse MFE of the Society of Actuaries and Course 3F of the Casualty Actuarial Society. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The students will be able to use arbitrage-free option pricing in the binomial market model and the Black-Scholes model.
2. The students will be able to adapt the binomial setting to computing exotic and path-dependent option prices, including the determination of optimal exercise.
3. The students will be able to follow marking-to-market strategies for approximate discrete delta hedging.
|
| STAT 47800 - Introduction To Bioinformatics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (C S 47800 and BIOL 47800) Bioinformatics is broadly defined as the study of molecular biological information, targeting particularly the enormous volume of DNA sequence and functional complexity embedded in entire genomes. Topics will include understanding the evolutionary organization of genes (genomics), the structure and function of gene products (proteomics), and the dynamics of gene expression in biological processes (transcriptomics). Inherently, bioinformatics is interdisciplinary, melding various applications of computational science with biology. This jointly taught course introduces analytical methods from biology, statistics and computer science that are necessary for bioinformatics investigations. The course is intended for junior and senior undergraduates from various science backgrounds. Our objective is to develop the skills of both tool users and tool designers in this important new field of research.
. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 47900 - Loss Models |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This material provides an introduction to modeling and covers important actuarial methods that are useful in modeling. Students will be introduced to survival, severity, frequency and aggregate models, and use statistical methods to estimate parameters of such models given sample data. The student will further learn to identify steps in the modeling process, understand the underlying assumptions implicit in each family of models, recognize which assumptions are applicable in a given business application, and appropriately adjust the models for impact of insurance coverage modifications. The student will be introduced to a variety of tools for the calibration and evaluation of the models. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
The students should be able to understand the steps involved in the modeling process and how to carry out these steps in solving business problems.
1. Analyze data from an application in a business context. 2. Determine a suitable model including parameter values. 3. Provide measures of confidence for decisions based upon the model.
|
| STAT 48700 - Cooperative Work Experience V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Cooperative Work Experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 49000 - Topics In Statistics For Undergraduates |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Supervised reading course or special topics cousre at the senior level for undergraduates are given under this number. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture 1, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| STAT 50100 - Experimental Statistics I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Concepts and methods of applied statistics. Exploratory analysis of data. Sample design and experimental design. Normal distributions. Sampling distributions. Confidence intervals and tests of hypotheses for one and two samples. Inference for contingency tables, regression and correlation, and one-way analysis of variance. Use of the SAS statistical software. Intended primarily for students who have not had calculus. Not open to students in mathematical sciences or engineering. Credit cannot be given for more than one of STAT 30100, 30500, 35000, 43300, 50100, 50300, or 51100. Prerequisite: College Algebra. Typically offered Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 50200 - Experimental Statistics II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Regression with several explanatory variables. Regression diagnostics. Analysis of variance for factorial designs. Multiple comparisons. Analysis of covariance. Repeated measures designs. Extensive use of the SAS statistical software. Intended primarily for students who have not had calculus. Not open to students in mathematical sciences or engineering. Typically offered Summer Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 50300 - Statistical Methods For Biology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory statistical methods, with emphasis on applications in biology. Topics include descriptive statistics, binomial and normal distributions, confidence interval estimation, hypothesis testing, analysis of variance, introduction to nonparametric testing, linear regression and correlation, goodness-of-fit tests, and contingency tables. Open only to majors related to the life sciences. Credit cannot be given for more than one of STAT 30100, 30500, 35000, 43300, 50100, 50300, or 51100. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
North Central
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to identify and choose appropriate ways to graphically and numerically summarize data.
2. Students will be able to use basic statistical methods to perform statistical inference and draw appropriate conclusions.
3. Students will understand the mathematical foundations of statistical inference for random samples so that they can study and utilize additional statistical methods.
|
| STAT 50600 - Statistical Programming And Data Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Use of the SAS software system for managing statistical data. The SAS environment. Data description. Data access and management. SAS macro language and application development. Prerequisite: STAT 51200 and coursework in computer programming. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 51100 - Statistical Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Descriptive statistics; elementary probability; sampling distributions; inference, testing hypotheses, and estimation; normal, binomial, Poisson, hypergeometric distributions; one-way analysis of variance; contingency tables; regression. Credit cannot be given for more than one of STAT 30100, 30500, 35000, 43300, 50100, 50300, or 51100. Prerequisite: Two semesters of college calculus. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 51200 - Applied Regression Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Inference in simple and multiple linear regression, residual analysis, transformations, polynomial regression, model building with real data, nonlinear regression. One-way and two-way analysis of variance, multiple comparisons, fixed and random factors, analysis of covariance. Use of existing statistical computer programs. Prerequisite: Coursework in Statistical Methods with a calculus prerequisite. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 51300 - Statistical Quality Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A strong background in control charts including adaptations, acceptance sampling for attributes and variables data, standard acceptance plans, sequential analysis, statistics of combinations, moments and probability distributions, applications. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 51400 - Design Of Experiments |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals, completely randomized design; randomized complete blocks; latin square; multi-classification; factorial; nested factorial; incomplete block and fractional replications for 2n, 3n, 2m x 3n; confounding; lattice designs; general mixed factorials; split plot; analysis of variance in regression models; optimum design. Use of existing statistical programs. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 51500 - Statistical Consulting Problem |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A written report of a consultation problem involving a designed experiment or sampling plan in which the student participates with members of the Department of Statistics staff. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 7 credits
|
| STAT 51600 - Basic Probability And Applications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A first course in probability, intended to serve as a background for statistics and other applications. Sample spaces and axioms of probability, discrete and continuous random variables, conditional probability and Bayes' theorem, joint and conditional probability distributions, expectations, moments and moment generating functions, law of large numbers, and central limit theorem. (The probability material in course one of the Society of Actuaries and the Casualty Actuarial Society is covered by this course.) Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 51700 - Statistical Inference |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A basic course in statistical theory covering standard statistical methods and their application. Estimation including unbiased, maximum likelihood and moment estimation; testing hypotheses for standard distributions and contingency tables; confidence intervals and regions; introduction to nonparametric tests and linear regression. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 51900 - Introduction To Probability |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (MA 51900) Algebra of sets, sample spaces, combinatorial problems, independence, random variables, distribution functions, moment generating functions, special continuous and discrete distributions, distribution of a function of a random variable, limit theorems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
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| STAT 52000 - Time Series And Applications |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. A first course in stationary time series with applications in engineering, economics, and physical sciences. Stationarity, autocovariance function and spectrum; integral representation of a stationary time series and interpretation; linear filtering, transfer functions; estimation of spectrum; multivariate time series. Use of computer programs for covariance and spectral estimation. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
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| STAT 52100 - Introduction To Statistical Computing |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The course demonstrates how computing can be used to understand the performance of core statistical methods and introduces modern statistical methods that require computing in their application. Covers relevant programming fundamentals in at least two programming environments (e.g. SAS and R/Splus). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. The focus of the course is on learning computing in two entirely different programming environments, namely SAS and R/Splus.
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| STAT 52200 - Sampling And Survey Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Survey designs; simple random, stratified, and systematic samples; systems of sampling; methods of estimation; costs. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 52300 - Categorical Data Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Models generating binary and categorical response data, two-way classification tables, measures of association and agreement, goodness-of-fit tests, testing independence, large sample properties. General linear models, logistic regression, probit and extreme value models. Loglinear models in two and higher dimensions; maximum likelihood estimation, testing goodness-of-fit, partitioning chi-square, models for ordinal data. Model building, selection, and diagnostics. Computer applications using existing statistical software. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| STAT 52400 - Applied Multivariate Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Extension of univariate tests in normal populations to the multivariate case, equality of covariance matrices, multivariate analysis of variance, discriminant analysis and misclassification errors, canonical correlation, principal components, factor analysis. Strong emphasis will be placed on use of existing computer programs. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 52500 - Intermediate Statistical Methodology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Statistical methods for analyzing data based on general/generalized linear models, including linear regression, analysis of variance (ANOVA), analysis of covariance (ANCOVA), random and mixed effects models, and logistic/loglinear regression models. Application of these methods to real world problems using SAS statistical software. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 52501 - Generalized Linear Models |
|
Credit hours: 3.00. Generalized linear models, likelihood methods for data analysis, and diagnostic methods for assessing model assumptions. Methods covered include: multiple regression, analysis of variance for completely randomized designs, binary and categorical response models, and hierarchical loglinear models for contingency tables. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Have knowledge of the relationship between the usual linear regression models and generalized linear models.
2. Understand the need of the extension from linear models to generalized linear models.
3. Be able to derive the quasi-likelihood and generalized estimating equations as well as criteria for specific models.
4. Understand AIC and BIC and their relationships.
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| STAT 52600 - Advanced Statistical Methodology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Computationally intensive methods in statistics including bootstrapping, Monte Carlo simulation, nonparametric density estimation, nonparametric regression, and methods appropriate for high-dimensional data. Extensive use is made of statistical software. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 52800 - Introduction To Mathematical Statistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Distribution of mean and s2 in normal samples, sampling distributions derived from the normal distribution, Chi square, t and F. Distribution of statistics based on ordered samples. Asymptotic sampling distributions. Introduction to multivariate normal distribution and linear models. Sufficient statistics, maximum likelihood, least squares, linear estimation, other methods of point estimation, and discussion of their properties, Cramer-Rao inequality and Rao-Blackwell theorem. Tests of statistical hypotheses, simple and composite hypotheses, likelihood ratio tests, power of tests. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
West Lafayette
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| STAT 52900 - Applied Decision Theory And Bayesian Statistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Bayesian and decision theoretic formulation of problems; construction of utility functions and quantifications of prior information; methods of Bayesian decision and inference, with applications; empirical Bayes; combination of evidence; Bayesian design and sequential analysis; comparisons of statistical paradigms. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 53200 - Elements Of Stochastic Processes |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (MA 53200) A basic course in stochastic models, including discrete and continuous time Markov chains and Brownian motion, as well as an introduction to topics such as Gaussian processes, queues, epidemic models, branching processes, renewal processes, replacement, and reliability problems. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 53300 - Applied Nonparametric Statistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Binomial test for dichotomous data, confidence intervals for proportions, one-sample signed Wilcoxon Rank test, 2-sample Wilcoxon test, 2-sample Rank tests for dispersion, Kruskal-Wallis test for one-way layout, Friedman Rank test for 2-way layout. Kendall distribution-free test for independence, one and two sample Kolmogorov-Smirnov tests, nonparametric regression. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| STAT 53600 - Introduction To Survival Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Deals with the modern statistical methods for analyzing time-to-event data. Background theory is provided, but emphasis is on applications and interpretations of results. Provides coverage of survivorship functions and censoring patterns; parametric models and likelihood methods, special life-time distributions; nonparametric inference, life-tables, estimation of cumulative hazard functions, the Kaplan-Meier estimator; one and two-sample nonparametric tests for censored data; semiparametric proportional hazards regression (Cox Regression), parameters' estimation, stratification, model fitting strategies, and model interpretations. Heavy use of statistical software, such as S-Plus and SAS. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| STAT 53800 - Probability Theory I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (MA 53800) Mathematically rigorous, measure-theoretic introduction to probability spaces, random variables, expectation, independence, weak and strong laws of large numbers, conditional expectations, and martingales. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| STAT 53900 - Probability Theory II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (MA 53900) Convergence of probability laws; characteristic functions; convergence to the normal law; infinitely divisible and stable laws; Brownian motion and the invariance principle. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 54000 - Mathematics Of Finance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the mathematical tools and techniques of modern finance theory, in the context of Black-Scholes option pricing. Brownian motion and its stochastic calculus, Ito's formula, and Feynman-Kac formula. Pricing and hedging of claims on Black-Scholes assets. Incomplete markets. Path-dependent options. Stochastic portfolio optimization. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 54100 - Advanced Probability And Options With Numerical Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Stochastic interest rate models. American options from the probabilistic and PDE points of view. Numerical methods for European and American options, including binomial, trinomial, and Monte-Carlo methods. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 54500 - Introduction To Computational Statistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This introductory course covers the fundamentals of computing for statistics and data analysis. It starts with a brief overview of programming using a general purpose compiled language (C) and a statistics-oriented interpreted language (R). The course proceeds to cover data structures and algorithms that are directly relevant to statistics and data analysis and concludes with a computing-oriented introduction to selected statistical methods. A significant part of the course involves programming and hands-on experimentation demonstrating the covered techniques, ration, and Markov chain Monte Carlo methods. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Given a straightforward data manipulation problem, decide on what elementary data structures to use, write down an algorithm for a solution as a pseudocode, and analyze its computational complexity.
2. Implement an algorithm using C and/or R code, understand, modify, and if needed perform basic debugging of the existing code.
3. Understand and implement the computational techniques of numerical optimization, matrix manipulation, sampling, logistic regression, and EM algorithm.
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| STAT 54600 - Computational Statistics |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course focuses on two fundamental aspects in computational statistics: (1) what to compute and (2) how to compute. The first is covered with a brief review of advanced topics in statistical inference, including Fisher’s fiducial inference, Bayesian and frequenstist methods, and the Dempster-Shafer (DS) Theory. The second is discussed in detail by examining exact, approximation, and interactive simulation methods for statistical inference with a variety of commonly used statistical models. The emphasis is on the EM-type and quasi-Newton algorithms, numerical differentiation and integration, and Markov chain Monte Carlo methods. Typically offered Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Master commonly used numerical matrix operations, including the sweep operator, Cholesky decomposition, eigenvalue decomposition, and single value decomposition.
2. Understand statistical thinking in development of interactive numerical methods.
3. Apply optimization algorithms such as quasi-Newton and conjugate gradient methods.
4. Implement EM-type algorithms for maximum likelihood estimation when expanded complete-data models are available, including commonly used statistical models.
5. Create random number generators.
6. Implement the Gibbs sampler and Metropolis-Hastings algorithms for Bayesian data analysis.
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| STAT 54900 - An Introduction To QTL Mapping In Experimental Populations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an introductory/interdisciplinary (master's level) quantitative trait locus (QTL) mapping course. QTL mapping is associated with the statistical analysis of genetic/genomic data and is considered part of the general science known as bioinformatics. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 55300 - Theory Of Linear Models And Analysis Of Experimental Designs |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Least squares analysis of linear models. Gauss Markov Theorem. Estimability and testability of parameters. Confidence regions and prediction regions. Introduction to design of experiments. Analysis of variance. Factorial and block designs. Analysis of random, fixed, and mixed models. Components of variance. Distribution of linear and quadratic forms in normal vectors. A firm background in matrix algebra and some previous exposure to linear models or analysis of variance is desirable. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 58000 - Application Of Statistical Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The use of numerical methods to obtain answers in problems arising in probability and statistics. Topics will include the use of the likelihood function, Bayesian and classical methods of estimation and testing, evaluation of probabilities, linear and nonlinear regression. STAT 53200, 55400, and some knowledge of computing and complex analysis are desirable. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 58100 - Bioinformatics Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This is a weekly forum for presenting both applied and theoretical work in the broad area of bioinformatics. Bioinformatics is the science of generating, organizing, and analyzing biological data. This seminar series occurs both in the fall and spring semesters and attracts speakers from Purdue University, as well as throughout the world. Students are encouraged to register for this course, and everyone else is encouraged to attend this open seminar. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| STAT 58200 - Statistical Consulting And Collaboration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to emphasize and develop the skills needed by a statistical consultant/collaborator. Topics include: problem solving, consulting session management, written and oral communication, research ethics, design of experiments, collection of data, and application of statistical methods to real problems. Class activities include actively participating in consulting sessions held by the Statistical Consulting Service, small group projects, short papers, and oral presentations. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be aware of the skills necessary to be an effective statistical consultant/collaborator. These skills include consulting session management, written and oral communication with clients, interpreting facial and body language, handling personality conflicts, practicing sound research ethics, properly designing an experiment and determining an appropriate sample size, and choosing an appropriate statistical method whose analysis addresses the client's questions given the available data.
2. Students will also know how to recognize problematic issues in the consulting/collaboration process and implement various strategies to address them.
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| STAT 59000 - Internship Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students complete an internship where they will use statistical methods. A detailed report describing the internship work is required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| STAT 59700 - Statistical Consulting Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Active participation in weekly consulting meetings, directed reading in the statistical literature, application of statistical methods to real problems, report writing. Permission of Instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| STAT 59800 - Topics In Statistical Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 6.00 (West Lafayette, IUPUI) 1.00 to 3.00 (North Central) Directed study and reports for students who wish to undertake individual reading and study on approved topics. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture 1, Lecture, Presentation, Practice Study Observation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
North Central
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| STAT 61900 - Probability Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Probability Theory is the foundation of statistical methodologies, which is fundamental in the practice of science. From this course students will get precise mathematical understanding of probabilities and sigma-algebras, random weak convergence, characteristic functions, the central limit theorem, Lebesgue decomposition, conditioning. Prerequisite: STAT 51900. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1.Have a precise mathematical understanding of probabilities and sigma-algebras; random variable, distributions, and expected values; Inequalities and laws of large numbers; weak convergence, characteristic functions, the central limit theorem, Lebesgue decomposition, conditioning.
2.The level of the course is mathematically rigorous based on measure theoretic probability, but without the unnecessary intricacies of a purely measure theoretic development suitable for a Ph.D. program in Mathematics/Statistics.
3.Studnets will become familiar with the foundational principles that justify statistical methodologies.
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| STAT 62800 - Advanced Statistical Inference |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will cover basic measure theory and probability, statistics and subfields, conditional expectations and probability distributions, asymptotic theory of estimation and likelihood based inference, optimal statistical tests, confidence sets and U-statistics. Other topics that might be covered include invariance, Edgeworth expansions, and saddle point method. Prerequisites: STAT 51900, STAT 52800, STAT 61900 concurrently. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. The students are expected to be familiar with commonly used distributions.
2. Undertsand and be able to apply the asymptotic theorems to study the asymptotic properties of estimators.
3. Be able to compute MLE’s in numerical methods.
4. Understand the concepts of efficient estimators, be able to construct efficient estimates, and know how to estimate densities.
5. Undertsand and be able to apply optimal tests, understand the concept of robust statistics, understand U-Statistics and able to apply them to derive asymptotic distributions of U-statistics.
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| STAT 63800 - Stochastic Processes I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (MA 638) Advanced topics in probability theory which may include stationary processes, independent increment processes, Gaussian processes; martingales, Markov processes, ergodic theory. Prerequisite: STAT 53900. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| STAT 63900 - Stochastic Processes II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (MA 63900) Continuation of STAT 63800. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| STAT 66700 - Measure-Theoretic Statistics: Decision Theoretic And Classical |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Decision theoretic approach to statistical problems, complete class theorems, Bayes and minimax procedures, sequential decision problems, sufficiency, comparison of experiments, invariance; most stringent, similar, unbiased, likelihood ratio tests; efficiency, Cramer-Rao inequality, estimation analogues of good tests; confidence sets. Prerequisite: MA 57100, STAT 52800, 53900, 57600. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| STAT 69000 - Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| STAT 69100 - Seminar In Probability Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture, Presentation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| STAT 69200 - Statistics Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A colloquium or seminar course with discussion. Colloquium speakers present current technical results from statistics. A discussion follows in which the speaker and instructor take questions and explain issues in detail. Students give reports on lectures. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| STAT 69500 - Seminar In Mathematical Statistics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics vary. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| STAT 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| STAT 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Science
Department: Statistics
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| STAT N5010 - Statistical Methods For Health Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory statistical methods course, with emphasis on applications in the health sciences. Topics include descriptive statistics, probability distributions, sampling distributions, confidence interval estimation, hypothesis testing, analysis of variance, linear regression, goodness-of-fit tests, and contingency tables. Credit cannot be given for more than one of STAT 30100, 35000, or STAT N5010. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| SUPV S3000 - Frontline Leadership |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This introductory supervision course explores traditional and contemporary leadership styles used in the manager-employee relationship. Concepts include improving communication, conflict resolution, planning, organizing, and strategies for performance and productivity improvements. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| SUPV S3100 - Resource And Planning Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Increased competitiveness in the world today has required companies to re-evaluate how they design facilities and manage their resources. Using interactive class discussions, this course takes a visionary and proactive approach to the concepts of organizational design, process/quality management, capacity analysis and supply chain management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| SUPV S3200 - Labor Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to labor relations for supervisors. Organization of labor unions and federations. Certification, contracts, collective bargaining, grievances, arbitration, and labor law will be covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| SUST S2010 - Foundations Of Sustainability |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide an interdisciplinary framework within which students can study the foundations of sustainability, and learn how to apply this knowledge to the development and implementation of sustainable values, practices, technologies and strategies. It emphasizes interconnections between environment, economy and society. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| SWAH 10100 - Swahili Level I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to Swahili. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SWAH 10200 - Swahili Level II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of Swahili 101. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| SWK S1000 - Topics In Social Work |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Theories and models that enhance understanding of our diverse society. It provides content about differences and similarities in the experiences, needs, and beliefs of selected minority groups and their relation to the majority group. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| SWK S1020 - Understanding Diversity In A Pluralistic Society |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. This course covers theories and models that enhance understanding or our diverse society. It provides content about differences and similarities in the experiences, needs and beliefs of selected minority groups and their relation to the majority group. These groups include, but are not limited to, people of color, women, gay, lesbian, and bisexual persons. This course analyzes the interrelationship of race, class, age, ethnicity, and gender and how these factors influence the social values regarding economic and social justice. Course content will be integrated through student writing and presentations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
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| SWK S1410 - Introduction To Social Work |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of characteristics, function, and requirements of social work as a profession. Emphasis on ideological perspectives of the profession and the nature of professional function and interaction. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| SWK S1800 - Selected Topics In Human Welfare I |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Selected Topics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| SWK S2000 - Special Topics In Human Services |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of selected topics in human services such as child care, institutional life, neighborhood work, public assistance or mental health. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Richmond
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| SWK S2010 - Introduction To Case Management |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Given current changing demographics, complex social problems, human service providers will serve a more diverse and perhaps more vulnerable population. A large number of clients will find it challenging to access the maze of increasingly decentralized social services. Case management may help to address some of these issues. This course will introduce various case management models and the roles and functions of case managers. It will highlight the nature of client participation and the mutuality of the helping process. Ethics and ethical dilemmas will be addressed. Skills for client centered, culturally competent case management will be explored. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SWK S2210 - Human Behavior And Social Environment I: Individual Functioning |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Understanding of human behavior and the social environment as a basis for social work practice. Focuses on understanding the interaction between person and environment. Coverage of major theories of individual functioning, life cycle development, and the family context. Exploration of inequality, discrimination, and differential access to opportunities for diverse populations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SWK S2310 - General Social Work Practice I: Theory And Skills |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of a critical understanding of social work practice. It focuses on the beginning phase of the helping process and related skills. Topics include the nature of the helping relationship, NASW Code of Ethics, practice as it relates to oppressed groups, assessment, and practice evaluations. Typically offering Fall, Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SWK S2510 - History And Analysis Of Social Welfare Policy |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide a historical perspective on the evolution of social welfare policies and programs and allow students to develop beginning policy analysis skills so that students will be able to identify gaps in the service delivery system and inequitable or oppressive aspects of current policy delivery. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SWK S2800 - Introduction To Field Experience |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Introductory field experience for testing interest in a social work career. It is also required for non-social work students pursuing the Case Management Certificate. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| SWK S3000 - Selected Topics In Social Work |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. An understanding of the general philosophy and broad principles of family life education in conjunction with the ability to plan, implement, and evaluate such educational programs. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| SWK S3010 - Computer Technology For Social Workers |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students may use this course to fulfill the computer course requirements for the undergraduate program or as an elective. This course is geared primarily for students with a low to moderate understanding of computers technology. It provides the student with the beginning level skills and knowledge necessary to function professionally in this technologically-based age. In addition, students in this course will explore how this information technology can be used in an appropriate manner so that the needs of clients and colleagues are honored in light of emerging standards for practice. Participants in the course will receive a broad overview of computer basics, software applications, the Internet and World Wide Web. Students will be introduced to a number of social work related computer applications including e-mail, web based research, webpage design as well as several MS Office applications that enhance research and practice. The course will address some of the ethical and social implications of computer technology for the social work profession, highlighting considerations to populations at risk. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SWK S3050 - Introduction To Child Protection |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide a comprehensive introduction to child abuse and neglect from psychological, social, cultural, legal, and economic perspectives. Social workers in all professional work settings must know how to identify child maltreatment and family violence. Students must also be able to practice without discrimination and with respect, knowledge, and skills related to the clients’ age, class, color, culture, disability, ethnicity, family, structure, gender, marital status, national origin, race, religion, sex, and sexual orientation. Students will learn the family dynamics and indicators of maltreatment and effective interventions at the micro, mezzo, and macro level, with an emphasis on strengths based, family-centered intervention strategies. Additionally, students will learn the extent of reported maltreatment of children, effects in children, treatment issues, the social worker’s role in a multidisciplinary team approach, how to advocate for individuals and families, and will be introduced to the concept of personal accountability for outcomes. This course will also introduce to students the values and ethics of the social work profession in the child welfare arena, specially the right of children to appropriate care, to be free of abuse and neglect, and to grow up in a safe environment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SWK S3060 - Crisis Intervention |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an elective, issue-oriented course at the undergraduate level offered as part of the Certificate in Case Management. This course focuses on the increasing number of complex and painful personal, couple and family crisis situations encountered by professional social workers in the course of service delivery. Crisis events are characterized by high stress responses in one or more persons within a short period of time, usually in response to some difficult social, interpersonal, intrapsychic, medical or developmental triggering events. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SWK S3070 - Grief And Loss Across The Life Span |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an elective web-based course that will explore the complex components of grief and loss throughout the life span from an ecological and strength based theoretical perspective. The focus of the course will be to increase understanding, knowledge and compassion related to the impact of grief and loss on individuals, families, and communities at large. In addition, the course gives students an opportunity to explore and understand their perceptions and beliefs on death and dying, and how individual cultural differences influence that experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SWK S3080 - Family Life Education |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Family Life Education. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SWK S3220 - Small Group Theory And Practice |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The course examines the significance of the small group as both the context and means for social development of individuals and as a vehicle for generalist practice. It includes discussion of the individual as a member of a variety of groups, including the family. The course covers group theories as well as mezzo practice strategies. Generalist social work practice recognizes the importance of groups in the life of individuals and societies. Groups are one of the most important vehicles for the social development of the individual as well as one of the basic structures by which a society organizes itself. They are often the means in which both individual and collective empowerment can occur, enabling the parties involved to effect change in their environment. Because of this significance, the study of group process and group practice is essential for social work. S3220 Human Behavior and Social Environment II: Small Group Functioning serves as a linkage between the HSBE I and III courses. It is based on the strengths and empowerment perspectives and uses a systems analysis for understanding the impact of the small group on both the individual and society. This course focuses on group dynamics and practice, with an emphasis on the small group. In addition, the course is designed to enhance students’ effectiveness for group participation and leadership. The course analyzes different social work roles and the various interventions used in working with groups. It offers a discourse on the individual as a member of a variety of groups, including the family and the formal organization as a composite of groups. The course activities include student participation in a small group experience where they will have the opportunity to learn selected skills for practice with small groups while studying the specifics of group theory and group dynamics. BSW graduates are expected to demonstrate the integration and application of the ten core competencies identified by the Council on social work Education, the accrediting body for all social work academic programs. The content and assignments in this course are designed to introduce, reinforce and/or emphasize selected practice behaviors associated with this course, and to assist students in developing the social work core competencies. These competencies are evidence by corresponding practice behaviors. This course content contributes to building knowledge and skills for students to demonstrate EP 2.1.4 (engage difference and diversity in practice), EP 2.1.5 (advance human rights and social and economic justice), EP 2.1.7 (apply knowledge of human behavior and the social environment), EP 2.1.9 (respond to contexts that shape practice) and EP 2.1.10 (engage, assess, intervene and evaluate practice with groups). S322 Human Behavior and Social Environment II: Small Group Functioning serves as a linkage between the HBSE I and III courses. The courses should be taken in sequence or concurrently. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SWK S3310 - Generalist Social Work Practice I: Theory And Skills |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses primarily on the application of basic generalist social work skills that demonstrate an understanding and application of the continuum of social work practice in the helping relationship. The course focuses on the beginning phase of the problem-solving process and related skills. This course is designed to provide students with a beginning understanding of generalist social work practice. It uses a range of perspectives including strengths perspective, empowerment perspective and person-in-environment perspective. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SWK S3320 - Generalist Social Work Practice II: Theory And Skills |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This practice course examines the middle and ending phases of the helping process and related skills. Students explore the helping relationship with various client system sizes, impact of agency policies and procedures upon practice and resolution of clients’ problems; practice evaluation Generalist Social Work Practice II: Theory and Skills focuses primarily on application of basic social work skills that demonstrate understanding and application of the continuum of social work practice at the middle and ending phases of the helping relationship. Through role play, case study analysis, application of a values framework, practice knowledge, and skills gained in previous courses students conduct assessment, identify interventions, apply theory, and develop and implement measurable goals and specific action steps to resolve client problems. Students demonstrate understanding and illustrate application of the basic social work skills and core interpersonal qualities in resolving the interrelationship between social conditions, the individual, family, group, and organization functioning while examining diversity. BSW graduates are expected to demonstrate the integration and application of the ten core competencies identified by the Council on Social Work Education, the accrediting body for all social work academic programs. The content and assignments in this course are designed to introduce, reinforce and/or emphasize selected practices behaviors associated with this course, and to assist students in developing the social work core competencies. These competencies are evidenced by corresponding practice behaviors. This course content contributes to building knowledge and skills for students to demonstrate EPAS (CSWE, 2008) competencies 2.1.1- 2.1.10—professional use of self, values and ethics, critical thinking, diversity, human rights and economic and social justice, research informed practice, human behavior, policy practice, response to practice context, and engagement, assessment, intervention and evaluation. This course is to be taken during the spring semester of the junior in the BSW curriculum. The course draws upon basic social work practice skill knowledge from S331 (Generalist Social Work Practice I: Theory and Skills) and S251(Emergence of Social Services). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SWK S3710 - Social Work Research |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The general goal of this basic social science research methods course is to introduce and develop skills needed to conceptualize a problem, make use of available literature, design a research strategy, evaluate, organize, and integrate relevant data (both existing and new), derive useful solutions based on knowledge, and communicate those solutions to clients and colleagues. The attainment of this goal will prepare students to continue their own professional education, contribute to the development of the profession as a whole, and maintain their service to clients at a standard commensurate with the current level of knowledge. This is the first course in the research professional content area and provides basic knowledge about research methodology as it applies to social work. Social work practice and research share common features and processes as both are fundamentally problem-solving enterprises. Students are encouraged to generalize the basic concepts and principles of science presented within this course for use in the knowledge building activities that take place throughout the broader curriculum. Underlying principles of science and logic are emphasized and special attention is directed toward the recognition of common sources of error and bias in the implementation and interpretation of research studies as it affects the outcomes of research utilization. Students will better able to recognize the impact of race, gender, age, and sexual orientation on the research process. BSW graduates are expected to demonstrate the integration and application of the ten core competencies identified by the Council on Social Work Education, the accrediting body for all social work academic programs. The content and assignments in this course are designed to introduce, reinforce and/or emphasize selected practice behaviors associated with this course, and to assist students in developing the social work core competencies. These competencies are evidenced by corresponding practice behaviors. This course content contributes to building knowledge and skills for students to demonstrate EPAS: 2.1.3 critical thinking; 2.1.2 values and ethics; 2.1.4diversity and difference; 2.1.5Social Justice; 2.1.6 research-informed practice and practice-informed research; 2.1.10(d) evaluation of practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SWK S3720 - Statistical Reasoning In Social Work |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This introductory course is designed for students who wish to master some very important tools used by contemporary social work practitioners to better understand the world of practice. The primary purpose of the course is to enable students to gain an understanding of the basic principles that guide statistical reasoning, especially as they relate to making informed decisions about the quantitative aspects of their practice. Students will learn how to collect and organize data, examine it for pattern and relationships, and analyze it for purposes of drawing plausible and defensible conclusions. We do not “prove” in social work research, but look for relationships between variables. The basic philosophy upon which this course is grounded is the belief that statistical reasoning (i.e., thinking, meaning, and interpretation) should precede statistical methods. It is assumed that, for most beginning students, many of the concepts and principles used by statisticians are likely to be experiences as foreign and confusing. Complex computational formulas and mathematical notations have been known to intimidate many students, and when that occurs, it can interfere with learning. Therefore, the course is based on pedagogy of active learning that engage students in a problem solving process that enables them to gain an understanding of the kinds of questions in relation to which statistics can help. It emphasizes the use of statistics in the real life situations. It attempts to engender in students an understanding of basic statistical concepts and the ability to synthesize the components of their statistical efforts in ways that will enable them to communicate their results in a clear and convincing manner. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SWK S4000 - Special Topics In Fields Of Practice |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 - 6.00. Special Topics In Fields Of Practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| SWK S4420 - Practice-Policy Seminar In Fields Of Practice |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Addresses practice and policy issues in specific fields of practice such as child and family, aging, addictions, and developmental disabilities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SWK S4600 - Sholarly Writing Seminar |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. This course prepares BSW/MSW students to successfully complete scholarly writing tasks. Topics addressed include expectations and standards for scholarly writing, conducting searches of professional literature, using effective paraphrasing and summarization skills, writing logically and coherently and appropriately citing references adhering to APA format. The course is intended to support students’ efforts on writing tasks assigned in future courses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SWK S4900 - Independent Study |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Individual study of an area of special interest. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| SWK S5100 - Human Behavior And The Social Environment: Individuals, Families, Groups |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Focuses on individual development and functioning at all system levels with particular emphasis on the interplay of individual, family, and group system needs and resources over time. Special attention is given to issues of values and ethics and to the impact of inequality, discrimination, and differential access to opportunity within society on the development and functioning of the individual, family, and group systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| SWK S5200 - Evaluation Processes For Social Work |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Introduces students to the knowledge and skills needed to evaluate their own practice and the effectiveness of social service programs within which they work. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| SWK S5420 - Social Work Practice II: Organizations, Communities, Societies |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. This course is concerned with helping communities and other social units to empower themselves and eradicate oppressive situations and practices through networking, political participation, leadership development, mobilization, utilization of resources, and other strategies and techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| SWK S6000 - Seminar In Social Work |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 10.00. Electives Vary in subject matter. Scheduling of these courses will be announced prior to semester registration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 10.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| SWK S6510 - Concentration Practicum II |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. Taken with S652, Practicum III. These courses together provide an in-depth practicum experience for M.S.W. Concentration students under the guidance and supervision of an approved field instructor. A faculty field liaison oversees the practica. Students complete both courses in the same agency although the students may use multiple departments or programs as sites for learning experiences. Practicum II and III build upon and deepen the practicum experiences and classroom knowledge gained in the intermediate year. The practicum courses provide students with experiences in the aforementioned curricular emphasis areas, which support the processes of synthesis, application, critical analysis, and evaluation of knowledge using a strengths perspective. The field practice seminar integrates concentration classroom learning with the experience of an internship. Students have the opportunity to apply their basic knowledge of group process as well as practice group leadership skills. This seminar will assist students in the identification and examination of significant practice and professional issues that occur in the last phase of the M.S.W. Program. A major instructional goal of the practicum is to increase students' competence in understanding and dealing with cross-cultural issues. Information and resources on diversity are discussed and applied in seminar and field placement, and students are encouraged to further explore and increase their own competence in dealing with cross-cultural issues. It is expected that students will develop an awareness of their own privilege in relationship to their client systems. Further, students are expected to use advocacy skills in a cultural context and carry these skills into action in their agencies and the wider community. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SWK S6830 - Community-Based Practice In Mental Health And Addiction |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students enrolled in this course examine a wide range of community-based services provided for people with severe mental illness and/or severe addiction problems. Special attention is given to strength-based, client-driven, and evidence-based practice models. Content includes community-based services in areas of case management, employment, housing, illness management, family, dual disorder treatment, and consumer self-help. Students also examine a variety of issues involved in the provision of community-based services such as ethical and legal issues, quality and continuity of care, cultural competency, organizational and financial factors, and other relevant policy and practice issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SWK S6850 - Mental Health And Addictions Practice With Individuals And Families |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students enrolled in this course develop knowledge, values and ethics, skills, and judgment necessary for competent application of selected evidence-based, best practice approaches for service for children, youth, adults, and families affected by mental health and addictions issues. Students explore topics such as risk and resilience, recovery, and relapse prevention, and consider implications of current social and policy factors affecting service delivery to persons affected by mental health and addictions issues. Students learn to discover, analyze, synthesize, and evaluate evidence of practice effectiveness and apply that knowledge in communication, strengths discovery and assessment, hypothesis formation, contracting, intervention and prevention planning, service delivery, and evaluation. Students develop professional understanding and expertise in the application of at least one evidence-based approach for service to individuals and families affected by at least one specific mental health or addictions issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SWK S6870 - Mental Health And Addiction Practice With Groups |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students enrolled in this course develop professional knowledge and skills for group work services to persons affected by mental health and addictions issues. The phases of group development and intervention during the various group work stages provide a conceptual framework for the course experience. Students learn to serve children, youth, adults, and families in groups that are therapeutic, growth producing, and life enhancing. Students examine a number of theoretical perspectives, including cognitive behavioral, communications, behavioral, and interpersonal approaches. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| SWRK 16200 - Careers In Social Work And Human Services |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Careers in Social Work and Human Services is designed to introduce students to social work, psychology and sociology applied to the range of human service fields within the social welfare system. The levels of professional practice, basic themes of helping and serving, professional values, ethics and codes of conduct for human service professionals will be explored. The aim is to expose students to the client types and client problems, organizational auspice and sponsorship and basic approaches utilized in serving individuals, groups, organizations and communities. The course will address cultural diversity and importance of research in human services. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and explore the basics of social work, psychology and sociology as applied to human services.
2. Identify the importance of understanding the flexibility in dealing with the culture, race, ethnicity, age, religion and sexual preference in human services.
3. Explore the perspectives and methods of each discipline as they approach clients at the micro, mezzo and macro levels of helping.
4. Compare and contrast the unique and shared characteristics of the disciplines as they approach the human service client.
5. Identify the steps in the problem-solving process as they are expressed by professionals from social work, psychology and sociology.
6. Explore the common elements and links between the three disciplines in direct practice, research and formulating evidence based practice.
7. Review various client systems and client problems from the individual professional (SW, PSY, SOC) and from the perspective of a SW, PSY and SOC team.
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| SWRK 24000 - Social Work Helping Communication With Individuals And Small Groups |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the theories of interpersonal communication as applied to helping and human services work from the generalist social work practitioner. The focus is on concepts of verbal and nonverbal communication, communication concepts, skills and abilities necessary for constructive professional interaction. The course develops practical methods and skills in the following: developing rapport, interviewing, group leadership and discussion facilitation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
The primary objectives of this course are:
1. Students will develop an understanding of basic concepts of therapeutic communication.
2. Students will examine diversity, cultural and biological influences in therapeutic communication.
3. Students will identify and develop responses to communication blocks, techniques of interviewing, assertive strategies.
4. Students will use methods of communication for various client levels (micro, mezzo and macro).
5. Students will learn the basic steps of problem solving and decision making as they relate to generalist social work practice.
6. Students will demonstrate knowledge, understanding and skills for effective therapeutic communication.
|
| SWRK 26100 - Introduction To Social Work |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview of social work profession and practice. Survey of substantive fields of social work and consideration of relevant attitudes, values, and ethics. Prerequisite for entry into social work concentration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| SWRK 30100 - Social Work Research |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is design to provide students with an understanding of scientific research process, methods and contributions to the advancement of social work practice knowledge. Students will learn the concepts, methods and process of applying research to the actual practice to determine treatment effectiveness. The uses and benefits of research will be examined from the practitioner, supervisor and administrator perspectives. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| SWRK 32100 - Human Behavior In The Social Environment I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. First course in sequence addressing the basic framework of social work education - person in environment and knowledge of the individual and the family through the life span. Attention to human diversity, discrimination, oppression and social justice as they impact the health and well being of individuals and families. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| SWRK 32200 - Human Behavior In The Social Environment II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is the second of a sequence. The focus on mezzo (groups, organizations) and macro (community) as the social work client. Attention is given to the impact of human diversity, discrimination, oppression and social justice as they affect groups, organizations and communities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
Upon completion of this course the student will be able to:
1. Demonstrate a foundation of theoretical knowledge regarding the structure and function of the small groups, organizations social environment and its impact upon the human experience.
2. Identify and express the values and ethics of the social work profession with an understanding of, and respect for, the positive values of diversity.
3. Exhibit an understanding of the dynamics and effects of social, cultural, economic, and political oppression and discrimination on individuals and groups.
4. Understand the strategies for change that seek to advance social and economic justice in social work practice.
5. Apply critical thinking skills within the context of assessing and integrating new information.
6. Analyze the impact of social structures, institutions, policies, and practices upon client systems, particular for populations at risk.
7. Recognize the need to develop generalist social work practice skills with diverse systems of all sizes, in both urban and rural settings.
|
| SWRK 35100 - Junior Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Junior practicum consists of 120 hours of direct service in a faculty approved social work setting. Student is supervised by an agency professional and participates in PNC social work faculty led weekly seminar. Students are exposed to social work professionals in different settings. Each setting provides a participant observer experiences enabling students to begin applying theories and concepts of behavioral sciences and social work to actual practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
The junior level field experience is designed for students to be able to:
1. Understand career options in social work field.
2. Develop and understand social work through the participant-observer role in community human services agencies.
3. Experience three or more types of human service practice agencies (i.e. social services, corrections, elderly services, youth activities, community action and/or school).
4. Develop and test areas of interest in social work and human services as preparation for a senior internship.
5. Examine agency, client and professional staff in the context of academic learning.
6. Examine human services with respect to human diversity and vulnerable populations.
7. To utilize field instructor mentoring and consultation to help meet goals for client care and improve professional skills.
8. Examine the social work code of ethics within an actual practice setting.
9. Recognize how a human services agency operates.
10. Discover more about personal strengths and weaknesses necessary for effective professional practice.
|
| SWRK 35900 - Macro Practice: Human Service Organizations And The Community |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course analyzes theories and concepts used to understand the dynamics between clients, social workers, and managers-supervisors as well as agencies' internal and external environments. The course examines the organizational, management and community interaction effects on individual and group behaviors as well as social work practice consequences. The course considers issues associated with human service organizations, such as diversity. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| SWRK 36100 - Institutional Social Welfare |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of philosophical, historical, political, economic, and social trends contributing to the development of social welfare. Current policy and practice issues of social work at micro and macro levels. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| SWRK 36200 - Social Work Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An upper-level, experientially based course in basic skills needed for facilitating creative problem exploration in helping relationships. Emphasis on interviewing techniques, value clarifications, and examination of one's interpersonal styles. Content directed at professional practice rather than personal growth. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| SWRK 36300 - Social Work Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of SWRK 36200. More intensive work on facilitation, problem exploration. Emphasis placed on action skills, creativity in interpersonal problem solving, and advocacy skills. Content directed at generic skills necessary for generalist social work practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| SWRK 37000 - Social Work With Substance Abuse Clients |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Social work's perspective of substance abusing clients. Topics include pharmacology of substance abuse, criteria for intake, assessment and treatment, diagnostic formats, effects of addiction and recovery on families, and relapse and prevention paradigms. Emphasis on the social work generalist model, the strengths perspective and systems theory. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| SWRK 37200 - Social Work Practice In Schools |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Use of the Social Work Generalist Model to understand practive principles such as goal setting and service planning with culturally and ethnically diverse populations. Practice modalities to be discussed include group, consultation, family and community-based interventions. Specific assessments and interventions are presented for substance abuse, violence, underachievement, and truancy. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| SWRK 37300 - Social Work Practice With The Elderly |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Generalist model practice with the elderly population including person-centered planning, empowerment, communication emphasis, interdisciplinary planning, assessment use and instruments application. A substantial base of diversity among the elderly population is a course focus. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| SWRK 37700 - Child Welfare: Policies And Best Practices |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the knowledge and skills required to work with children and their families. Emphasized in the course: understanding child welfare policy development, benefits of child welfare services, child protective services, foster care, adoption, institutionalization, examination of public policies, and social work practices with children. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Critique social policy and practices with children.
2. Analyze interagency collaboration with child welfare practices.
3. Identify dimensions for the psychosocial assessment of children.
4. Utilize self-evaluation in developing cultural sensitivity and sensitivity to diversity in social work practice with children and families.
|
| SWRK 38300 - Program Evaluation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Program evaluation research designs discussed including program monitoring, client satisfaction, needs assessment, formative and evaluative assessments. Emphasis on application of evaluations for social work practice settings. Elements of a substantive social work program are learned. Familiarity and competence reading and using the social work program evaluation literature is included. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| SWRK 39000 - Directed Study |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| SWRK 46100 - Field Practicum In Social Work |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. In community human service agency under professional social work field instructor students develop an individualized learning contract that creates an experience applying academic and social work classroom learning to actual professional practice with client(s); 240 hours each for two semesters and intern seminar group with PNC faculty. The theory, tools, skills, methods and roles of generalist social work are practiced under professional supervision in human service agencies with actual clients. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
|
| SWRK 46400 - Field Practicum In Social Work II |
|
Credit Hours: 6.00. In a community human service agency, under a professional social work field instructor who provides direction, guidance and supervision, students develop a learning contract that creates an experience applying academic and social work classroom learning to actual professional practice with clients(s). This internship is 240 hours over an entire semester. Imbedded in the course is a weekly intern seminar group meeting with PNC faculty. The theory, tools, skills, methods and roles of generalist social work are practiced under professional supervision in human service agencies with actual clients. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 6.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
After successfully completing this course, students will be able to:
1. Apply previously learned knowledge regarding social work practice and theory, human behavior and the social environment, social service policy and research methodology to experiences in their field placement.
2. Evaluate and apply new content selected by faculty field liaison and agency field instructor to generalist practice.
3. Contribute experiences and knowledge from the field internship to the professional development of the student intern group.
4. Develop and articulate a commitment to diversity and an awareness of the impact of oppression and injustice on clients and practice.
5. Analyze and critically examine policies, procedures, programs and social actions that address social needs and injustices from the perspective of the field agency, then relate the impact of these policies on the agency at various levels.
6. Reflect constructively on the internship experience, including but not limited to: policy issue, auspices issues, role conflicts and tensions, ethical or value issues, interpersonal conflicts, personal and program limitations, positive and negative aspects of agency programs and the impact of the experience on student personal and professional growth.
7. Function successfully as a generalist social worker on an interdisciplinary team.
|
| TCEM 11000 - College Life Orientation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. To introduce new TCEM majors to the department, school, and university to ensure a successful beginning to their academic careers. Typically offered Fall, Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM 11200 - Tourism And Hospitality Management Principles |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The principles of planning, organizing, directing and controlling as applied to the hospitality service industry. Topics relating to motivation and leadership will be stressed. Issues of organizational change, organizational effectiveness and the nature of managerial work will be addressed. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| TCEM 11500 - Computers In Hospitality Industry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Establishes computer competency with operating systems, spreadsheets, and word processing. Explores applications of computers in the tourism industry with emphasis on programs impacting the management of organizations.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM 11900 - Travel Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A comprehensive investigation of the broad range of available travel services and products. Skills needed to begin a productive career in the travel industry are emphasized.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| TCEM 14100 - Financial Accounting For The Service Industries |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamental accounting principles and procedures applied to the hospitality and service industries. Includes study of the uniform system of accounts, financial statements, special purpose journals, and subsidiary ledgers unique to the hospitality and service industries. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| TCEM 17100 - Introduction To Convention And Meeting Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of the conventions, expositions and meetings industry. Focus will be on the operational aspects of various industry segments and the intra-industry interaction of each. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| TCEM 17200 - The Development And Management Of Attractions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An examination of the process of developing visitor attractions and a discussion of the main issues involved in their management. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| TCEM 21000 - Special Event Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course topics will include planning for social events such as themed parties, weddings, or balls; planning for fundraiser events; planning recognition events; and planning entertainment events. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| TCEM 21200 - Tourism And Hospitality Management Principles |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The principles of planning, organizing, directing, and controlling as applied to the hospitality service industry. Topics relating to motivation and leadership will be stressed. Issues of organizational change, organizational effectiveness, and the nature of managerial work will be addressed. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| TCEM 22100 - Customer Relations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of customer management skills including conflict management, effective communication, and of ethics. Development of hospitality employee to serve the customer based on team work and motivation.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM 23100 - Tourism And Hospitality Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development, use, and evaluation of effective merchandising, advertising, and public relations techniques in the hospitality and tourism industries. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| TCEM 24100 - Financial Analysis And Decision Making In Tourism And Hospitality Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Managerial and financial analyses of numerical data used for decision making. Consideration of systems, techniques, information types, and presentational forms used by hospitality management. Emphasis on situations oriented to the hospitality industry. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM 25100 - Computers in the Hospitality Industry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Establishes computer competency with the DOS operating system, spreadsheet, and word processing. Explores applications of computers in the hotel and foodservice industry with emphasis on programs impacting the management of hospitality organizations.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM 25200 - Promotional Communications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides information on the field of personal and public relations. Explores effective public relations methods. Focuses on the relationship-oriented decisions a public relations professional must make based upon different circumstances that arise within an organization.
Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| TCEM 27100 - Mechanics Of Meeting Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Managerial and financial analyses of numerical data used for decision making. Consideration of systems, techniques, information types, and presentational forms used by hospitality management. Emphasis on situations oriented to the hospitality industry.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| TCEM 27200 - The Tourism System |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Travel, trends, travel modes, and economic impact on destination area. Emphasis on local, regional, and national tourism. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| TCEM 28100 - Hotel Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. All components of a hotel are reviewed to examine the efficient flow of activities among departments for optimal operation. Includes discussion of operational departments relevant to the type of property. Focuses on management procedures to maximize guest service and profit. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM 28900 - Promotional Communications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides information on the field of personal and public relations. Explores effective public relations methods. Focuses on the relationship-oriented decisions a public relations professional must make based upon different circumstances that arise within an organization.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM 29100 - Quantilty Food Production &Services |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An introduction to food preparation methods and service techniques in quantity food settings. Students become familiar with ingredients and culinary terminology, and learn to read and evaluate menus. Recipe conversion
and costing skills are developed. Different production schemes and product flow are examined, and the relationship between back-of-the-house and front-of-the-house activities is discussed.
Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM 29200 - Total Quality Management In Restaurant Operations And Service |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. All aspects of restaurant operations and service including total quality management, productivity, computer literacy and food production.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM 29900 - Topcs Restaurant Hotel Industry |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM 30100 - Practicum In Restaurant Hotel Industry Tourism Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. In-service training and practical experience, totaling at least 300 hours in an approved food service and/or lodging operation.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM 30200 - Hospitality/Tourism Industry Trends |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Discussion of industry related trends and Issues.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM 30500 - Newsletter Design And Technology Work Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. In-service training and practical experience in the design and development of a newsletter. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM 30600 - Destination Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Preparation of a destination development plan that presents a comprehensive outline of a proposed tourism operation.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM 30800 - Wine Selection |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics will include types of wines, wine quality, and serving suggestions. Wine tastings will be included. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM 31000 - Event Catering Management |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Exploration and creative use of foods and beverages to meet the clients' needs for on-premise and off-premise catering. Concepts of management for the effective operation of catering businesses with analysis of financial framework, menu planning, customer relations, and production-service logistics. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Greensburg
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-Muncie
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| TCEM 31200 - Human Resource Management For The Service Industries |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The concept of management of people for effective operations in foodservice, lodging and tourism involving supervisory development and communication; the pretesting, training, and evaluating of employees; and the development of attitudes and morale of people working together. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| TCEM 31800 - Creative Wine Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will be presented with a concise, practical guide to profitable wine management. The course will incorporate the best experience amassed by operations over the years, with heavy emphasis on the recent trends. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM 32800 - Introduction To Microbrewing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A broad overview of the craftbrewing industry with a highlighted emphasis on Indiana manufactured products featuring samples from Indiana producers. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| TCEM 32900 - Tourism Sports Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The application of tourism marketing principles and activities will be analyzed in the content of effective tourism marketing. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| TCEM 34100 - Convention Sales And Service |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed as an in-depth analysis of convention and facility sales and service. The course will enable meetings and events from the pre-planning through post event evaluation from the supplies perspective. Topics covered include marketing and advertising a facility property, organizing a sales staff, selling to different markets and contract and legal issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM 36200 - Economics Of Tourism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discussion of the economic impact of travel on tourism's various sectors and of the quantitative methods that can be applied to travel forecasting and tourism projects. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| TCEM 38200 - Popular Travel Trends |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of an understanding of the patterns, principles, and
management of international travel to popular tourist destinations. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| TCEM 38500 - Beer And Spirits Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will be introduced to the basic principles of beer and spirits production with a primary focus on manufacturing, quality criteria, beer and spirits styles, and sensory standards. Evaluation by tasting is an integral part of the course. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM 38700 - Tourism Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Provides students with an opportunity to improve their operational/ managerial skills by working in new areas. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM 38800 - Wine Styles |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The tasting of wines, application of wine fundamentals and recognition of regional varietals and their characteristics to better appreciate how history, climate and policy ultimately manifest into what's in each bottle of wine.
Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM 40100 - Industry Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 3.0. To provide students an opportunity to improve their operational/managerial skills by working in new areas. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 12.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| TCEM 40800 - Food And Wine Pairing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. To be able to appreciate the categories of wine, what they are and how they may be used in conjunction with making food combinations and menus even wine lists for restaurants and other foodservice establishments. Students must be at least 21 years old.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM 41100 - Hospitality Law |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Rights and duties of innkeepers and restaurateurs, civil rights, contracts, negotiable instruments, and types of organizations. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM 41800 - History Of Wine |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. History Of Wine. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM 46100 - Tourism Research And Planning Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course discusses tourism research planning and development as a process, with emphasis on goal achievement for both tourism businesses and host communities. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM 47100 - International Meeting Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The organization and production of international corporate business meetings, seminars, incentive trips, and customer events using innovative and cost-effective programs that address changing business needs.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| TCEM 47200 - Global Tourism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Critical issues, problems, and opportunities that face the tourism industry. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM 47700 - Non Profit Meeting Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on basic aspects and skills involved in planning and managing non profit meeting and conventions. Examines sequences of events from the conceptual state of the first meeting plan through completion of the event. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| TCEM 48200 - Travel To Exotic Destinations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of an understanding of the principles, patterns, and management of international travel to exotic destinations. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| TCEM 48300 - Ecotourism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Ecotourism. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM 49900 - Operational Tourism Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Combines all of the areas concerned with executive management, marketing, personnel, cost controls, etc. Examines the hospitality organization as a total system, with emphasis on strategic planning, systems design, and problem analysis. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM E1040 - Principles Of Event Tourism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides an introductory approach to planning and organizing events. Focus is on the operational principles of for-profit and non-profit event types, including sporting, cultural, social, and business. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM E2190 - Management Of Sports Events |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Surveys sport event planning on the amateur and professional levels. Discussions and studies entail site selection, logistics, personnel, marketing, economics, and legalities of hosting an event. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| TCEM E3040 - Mechanics Of Event Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analyzes elements and details relating to organization and execution of events. Students practice and apply principles to topics including budgeting, site selection, marketing, staffing, risk management, design and evaluation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM E3770 - Exhibit Marketing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Leads students through every phase of exhibit marketing, from the initial planning stage to implementation and post-show follow-up. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| TCEM G1000 - Introduction To The Tourism Industry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces the various components of the tourism, events, and hospitality industry. Emphasis on exploring such areas as service, food and beverage operations, lodging, hospitality, events and attractions. Students are exposed to different career opportunities available within the diverse scope of the industry. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM G3090 - Cruise Line Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces the cruise line industry and investigates the skills needed to begin a productive career in the specialized travel segment. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM H1050 - Lodging Management And Operations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores the management and operations of lodging facilities. Topics include type of property, revenue management, and guest services focused on meeting guests' needs and maximizing occupancy. Discussion includes special forms of lodging, such as bed and breakfast facilities, vacation ownerships and resorts. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| TCEM H1910 - Sanitation And Health In Food Service, Lodging, And Tourism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The application of sanitary and public health engineering principles to food service and lodging operations. Typically offered Fall Summer Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM H2180 - Wines Of The World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Discover, appreciate, and use fine wines at the personal or professional level. Wines will be explored alone and in food pairings. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM H3280 - Beers Of The World |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explore the world's great beer styles, including imports and craft beers, as well as beer flavors and off-flavors, the brewing process, ingredients, history, beer and food pairing, competitions, judging and more. Sampling and field trips will be required. Students will also be prepared to take the Certified CiceroneR exam. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| TCEM H3710 - Convention and Sales Service |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores convention and facility sales and service. Considers meetings and events pre-planning through post event evaluation from the supplies perspective. Topics include marketing and advertising a facility property, organizing a salese staff, selling to different markets and contract/legal issues. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| TCEM H4080 - Food And Wine Pairing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Appreciate the subleties, the nuances, and sheer enjoyment of proper food and wine combinations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM L2910 - Food Production Principles Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Basic knowledge of food service operations. Students learn and develop food production and service skills at Camp Brosius, Elkhart Lake, WI. Students are exposed to quantity cooking methods, the use and care of equipment, and service techniques as they rotate through various positions commonly found in food service operations. All aspects of the dining experience are experienced by students.
Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM L3100 - Special Event Management Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Laboratory experiences in special event execution. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM L3910 - Event Catering Management Laboratory |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students will apply their knowledge from TCEM 391 to execute and evaluate catered events. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCEM T1070 - Tourism Planning and Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduces students to tourism attractions and destination management organizations (DMOs). Focus will include management, marketing and product development of DMOs including convention and visitors bureaus (CVBs) and state tourism offices. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| TCEM T2340 - Cultural Heritage Tourism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analyzes visitor and host community dynamics and the management of tangible and intangible cultural heritage assets. Elements examined include management and development of cultural tourism attractions and links to community. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCM 19900 - Selected Topics: Technical Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics of current and specialized interest for technical communicators. Hours and subject matter arranged by staff.
Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
|
| TCM 22000 - Technical Report Writing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Extensive application of the principles of clear writing in industrial reporting, with emphasis on adaptation to the audience; organization of ideas; and a concise, objective writing style.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| TCM 23000 - Principles And Practices Of Technical Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course serves as a gateway into the technical communication B.S. degree. It introduces the basic principles and practices of technical communication in the workplace. This course explores the range of abilities that technical communicators need and includes applied projects that will begin to develop these abilities. The course also serves as a foundation for higher-level courses within the major of technical communication. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Analyze audience needs and apply them in the planning process to create technical communication appropriate to specific situations.
2. Describe and select appropriate, well-designed processes and content approaches to create effective technical communication products.
3. Use best practices for clear writing.
4. Create effective technical communication products with information and/or persuasive aims.
5. Describe knowledge skills and personal qualities for a possible career in technical communication.
6. Recognize essential software tools typically used by technical communicators.
7. Use basic features of software tools to create technical communication products.
8. Collaborate effectively with peers in creating technical communication products.
|
| TCM 25000 - Career Planning In Engineering And Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Course will guide you through a systematic, hands-on approach to making career-related decisions. The course assumes that career planning is an ongoing process and requires understanding of self and one’s environment; therefore, you will leave the course with the necessary tools to find and acquire an internship, co-op, or job now and in the future. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Analyze how your skills, values and interests affect your career search.
2. Identify marketable skills and learn how to convey the value of those skills to employers.
3. Develop a cover letter, resume, and thank you letter that clearly demonstrate your unique skills and qualifications.
4. Locate resources that will assist you in finding internship, co-op, and career opportunities.
5. Understand the dynamics of interviewing and how to prepare.
6. Prepare for a smooth transition from academic career to professional career.
7. Understand the importance of collaborating with others in the workplace.
8. Understand the importance of your professional and ethical responsibility in the job search process and in your job search documents.
|
| TCM 29900 - Selected Topics: Technical Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics of current and specialized interest for technical communicators. Hours and subject matter arranged by staff.
Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
|
| TCM 31000 - Technical And Scientific Editing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course focuses on techniques for editing functional technical and scientific products in academic and professional settings. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the duties of technical and scientific editors.
2. Explain the different levels of editing.
3. Edit technical or scientific products while using the different levels of edit and preserving authorial intent.
4. Analyze and explain similarities and differences between style guides.
5. Explain benefits and drawbacks of hard-copy vs soft-copy editing.
6. Employ style guidelines to edit products for specific audiences ad contexts.
7. Manage projects by creating, using, and updating tracking tables and convention sheets.
8. Communicate effectively with authors and colleagues to manage projects using a collaborative approach.
|
| TCM 32000 - Written Communication In Science And Industry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of current writing practices in technology and science, especially in organizational settings. Practice in designing and preparing reports for a variety of purposes and audiences. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCM 34000 - Correspondence In Business And Industry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The development and application of strategies and skills for writing letters for business and industry in technology and engineering. Applications may include resumes and letters of application, informational and persuasive letters, and in-house memoranda. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCM 35000 - Visual Technical Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics covered in this class include methods and principles of creating visual technical communication, basics of visual design, visualization of technical data, usability of visual technical communication products, the role of technical communicators in the workplace, and modern technology available to technical communicators. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain and apply basic principles of designing print and electronic products that communicate both visually and textually.
2. Analyze technical communication products that others have created in order to determine how the visual elements fit the communication situation.
3. Develop project management skills for technical communication context.
|
| TCM 36000 - Communication In Engineering Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The application of rhetorical principles to written and oral communication in the engineering professions. Planning, drafting, and revising professional engineering reports; planning and delivering oral presentations; organizing information; developing persuasive arguments. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCM 37000 - Oral Practicum For Technical Managers |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The practical application of effective listening and speaking skills in situations typical for managers and supervisors in technology and engineering. Applications may include one-to-one conversations in supervisory management, such as hiring interviews and performance reviews; technical training programs; group discussions in work units, committees, and task forces; informal presentations, including program and status reports; formal technical presentations; communication in international industrial environments. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| TCM 38000 - Technical Communication In The Healthcare Professions |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focuses on the writing demands of the healthcare industry and so includes principles of clear writing, concise style, and organized ideas. Students examine and write documents for audiences in their medical and clinical organizational contexts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCM 39500 - Independent Study in Technical Communications |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individualized project approved by instructor consenting to direct it and by program coordinator. Credit varies with scope of the project. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 4 credits
|
| TCM 39900 - Selected Topics:Technical Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics of current and specialized interests for technical communicators. Hours and subject matter to be arranged by staff. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| TCM 42000 - Field Experience In Technical Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Full- or part-time work in technical communications, supervised by a qualified professional in the cooperating organization and a faculty advisor. Requires periodic written and oral reports and final written and oral reports on work experience and assigned readings. Credit varies with scope of projects. Meets RISE criteria. May be repeated for a total of 4 credit hours. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 4 credits
|
| TCM 42500 - Managing Document Quality |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ENG W532) This course examines and applies principles of creating technical publication in order to pursue quality management of the process. Students will produce effective publications by identifying and intervening in crucial points in documentation cycle - planning, researching, designing, drafting, reviewing, testing, and revising. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCM 43500 - Portfolio Preparation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Preparation of professional portfolio for review by representatives of the cooperating professional society (Society for Technical Communications). Includes readings and development of a professional career plan. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| TCM 45000 - Research Approaches For Technical And Professional Communication |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines quantitative research techniques practiced by professionals working in technical and business communication. It explores both primary (i.e. field) and secondary (i.e. library) research approaches for learning about content, audience, and publication design. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCM 46000 - Engineering Communication In Academic Contexts |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Analysis of situations and genres of written and oral communication of engineering information in academic contexts. Application of rhetorical principles in preparing and delivering written and oral presentations of engineering information. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TCM 49900 - Issues in Technical Communcation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics of current and specialized interest for technical communicators. Hours and subject matter arranged by staff. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| TCOM B1010 - Foundations Of Telecommunications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the technology, industries, and regulatory structures involved in the electronic media. Provides an overview of the history of broadcasting, cable, and telecommunications, with special emphasis on emerging technologies.
Not open to students who have credit in JOURN 101. Open only to approved pre-telecommunication students.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| TECH 10000 - Technology Freshman Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Technology Freshman Seminar. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| TECH 10100 - Women In Technology: Exploring The Possibilities |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An in-depth view of the emerging role of women in technology. Presentations by career professionals and faculty in a variety of technology disciplines will increase familiarity with the diversity of programs within the school. Academic and interpersonal skills and strategies needed to succeed in technology careers, and issues such as balancing work and family, will be addressed. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| TECH 10200 - Discovering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Designed to help students develop habits and skills that will benefit them in a college environment. An emphasis is placed on skills that will aid students in their pursuit of an engineering/technology degree; such as computer skills and problem solving. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| TECH 10400 - Technical Graphics Communications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an introduction to the graphic language used to communicate design ideas using CAD. Topics include: Sketching, multiview drawings, auxiliary views, sections views, pictorial views and dimensioning practices as well as an introduction to three-dimensional modeling, lighting and rendering. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
|
| TECH 10500 - Introduction To Engineering Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the different disciplines incorporated in engineering technology as well as the skill set needed to be a successful student in engineering technology. Focus will be on individual and professional development, problem identification, developing analytical skills, time and resource management, project planning, design, implementation and evaluation, and oral and written communication in the engineering technology profession. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| TECH 11000 - Freshman Honors Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A first-year honors seminar designed to inform and challenge technology students. Discussion will include a broad range of technology and intellectual issues. By invitation or permission of the instructor. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Honors, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| TECH 12000 - Design Thinking In Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Student will engage in critical analysis of real-world problems and global challenges. They will demonstrate the ability to recognize opportunity and to take initiative in developing solutions applying the principles of human centered design. Students will be able to communicate effectively and to work well on teams. Problems and solutions will be examined from societal, cultural, and ethical perspectives. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Information Literacy, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Information Literacy, UC-Science, Tech & Society
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Write a narrowly focused problem statement.
2. Apply ethnographic methods to understand technological problems.
3. Develop a search strategy, access technical databases and evaluate results and source quality.
4. Create a technical report documenting results of the design process.
5. Manage design projects, develop project timelines and negotiate individual responsibilities and accountability in the team environment.
6. Apply strategies of ideation to develop novel and innovation solutions.
7. Demonstrate rapid prototyping solutions for purposes of design, testing and communication.
|
| TECH 19900 - Special Topics In Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Special topics in Technology; subject matter to be arranged. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| TECH 20000 - Technology Cooperative Education Practice I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Semester of external career related experiences designed to enhance the student’s preparedness for entering an initial or second career. A minimum of 10 weeks and 200 hours are required for credit. Instructor permission required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Coop, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1.Translate theory into practice
2.Behave appropriately in the professional work environment.
3.Work within the ethical framework of the industry.
|
| TECH 20010 - Technology Career Emrichment Internship I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Semester of external career related experiences designed to enhance the student’s preparedness for entering an initial or second career. A minimum of 10 weeks and 200 hours are required for credit. Instructor permission required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Internship, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Translate theory into practice
2. Behave appropriately in the professional work environment.
3. Work within the ethical framework of the industry.
|
| TECH 25000 - Technology Cooperative Education Practice II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Semester of external career related experiences designed to enhance the student’s preparedness for entering an initial or second career. A minimum of 10 weeks and 200 hours are required for credit. Instructor permission required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Coop, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Translate theory in to practice
2. Behave appropriately in the professional work environment.
3. Work within the ethical framework of the industry.
|
| TECH 25010 - Technology Career Enrichment Internship II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Semester of external career related experience designed to enhance the student’s preparedness for entering an initial or secondary career. A minimum of 10 weeks and 200 hours are required for credit.Instructor permission required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Internship, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1.Translate theory into practice
2.Behave appropriately in the professional work environment.
3.Work within the ethical framework of the industry.
|
| TECH 29199 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply pertinent knowledge in identifying and solving problems.
|
| TECH 29299 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply pertinent knowledge in identifying and solving problems.
|
| TECH 29500 - Selected Topics In Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Selected topics in general or interdisciplinary engineering technology. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| TECH 29900 - Special Topics In Technology II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Hours, subject matter, and credit to be arranged by faculty. Group instruction in new or specialty areas of technology provided by Technology faculty. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| TECH 30000 - Technology Cooperative Education Practice III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Semester of external career related experiences designed to enhance the student’s preparedness for entering an initial or second career. A minimum of 10 weeks and 200 hours are required for credit. Instructor permission required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Coop, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Translate theory in to practice
2. Behave appropriately in the professional work environment.
3. Work within the ethical framework of the industry.
|
| TECH 30010 - Technology Career Enrichment Internship III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Semester of external career related experience designed to enhance the student’s preparedness for entering an initial or secondary career. A minimum of 10 weeks and 200 hours are required. Instructor permission required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Translate theory into practice
2. Behave appropriately in the professional work environment.
3. Work within the ethical framework of the industry.
|
| TECH 30100 - Renewable Energy Systems |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course provides the students with an introduction to renewable energy sources. Topics include photovoltaic, solar thermal systems, fuel-cells, hydrogen, wind power, waste heat, bio-fuels, wave/tidal power, geothermal power and hydroelectric. Analysis of technical, economic, environment, politics, and social policy are integral components of the course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Define, describe, and compare various energy sources.
2. Convert units between measurement systems and understand the value of different forms of energy (ex.1MMBtu of Heat verses 1MMBtu of Electricity).
3. Utilize spreadsheets for engineering calculations, data analysis, and data presentation.
4. Analyze the world’s consumption of energy and energy intensive sectors of the economy.
5. Prepare a laboratory report using proper format and data presentation techniques.
6. Access multiple resources to write about and compare various energy sources.
7. Act in a professional manner while discussing renewable energy topics which may involve passionate disagreement as it relates to politics, economics, environment, etcetera.
8. Examine and debate global implications for various energy sources.
9. Debate major points of energy politics and economics.
|
| TECH 30200 - Introduction To Green Building Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines, discusses and analyzes buildings. In particular, it delves into an introduction into green building science and technology. Building systems and assemblies (both residential and commercial) will be discussed and will include topics such as the principles of: thermal efficiency and comfort, climate, shading, site design, daylighting, efficient building envelopes and mechanical equipment. An emphasis will be placed upon interpreting, designing, assessing and applying green solutions and details for building construction purposes. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the main components of green building technology.
2. Illustrate several green concepts for building systems design.
3. Compare and contrast solutions for green building design.
4. Evaluate the efficiency of green design concepts.
5. Select effective solutions for green building design.
|
| TECH 30300 - Energy Efficiency And Auditing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course discusses fundamentals of energy efficiency and energy auditing. Students will analyze audit data, research energy improvement measures, and prepare recommendations. Topics include energy audit process, energy audit reports, energy bill analysis, economic analysis, audit instrumentation, and will include a subset of the following: building envelope, electrical system, HVAC system, waste heat recovery, lighting, cogeneration, and other prevalent commercial/industrial systems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and describe basic concepts, terminology, and industrial applications of various energy sources. Provide accurate measurements using basic metrology equipment.
2. Convert units between measurement systems and understand the value of different forms of energy (ex. 1MMBtu of Heat verses 1MMBtu of Electricity).
3. Utilize spreadsheets for engineering calculations, data analysis, and data presentation.
4. Understand the need for safety in the workplace.
5. Work alone and in teams to investigate topics, research efficiency improvements, write reports, and make presentations on a specified energy topic.
6. Utilize statistical methods and/or software packages to determine/ predict inefficient energy use and to design/develop energy/environment/cost efficient solutions.
|
| TECH 30400 - Green Building Information Modeling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines the BIM or Building Information Modeling approach to the design and construction of buildings. Topics include, but are not limited to: parametric modeling, interoperability, clash detection and BIM implications for architects, engineers, interior designers, managers and contractors. An emphasis will be placed upon interpreting, designing, and assessing how sustainable technologies (e.g., energy efficiency) can be assessed using BIM tools and modeling techniques. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the main concepts of green building information modeling (BIM).
2. Comprehend the concept of parametric modeling.
3. Explain the concepts of sustainability in design.
4. Comprehend the concept of interoperability.
5. Explain clash detection concepts.
6. Identify the future concerns of BIM and sustainable design.
|
| TECH 32000 - Technology And The Organization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course intended to provide students with experiences mirroring what they will encounter in the world of work. Students will participate in interdisciplinary teams to explore technology solutions. Course topics include public policy, regulatory and ethical issues, teaming and leadership, and project management. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify, apply and address public policy issues relevant to technology solutions.
2. Understand how technology solutions are developed, implemented, and maintained within a regulatory framework.
3. Identify, apply and address organizational ethics including conflicts of interest and individual ethical responsibilities.
4. Demonstrate the ability to function effectively in interdisciplinary teams.
5. Demonstrate effective oral and written communication skills.
6. Demonstrate project management competencies.
|
| TECH 33000 - Technology And The Global Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course examines the interplay of technology, globalization, and ethics. Students will explore concepts and issues related to outsourcing; global competitiveness; communications; contemporary issues; cultural differences such as inequality, security, sustainability, and quality of life; and the ethical dilemmas that often emerge as a result of the impact of technology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture 1, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand cultural norms, interactions, societal ethics and the impact of culture on business and industry.
2. Become familiar with international law and customs, security, import/export rules.
3. Understand the logistics of international travel including the use of passports and visas.
4. Understand issues involved in leading international teams and managing international projects.
|
| TECH 35000 - Technology Cooperative Education Practice IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Semester of external career related experience designed to enhance the student’s preparedness for entering an initial or secondary career. A minimum of 10 weeks and 200 hours are required for credit. Instructor permission required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Coop, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Translate theory into practice.
2. Behave appropriately in the professional work environment.
3. Work within the ethical framework of the industry,
|
| TECH 35010 - Technology Career Enrichment Internship IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00-3.00. Semester of external career related experience designed to enhance the student’s preparedness for entering an initial or second career. A minimum of 10 weeks and 200 hours are required for credit. Instructor permission required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Translate theory into practice.
2. Be appropriately in the professional work environment.
3. Work within the ethical framework of the industry.
|
| TECH 38199 - Professional Practice Co-Op I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply pertinent knowledge in identifying and solving problems.
|
| TECH 38299 - Professional Practice Co-Op II |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply pertinent knowledge in identifying and solving problems.
|
| TECH 38399 - Professional Practice Co-Op III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply pertinent knowledge in identifying and solving problems.
|
| TECH 39399 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op III |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply pertinent knowledge in identifying and solving problems.
|
| TECH 39499 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op IV |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply pertinent knowledge in identifying and solving problems.
|
| TECH 39500 - Selected Topics In Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Selected topics in general or interdisciplinary engineering technology. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| TECH 39599 - Professional Practice Extensive Co-Op V |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply pertinent knowledge in identifying and solving problems.
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| TECH 39699 - Professional Practice Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Professional practice with qualified employers within industry, government, or small business. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 30 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply pertinent knowledge in identifying and solving problems.
|
| TECH 39900 - Special Topics In Technology III |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Hours, subject matter, and credit to be arranged by faculty. Group instruction in new or specialty areas of technology provided by technology faculty. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| TECH 40000 - Technology Study Abroad |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 8.00. This course is utilized to record credits earned through participation in Purdue study abroad programs. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
|
| TECH 40200 - Emerging Green Technologies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will allow for examination of the very latest emergent green technologies in renewable energy, green buildings, and sustainable design, as well as, other green technology emerging in the marketplace or in development stages. Students will be immersed in the study of technology that is on the “bleeding edge” of technological development worldwide. Typically offered Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Indianapolis
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand and identify current green technologies.
2. Identify and understand emerging green technologies.
3. Researching and discovering technologies beyond web searches.
4. Assess the benefits of emerging technologies.
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| TECH 45000 - Technology Cooperative Education Practice V |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Semester of external career related experience designed to enhance the student’s preparedness for entering an initial or second career. A minimum of 10 weeks and 200 hours are required for credid. Instructor permission required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Coop, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Translate theory into practice.
2. Behave appropriately in the professional work environment.
3. Work within the ethical framework of the industry.
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| TECH 47100 - International Meeting Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The organization and production of international corporate business meetings, seminars, incentive trips, and customer events using innovative and cost-effective programs that address changing business needs.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TECH 49500 - Selected Topics In Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Selected topics in general or interdisciplinary engineering technology. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| TECH 49600 - Senior Design Project Proposal |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Capstone problem identification and solution design course demonstrating synthesis of technical, professional, and general knowledge for senior engineering technology students. Proposal presentation is required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| TECH 49700 - Senior Design Project |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Teams will develop innovative solutions based on proposal outcomes in TECH 49600 for current issues in the engineering technology profession, workplace, or community. Project deliverable, presentation, and written report are required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Learning Objectives:
1. Present reports (oral or written) at each stage of the project.
2. Determine if the functional specifications of a project based on abstract concepts.
3. Design a block diagram for a project.
4. Determine the theoretical design based on functional specifications.
5. Write and implement a project test-plan.
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| TECH 49900 - Special Topics In Technology IV |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Hours, subject matter, and credit to be arranged by faculty. Group instruction in new or specialty areas of technology provided by technology faculty. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| TECH 50100 - Internship In Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 3.00. Practical work experience in technology-related positions in business, government, and industrial organizations, designed to combine graduate study with work experience directly related to the student’s plan of study. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Depending upon the topic of the course, outcomes would vary.
|
| TECH 50200 - Smart Energy Grid |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Design, operation and management of smart energy grid. Study of operating principles and models of smart grid components, including distributed energy sources and distribution feeder components, communication infrastructures for smart grid operation, advanced metering infrastructure, advanced control methods and demand and response management. Other topics include the distribution feeder analysis, impact of smart grid component integration on grid operation and the evaluation of grid reliability. Prerequisite: Graduate student status in the College of Technology or in another school (with appropriate objectives and preparation) and leveling courses may be required based on the student's undergraduate degree. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Learn the operating principles and modeling of smart grid components.
2. Learn the roles of distributed generation technologies, communication infrastructures, advanced metering infrastructure, advanced control methods, and demand management in smart grid operation.
3. Learn to design a smart grid for a small town or city.
4. Learn to evaluate the impact of smart grid operation on distribution network reliability and resiliency (fault tolerance).
|
| TECH 50400 - Motorsports Project Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on organizational and engineering project management aspects specific to the operation of a race team or other closely related business in the extremely fast moving world of motorsports. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will demonstrate a recognition of the pace and process associated with motorsports project management and an ability to operate in that environment.
2. Students will create integrate budgets and schedules appropriate to management of motorsports projects.
3. Students will assess and analyze technical risk and synthesize engineering aspects of the design in order to develop technical risk mitigation plans appropriate for motorsports projects.
4. Students will communicate effectively, in both oral and written communications.
5. Students will demonstrate the ability to operate effectively and interact appropriately with people in dynamic teams.
|
| TECH 50700 - Measurement And Evaluation In Industry And Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (IT 50700 - PWL) This course is an introduction to measurement strategies and evaluation of data in industry and technology within the context of research design and implementation. Students in this course will learn about the research process by designing, conducting, and analyzing the data for a small empirical research project. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TECH 52100 - Practicum In Motorsports Design And Application |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. This course comprises a study conducted while the student is working with a race team. The student’s experience will be overseen and monitored by IUPUI faculty. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will demonstrate their ability to operate effectively while embedded in a race team, or equivalent, situation, analyzing data, synthesizing conflicting inputs, integrating the various needs of the organization and making appropriate technical decisions.
2. Students will integrate their theoretical and practical learning and apply it to a real world motorsports industry scenario.
3. Students will communicate effectively, in both oral and written communications.
|
| TECH 52200 - Sustainability Foundations |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis is placed on definitions of sustainability for corporate, governmental and non-governmental organizations, as well as the frameworks used for developing and implementing sustainability programs. Areas of emphasis in environmental, economic, social, and energy sustainability are explored along with policy and regulations that apply to decision-making. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate knowledge in environmental, economic, energy, and social aspects of sustainability.
2. Identify key measurements for sustainability.
3. Understand the frameworks and system approaches for developing and implementing sustainability for both the public and private sectors.
4. Recognize policies and regulations needed for sustainability efforts.
5. Prepare and present a major project demonstrating in-depth knowledge of the current state of the literature, major challenges and proposed solutions for a specific sustainability project.
|
| TECH 52300 - Sustainable Critical Infrastructures |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an applied sustainability course that explores critical infrastructures needed for sustainability efforts, and explores several industrial segments in-depth including supply chain and energy. Frameworks for evaluating benefits versus risks will be introduced as well as metrics for evaluating. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate knowledge in critical infrastructures and policy implications for maintaining environmental, economic, energy, and social aspects of sustainability.
2. Identify key metrics for evaluating sustainability program effectiveness for both the public and private sectors.
3. Develop policies and regulations needed for sustainability efforts.
4. Prepare and present a major project demonstrating in-depth knowledge of the current state of the literature, major challenges and proposed solutions for a specific sustainability project.
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| TECH 52400 - Sustainability Analysis Assessment |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Applied research project where students conduct a sustainability project under instructor guidance. Emphasis is on new developments relating to technical and operational aspects of sustainability as it applied in industry using triple bottom line evaluations. This course emphasizes a holistic approach to sustainability that includes environmental, economic, and social aspects as well as the impact of policy, standards and regulations on decision-making for sustainability. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe and discuss multiple frameworks by which sustainability may be applied and evaluated.
2. Demonstrate knowledge of seminal works in sustainability models, assessments and measurements.
3. Evaluate the sustainability of a product or process.
4. Independently design and implement sustainability improvements in a product or process.
5. Critically evaluate policies, standards and regulations in applied studies.
6. Demonstrate the research knowledge and skills required to conduct an applied sustainability project.
7. Prepare and present a major product demonstrating in-depth knowledge of the current state of the literature, major challenges and proposed solutions for a specific sustainability project.
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| TECH 53100 - Motorsports Topics Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Featuring a variety of special topics and guest speakers tying together the concepts of design, modeling, and testing from an undergraduate program in motorsports engineering or related field. Also including biological sciences and psychology of racing, and pertinent current events topics from the motorsports industry. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will demonstrate a mastery of diverse topics related to the motorsports industry and the ability to synthesize and analyze aspects of those topics to arrive at decisions appropriate for a dynamic motorsport organization.
2. Students will integrate the concepts from various topics within the motorsports industry in a holistic fashion.
3. Students will communicate effectively, in both oral and written communications.
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| TECH 54000 - Reliability And Maintenance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of maintainability, maintenance, and reliability methods during product and systems design phase for mechanical and electronic devices. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| TECH 56100 - Industrial Projects Management And Control |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An exposition of planning, scheduling, and controlling of a project during its life cycle. Topics include the use of project-management techniques, such as PERT (Project Evaluation and Review Technique) and Gantt charts and other techniques of selecting, planning, scheduling, and controlling projects. Covers resources optimization and risk management techniques. Involves computer applications and software tools in project management.
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| TECH 56200 - Teaching Engineering Technology Content And Laboratories |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students learn the fundamental techniques in teaching engineering and technology education. This course provides students with the skills and knowledge of teaching information and communication systems, construction, manufacturing processes, and energy/power/technologies. This course will develop the skills needed to manage and plan a technology laboratory. It covers an overview of the importance of technology content areas and appropriate ways to teach technology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an in-depth understanding of technology operations and concepts and best practices for teaching these operations and concepts to students.
2. Plan, design, and model effective learning environments and multiple experiences supported by technology that maximize student learning.
3. Apply technology to facilitate a variety of effective assessment and evaluation strategies.
4. Use technology to enhance and improve personal productivity and professional practice.
5. Develop an understanding of the development and implementation of technology infrastructure, procedures, policies, plans, laboratories and budgets for secondary schools.
6. Explain the importance of the shared vision for campus integration of technology and foster an environment and culture conducive to the realization of the vision.
7. Describe the proper procedures for planning and managing a technology education laboratory.
8. Develop techniques for planning and organizing laboratory tools, supplies, and equipment for efficient and educationally sound laboratory operation.
9. Develop a realization of the importance of safety in technology education facilities and become familiar with prescribed methods of rendering facilities safe for student activities.
10. Perform a facility safety inspection, identifying hazards and noting methods of abatement.
11. Develop an awareness of government requirements and mandates as they relate to the technology education laboratory.
12. Develop systems for inventory, purchase, and maintenance of equipment and supplies for an instructional facility.
13. Design a technology education laboratory.
|
| TECH 56300 - History, Trends, And Limitations Of Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students learn the fundamental concepts in engineering and technology education. This includes knowledge of information and communication systems, constructions, manufacturing processes, energy/power/transportation technologies, and the overall impact of individuals on the environment within the context of society. This course develops the philosophy and nature of technology as an education discipline. It covers an overview of the importance of technology in history. Students also learn the limitations and scope that impacts the field of engineering technology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Learning Objectives:
1. Discuss the characteristics and scope of technology.
2. Discuss the relationships between technology and social, cultural, political, and economic systems.
3. Discuss the importance of significant technological innovations on the history of human kind.
4. Discuss the role of society in the development and use of technology.
5. Discuss the relationship among technologies and the connections between technology and other disciplines.
6. Complete an electronic portfolio that follows the criteria of their state induction.
7. Describe the proper procedures for planning and managing a technology education laboratory.
8. Develop techniques for planning and organizing laboratory tools, supplies, and equipment for efficient and educationally sound laboratory operation.
9. Develop a realization of the importance of safety in technology education facilities and become familiar with prescribed methods of rendering facilities safe for student activities.
10. Perform a facility safety inspection, identifying hazards and noting methods of abatement.
11. Develop an awareness of government requirements and mandates, as they relate to the technology education laboratory.
12. Develop systems for inventory, purchase, and maintenance of equipment and supplies for an instructional facility.
13. Design a technology education laboratory.
14. Describe the disciplines that comprise career and technical education and their interrelationship.
15. Define terms associated with the field of technology education.
16. Identify and describe the major historical events that influenced both career and technical education, and technology education.
17. Identify professional associations and journals in the field of technology education.
18. Describe Purdue University’s degree requirements for technology education.
19. Describe Indiana’s certification requirements for technology education.
20. Develop and demonstrate a scene of professionalism.
21. Discuss the role of technology education in today’s and tomorrow’s educational systems.
22. Discuss trends and issues related to the field of technology education.
23. Compile an initial professional teaching portfolio.
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| TECH 56900 - Simulation Modeling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to computer simulation of waiting lines (queues), especially those that pertain to manufacturing. Topics include elementary queueing systems modeling and analysis, the effects of variability, notation, queue behavior, and load balancing. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| TECH 57400 - Advanced Quality Engineering Methods |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Quality engineering methods for quality planning, improvement and control with applications in manufacturing and service, emphasizing both on-line and off-line methods. Topics include modern quality philosophies and methods, control charts, process capability studies, loss functions and robust engineering, and application of multiple regression models in quality engineering. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| TECH 57800 - Energy Resource Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will concentrate on four major components of Energy Resource Management: Supply, Demand, Regulation and Environment. Energy audits, energy economics, metering, performance contracting and financing with demand response, measurement, verification, equipment applications, and systems will be studied. An overview of alternative energy as well as the latest energy efficient lighting technology will be given. The quantitative analysis of water, air gas electricity and steam (WAGES) will be given. This course presents the key concepts and methods of energy efficiency. It explores how energy is converted into useful services and the role of increased efficiency in providing those services with less energy. The different forms of efficiency improvements and conservation are introduced, drawing upon examples in transportation, buildings, and industry. Case studies of energy auditing, energy purchasing and conservation, maintenance and operation issues, code and standards applied in energy resource management will be given. Graduate student status or senior status with instructor approval. Leveling courses may be required based on the student undergraduate degree. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Perform auditing and economic analysis of conventional and non-conventional energy sources, seasonal variations and availability.
2. Apply management control and maintenance systems of energy resources.
3. Assess sustainability of high performance green and renewable energy.
4. Understand boilers, fired systems, cogeneration and HVAC systems.
5. Realize ground source heat systems.
6. Recognize lighting and electrical management.
7. Comprehend natural gas purchasing and thermal storage.
8. Know codes and standards.
9. Identify utility de-regulation and energy systems outsourcing.
10. Grasp energy security risk analysis methods.
11. Handle financing Energy Resource Management projects.
|
| TECH 57900 - Sustainability Engineering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The course will introduce the student to Sustainability Engineering and technologies that are used in the managing of organizational operations. Permission of instructor required. Prerequisite: Graduate student status or Senior status with instructor approval. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the relevant science and technology within the framework of environmental science and engineering energy, sustainability management and environmental economics.
2. Ability to break down the barriers between and within disciplines and to promote the required actions.
3. Ability to apply engineering/technological decision-making tools and methodologies to sustainability-related problems.
4. Ability to demonstrate capacity to distinguish professional and ethical responsibilities associated with the practice of engineering.
|
| TECH 58100 - Workshop In Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. Advanced study of technical and professional topics. Emphasis is on new developments relating to technical, operational, and training aspects of industry and technology education. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture 1, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
IUPUI
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| TECH 58200 - Motorsports Special Topics |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course involves an independent or directed study conducted under the guidance of a department faculty member. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will demonstrate a mastery of diverse topics related to a specific aspect of the motorsports industry and the ability to analyze data, synthesize conflicting inputs, integrate the various needs of a project and make appropriate technical decisions.
2. Students will integrate the concepts from various topics within the motorsports industry in a holistic fashion.
3. Students will communicate effectively, in both oral and written communications.
|
| TECH 59500 - Workshop In advanced Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. Advanced study of technical and professional topics. Emphasis is on new developments relating to technical, operational, and training aspects of industry and technology education. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| TECH 59800 - Directed MS Project |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A formal investigation of a particular problem under the guidance of the advisory committee. Enrollment during at least two consecutive terms for a total of three credits is required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| TECH 60100 - Research Seminar In Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course provides an introduction to the field and scholarship of Technology and the skills necessary for success. Prerequisite: Doctoral student standing. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 5 times
|
| TECH 60200 - Seminar In Technology And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course focuses on relevant issues and challenges facing professionals in technology-related careers. Topics may include, but are not limited to: ethics, legal issues, public policy, defining technology, and technology and society. Prerequisite: Doctoral student standing. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| TECH 62100 - Seminar In Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Current problems in Technology. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| TECH 63700 - Research Focus: The Social Internet |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. TECH 63700 simulates an interdisciplinary think tank environment where students identify research questions and examine the impact of social media and social networking technologies on various aspects of society, business, culture, communication, web experience, and interface design. The course integrates immersion in social media with consideration of several theoretical perspectives from diverse fields. Students complete an original research project customized to fit individual or team interests. The course encourages theoretical and methodological diversity. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Conduct independent research with and about social media on topics of their own interest.
2. Recognize the defining principles of social media.
3. Recognize the changes effected by social media in some major aspects of culture and society, as well as their own area of interest.
4. Identify major trends in social media research.
5. Create social media solutions and apply them to their own area of interest.
|
| TECH 64100 - Advanced Analytics For Research And Industry |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Offers students training and experience in advanced parametric statistical techniques in both research and industrial applications. While statistical theory necessary to properly conduct analyses will be discussed, this course focuses on practical applications of analysis strategies, including issues in handling data from organizations and industry settings. Material includes overview and implementation of relevant statistical software applications. Practical skills in presenting advanced analyses to both professional and scientific audiences is a key component of the course. Prerequisites: IT 50700 or STAT 50100. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the types of analyses available to solve various industrial and organizational problems, the rationale behind analytic selection, and be able to select the appropriate analyses for a variety of situations.
2. Explain the role of employees at all levels in planning, conducting, or participating in effective research, and how to properly integrate input and data from various levels of an organization or laboratory research design into comprehensive analyses.
3. Design, set up, run, evaluate, and interpret advanced statistical analyses in real-world and laboratory settings, and explain these findings to both lay and expert audiences.
4. Read, interpret and critically evaluate complex and multivariate analyses reported in applied research journals.
5. Set up and interpret computer data sets and outputs which are required to carry out analyses, and write up in proper publication format the results of such outputs.
|
| TECH 64600 - Analysis Of Research In Industry And Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Analysis of research and evaluation of research reports. Emphasis on understanding the application of fundamental statistical methods in design and interpretation of research findings in industrial, technical, and human resource development environments. Prerequisite: Master's student standing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
PU Fort Wayne
IUPUI
Calumet
West Lafayette
|
| TECH 69000 - Independent Study In Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Intensive individual study of selected current developments and issues in technology. A faculty sponsor is required for this course. Prerequisite: Doctoral student standing. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| TECH 69500 - Graduate Professional Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Advanced professional experience in Technology. The experience is coordinated by the major professor with cooperation of a participating employer. Students submit a summary report. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Effectively communicate their field of study.
2. Think critically, creatively, and solve problems in Technology.
|
| TECH 69700 - Qualitative Research Methods In Technology Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In-depth examination of qualitative methods and frameworks used in technology research. Students learn by application a variety of methods from the qualitative research toolbox such as interviewing, focus groups, observation, and experience analysis. TECH 69700 prepares students to plan, pilot, and assess an original qualitative research study and to integrate qualitative research findings in the technology design and evaluation process. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Explain the epistemological assumptions underlying qualitative research methods.
2. Identify and evaluate various types of qualitative research techniques.
3. Plan a research study using qualitative research methods.
4. Conduct a research study using qualitative research methods.
5. Write up a qualitative research scholarly paper.
6. Assess and analyze the validity of qualitative research.
|
| TECH 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| TECH 90000 - Tech Orientation |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| TECH 90100 - Tech Orientation |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: College of Technology Admin
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| TECH V3000 - Workplace Diversity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course increases the understanding of the relationship between culture and communication, with emphasis on the impact of culture on workplace practices. Students will be introduced to the concept of an “inclusive workplace”. Additional emphasis on the advantages of diversity management as a workplace motivator will be discussed. Authentic examples and case studies will be used to bring the content life. Students will develop a “personalized” definition of workplace diversity. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| TECH V3100 - Technology Project Applications I |
|
Credit Hours: 5.00. This Technology Specialist course is designed to extend the student’s technical skills in an area of technology. Each student will derive a contemporary project which is directly related to their AS/AAS degree, utilize modern techniques, and fabricate an advanced technology project. The student will coordinate their project with the BS degree instructor and a technology faculty member who has a background and expertise in the student’s AS/AAS field of technology. The student will be responsible for the project development, purchase of the components, and fabrication of the project. The student will also keep a logbook and write a final report of the completed process. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Vincennes
|
| TEL R2870 - Process And Effects Of Mass Communications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to 1) communication strategies and processes in print, radio, television, film, and the Internet and 2) psychological and social effects of these processes on various audiences in various situations.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| TEL R3090 - Television Production |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the production process in the studio and in the field.
Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| TEL R4040 - Topical Seminar In Telecommunications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of problems and issues of telecommunications in contemporary society. May be taken three times for credit with different topics.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| TEL T1010 - Living In The Information Age |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Assesses how development in communications systems and technology affect our lives today and may affect them tomorrow. Reviews underlying technologies. Considers implications for individuals, institutions, and society from psychological, sociological, legal/political, business/economic, and cultural perspectives. Credit not given for both T1010 and T2040. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TEL T2050 - Introduction To Media And Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will explore the role of media in today’s society from the perspectives of social and psychological processes and effects, economics, technology and public persuasion. Specific focus will be given to the construction of social meaning associated with mediated messages as well as the range of uses and effects of exposure to mediated messages in individuals, groups, organizations, and society. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TEL T2060 - Design And Production Area |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides a conceptual framework for writing, designing, and evaluating a variety of media products. This is not a hands-on production course but does offer an overview of the production process. Topics include scriptwriting, production design, visualization, composition, editing styles, and others. This course is a prerequisite for advanced-level courses in the design/production area. Credit not given for both T2730 and T2060. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TEL T2070 - Introduction To Telecommunications Industry And Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introductory analysis using a case-study method of how telecommunications industries such as broadcasting, cable, and telephone are structured, funded, and regulated; how telecommunications organizations create and market programs and products, and how they manage their operations. Credit not given for both T274 and T207. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TEL T2110 - Writing For Electronic Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Writing for the Electronic Media provides an introduction to basic media writing principles. Students will learn to sharpen their grammar and composition skills, and discuss
selection and treatment of content for the media. The class will discuss and practice formats used for radio, television, news, sports and promotions. We will discuss and practice other forms of
media writing, such as copywriting for the advertising industry and public relations writing. By the end of the semester, you should be able to create professional copy in the proper media format. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TEL T2730 - Media Program Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides a conceptual framework for writing, designing, and evaluating a variety of media products. Media program design is not a hands-on production course, but does offer an overview of the production process. Topics include script-writing, production design, visualization, composition, editing styles, and others. This course is a prerequisite for some advanced-level courses in the design/production area.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| TEL T2830 - Introduction To Production Techniques And Practices |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the production process in the studio and in the field.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| TEL T3220 - Telecommunications Networks |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The evolution of telecommunication network technology, policy economics, and industries from the 1870s to the present. Basic telecommunication transmission and switching, general operational concepts, and societal and cultural effect of telephony in the United States. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TEL T3270 - Data Communications |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the basic concepts for understanding the integration of computers and telecommunications networks. The impact of environmental factors on the design of data networks. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TEL T3360 - Digital Video Production |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Digitizing, A/V import, editing, video and audio effects, NTSC and compressed output, and other topics related to video finishing in major non-linear editing software. Applications include broadcast television, video art, commercial and industrial work, the Web and platform-based interactive multimedia. (Will need to demonstrate fluency with Macintosh and PC platforms.). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| TEL T3370 - Video Field Production |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Planning, writing, producing, and editing program inserts and segments for television using portable video equipment.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| TEL T3440 - Programming Strategies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Programming strategies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TEL T3470 - Promotional And Marketing In Telecom |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Topics include promotional and marketing in telecommunication. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TEL T4460 - Telecommunications Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on telecommunications management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TEL T4530 - Topics In Seminar Industrial And Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Exploration of management or strategic problems and issues in telecommunications. May be repeated with different topics for a maximum of 6 credit hours. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| TEL T4970 - Telecommunications Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Telecommunications internship. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| TEL T4980 - Projects In Telecommunications |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individual projects in an area of telecommunications. May be repeated up to a maximum of 3 credit hours. Advanced approval of a project by a faculty Supervisor and the Chairperson. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Richmond
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| THTR 13300 - Survey Of Acting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. For non-theatre majors. Training and exercise in the basic elements of acting and the use of the stage. Study of historical and theoretical backgrounds of acting and of different types of plays and staging. Typically offered Fall Spring.
CTL:IFA 1301 Introduction To Acting
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 13400 - Fundamentals of Performance |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory survey of the arts of acting and directing as practiced in the world today. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| THTR 13600 - Rehearsal And Performance I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Study and practice of rehearsal techniques of stage performance. Students will be assigned to acting or other rehearsal activities during semester's major production. May not be taken concurrently with THTR 16800, 33600, or 36800. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| THTR 13800 - Acting I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Student experientially learns basic acting skills through a structured series of exercises. Emphasis is on developing and controlling concentration, creation of basic realities, improvisation. May not be taken concurrently with THTR 16800, 33600, or 36800. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| THTR 15800 - Stagecraft |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theory and application of current and traditional technical theatre practices. Training in stage carpentry, painting, and pre-production organization. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| THTR 16000 - Introduction To Scene Design And Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is designed to introduce the students to the process and tools of scene design and technology. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 16100 - Introduction To Costume Design And Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to analytical, artistic, and practical skills required when creating costumes for theatre. Beginning training in elements and principles of design, rendering and presentation skills. Elementary instruction in costume construction, including hand and machine sewing, costume crafts, and basic patterning. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 16200 - Introduction To Light Design And Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A course that introduces the student to the basic equipment and design process of stage lighting design. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 16300 - Introduction To Sound Design And Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to theatre sound design and technology for general theatre students. Involvement in Division of Theatre production program. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 16400 - Introduction To Theatre Organization And Management |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A theoretical study of performing arts management and backstage operations from audition through performance. Techniques of scheduling, production management, stage management, technical direction, house management, safety issues, and emergency procedures. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 16800 - Theatre Production I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. Study and application of aspects of theatre production. Practice in various production skills. Students will be assigned to positions in semester's major production. May not be taken concurrently with THTR 13600, 33600, or 36800. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| THTR 20100 - Theatre Appreciation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Understanding and appreciation of the theatre's role in the modern world, dramatic structure and analysis, the actor, director, designer, and critic; attendance at current stage productions; class discussion of production elements. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
CTL:IFA 1302 Theatre Appreciation
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Core Transfer Library, Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, UC-Humanities
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
TSW-Lafayette
|
| THTR 21300 - Voice For The Actor |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Designed to heighten the actor's awareness of the vocal instrument. Elementary vocal techniques will be practiced to expand the student's vocal flexibility and range. Emphasis on freeing habitual vocal tensions and teaching the student the fundamentals of vocal health. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 23300 - Acting I: Acting Technique |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Beginning training and exercises in the basic elements of acting, including vocal and physical preparation, sensory awareness, releasing the imagination and a basic understanding of action and objective. Staging exercises and terminology are emphasized. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 23500 - Vocal/Physical Preparation |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Vocal/Physical Preparation is designed to increase and deepen student's physical awareness, develop physical and vocal stamina, flexibility and strength, modify habitual modes of expression, expand vocal and physical range, and increase students¿ ability to respond expressively. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
1. To eliminate unnecessary vocal and physical tension.
2. To impart a comprehensive vocal and physical regimen.
3. To expand the student¿s physical and vocal range of expression.
4. To help the student become a more versatile, more expressive, and more responsive human being.
|
| THTR 23800 - Acting II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the Stanislavski Method through scene work. The student will present four to eight scenes of increasing complexity, beginning with modern, realistic drama. Textual analysis, advanced game work and improvisation. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| THTR 25300 - Survey Of Audio Production |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to theories and techniques of audio production. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will have an understanding of the basics of audio production, including recording, editing, and studio practices.
2. Beginning experience with MIDI sequencing, Digital Audio Workshop (MOTU Digital Performer), and Yamaha digital soundboards.
|
| THTR 25400 - Drafting For Theatre |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Projects course in drafting for the theatre using graphic standards and presentations techniques accepted in the performing arts industry. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 25600 - Stage Make-Up |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Study of facial anatomy, the aging process, the principles of light and shadow, and character analysis. Theory and practice in the basic techniques of applying stage makeup. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 26100 - Introduction to Theatrical Design Class |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to the principles and practices of contemporary theatrical design. Emphasis on the study and development of unified production theory and its practical application to the areas of theatrical design. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| THTR 26300 - Introduction To Sound Studios |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to theories and techniques of audio production. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 26400 - Rendering Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A project approach to the development of the student's ability to pictorially represent ideas through drawing, drafting, painting, etc. Emphasis on clarity of intention and effective presentation of ideas through various media and techniques. Majors have priority. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 26500 - Introduction To Stage Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an introductory course in the craft of theatre stage management. This course will introduce the student to the procedures, responsibilities, rules and professional opportunities in theatre state management. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Learning Objectives:
1. Will understand what personal qualities make a good stage manager.
2. Will appreciate the responsibilities a stage manager has in producing a play.
3. Will be able to stage manage a stage production if called upon.
|
| THTR 27000 - Theatrical Materials And Techniques I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to traditional scenery construction materials and techniques; rigging techniques and concepts, and scenery construction equipment and technology. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 28400 - Textual Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of dramatic structure: theme, form, style, genre, and characterization as applied to selected plays. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| THTR 29000 - Special Topics In Theatre |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics will vary. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| THTR 30800 - The History And Development Of The American Musical Theatre |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of various musical genres that contributed to the development of the American musical theatre. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn to identify various musical genres that contributed to the development of American musical theatre.
2. Students will gain skills in analyzing and critiquing librettos/scripts as well as the evaluations of specific productions.
3. Students will be exposed to a wide variety of historical material that can be applied to the analysis of the art of musical theatre.
4. Students will be enriched by increasing their aesthetic awareness and appreciation of the musical theatre as a distinctly American art form.
|
| THTR 32300 - Acting: Movement For The Actor |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to heighten body awareness in movement and stillness. Characterization techniques will be practiced that expand the student's flexibility, aerobic capacity, strength, agility, and range of self-expression. Emphasis on freeing habitual tension patterns through the exploration of expressive movement. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| THTR 33300 - Acting II: Scene Study |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continued development of the basic acting tools of objectives, actions, justification, personalization; continued vocal and physical work; introduction of script and character analysis; and the introduction of audition techniques. The course will use material from contemporary dramatic literature in the rehearsal process. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 33400 - Acting III: Acting For The Camera |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continued development of acting technique, as it relates to challenges unique to acting on film, television and commercials. Students will develop an effective process for on-camera performance. Class exercises/presentations are recorded, viewed and critiqued by the students and the instructor. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will be able to perform specific tasks as it relates to acting on camera, such as acting styles required for commerical, industrial, sitcom and film; hitting the mark, quick-study memorization skills; acting with different camera angles; improvisational acting in scene work; camera vocal technique and camera technology.
|
| THTR 33600 - Rehearsal And Performance II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. The study and practice of rehearsal techniques and stage performance. Students will be assigned to acting and stage management duties in experimental and major stage productions. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| THTR 33800 - Acting III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Professional acting studio. Advanced character development focusing on the demands of period styles work. Possible styles to be covered include: Greek Theatre, Restoration/Comedy of Manners, Elizabethan, and Contemporary Realism. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| THTR 34700 - Dramatic Performance |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Students who take THTR 34700 will be significant participants in a full-scale dramatic production at Purdue North Central, either as actors or as members of the production crew. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
Depending on their duties as part of the production, students can expect to gain experience in one or more of the following areas:
1. The demands of preparing a role for performance.
2. Set and scenery design.
3. Lighting design.
4. Sound design and music.
|
| THTR 34800 - Dramatic Performance In Context |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students who take THTR 34800 will be significant participants in a full-scale dramatic production at Purdue North Central, either as actors or as members of the production crew. In addition to their responsibilities in the production, students will attend a weekly class on the literary and cultural content of the play in question, along with instruction in acting. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
North Central
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
Learning Objectives:
Depending on their duties as part of the production, students can expect to gain experience in one or more of the following areas:
1. The demands of preparing a role for performance.
2. Set and scenery design.
3. Lighting design.
4. Sound design and music.
5. The literary and cultural context of the play.
6. An introduction to acting.
|
| THTR 35100 - Costume Techniques I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Offered in 2001-2002 and alternate years. A practical study of basic sewing skills and construction techniques used in the construction of theatre costumes. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| THTR 35300 - Theater Audio Techniques I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Offered 2002-2003 and alternate years. A theoretical and practical study of the technical aspects of audio as they relate to theatre. The course will include specifications, layout and installation techniques, operation, and maintenance of theatre sound systems, etc. Majors have priority. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 35400 - Painting For The Stage |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Offered in 2001-2002 and alternate years. The principles and practice of painting for the stage. Study of tools, media, and techniques used in traditional scenic painting, costume painting, and the creation of dimensionality on various surfaces. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 35500 - American Musical Theatre |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (MUS 35500) A study of the origin, artistry, and unique qualities of the American musical theatre. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Credit By Exam, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Calumet
|
| THTR 36000 - Scenic Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Offered in 2000-2001 and alternate years. Project course in utilizing the principles of design as they can be formed into an environment for dramatic action. Emphasis on the interrelationship among all aspects of production and how the scenic element becomes a building block toward total picturization. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 36100 - Costume Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Offered in alternate years. Theory and principles of design specifically applied to stage costume design. Emphasis on the interrelationship of all aspects of production and how the costume becomes a building block toward total picturization. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 36200 - Light Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A project course in utilizing the principles of design as they can convey an environment and its qualities to further dramatic action. Emphasis on the interrelationship among all aspects of production and how light becomes a building block toward total picturization. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 36300 - Sound Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Offered in 2001-2002 and alternate years. Project course in utilizing the principles of design as they can be formed into auditory response and environment. Emphasis on the interrelationship among all aspects of production and how sound becomes a building block toward total picturization. Majors have priority. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 36500 - Period Style for the Theatre I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of developments in the history of dress, decor and architecture from the primitive through the 17th century. Emphasis on interpretation of said developments in contemporary theatre practice. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| THTR 36600 - Period Style for the Theatre II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of developments in the history of dress, decor and architecture from the 18th century through the present. Emphasis on interpretation of said developments in contemporary theatre practice. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| THTR 36800 - Theatre Production II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. The study and application of theatre practices. Students will be assigned to all levels of departmental production of applied practice. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| THTR 37500 - Theatrical Composition |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will explore various contemporary techniques to inspire the creation of theatre. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 12 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Produce an original work involving the creation or application of knowledge, performance or service.
2. Report the results of original work through a discipline-appropriate product.
3. Demonstrate a high level of personal integrity and professional ethics by understanding the ethical responsibilities related to the profession associated with the subject of the capstone project.
4. Demonstrate critical-thinking abilities and /or familiarity with quantitative and qualitative reasoning.
5. Demonstrate methods of devising theatre pieces by efficiently generating and shaping material through exercises and rehearsals.
6. Create powerful, resonant, vibrant, and engaging material for performance as actors, directors, designers and writers.
7. Create theatrical space in typically non-theatrical areas (site-specific theatre).
8. Exhibit problem solving skills through the development of new material in new spaces.
9. Demonstrate an understanding of ensemble through leadership, collaboration, communication and mutual respect.
|
| THTR 37600 - Introduction To Playwriting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction survey of the principles of dramatic construction, with emphasis on the practice of writing for the stage. Each student's process and writing style are carefully examined. Workshop productions of works-in-progress of each student are expected. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| THTR 38000 - History Of Theatre I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theatre history from origins through 1700, with special attention to significant plays and playwrights and the physical development of the theatre. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 38100 - History Of Theatre II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Theatre history from 18th to 21st century with special attention to significant plays and playwrights and the physical development of the theatre. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 39000 - Directed Study Of Special Theatre Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An undergraduate level, individualized, and intensive study of any aspect of theatre required by the student's plan of study. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| THTR 41300 - Advanced Voice For The Stage |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced work in vocal production for performance. Emphasis on development of the full resonant voice, vocal power and range, and standard American speech. Special attention paid to application of knowledge to various performance situations and environments. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 43300 - Acting IV: Acting Shakespeare |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continued development of acting and audition techniques, advancing to the demands of Shakespeare, verse drama and/or period styles work, including textual analysis and/or historical research. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 43400 - Advanced Acting Skills |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A specially designed class for the advanced undergraduate actor. Areas of study may include period/ style acting; verse performance; mask work; advanced characterization; and audition techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 43800 - Acting IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Professional acting studio. Professional issues class preparing the advanced acting student for the rigors of the professional and graduate level theatre arenas. Students will explore the skills of monologue auditions, cold readings, improvisational auditions, musical theatre auditions, acting for the camera, and interviews as well as headshot and resume development. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| THTR 44000 - Directing: Page To Stage |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on theoretical and practical understanding of the essential principles and fundamentals of directing for the stage. Students will learn a proven directorial methodology and engage in essential research and written and practical presentations throughout. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 45800 - Problems In Theatre Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A tutorial in technical theatre. Available for students who wish to do more extensive work in theatre technology. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| THTR 46800 - Problems In Theatre Design |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A tutorial in theatre design. Available for students who wish to do more extensive work in the design aspects of production. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| THTR 47000 - Theatre And Society I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of theatre history, performance, and dramatic literature from the primitive eras through the Renaissance. Emphasis on the relationship of theatre to its society. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| THTR 47100 - Theatre And Society II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of theatre history, performance and dramatic literature from 1660 to the present. Emphasis on the relationship of theatre to its society. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| THTR 49000 - Special Topics In Theatre |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Topics will vary. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| THTR 49900 - Senior Performance Project |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. All theatre majors will register for this course, which serves as the curricular capstone, during their final semester. Students will develop, with their advisor, a public performance or presentation appropriate to their area of emphasis. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| THTR 50100 - Stage Management |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A combination of lectures on and practical experiences in planning and conducting the rehearsal sequence leading to the running of a production. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| THTR 50400 - Summer Repertory Theatre |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Participation in the cast, crew, or management of Department of Theatre summer theatre projects. Typically offered Fall Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| THTR 51000 - Stage Dialects |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A study of the actor's use of dialects. Learning dialects and their practical use through scene study. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 51300 - Vocal Production For The Stage I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The study of the voice production mechanism. Emphasis on exercises in relaxation, breath, alignment, and tonal focus. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 51400 - Vocal Production For The Stage II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Continuation of Vocal Production for the Stage I. Emphasis on exercises in vocal exploration through application to performance. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 52300 - Creating A Character I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Techniques towards the physical embodiment of a character. Typically offered Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 52400 - Creating A Character II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced techniques towards the physical embodiment of a character. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 52500 - Theatrical Characterization |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The discovery of a unique performing personality through the use of a wide range of mask and clown characterization techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 52600 - Advanced Stage Movement |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Advanced movement training, including one or more of the following: stage combat, circus skills, gymnastics, period movement, dance, repatterning techniques, martial arts disciplines, and explorations into character. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| THTR 53200 - Professional Issues In Theatre |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Training in the techniques of the prepared audition, cold readings, improvisational auditions, and interviews. A survey of various employment opportunities and the demands of the professional theatre, educational theatre, and professional training. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 53300 - Acting Technique |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive study of the internal and external elements of acting through the use of improvisational principles within the context of scene study. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| THTR 53500 - Vocal/Physical Preparation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Practice in the coordination of the vocal and physical apparatus of the actor. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 5 times
|
| THTR 53600 - Advanced Problems In Acting |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Advanced study of selected problems in acting, including detailed role and play analyses, thorough rehearsals and critiques of performance. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| THTR 53800 - Acting For The Camera |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of acting styles and audition techniques for the camera. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 53900 - Period Style For The Actor |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Applied focus on theatrical styles of acting. Scene study related to the development of skills necessary to perform work from a variety of periods and a variety of genres. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| THTR 54000 - Advanced Directing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of principles of directing to the various types of drama; laboratory practice in directing plays for experimental production. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 54500 - Directional Process In Production |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of models the director uses when dealing with the other creative personnel involved in production. Primary emphasis will be placed on the directoral and actoral processes as they relate to the work of the designers and technicians. Offered in alternate years. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 55000 - Advanced Scenery Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A theoretical and practical study of theatrical scenery planning, construction, and stage use. Topics will vary by semester and will include project management techniques, mechanical design, automation systems, show control systems, rigging, and safety issues. Permission of instructor required
. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| THTR 55100 - Advanced Costume Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced study of specialized skills and construction techniques used in the creation of theatre costumes. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| THTR 55300 - Theatre Audio Technology II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of the technical aspects of audio as they relate to use of, and experimentation with, various techniques in the design, installation, and specification of theatre sound systems, etc. Priority for majors. Offered in alternate years. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 55400 - Advanced Theatre Drafting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced projects course in drafting for the theatre. Emphasis on accepted theatrical drafting, standards, types of drawing, and presentation formats. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Recitation, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 55600 - Advanced Stage Makeup |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced training and practice in the application of theatrical makeup. Emphasis on problem solving and varied materials and application techniques. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 55800 - Advanced Problems In Theatre Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Advanced study and application of technical theatre problems and practice. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| THTR 56000 - Advanced Scenic Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study of the principles of design and their application to specific staging problems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 56100 - Advanced Costume Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study of the principles of costume design and their application to specific problems. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| THTR 56200 - Advanced Light Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study of the principles of light design and their application to specific lighting problems. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| THTR 56300 - Advanced Sound Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study of the principles of sound design for theatre and theory application to specific problems. Offered in alternate years. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 56400 - Theatrical Rendering |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides advanced training in rendering techniques used by theatrical designers. Students will study perspective drawing, figure drawing, painting, and explore different materials used by designers to communicate their artistic vision. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 56700 - Model Construction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Model construction is one of many skills required of scene designers and is a preferred communication tool for many directors and designers. This course offers a variety of practical exercises for presenting both blueline and full color models. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 56800 - Advanced Problems In Design |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A described tutorial in theatrical design or design research. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| THTR 56900 - Special Problems In Audio Production |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study and application of sound studio production techniques to different audio related disciplines. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| THTR 57001 - Statics And Structures For Theatre I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study of static forces and analysis of the ability of specific structural shapes and materials traditionally used in theatrical scenery construction to resist these forces. This course will be taught both fall and spring semesters once every three years. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 57002 - Statics And Structures For Theatre II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced study of static forces and analysis of the ability of specific structural shapes and materials traditionally used in theatrical scenery construction to resist these forces. This course will be taught both fall and spring semesters once every three years. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 58000 - Period Style For The Designer |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of the major aesthetic developments in art, architecture, interior decor, costume history, and musical styles from Ancient Egypt to the present, intended for the edification of the theatre designer.
. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 58300 - History Of American Theatre |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of American (United States) theatre and drama from their beginnings to the present. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
|
| THTR 59000 - Directed Study Of Special Theatre Problems |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An individualized and intensive study of any aspect of theatre required by the student's plan of study. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
Calumet
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| THTR 59700 - Production And Design Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Training in theatrical design based upon a variety of theatrical presentation forms. The type of presentation alternates, and specific content varies each semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Studio, Studio 1
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| THTR 61300 - Classical Text I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Concentration on increasing vocal flexibility through exploration and preparation of Shakespearean texts. Permission of instructor required. Prerequisite: THTR 51400. Typically offered Spring Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 61400 - Classical Text II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of Classical Text I, with emphasis on studio scene work beginning with Shakespeare and progressing through the works of other major classical playwrights. Permission of instructor required. Prerequisite: THTR 61300. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 63300 - Interpretive Acting Techniques |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced work in script and character analysis, character development, interpretation, interaction and relationship dynamics; rehearsal of complex scenes using material from various contemporary forms and theatrical genres. Prerequisite: THTR 53300. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| THTR 64000 - Directing Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Practical experience with a university, professional, or community theatre to facilitate the transition from student to professional director. Available for graduate students in their final year. Particular assignment must be approved by the student's major professor. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 65800 - Special Problems In Technology |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. A described tutorial leading to postgraduate level project work for those students who are developing advanced theories in stage technology. Prerequisite: THTR 55800. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| THTR 66900 - Tutorial Internship For MFA |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Off-campus internship designed to provide practical field experience under professional supervision in selected situations related to the candidate's area of specialization. Arrangements for internship must be approved by the candidate's graduate advisory committee. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
Course Attributes: Coop, Full-Time Privileges
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| THTR 67000 - Script Interpretation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The study of scripts through several lenses, ranging from Aristotelian analysis to holistic, contemplative practice. The course includes seminar discussion, response papers, group projects, exercises, and a final script interpretation in the form of a formal paper. Prerequisite: THTR 60100. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 67100 - Modern Theory And Criticism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A seminar on modern performance theory, aesthetics, and practice. Emphasis on European theatre since 1875 and American theatre after 1960, with application through performance projects. Prerequisite: THTR 60100. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| THTR 69700 - MFA Terminal Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. MFA Terminal Project. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| THTR 69800 - Research MA Or MFA Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MA Or MFA Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Patti & Rusty Rueff Schl VPA
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| THTR A1900 - Art, Aesthetics And Creativity |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores artistic disciplines and associated forms, materials, and practices. Develops students' making, looking, and listening skills. Through the creative process students will explore relationships to other individuals and cultures, and will review the implications of their learning for their personal, academic, and professional pursuits. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| THTR D1100 - Social Dance |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. An introduction to the most commonly encountered social dances. To provide the beginning student with increased confidence on the dance floor in social situations. Emphasis on body placement and alignment, coordination and imagination. Special emphasis placed on the cultural aspects of the development of the dances. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| THTR D1300 - Flamenco I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. The basic elements of Spanish flamenco dance; footwork, arm movements and turns to six, eight and twelve count rhythms will be covered. Emphasis on body placement and alignment, as well as coordination and imagination will also be included.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| THTR D2050 - Choreography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will teach students to analyze and apply the basic elements that are essential for a practical theory of choreography. Students will learn to create choreography for solos and group pieces performed on stage and in other spaces. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| THTR D2500 - Middle Eastern Dance II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Continued exploration of Middle Eastern dance movement, Egyption style. Continued work with required isolations for performance of the techniques necessary for this dance style. Combines isolation and technique, with exploration of choreography as it applies to the discopline. Performance opportunities available.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| THTR T1000 - Introduction to Theatre |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. University Core Curriculum course that surveys plays selected from the major periods of dramatic productivity from the ancient Greeks through contemporary times and the historical and social elements that helped to shape them. Introduces students to an understanding and appreciation of the many faces of dramatic creativity. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| THTR T1050 - Appreciation Of Theatre |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the art of the theatre through a study of major dramatic forms and theatrical techniques. No credit for the theatre/drama major concentration.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| THTR T1150 - Oral Interpretation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to theories, methodology, and skills; oral and visual presentation of literature for audiences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| THTR T1200 - Acting I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of acting techniques through improvisational approach. Beginning scene study.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| THTR T1500 - Fundamentals Of Play Structure And Analysis |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Dramatic structure, methods of play analysis for actors, directors, designers, and students of dramatic literature.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| THTR T2100 - Appreciation Of Theatre |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the art and history of theatre through a study of major dramatic genres, theatrical elements and techniques, and current productions. No credit given for theatre and drama major concentration. Typically offered Summer, Fall and Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Richmond
|
| THTR T2200 - Acting II: Scene Study |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of major theories and aims of acting in conjunction with practice in techniques of the art of acting. Laboratory required.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| THTR T2220 - Voice For The Actor |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to develop physiological and psychological understanding of the voice as it applies specifically to the study of acting. Provides a series of exercises/techniques to free, develop, and strengthen vocal pitch, range, resonance, breath control, and articulation. Includes an introduction to the International Phonetic Alphabet and state dialects. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| THTR T2230 - Vocal And Physical Preparation I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Vocal and physical preparation for acting. Designed to develop awareness of the voice and body as instruments of communication in the study of acting. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| THTR T2250 - Stagecraft I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Fundamentals of stagecraft, scenic construction, rigging techniques, and mechanical drawing for stagecraft. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| THTR T2280 - Design For The Theatre |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of design principles and practices in all areas of the theatre. Emphasis on those aspects of design which are common to work in scenery, costumes, lighting, and makeup. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| THTR T2300 - Costume Design And Technology I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to theories, methodology, and skills for costume design for the theatre, with laboratory component in basic costume technology skills and wardrobe. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| THTR T2900 - History and Design of Stage Makeup |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Study of the history, principles, and practice of stage makeup design. Through lecture, demonstrations, and laboratory, students will have the opportunity to create makeup designs for characters from dramatic literature.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| THTR T3250 - Voice And Speech |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to voice production. Emphasizes relaxation, breathing, and the production of vocal sounds: deals with vocal habits and cultural holds through exercises and vocal work- outs. Introduction to phonetics and practical work with text while freeing the voice and redeveloping a passion for language. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| THTR T3260 - Scene Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to process of scene design, scene designer's responsibilities, scene problem solving, and exploration of visual materials and forms. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| THTR T3350 - Stage Lighting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Lighting the play, basic instrumentation and optics, color theory, electricity, and an introduction to the drafting of light plots. Laboratory required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| THTR T3490 - Theatre Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Directed projects in theatre practice connected with current productions. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| THTR T4330 - Costume Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to costume design and sketch rendering with an emphasis on the relationship of costume to character. Includes an introduction to production styles. Typically offered Spring Summer Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| THTR T4530 - Playwriting I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Dramaturgical principles and practice in dramatic writing. First semester culminates in writing of one-act play, second in long play. Scenes and plays approved by instructor are presented under supervision of author and instructor. Introduction to theories, methodology, and skills: principles of dramatic structure, practice in writing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
|
| THTR T4620 - Development Of Dramatic Art III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on the development of dramatic art Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| THTR T4830 - Topics In Theatre And Drama |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Studies in special topics not ordinarily covered in other departmental courses. May be repeated once for credit if topic differs.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| THTR T4900 - Independent Study In Theatre And Drama |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Advanced study in performance, production, reading or research.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| TLI 29900 - Special Topics In Technology Leadership & Innovation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.0 to 3.00. Hours, subject matter, and credit to be arranged by faulty. Group instruction in new or specialty areas of Technology Leadership and Innovation is provided by Technology faculty, subject to TLI curriculum committee approval. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Technology Leadrshp & Innovatn
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| TLI 49900 - Special Topics In Technology Leadership & Innovation |
|
Credit Hours: 1.0 to 3.00. Hours, subject matter, and credit to be arranged by faulty. Group instruction in new or specialty areas of Technology Leadership and Innovation is provided by Technology faculty, subject to TLI curriculum committee approval. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Technology Leadrshp & Innovatn
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
TSW-Anderson
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-Lafayette
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
TSW-Vincennes
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
|
| TLI 52100 - Drug Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A review of drug discovery and drug development, with emphasis on the regulatory aspects of these activities. Animal preclinical research and human clinical research are discussed in detail. In addition, the process for the assembly of an IND and NDA is discussed along with the Phases (I,II,III) of human clinical trials. The CMC (chemistry manufacturing and control) aspects of drug development are presented along with ICH documents and manufacturing process analytical technologies. The course concludes with a brief review of international regulatory issues and patents. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Technology Leadrshp & Innovatn
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Comprehend strategies used for biotechnology innovation: regulatory and quality documents and materials in the areas of drug development and discovery.
2. Ability to meld theory and practice.
3. Examine issues rationally, logically, and coherently; and acquire, evaluate, and synthesize information and knowledge relevant to an identified problem; and make sound decisions in both familiar and unfamiliar contexts.
4. Read, write, speak, listen, and use data, media and computers to send and respond effectively to communication for varied audiences and purposes.
5. Demonstrate sensitivity to and facility with personal values and ethical principles in professional and social contexts.
|
| TLI 52200 - Good Regulatory Practice |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Includes a review of the FDA and ICH regulations on good manufacturing, good laboratory, and good clinical practices. The meaning of these regulations, the globalization of practices, and the roles and responsibilities of various professionals implementing these regulations are addressed. Special emphasis will be detailed coverage of the process for the assembly and submission of an IND or NDA, and the function of the regulatory affairs department in a pharmaceutical company. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Technology Leadrshp & Innovatn
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the conceptual foundations and approaches to good regulatory practices and comprehend strategies used in regulatory affairs.
2. Obtain and apply broad knowledge of FDA and international law, regulations, and guidance documents for at least one category of medical products (drugs, biological products, devices).
3. Ability to meld theory and practice in regulatory affairs.
4. Examine issues rationally, logically, and coherently; and acquire, evaluate, and synthesize information and knowledge relevant to an identified problem; and make sound decisions in both familiar and unfamiliar contexts.
5. Read, write, speak, listen, and use data, media and computers to send and respond effectively to communication for varied audiences and purposes.
6. Demonstrate sensitivity to and facility with personal values and ethical principles in professional and social contexts.
7. Recognize the factors that influence regulatory decisions, develop methods to incorporate regulatory trends and practices, and think strategically about product development and marketing.
8. Examine quality systems and standards and their impact on public safety as well as the reliance on quality by health care providers.
9. Obtain and apply broad knowledge of FDA and international requirements for the approval and conduct of pre-and post-market clinical studies with regulated products and understand the basic principles of clinical study design and clinical data analysis for at least one category of medical products (drugs, biological products, devices).
|
| TLI 52300 - Quality Management, Audits And Inspections |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides advanced topics in quality management and business improvement methods that apply to the pharmaceutical industry. Emphasis will be placed on specific issues of industry, audits, and inspections, as well as the successful selection and presentation of business and quality improvement projects to produce compliance and competitive advantage. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Technology Leadrshp & Innovatn
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Obtain and apply broad knowledge of FDA and international law, regulations, and guidance documents for at least one category of medical products (drugs, biological products, devices).
2. Ability to meld theory and practice in regulatory affairs.
3. Examine issues rationally, logically, and coherently; and acquire, evaluate, and synthesize information and knowledge relevant to an identified problem; and make sound decisions in both familiar and unfamiliar contexts.
4. Read, write, speak, listen, and use data, media and computers to send and respond effectively to communication for varied audiences and purposes.
5. Demonstrate sensitivity to and facility with personal values and ethical principles in professional and social contexts.
6. Recognize the factors that influence regulatory decisions, develop methods to incorporate regulatory trends and practices, and think strategically about product development and marketing.
7. Examine quality systems and standards and their impact on public safety as well as the reliance on quality by health care providers.
|
| TLI 52400 - The Documents And Dialogues Of Drug Delivery And Registration |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This capstone advanced course will integrate previous learning relating to laws and regulations, quality principles and practices, and the preparation and submission of documents for preclinical research clinical trials and new drug approvals. Special topic lectures will be given. Considerable time will be devoted to preparing regulatory documents and conducting "mock" dialogues and negotiations with "pretend" agency officials. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Technology Leadrshp & Innovatn
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Obtain and apply broad knowledge of FDA and international law, regulations, and guidance documents for at least one category of medical products (drugs, biological products, devices).
2. Ability to meld theory and practice in regulatory affairs.
3. Examine issues rationally, logically, and coherently; and acquire, evaluate, and synthesize information and knowledge relevant to an identified problem; and make sound decisions in both familiar and unfamiliar contexts.
4. Read, write, speak, listen, and use data, media and computers to send and respond effectively to communication for varied audiences and purposes.
5. Recognize the factors that influence regulatory decisions, develop methods to incorporate regulatory trends and practices, and think strategically about product development and marketing.
6. Obtain and apply broad knowledge of FDA and international requirements for the approval and conduct of pre-and post-market clinical studies with regulated products and understand the basic principles of clinical study design and clinical data analysis for at least one category of medical products (drugs, biological products, devices).
|
| TLI 52500 - Molecular Basis Of Manufacturing Pharmaceuticals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This advanced course addresses important Chemistry Manufacturing and Control (CMC) issues related to process analytical technology. The course provides important information on strategies for monitoring processes on-line, the best approaches to analyzing data, how the data can be used to find process critical control points, and strategies for reporting the data to the FDA. The course may include laboratory exercises, laboratory tours, and/or workshops outlining how to interpret the data. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Technology
Department: Technology Leadrshp & Innovatn
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the conceptual foundations and approaches to good regulatory practices and comprehend strategies used in regulatory affairs.
2. Obtain and apply broad knowledge of FDA and international law, regulations, and guidance documents for at least one category of medical products (drugs, biological products, devices).
3. Ability to meld theory and practice in regulatory affairs.
4. Examine issues rationally, logically, and coherently; and acquire, evaluate, and synthesize information and knowledge relevant to an identified problem; and make sound decisions in both familiar and unfamiliar contexts.
5. Read, write, speak, listen, and use data, media and computers to send and respond effectively to communication for varied audiences and purposes.
6. Recognize the factors that influence regulatory decisions, develop methods to incorporate regulatory trends and practices, and think strategically about product development and marketing.
|
| UCOL U1100 - First Year Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 or 2.00. This course is designed to be an academic experience to introduce beginning students to the university environment. Emphasis is placed on success strategies including writing, critical thinking, communication skills, use of information technology, understanding of academic community ethics and values, familiarity with campus resources and establishment of a support network. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| UCOL U2000 - Outdoor Leadership Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course introduces students to the knowledge, attitudes, and inner resources needed to be an effective leader in the outdoors and in life. Participants will be involved with activities that require various degrees of teamwork, fun, trust, cooperation, and communication. Goals for each activity will be set by both students and instructors. Also, analogies will be made to real orientation and life situations whenever possible to demonstrate connections between learning and practice. Students will utilize their first hand experiences to obtain the techniques needed to improve their leadership skills. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| UCOL U2010 - Introduction To Mentoring |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. An introductory course for student mentors serving in their first semester on a UC Leadership Scholarship. This course provides a foundation of mentoring knowledge such as the history of, nature of, and skills associated with mentoring as well as information about the university structure, and the diverse needs of undergraduate students. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| UCOL U2020 - Mentoring: Active And Collaborative Learning |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This is designed to help mentors learn more about mentoring as a collaborative process. To expand mentor's knowledge and skills by developing a deeper understanding of how students learn, collaborative learning techniques, and how to take collaborative learning into groups in which they mentor. Reading, discussions and activities will be assigned in effort to help mentors become better group leaders, understand role theory within groups. Techniques for engaging students in active learning, and refining their mentoring relationships. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| UCOL U2030 - Mentoring: Leadership And Transition |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Mentoring:Leadership & Transition. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| UCOL U2040 - Mentoring: Independent Study |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Mentoring: Ind Study. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| UCOL U2100 - Career Connections |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Career Connections. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
TSW-Columbus
|
| URDU 10100 - Urdu Level I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to basic skills in the language. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| URDU 10200 - Urdu Level II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of URDU 10100. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| VCD F1020 - Color Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an introductory course presenting color and design, color theory, cultural uses and meaning, and the history of color in art and design. Additive and subtractive color palattes and the observation of hues as seen in nature will be explored through lectures and studio projects. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD H1010 - Color |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This foundational course presents color and its use in design in various media and contexts. Color will be discussed in quantitative terms (blue, value, saturation) and qualitative terms relating to psychology, symbol, and culture. The course is comprised of reading assignments, lecture, demonstration, and practical exercises. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD H1950 - Concept And Literacy Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students will explore issues of design concept and articulation in a monthly seminar involving all VCD students in one venue. Visiting designers, guest speakers, and symposia will be featured. Conversations on faculty research and exemplary student projects will also feature in the discourses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD H1960 - Concept And Literacy Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students will explore issues of design concept and articulation in a monthly seminar involving all VCD students in one venue. Visiting designers, guest speakers, and symposia will be featured. Conversations on faculty research and exemplary student projects will also be featured in the discourses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD H2010 - History Of Graphic Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will survey graphic design from prehistory through the Industrial Revolution. It will locate graphic design within the history of art and examine connections between social phenomena and development of visual communication. Major styles will be analyzed and compared, and influences identified. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD H2040 - History Of Graphic Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will survey graphic design in the 20th and 21st Centuries. It will locate graphic design within the history of art and examine connections between social phenomena and development of visual communication in the modern, postmodern, and digital ages. Major styles will be analyzed and compared, and influenced identified. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD H2050 - History Of Photography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores and critically examines the development of Photography from 19th century through the 21st century. Artistic and cultural perspectives will be analyzed in the context of social and political conditions that shape the direction of photography. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD H2950 - Concept And Literacy Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students will explore issues of design concept and articulation in a monthly seminar involving all VCD students in one venue. Visiting designers, guest speakers, and symposis will be featured. Conversations on faculty research and exemplary student projects will also be featured in the discourses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD H2960 - Concept And Literacy Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students will explore issues of design concept and articulation in a monthly seminar involving all VCD students in one venue. Visiting designers, guest speakers, and symposis will be featured. Conversations on faculty research and exemplary student projects will also be featured in the discourses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD H3010 - History Of Animation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This class will survey Animation from its emergence in the late 19th century to new directions in the 21st century. Students will examine stylistic trends in aesthetic, cultural and visual communication contexts, and analyze the work of leading animation artists. The class will provide conceptual support for animation courses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD H3480 - History of Photography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A survey of photography as a medium of art and of communication, with a primary emphasis beginning in the 1920's. Photographic genres, as well as developments in optical, chemical & mechanical technology, will be studied. The evolution of photographic vision will be covered through examples of master works. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD H3900 - Topics In Art History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In-depth projects and studies in special directions of art history, closely related to existing areas of concentration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
|
| VCD H3950 - Concept And Literacy Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students will explore issues of design concept and articulation in a monthly seminar involving all VCD students in one venue. Visiting designers, guest speakers, and symposis will be featured. Conversations on faculty research and exemplary student projects will also be featured in the discourses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD H3960 - Concept And Literacy Seminar |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. Students will explore issues of design concept and articulation in a monthly seminar involving all VCD students in one venue. Visiting designers, guest speakers, and symposis will be featured. Conversations on faculty research and exemplary student projects will also be featured in the discourses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD H4900 - Topics In Art History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. In-depth projects and studies in special directions of art history closely related to existing areas of concentrations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
|
| VCD H4950 - Thesis Seminar And Exhibition I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course enables students to organize a body of work as a major thesis intended for exhibition. The subject must be approved by the department chairman and thematic constructs guided by the course instructor and discipline specialists. Students will also be prepared for seeking employment or applying to Graduate School. Typically offered Fall Spring
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
|
| VCD H4960 - Thesis Seminar And Exhibition II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. The approved thesis project organized in the previous semester will be completed in readiness for a public group exhibition. Students will create their theses statements and be involved in planning, marketing and executing the exhibition. They will also be prepared for public gallery talk presentations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD N1980 - Introduction To Photography For Non-Majors |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on mastering camera operation, exposure and composition. Assignments will be shot digitally or on slide film; no darkroom work will be involved. Evaluation will be based on technical competency and aesthetic value. General historical background and an overview of current developments in photography also will be provided. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD N2740 - Digital Imaging |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A course designed for non-art majors. Students will learn to apply basic art and design fundamentals to the personal computer. Areas such as page layout and illustration will be coveed in assigned problems. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P1010 - Observational Drawing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces drawing techniques and focuses on the accurate rendering of things observed, such as the human figure, landscapes, and still life. It will incorporate the fundamentals of 2-D Design as the student develops eye-hand coordination skills required for the clear communication of objects, scenes, and ideas. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P1020 - Introduction To 2-D Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the creative design as well as formal principles and elements used in two-dimensional design. The course includes regular readings, lectures, demonstrations, discussions, studio assignments in various media, and group critiques of student work. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P1030 - Craftsmanship/Assembly |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an introductory course presenting the basics of book and portfolio development and assembly. Emphasis will be placed on honing skills pertaining to the craft of book, box, and portfolio construction. Each student will present a unique portfolio of completed work at the end of semester. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P1040 - Introduction To Typography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course uses pre-digital methodologies to ensure that students experience letterforms at the level of drawing them first, before using them to communicate messages. Students will learn the anatomy of type as well as the units, terminology, and principles of designing with type. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P1050 - Digital Imaging |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Knowledge in digital imaging software is useful in graphic and web design, image manipulation, photo restoration, digital illustration, and even in creating textures, and lighting maps for 3D modeling and animation. This is a course that introduces basic skills and functions of digital imaging. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P1510 - Design Fundamentals I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (FINA P1510) Two dimensional design: In design fundamentals, the student becomes familiar with the vocabulary and elements of the visual language. Also, the expressive powers of the elements of line, shape, texture, space and color are explored through a series of sequential exercises. Many different problems in building visual units provide the training artists need to make individual, yet clear, expressive and complete statements. (P1510 Fall; P1520 Spring). Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P1520 - Design Fundamentals II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (FINA P1520) Three dimensional design: In design fundamentals, the student becomes familiar with the vocabulary and elements of the visual language. Also, the expressive powers of the elements of line, shape, texture, space and color are explored through a series of sequential exercises. Many different problems in building visual units provide the training artists need to make individual, yet clear, expressive and complete statements. (P1510 Fall; P1520 Spring). Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P2010 - Directed Drawing |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides a creative and fast way to render two and three-dimensional objects. Students will be enable to use a variety of techniques and media, produce accurate, proportional, and anatomical rendering, incorporate the fundamentals of design and communicate through drawing. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P2020 - Introduction To Photography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the student to the basic elements and principles of design as they apply to the field of photography and imaging. Through lectures, demonstrations, projects, and exercises, students will develop a body of work that will demonstrate their understanding of the fundamentals of photography. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P2030 - Web Design I: Introduction To Web Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the fundamentals of Web design, emphasizing best practices in HTML, CSS, basic interactivity, and visual design for the Web. Students will learn navigation structures, information architecture, usability, and accessibility. They will be enabled to plan, design, build, and publish a small static Web site. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P2040 - Introduction To 3-D Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the creative design process, as well as formal principles and elements used in three-dimensional design. The course includes regular readings, lectures, discussions, audio assignments in various media, and group critiques of student work. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P2050 - Graphic Design I: Introduction To Graphic Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces the student to the basic elements and principles of design as they apply to the field of graphic design. Through exercises, demonstrations, projects, and exercises, students will see Photoshop and Illustrator as design tools and begin to understand how these programs are used in the field. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P2060 - Illustration I: Dry Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on using “dry media” techniques in illustration. Students will learn different techniques of using the various dry media in solving illustration problems. Gathering of critical information on each assignment is stressed to enable transformation of a conceptual sketch into an illustration with effective communicative energy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P2070 - Photography I: Portraiture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an examination of the fundamentals of portrait photography both in a studio setting and outdoors. Projects will be assigned to advance each student’s ability to create photographic portraiture under a variety of conditions. Basic issues concerning posing, exposure, ratios and lighting will be examined. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P2080 - Video And Intermedia I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course introduces video editing for use in film, video portfolio and the web. The student will become familiar with editing software, basic camera work and the processes involved in linear and non-linear editing. Students will also glean an understanding of editing using a script and/or storyboard. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P2430 - Photography Fundamentals |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to introduce the student to the basic understanding of photography in relationship to both the fine arts and the application of photography to advertising. Basic use of the camera and the darkroom will be introduced. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P2530 - Principles of Graphic Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Familiarity with the visual vocabulary and the elements of the visual language. The expression of the elements of line, shape, texture, space and color will be developed through a series of exercises. Different problems in building visuals provide training that artists need to make individual, yet clear, expressive statements. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P2540 - Principles of Graphic Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Continuation of P253 with emphasis on more involved projects utilizing tyopgraphy, layout, symbols, and illustration: Calendars, advertising campaigns, publications, typographical/illustrated books, and mulit-colored projects. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P2550 - Lettering And Typography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to the history, terminology, and the formal aspects of typography through projects using foundry type and letterpress combined with computer technology.
. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P2610 - Layout and Finished Art |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Assignments beginning with rough comprehensives, completion through finished art work, paste-ups and art for reproduction. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P2620 - Layout Finished Art II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Layout Finished Art II. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P2710 - Illustration I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advertising, story, fashion, and product; finished illustrations in various mediums and study of reproduction techniques (P271 Fall, P272 Spring). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P2720 - Illustration II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advertising, story, fashion, and product; finished illustrations in various mediums and study of reproduction techniques (P271 Fall, P272 Spring). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P2730 - Computer Art and Design I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Emphasis will be placed on the exploration of digital art and design. This beginning course acquaints students with raster and vector graphics and the manipulation of peripherals such as scanners and printers. Students will be encouraged to explore personal imagery in solving assigned problems. (Fall, Spring). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P3000 - Professional Practice Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Program offers students the opportunity to learn through supervised experience in professional work settings. Students must meet the school requirements to participate in a supervised internship. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| VCD P3010 - Photography II: Applied Imaging |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an exploration of photographic techniques specific to medical and forensic photography, small and large product photography, and still life photography. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P3020 - Photography III: Conceptual Imaging |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will focus on methods for developing conceptual skills. Global issues encompassing literature, art, culture and diversity will be examined through visual imagery. A comparison of creative thinking versus critical thinking will be emphasized as we explore the role of creative thinking in conceptual photography. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P3030 - Graphic Design II: Identity and Branding |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will focus on the fundamentals of branding and how to create visual identities that extend past simple logo design. Students will research companies and products and craft specific, informed narratives with Illustrator—based designs in order to target appropriate audiences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P3040 - Graphic Design III: Publication Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will work with longer narratives in magazines, annual reports, and project catalogs. Students are encouraged to consider the function of these publications and how they fit within an increasingly digital age through use of typesetting tools and layout programs such as InDesign and QuarkXPress. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P3050 - Illustration II: Wet Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on using “wet media” techniques in illustration. Students will learn different techniques of using the various wet media, as well as mixing wet and dry media, in solving illustration problems. Assignments will involve transformation of a conceptual sketch into an illustration with effective communicative energy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P3060 - Illustration III: Vector |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will learn advanced vector-based illustration tools through programs such as Illustrator to complete assignments based in the areas of character, product, package, and mechanical concepts. The student will begin to develop a personal illustration style through exercises concerned with creative and conceptual thinking skills. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P3070 - Photography IV: Editorial Imaging |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course explores the use of images in narrative, documentary, and editorial form as they relate to social and political issues. Methods of idea generation, research, and story development will be explored as students create companion text that accompanies multiple or consecutive images for their photo essays. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P3080 - Photograpy V: Special Projects / Portfolio |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course enables students to apply cumulative skills to create independent projects that reflect the students’ interests and strengths in photography and imaging. Students will develop a portfolio and Artist Statement that fully and accurately represent their artistic vision and style. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P3090 - Video And Intermedia II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course presents an advanced approach to video production and editing for use in film, video portfolio, and video publication. The student will develop greater proficiency with editing software, camera work, and production processes, and will create a completed portfolio-ready project of a professional standard. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P3100 - Introduction To 3D Computer Modeling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will provide a student with a comprehensive knowledge of methods for 3D modeling production. Students will develop skills in actual sculpting and modeling and will apply knowledge of computer 3D modeling technologies and techniques, including mapping, texturing, lighting, and rendering. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P3110 - Intermediate 3D Computer Modeling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will work with ideas and concepts from their studies in Visual Communication, and from personal experiences, to create interesting and well-drafted 3- dimensional forms. Student will explore these elements through appropriate computer modeling software. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P3120 - Storyboarding |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will be introduced to preproduction methods in 3D modeling and animation, with emphasis on storyboard, storylines and narrative structures. Cinema terminology and trends will be learned and selected work by prominent animation artists examined. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P3130 - Animation I: Stop Motion To Digital |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This class is concerned with working with different methods of creating modern animations. We will explore hybrid types of animation, including stop-motion and live-action approaches. The student will use model clay, cut-outs, props, silhouettes, vector graphics, bitmaps, and live action to create exciting motion graphics to tell their stories. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P3140 - Animation II: Character Development |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Understanding character modeling software is an important skill for character development in contemporary animation. This class will provide the student with an introduction to the software and the work that one can do with it, such as creating dynamic particles, cloth and hair. The student will use these skills to create animated features. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P3430 - Advanced Photography I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced problems in photography determined by the student's skill, interests and major objectives. (P343 Fall; P344 Spring). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P3440 - Advanced Photography II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced problems in photography determined by the student's skill, interests and major objectives. (P343 Fall; P344 Spring). Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P3560 - Package Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Problems in package design from product concept to finished art work. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P3570 - Display and Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Problems in exhibition and display design including window, floor and point to sale as well as sets for photography, film, and televeision production; other specialized structures such as architectural graphics and signage included. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P3710 - Illustration III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced illustration projectstied into studio-type situations with emphasis on production problems. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P3720 - Illustration IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced illustration projectstied into studio-type situations with emphasis on production problems. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P3740 - Computer Art and Design II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A continuation of P273. Emphasis will be placed on two-dimensional and three-dimensional graphic software, Web page design and online publications. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P4010 - Illustration IV: Raster |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will learn advanced raster-based illustration tools through programs such as Photoshop and others to complete assignments dealing with concepts of metaphor, abstraction and humor. Further techniques for drawing, coloring, texture, masking and light control are explored as effective illustration tools. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P4020 - Graphic Design IV: Packaging & Display |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is concerned with solving communication problems through an understanding of the identities of both a company and its products. Students will create packages, shopping bags, wall displays, kiosk and point-of-sale environments with an informed use of their design skills and give professional presentations of their work. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P4030 - Graphic Design V : Digital Prepress / Portfolio |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will enable students to apply communication and design strategies to shape their work into innovative and effective portfolio formats. The class will explore various methods to professionally prepare their artwork for offset printing or digital publication by demonstrations and field trips to local design and printing firms. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P4040 - Animation III: Game And Virtual Worlds |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course deals with video game production and developing virtual worlds through use of 3D modeling and animation techniques. Video games are a multidisciplinary medium that, through a storyboarding and experimental process, the student will use skills acquired in previous classes to create unique interactive experiences. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P4050 - Animation 4 : Special Projects/Portfolio |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course teaches the student how to create an effective portfolio in digital, analog and hybrid forms. We will focus on concepts such as: target audience, styles and communication strategies that will enable the student to present his or her work in well-organized, concise and accessible formats. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P4060 - Advanced 3D Computer Modeling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will learn advanced rendering, lighting, texturing and mapping to enable the creation of photorealistic and non-photorealistic surfaces. A variety of exercises and assignments will integrate ideas sourced in design principles with personal visual narratives in creative problem solving. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P4070 - Professional Practice Internship |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course enables collaboration between students and local businesses in a partnership context. Sourced in a community engagement paradigm, the course empowers students to provide professional standard graphic and electronic design or photography, while the community partners provide real-life work environments for students. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P4080 - Independent Study |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a student-initiated effort to pursue (with a member of the VCD faculty) advanced interests in graphic design, imaging and photography, or modeling and animation, that are extensions of coursework, or that are not available via the usual curriculum. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
|
| VCD P4430 - Advanced Photography III |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 6.00. Individual problems in photography. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 4 times
|
| VCD P4440 - Advanced Photography IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Individual problems in photography. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 5 times
|
| VCD P4500 - Senior Project |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Major thesis required for fourth-year students. Subject must be approved by department chairperson. A senior exhibit of a certain number of works in a major area is also required prior to graduation. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 3 times
|
| VCD P4530 - Graphic Design III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An advanced course dealing with a singular multifaceted design campaign. This senior project will involve all phases of a promotional campaign from logotype development to final project will involve all phases of a promotional campaign from logotype development to final packaging. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P4540 - Graphic Design IV |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focus on advanced problems in computer graphics (interactive/multimedia authoring) will be determined by the skills and interest of each student. Emphasizing portfolio preparation, the faculty advises the student in the development of an artist's statement and the design campaign for the senior review, culminating in the B.F.A. thesis exhibit. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 5 times
|
| VCD P4550 - Advanced Letter and Typography |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced Letter And Typography. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCD P4750 - Computer Art and Design III |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 6.00. Focus on advanced problems in computer graphics (interactive/multimedia authoring) will be determined by the skills and interests of each student. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 4 times
|
| VCD P4760 - Three-Dimensional Computer Modeling |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Concentration on three-dimensional modeling and environments--object building and manipulation, lighting, atmosphere, and surface mapping. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 5 times
|
| VCD P4780 - Computer Animation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Concentration on three-dimensional computer animation concepts and methods, such as paths, cameras, objects in motion and transformation, animated textures, etc. Individual and collaborative animation problems will be examined. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 5 times
|
| VCD P4900 - Topics in Studio Fine Arts |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. In-depth projects and studies of special studio art topics closely related to existing areas of concentration. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 2 times
|
| VCD P4950 - Independent Study In Fine Arts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides the opportunity for a student to pursue studio interests (such as mixed media) not served in other course offerings. Projects may vary. Eligible for graduate credit. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Studio
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| VCD P5900 - Topics Of Studio Fine Art |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| VCD S1050 - Introduction to Design |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Introduction to design for non-majors introduces students to the basic elements of design. Line, shape, space, focus and color are the elements which are covered in class. Formal and informal systems of design will be explained in classroom exercises. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| VCS 14000 - Small Animal Nursing I For Vet Techs-DL |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. This is the first of four courses involving nursing and management of the small animal patient. This course provides an introduction to small animal patient care and treatment that a technician will be expected to provide in a veterinary practice. It includes techniques equipment orientation, client education, management of the hospitalized patient, and preventative medicine. Emphasis will be on the role of the veterinary technician in the veterinary hospital. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| VCS 14100 - Small Animal Nursing II For Vet Techs-DL |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. This is the second of four courses involving nursing and management of the small animal patient. It is the continuation of the small animal patient care and treatment that a technician will be expected to provide in a veterinary practice. It includes techniques, equipment, client education, management of the hospitalized patient, and preventative medicine. Emphasis will be on the role of the veterinary technician in the veterinary hospital. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| VCS 14200 - Diagnostic Imaging For Vet Techs I -DL |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. This is the first of two courses involving basic principles of imaging that are necessary for the understanding and performance of diagnostic imaging procedures in a veterinary hospital. This course provides an introduction to x-ray generation, image formation, exposure factors, scatter radiation, grids, film, screens, safety, basic terminology, positioning, darkroom techniques, an artifact identification. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| VCS 14300 - Diagnostic Imaging For Vet Techs II -DL |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. This is the second of two courses involving principles of imaging that are necessary for the understanding and performance of diagnostic imaging procedures in a veterinary hospital. This course provides an introduction to advanced positioning techniques for the small animal, large animal techniques, contrast techniques, technique charts, basic ultrasound, diagnosic imaging in exotic animals, and diagnostic imaging for the veterinary dentistry. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| VCS 14500 - Anethesia For Vet Techs I -DL |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. This is the first of two courses involving basic principles of anesthesia and anesthetic delivery for the veterinary technician. This course focuses on the preparation of the patient for anesthesia, the agents used as pre-anesthetics, induction agents and general anesthesia, and the physiologic impacts of anesthesia on the body. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| VCS 14600 - Anethesia For Vet Techs II -DL |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. This is the second of two courses involving basic principles of anesthesia and anesthetic delivery for the veterinary technician. This course focuses on multi-species anesthetic techniques (small animal, large animal/equine, pocket pets), managing high risk patients, anesthetic complications, and pain management. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| VCS 14700 - Principles Of Techniques and Sterilization-DL |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is designed to instruct veterinary technician students in the basic principles of veterinary operating room protocols and sterilization of surgical supplies commonly used within a veterinary hospital. Emphasis will be placed upon key concepts of surgical preparation of the patient, and the role of the circulating nurse and surgical nurse. In addition, the concepts of proper instrument care, sterilization procedures and inventory rotation will be covered. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| VCS 14800 - Large Animal Nursing and Health Management I - Distance Learning |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This is the first of four courses involving large animal and equine nursing and health management. This course provides an introduction to nursing and health management that a technician will be expected to provide in a veterinary practice. Emphasis will be on the role of the veterinary technician in the veterinary facility. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| VCS 14900 - Large Animal Nursing and Health Management II - Distance Learning |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This is the second of four courses involving large animal and equine nursing and health management for the veterinary technician. This course completes the introduction to nursing and health management that a technician will be expected to provide in a veterinary practice. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| VCS 16000 - Nursing Of Small Animals |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Provides information on medical nursing care of small animals. The practice and application of patient care procedures and techniques required of a veterinary technician will be emphasized. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| VCS 16500 - Nursing Of Large Animals |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Provides information on medical nursing care of horses, cattle, swine, and sheep. The practice and application of patient care procedures and techniques required of a veterinary technician will be emphasized. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| VCS 20100 - Pharmacy Procedures For VT -DL |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course introduces students to the concepts of pharmacy procedures used in veterinary practice. Concepts covered in this course include basic record keeping, safe handling of drugs and chemicals, inventory control, calculation of amount of drugs to be dispensed or dosed, reading prescriptions, labeling drug containers, compounding, and drug regulatory matters that impact the veterinary hospital pharmacy. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| VCS 22100 - Veterinary Nursing Techniques For The Normal Animal (SA & LA) |
|
Credit Hours: 4.00. The course will introduce the students to concepts related to normal, healthy large and small animal patients. The course includes both lecture and laboratory components. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe and apply common methods of restraint used for large animals and small animals.
2. Take a detailed patient history and perform a thorough physical exam.
3. Discuss well-patient care with clients including vaccinations that are recommended for both large and small animal species.
4. Collect diagnostic samples from small and large animals.
5. Administer medications via common routes to small and large animals.
6. Identify common breeds of dogs, cats, horses, cattle, swine, and sheep.
|
| VCS 22200 - Dentistry For The Veterinary Technician |
|
Credit Hours: 0.50. This course is an introduction to veterinary dentistry for the technician, with emphasis on basic dental anatomy, pathologies and treatments, dental charting, intraoral radiography, dental cleaning and periodontal disease management. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 0.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify tooth anatomy and perform dental charting.
2. Recognize common pathologies and understand treatment approaches.
3. Perform oral exams and dental cleaning.
4. Produce diagnostic intraoral radiographs.
5. Develop and provide client education.
|
| VCS 22300 - Surgical Nursing And Operating Room Protocols |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is an introduction to the surgical environment and all aspects related to the principles of asepsis and the practice of sterile technique. Students will learn using a variety of teaching modalities (lecture, group work, laboratory experience). Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify basic surgical instruments.
2. Explain the principles of aseptic technique.
3. Perform the duties of surgical nurse.
4. Perform the duties of the circulating nurse.
5. Explain procedures to prepare items for sterilization and the techniques used for sterilization.
6. Demonstrate bandaging techniques for both large and small animal patients.
7. Identify the phases of wound healing.
|
| VCS 22400 - Small Animal Nursing I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course will introduce students to nursing and diagnostic techniques for small animals and the body’ response to disease. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Recognize and report conditions of hospitalized small animal patients.
2. Provide appropriate nursing care to hospitalized patients.
3. Place IV catheters in small animal patients and administer fluids appropriately.
4. Perform diagnostic procedures and exams for small animal patients.
5. Provide technical assistance to a DVM for diagnostics and therapeutics.
6. Recognize emergent conditions and provide appropriate treatment.
7. Perform basic training techniques with dogs.
|
| VCS 22500 - Large Animal Nursing I |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course builds on concepts learning in VCS 22100 related to normal, healthy large animal patients. It also introduces the students to higher level patient care for the large animal patient. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and explain the nursing concepts of hospitalized and post-op LA patients.
2. Select and apply nursing concepts to the LA patient.
3. Place an IV catheter in a large animal patient and identify the problems that can occur from long term catheterization.
4. Describe milking procedures and the tests used to identify problems.
5. Collect diagnostic samples from large animals.
6. Administer medications via common routes to large animals.
7. Calculate fluid therapy rates for LA patients.
8. Identify the appropriate uses for bandages, splints, casts.
9. Identify the steps utilized in intensive neonatal care and medical emergencies.
|
| VCS 22600 - Principles Of Anethesia |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is an introduction to surgical nursing and anesthesia. The principles of asepsis and sterile technique will be introduced and demonstrated by staff and in some cases, practiced by the student. The basics of anesthesia will be introduced and practiced by the student. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify basic surgical instruments.
2. State the principles of aseptic technique.
3. Identify breaks in aseptic technique.
4. Perform open gloving.
5. Perform aseptic personnel scrub; gowning and closed gloving.
6. Identify the parts of an anesthesia machine.
7. Know the function of the above parts.
8. Trace the flow of oxygen through an anesthetic machine, with rebreathing and nonbreathing systems.
9. Identify rebreathing and nonbreathing systems.
10. Practice monitoring principles and identify normal parameters.
11. Identify a variety of analgesic and anesthetic drugs.
12. Begin to identify and state the uses and classifications of these drugs.
13. Perform general anesthesia; from physical exam through recovery.
|
| VCS 22800 - Small And Large Animal Well Animal Nutrition |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will introduce students to an overview of nutritional concepts as it applies to common domestic small and large animal species and selected exotic companion/avian pets. Basic concepts for understanding nutritional needs for all species will be introduced as well as therapeutic use of diets as it relates to animal nursing. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Assess normal nutritional requirements of the animal (ruminant vs. monogastric) as they apply to physiological processes.
2. Explain BCS evaluation as it relates to obesity, weight loss, and weight management programs.
3. Identify adult, pediatric and geriatric nutritional needs.
4. Describe the changing nutritional needs from pediatric stages to adulthood.
5. Define specific differences in diets based upon breed (large vs. small, selected breed well dog needs).
6. Compare, contrast and analyze food labels.
7. Evaluate diets and dietary supplements, nutraceuticals, hay, feed and pasture management.
8. Plan and perform nutritional counseling/weight management programs by educating clients on dietary needs of pets and livestock, incorporating the roles of the technician and veterinarian.
|
| VCS 23000 - S A Nursing III-VTDL |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. This is the third of four courses involving nursing and management of the small animal patient. This course continues the concepts of small animal patient care and treatment that a technician will be expected to provide in a veterinary practice. It includes techniques, equipment, client education, management of the hospitalized patient and preventative medicine. Emphasis will be on the role of the veterinary technician in the veterinary hospital. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| VCS 23100 - S A Nursing IV-VTDL |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. This is the fourth of four courses involving nursing and management of the small animal patient. This course involves emergency and critical patient care and treatment that a technician will be expected to provide in a veterinary practice. It includes techniques, equipment, client education, management of the hospitalized patient and preventative medicine. Emphasis will be on the role of the veterinary technician in the veterinary hospital. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| VCS 23300 - Introduction to Ophtho Derm and Oncology-DL |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course involves the instruction of nursing and management of small animal patients related to opthalmology, dermatology, and oncology. It presents concepts of small animal patient care and treatment that a technician will be expected to provide in a veterinary practice. It includes techniques, equipment, client education, management of the hospitalized patient, and preventative medicine related to these specific clinical disciplines. Emphasis will be on the role of the veterinary technician in the veterinary hospital. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VCS 23700 - Large Animal Nursing and Health Management III - Distance Learning |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. This is the third of four courses involving large animal and equine nursing and health management for the veterinary technician. This course focuses more on the observation/assessment of the animal, handling techniques, and basic medical care and management that a technician will be expected to provide in a veterinary practice. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VCS 23800 - Large Animal Nursing and Health Management IV - Distance Learning |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. This is the fourth of four courses involving large animal and equine nursing and health management for the veterinary technician. This course focuses more on the handling techniques and basic medical care and management that a technician will be expected to provide in a veterinary practice. Emphasis will be on the role of the veterinary technician in practice. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VCS 24500 - Small Animal Health Management |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course will cover management of hospitalized patients, client education programs, and preventive medicine programs. Emphasis will be on the role of the veterinary technician in the veterinary hospital. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 25100 - Introduction To Diagnostic Imaging For The Veterinary Technician |
|
Credit Hours: 0.50. This course is an introduction to veterinary diagnostic imaging and is designed to instruct the veterinary technician student in the basic principles of imaging, necessary to perform imaging tasks within a veterinary hospital. This course will introduce the fundamentals needed in the clinical imaging rotations and in practice. Typically offered Fall.
0.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply the principles of physics and x-ray machine anatomy, to the generation of X-rays.
2. Calculate and utilize exposure factors in the production of diagnostic quality radiographs.
3. Appreciate the importance of radiation safety, personal protective equipment and occupational health.
4. Employ the best combinations of grids, intensifying screens, cassettes and film to reduce scatter and produce diagnostic quality radiographs.
5. Develop and process radiographic film using processing chemicals and appropriate darkroom techniques.
6. Troubleshoot exposure, processing and handling problems with non-diagnostic films.
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| VCS 25200 - Diagnostic Imaging For Veterinary Technicians |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Provides an introduction to imaging of domestic animals. Emphasis will be placed on radiological principles and techniques, darkroom procedures and design, preparing technique charts for various X-ray units, animal positioning, and radiation safety. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 26100 - Large Animal Health Management |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course will cover basic principles of biologics, pharmaceuticals, livestock health management programs, and client communication to prepare the technician student for entering employment in food animal or general practice. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 32100 - Large Animal Nursing II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00.This course build on concepts learned in VCS 22100 and VCS 22500 related to normal, healthy large animals patients. It also introduces the student to higher level patient care for the large animal patient. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify the key principles associated with herd health management.
2. Understand the role of regulatory issues in large animal medicine.
3. Demonstrate an understanding of the common diseases affecting large animal species.
4. Develop an understanding of naturally occuring toxic plants.
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| VCS 32200 - Small Animal Nursing II |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. This course will cover management of hospitalized patients, client education, and preventative medicine programs. Emphasis will be on the role of the veterinary technician in the veterinary hospital. Typically offered Fall.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe basic information about small animal medicine conditions to clients.
2. Educate clients regarding preventative small animal medicine.
3. Utilize knowledge of small animal medical conditions to provide nursing care to patients.
4. Utilize knowledge of small animal medical conditions to anticipate DVM needs for diagnosis and treatment of hospitalized patients.
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| VCS 41800 - Applied Small Animal Behavior |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. Clinical applications of canine and feline behavior problems. The normal and common abnormal behaviors of domestic dogs and cats will be presented. Emphasis will be on taking clinical history from owner, observing animals, and establishing behavioral modification treatment plans as part of the veterinary team. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 46700 - Diagnostic Instrumentation |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00. A laboratory in the utilization, care, and maintenance of electronic equipment used in veterinary diagnostics. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 49000 - Food Animal Husbandry & Technical Skills I |
|
Credit Hours: 0.50. This course is designed to provide the veterinary technologist student with a deeper understanding and broader experience in food animal production than is found in the Associate Degree (Veterinary Technology) Program. Emphasis will be on selected common diseases of beef and dairy cattle, selected common diseases of swine, field anesthesia, and hoof care. Enrollment is limited to 10 students. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 0.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 60200 - Problems In Clinical Medicine And Surgery |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 5.00. Individualized topics selected from the various areas of Veterinary Clinical Sciences. May include directed readings, discussion, and other intensive studies in specialized topics. Prerequisite: DVM degree. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| VCS 60300 - Introduction To Clinical Research, Trials and Translational Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is designed for students entering the Graduate Program in the Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences. During the course, lectures are presented which introduce students to the elements and scope of clinical research, including the methods used in clinical research, trials and translational research. Topics covered will explain the principles of safe and ethical conduct of clinical research. Students will also be introduced to the principles of data collection, management and interpretation. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To help students understand the elements and scope of clinical research.
2. To expose students to the methods used in clinical research, trials and translational research.
3. To understand the principles of safe and ethical conduct of clinical research.
4. To understand the principles of data collection, management and interpretation.
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| VCS 60400 - Animal Models In Translational Research |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is designed for students in the Graduate Program in the Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences. During the course, lectures are presented which help students obtain a working knowledge of the use of animal models in research. Topics covered will explain the principles of using animals in research and as a model for human diseases. Students will also be exposed to the principle elements of translational research, methods used in translational research and trials, and the principles of data collection, management and interpretation. Prerequisite: VCS 60300. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Help students understand the principle elements of translational research.
2. Help students understand issues related to the use of animals in research.
3. Expose students to the methods used in translational research and trials.
4. Understand the principles of using animals as a model for human diseases.
5. Understand the principles of data collection, management and interpretation.
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| VCS 61000 - Clinical Training In Veterinary Clinical Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 6.00. Veterinary Clinical Sciences (VCS) residents working in specific specialty areas rotate through relevant specialty clinical services in the Veterinary Teaching Hospital (or other specialty facilities) as determined by the resident committee and the requirements of each specialty college. Rotation lengths are 2.5 to 5 weeks. Residents are closely supervised by VCS faculty and gradually are given more individual responsibility as decision-making and clinical skills develop. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| VCS 62000 - Seminar In Clinical Medicine And Surgery |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Seminars provide a forum for discussion of current concepts and research results in clinical medicine and surgery, and other aspects of veterinary medicine. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| VCS 62100 - Topics In Advanced Medicine |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Advanced study and investigation of the pathophysiology, occurrence, diagnosis, treatment, management, and prevention of animal diseases. Emphasis will be given to the medical aspects of diseases by body system (e.g., renal, gastrointestinal, etc.) and by medical discipline (e.g., oncology, ophthalmology, etc.). Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| VCS 63000 - Current Topics In Veterinary Clinical Sciences |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. One-two hour sessions organized and conducted weekly by VCS residents, with input/discussion from the attending VCS faculty. Alternating weekly topic sessions may include journal club and morbidity and mortality patient rounds or other topics appropriate to the specialty.
. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| VCS 64000 - Introduction To Veterinary Homeland Security |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A didactic course presenting introductory material on topics in veterinary homeland security. Topics include the threat and impact of agri-terrorism, government and veterinarian roles in animal health emergencies and community planning, foreign animal/zoonotic/food borne disease surveillance/early detection, radiological/chemical events, field epidemiology, and biosecurity for emergency responders. A laboratory module in which students become certified at the 10000 level in Incident Command Training is required. Prerequisite: DVM degree. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VCS 64200 - High Consequence Disease Review: Bovine |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A didactic course presenting etiology, transmission, clinical signs, lesions, diagnostic methods and differential diagnoses for high consequence diseases that affect cattle. Actual cases will be included when available. Prerequisite: DVM degree. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VCS 64300 - High Consequence Disease Review: Equine |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A didactic course presenting etiology, transmission, clinical signs, lesions, diagnostic methods and differential diagnoses for high consequence diseases that affect horses. Actual cases will be included when available. Prerequisite: DVM degree. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VCS 64400 - High Consequence Disease Review: Swine |
|
Credit Hours: 0.50. A didactic course presenting etiology, transmission, clinical signs, lesions, diagnostic methods and differential diagnoses for high consequence diseases that affect pigs. Actual cases will be included when available. Prerequisite: DVM degree. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VCS 64500 - High Consequence Disease Review: Minor Species |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A didactic course presenting etiology, transmission, clinical signs, lesions, diagnostic methods and differential diagnoses for high consequence diseases that affect sheep, goats, and rabbits. Actual cases will be included when available. Prerequisite: DVM degree. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VCS 64600 - High Consequence Disease Review: Avian |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. A didactic course presenting etiology, transmission, clinical signs, lesions, diagnostic methods and differential diagnoses for high consequence diseases that affect birds. Actual cases will be included when available. Prerequisite: DVM degree. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VCS 64700 - High Consequence Disease Review: Zoonotic |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A didactic course presenting etiology, transmission, clinical signs, lesions, diagnostic methods and differential diagnoses for high consequence diseases that affect both animals and people. Actual cases will be included when available. Prerequisite: DVM degree. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VCS 64800 - Defining The Threat |
|
Credit Hours: 0.50. A didactic course defining the threat of terrorism to livestock, companion animal, and public health. Course content includes threat assessments, profiles of terrorist groups, specific threats, impact of threats, and veterinarians' role in mitigating threats to animal health. Prerequisite: DVM degree. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VCS 64900 - Understanding The Response |
|
Credit Hours: 0.50. A didactic course outlining current state and national protocols for responding to disease outbreaks, acts of terrorism, and natural disasters that affect our animal population. Course content covers response plans for each situation and timetables and standard operating procedures for each response plan. Responsible personnel, their jobs, and their contact information will be identified. The role of the veterinarian in each type of response will be detailed. In addition, laboratory modules in which students become trained in the National Response Plan are required. Prerequisite: DVM degree. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VCS 65000 - Biology Of Aging |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Provides students with an overview of prevailing theories, experimental data, and human observations pertinent to the biology of aging. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VCS 65100 - Biosecurity For Veterinary Responders |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A didactic course outlining biosecurity procedures for veterinarians responding to animal health emergencies. Topics include quarantine establishment, personal protective equipment, general biosecurity procedures, and decontamination techniques. Prerequisite: DVM degree. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| VCS 65200 - Euthanasia And Carcass Disposal |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A didactic course outlining euthanasia and carcass disposal guidelines in the event of an animal health emergency. Topics include humane handling of healthy and morbid animals, mass euthanasia, carcass disposal techniques, and carcass disposal regulations. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| VCS 65300 - The Veterinarian's Role In Community Planning |
|
Credit Hours: 0.50. A didactic course outlining the veterinarian's role in community planning for emergencies. Topics include understanding and developing emergency plan templates, informational resources for emergency planning, completing an emergency plan, and evaluation of emergency plans. Veterinarians will be required to access, critique, and revise their community's emergency plan for the service learning component of this course. Prerequisite: DVM degree. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 0.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| VCS 65400 - Food Borne Illnesses |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A didactic course outlining the veterinarian's role in food borne disease outbreaks. Topics include regulatory aspects of food safety and food borne disease outbreaks, understanding the classification of food borne diseases, epidemiological investigation of food borne illness, and a review of common food borne illnesses. Prerequisite: DVM degree. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| VCS 65500 - GIS Applications In Veterinary Emergency Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A didactic course reviewing the application of geographic information systems to emergency preparedness and response in animal-related emergencies. Topics include fundamental GIS concepts, how to display, query, and edit spatial and attribute data, and how to apply specific GIS tools in information and resource management during an animal-related emergency. Prerequisite: DVM degree. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| VCS 65700 - Crime Scene Management |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. A didactic course outlining the protocol law enforcement will utilize when conducting a crime scene investigation where veterinarians are expected to give assistance. The course framework includes initial response, scene processing and evidence collection, documenting the crime scene, and crime scene equipment. Actual cases will be included when available. Prerequisite: DVM degree. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| VCS 65900 - Business Continuity Management |
|
Credit Hours: 0.50. A didactic course reviewing the development and implementation of a business continuity management plan in preparation for a disaster. Course content includes developing a culture of enthusiasm and readiness; risk assessment and impact analysis; planning strategies; and exercising and auditing. Prerequisite: VCS 64000. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
|
| VCS 66100 - Scientific Inquiry |
|
Credit Hours: .5. A didactic course presenting introductory material on scientific inquiry. Topics include scientific writing, critical evaluation of manuscripts, introductory statistics information resources, and preparing/giving presentations. Students must be graduate students in a non-thesis Master degree with a concentration in Veterinary Homeland Security or graduate students in the Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences who have clinical duties and animal health emergency responsibilities that prohibit attendance in traditional lecture courses. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand how to access library resources necessary to complete a literature review.
2. Undertsand how to select an appropriate statistical test to analyze a given set of data and interpret the results of a basic statistical analysis.
3. Understand and be able to explain and apply the concepts of randomization, controls, sample size, probability, and bias.
4. Be able to critically read a scientific manuscript and evaluate the study design, methodology, conclusion, and validity.
5. Understand the steps required to prepare a scientific manuscript suitable for publication, and have basic scientific writing skills.
6. Be able to prepare and deliver a scientific presentation.
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| VCS 66300 - Building Skill Sets In Veterinary Homeland Security |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an experiential course in which students will be required to complete and document 40 hours (2400) minutes of activities (training, planning, exercising, responding, etc) that assist private and public industry, communities, states, regions, or nations prevent, respond, or recover from emergencies resulting from natural disasters, or other emergencies that could affect animals. Credit for this course can be applied as no more than one elective course in a certificate in Veterinary Homeland Security and/or a required and repeatable elective course in a non-thesis Masters degree with concentration in Veterinary Homeland Security. Prerequisite: VCS 64000I ntroduction to Veterinary Homeland Security. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 4 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Expericnce hands-on activities that enhance their skill set so they can be a valuable contributor to our nation’s veterinary homeland security efforts (Experience).
2. Be able to understand and explain how the acquired skills (above) can be applied to prevention, preparation, response and recovery for animal-related emergencies (Knowledge and Communication).
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| VCS 66400 - Veterinary Homeland Security Manuscript Preparation And Submission |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This is an independent study course that provides an opportunity for students to get experience preparing and submitting a manuscript for publication. Students will be required to prepare and submit a manuscript to a professional journal on a topic related to veterinary homeland security. Students will also be required to respond to feedback from classmates’ critiques of their manuscript and to critique the manuscripts of classmates. Credit for this course can be applied as no more than one elective course in a certificate in Veterinary Homeland Security and/or a required and repeatable elective course in a non-thesis Masters degree with a concentration in Veterinary Homeland Security. Prerequisite: VCS 64000 Introduction to Veterinary Homeland Security. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 4 times
Learning Objectives:
1. Participated in responding to and preparing critiques of manuscripts (Critical thinking and Communication).
2. Completed and submitted for publication a manuscript that will contribute to our nation’s preparedness efforts in veterinary homeland security (Knowledge, Critical Thinking and Communication).
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| VCS 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| VCS 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop research skills in the appropriate research areas including animal testing methodologies, laboratory techniques, data collection and management, scientific writing and general conduct of clinical and translational research.
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| VCS 80100 - Behavior, Husbandry, And Diagnostic Techniques I |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. Introduction to behavior, husbandry, and diagnostic techniques of domesticated animals. Behavioral patterns and methods of management of various breeds of companion animals and animals used in the production of food, fiber, and feathers; restraint techniques, methods of collecting samples for diagnostic purposes, and methods of medication appropriate to a given species; concepts of population and production medicine and the importance of regulatory medicine. Typically offered Fall.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 80200 - Behavior, Husbandry, And Diagnostic Techniques II |
|
Credit Hours: 1.50. A continuation of VCS 80100. Intermediate studies of behavior, husbandry, and diagnostic techniques. Behavioral patterns and methods of management of various breeds of companion animals and animals used in the production of food, fiber, and feathers; restraint techniques, methods of collecting samples for diagnostic purposes, and methods of medication appropriate to a given species; concepts of population and production medicine and the importance of regulatory medicine. Typically offered Spring.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 80300 - Behavior, Husbandry, And Diagnostic Techniques III |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. A continuation of VCS 80200. Behavior, husbandry, and diagnostic techniques related to preventive medicine and production systems of domesticated animals. Behavioral patterns and methods of management of various breeds of companion animals and animals used in the production of food, fiber, and feathers; restraint techniques, methods of collecting samples for diagnostic purposes, and methods of medication appropriate to a given species; concepts of population and production medicine and the importance of regulatory medicine. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 80400 - Behavior In Domestic Animals |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Instruction in basic principles of behavior; factors determining normal and abnormal behavior; and the different types of learning. The main domestic species will be characterized in terms of their normal behavior with which behavior problems are most important in the different species. Typically offered Fall Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 80500 - Small Animal Behavioral Therapy |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Provides information on the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of behavior problems of dogs and cats, with emphasis on differential diagnosis of behavioral problems and behavioral pharmacology. Topics include aggression, anxiety related problems, inappropriate elimination, client counseling, and problem prevention. Client interaction and the question of euthanasia for behavioral problems is also discussed. Typically offered Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 80600 - Small Animal Medicine And Surgery I |
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Credit Hours: 3.50. An overview of clinical approach to common medical and surgical diseases of dogs and cats. A systems approach is used to teach the major concepts of diseases affecting each body system. The focus is on diagnosis and treatment of common diseases encountered in small animal clinical practice. Typically offered Fall Summer.
3.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 80616 - Small Animal Clinical Nutrition |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. The goal of this course is to provide the fundamentals of nutrient assessment while discussing nutritional modification in the management of disease. At the completion of this course, the veterinary student should be proficient in recognizing a nutrition-related problem in a clinical patient, conducting a thorough nutritional assessment, and constructing appropriate nutritional strategies for both the pet and client. The veterinary student will achieve an understanding of clinical nutrition that can be applied to the contemporary practice of veterinary medicine. Typically offered Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop an understanding of problem-solving approaches to nutrition in dogs and cats.
2. Discuss and defend the importance of diet in medical implications of acute and long-term recovery, and influence on the risk of chronic diseases.
3. Demonstrate an awareness of the current controversies in small animal clinical nutrition.
4. Perform nutritional assessment of both the healthy and sick animal.
5. Determine the adequacy of the feeding management for the current status of the animal.
6. Develop a nutritional strategy which addresses the current needs of the animal.
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| VCS 80700 - Small Animal Medicine And Surgery II |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. An overview of clinical approach to common medical and surgical diseases of dogs and cats. A systems approach is used to teach the major concepts of disease affecting each body system. The focus is on diagnosis and treatment of common diseases encountered in small animal clinical practice. Typically offered Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 80800 - Equine Medicine And Surgery |
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Credit Hours: 2.50. Diagnostic methods and prevention, control, and treatment regimens for common diseases affecting horses. Issues related to diseases of regulatory importance (epidemic and exotic) are discussed. Students also learn about surgical correction of selected problems and elective surgical procedures. Typically offered Fall Summer.
2.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 80900 - Ruminant Medicine And Surgery |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Diagnostic methods and prevention, control, and treatment regimens for common diseases affecting ruminants. Issues related to food quality assurance and safety, and diseases of regulatory importance (epidemic and exotic). Surgical correction of selected problems and elective surgical procedures. Typically offered Fall Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 81000 - Swine Production Medicine |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Diagnostic methods and prevention, control, and treatment regimens for common diseases affecting swine. Issues related to food quality assurance and safety and diseases of regulatory importance (epidemic and exotic) are discussed. Typically offered Fall Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 81100 - General Surgery Laboratory |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to basic skills in surgery and anesthesia. Models are used to learn basic skills of instrument use, tissue handling, dissection, and suturing. Students will progress to common anesthetic and surgical procedures on live and cadaver animals. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 81200 - Principles Of Anesthesia, Surgery, And Emergency Medicine |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to basic principles of anesthesiology and surgical practice. The principles of aseptic technique, operating room protocol, tissue handling, hemostasis, and wound repair. Principles of emergency medicine, including shock therapy, fluid therapy, and trauma management. Typically offered Fall Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 81300 - Diagnostic Imaging |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. In the first half of the core diagnostic imaging course, emphasis is on how images are made using current technology. Although radiography is emphasized, imaging modalities such as ultrasonography, computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, scintigraphy, and thermography are discussed. In the second half of the course, types of lesions that can be observed in large and small animals with the various imaging modalities are explained. The course is offered once annually, and its successful completion is required for any of the elective courses offered by Diagnostic Imaging. Typically offered Fall Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 81400 - Comparative Theriogenology |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Basic aspects of reproduction in large and small animals, including obstetrics and genital diseases, on a single animal or group basis are covered. Typically offered Fall Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 81500 - Ophthalmology |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to veterinary comparative ophthalmology. Covers the diagnosis, pathophysiology, and treatment of the ocular diseases commonly seen in food and companion animal species. Typically offered Fall Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To provide students with the basics of normal ocular anatomy and physiology, common ophthalmic diseases in all species for general practice, including their pathophysiology clinical presentations, therapies, and prognoses.
2. Students will become familiar with ophthalmic terminology.
3. Students will gain a basic knowledge of the diseases of the anterior and posterior segments of the eye, the eyelids, and the globe.
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| VCS 81700 - Achieving Success In Private Practice |
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Credit Hours: 1.50. Provides a foundation for the application of practice management principles. Focuses on operations management, financial management, human resource management, and marketing management. Typically offered Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 81800 - Small Animal Surgery Laboratory I |
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Credit Hours: 0.50. Common orthopedic and soft tissue surgical procedures are performed on cadaver and live animals. Typically offered Spring.
0.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 81801 - Small Animal Surgery Laboratory I Alternate |
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Credit Hours: 0.50. Common orthopedic and soft tissue surgical procedures are performed on cadaver and live animals. Typically offered Spring.
0.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 81900 - Small Animal Dentistry |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will be involved with the evaluation and treatment of small animal dentistry patients. Patient activity will occur during four days of the week. On the fifth day, procedure labs using cadaver specimens will be held. Daily patient discussions will occur, topic/additional patient rounds may also be presented on the fifth day. A complete spectrum of small animal dentistry treatments is provided by the clinical service. Therefore, the Students will be involved with all levels of dental/oral care. For students enrolled in Small Animal/Companion Animal and mixed animal tracks. Total clinic hours 129. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 82000 - Small Animal Surgery Laboratory II |
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Credit Hours: 0.50. More advanced soft tissue and orthopedic surgical techniques are practiced on cadaver and live animals. Typically offered Spring.
0.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 82001 - Small Animal Surgery Laboratory II Alternate |
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Credit Hours: 0.50. More advanced soft tissue and orthopedic surgical techniques are practiced on cadaver and live animals. Typically offered Spring.
0.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 82100 - Clinical Neurology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will be directly or indirectly involved in the evaluation, treatment and care of patients present to the neurology/neurosurgery service. Cadaver work may supplement the clinical experience. Students will be expected to accomplish the objectives of the Neurology/Neurosurgery block and to develop greater knowledge, clinical judgment, diagnostic capabilities and neurologic examination skills that would enable them to manage more complex cases, such as intervertebral disc disease, seizures, encephalopathies and neuropathies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 82200 - Large Animal Surgery I |
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Credit Hours: 0.50. Basic surgical training in large animals, including both soft tissue and orthopedic procedures. Typically offered Spring.
0.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 82300 - Large Animal Surgery II |
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Credit Hours: 0.50. More advanced surgical training in large animals, including both soft tissue and orthopedic procedures. Typically offered Spring.
0.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 82400 - Small Animal Theriogenology |
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Credit Hours: 0.50. All aspects of small animal reproduction (in detail), including obstetrics and genital diseases, on a single animal or group basis, are covered. Typically offered Spring Summer.
0.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 82500 - Ruminant Theriogenology |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. All aspects of ruminant reproduction are covered, including obstetrics and genital diseases on a single animal or group basis. Typically offered Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 82600 - Equine Theriogenology |
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Credit Hours: 0.50. Covers all aspects of equine reproduction (in detail), including obstetrics and genital diseases, on a single animal or group basis. Typically offered Spring Summer.
0.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 82700 - Small Animal Imaging |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. A continuation of VCS 81300. Specific diseases of small animals where imaging is part of the diagnosis are discussed. Emphasis is on radiography and untrasonography. The use of alternate imaging modalities is discussed where appropriate. Typically offered Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 82900 - Equine Imaging |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. A continuation of VCS 81300. Specific diseases of horses where imaging is part of the diagnosis are discussed. Emphasis is on radiography and ultrasonography. The use of alternate imaging modalities is discussed where appropriate. Typically offered Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 83100 - Advanced Equine Theriogenology |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Palpation of the mare's reproductive tract is emphasized. Students will have the opportunity to become proficient in all aspects of equine reproductive management and to enhance their abilities to recognize reproductive problems and to formulate and carry out a diagnostic and therapeutic plan. Typically offered Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 83200 - Equine Lameness |
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Credit Hours: 0.50. Advanced study of equine lamenesses, with a focus on the performance horse. Physical examination of the locomotor system, lameness diagnosis, and the establishment of a prognosis are emphasized. Typically offered Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 0.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture, Practice Study Observation
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 83300 - Advanced Equine Medicine |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. A continuation of VCS 50800. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 83400 - Food Animal Surgery |
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Credit Hours: 0.50. A continuation of Large Animal Surgery for students with a selected interest in large animal/mixed practice. Surgical diseases of cattle are emphasized. Typically offered Spring Summer.
0.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 83500 - Environments For Large Animal Species |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Options for systems of management and environments available to producers of animals used in the production of food, fiber, feathers, and horses. An understanding of the principles of designing buildings and controlling environments will be gained through lectures and problem-solving sessions. Typically offered Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 83600 - Introduction To Clinical And Equine Nutrition |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Nutritional requirements of different large animal species are learned. Relationships between nutrients and outcomes when nutrients are under- or oversupplied in different phases of an animal's life cycle. Specific ration and nutritional requirements of horses are discussed, and students will be expected to evaluate nutritional problems. Typically offered Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 83700 - Clinical Nutrition For Ruminants And Swine |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Current information on nutritional requirements of cattle and pigs, along with the relationships between nutrients and outcomes when nutrients are under- or oversupplied in different phases of the life cycle of cattle and pigs. Specific rations and nutritional requirements of cattle and pigs. Students will be expected to evaluate nutritional problems. Typically offered Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 83800 - Swine Production Medicine |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to production and health management in swine herds. The concept of the model herd is introduced, and the use of records in the diagnosis of problems and maximizing production efficiency is covered. The focus is herd-based and includes problem-solving. Typically offered Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 83901 - Beef Production Medicine |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. The goal of this course is to present the concepts of beef production medicine to prepare the student to formulate plans to solve herd problems. The topics of herd health, fertility, nutrition, records, genetics, marketing and environment will be discussed and students will work in groups to solve real herd issues. An optional herd visit will also be available to all students. Typically offered Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Focus on owner’s goals for herd improvements and make recommendations to achieve herd goals.
2. Research questions during case-based exercises and formulate a plan to solve the problems.
3. Utilize the divisions of health, records, nutrition, genetics, marketing, environment and fertility when formulating herd reports.
4. Demonstrate an understanding the economics of beef production.
5. Be prepared to enter a high level practice where beef production medicine is an emphasis.
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| VCS 83902 - Dairy Production Medicine |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. The goal of this course is to present the concepts of dairy production medicine to prepare the student to formulate plans to solve herd problems. The topics of dairy cow nutrition (including ration balancing programs), calf nutrition and management, records analysis including the use of PCDart computer program, vaccination programs, and animal welfare evaluations. Additionally, students will be exposed to team troubleshooting and performing farm evaluations. Outside speakers may be used as content experts. Typically offered Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an understanding of how to successfully evaluate the “roadblocks” for improving the production and animal health of individual dairy farms.
2. Demonstrate an understanding of the concepts of herd-based medical and management decisions vs. individual animal medicine.
3. Gain exposure to fundamentals of monitoring health and productivity based on herd parameters.
4. Gain exposure to concepts and computer programs for dairy nutrition and records analysis.
5. Be prepared to enter progressive dairy practices.
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| VCS 84000 - Small Ruminant/Llama Medicine |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. The pathogenesis, diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of common diseases of small ruminants and llamas. Typically offered Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 84101 - Advanced Ophthalomogy |
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Credit Hours: 0.5. This course is an advanced course in ophthalmology covering topics not covered in the core ophthalmology course. Species discussed will include canine, feline, equine, bovine, ovine, caprine and exotic species. Topics include vision and neuro-ophthalmology, surgery, ocular emergencies, ocular manifestations of systemic disease, ocular examination, and diagnostic techniques and modalities specific to diseases of the eye. Typically offered Spring Summer.
0.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To provide students with advanced instructions in clinical ophthalmology and diagnostic testing for diseases of the eye.
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| VCS 84300 - Successful Practice Skills |
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Credit Hours: 0.50. Builds upon the foundation for the application of practice management principles learned in VCS 51700. Focus is in the areas of communications and relationships with clients, staff, and colleagues; leadership development; and key essentials of practice operation for the prospective associate (or practice director). Typically offered Spring Summer.
0.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 84400 - Client Communications - Companion Animal Practice |
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Credit Hours: 0.50. The course will be taught in a discussion format utilizing small group exercises and role-plays. The goal is to demonstrate and describe effective client communication skills. Because effective client communication is a learned skill, the course will provide multiple opportunities for students to practice and refine their skills. Students who participate in this course will be videotaped working through a scenario with a simulated client. While being videotaped and then watching oneself can be very uncomfortable and potentially embarrassing, it is a great way to improve communication skills and is worth the potential momentary discomfort. Typically offered Spring Summer.
0.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will learn basic communication skills that are effective in client, other professional and personal interactions.
2. Students will identify their current communication strengths and weaknesses in a fun, non-threatening environment.
3. Students will learn techniques to build on those strengths and improve areas of difficulty.
4. Students will learn communication strategies that can be used in difficult client situations.
5. Students will practice communication skills and receive targeted feedback through class discussions, role plays and a videotaped encounter with a simulated client.
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| VCS 84500 - Small Animal Medicine Laboratory |
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Credit Hours: 0.50. A guided experience in the performance of diagnostic procedures used in small animal practice. Intended for those who will work with dogs and cats as professionals. Designed to introduce some advanced procedures and to provide an opportunity for refinement of procedures introduced earlier in the curriculum. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 0.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 84600 - Advanced Small Animal Medicine |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. An advanced course dealing with selected diseases of dogs and cats. Designed for the student who is focusing on small animal or companion animal practice. A systems approach is used to teach the major concepts of diseases affecting each body system. Focuses on diagnosis and treatment of diseases commonly encountered in small animal clinical practice. Topics covered in this elective include endocrinology, nephrology, gastroenterology, and immune-mediated diseases. Typically offered Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 84700 - Advanced Small Animal Specialties |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. An advanced course dealing with selected diseases of dogs and cats. Designed for the student who is focusing on small animal or companion animal practice. A systems approach is used to teach the major concepts of diseases affecting each body system. Focuses on diagnosis and treatment of diseases commonly encountered in small animal clinical practice. Topics included in this elective include cardiology, dermatology, neurology, and oncology. Typically offered Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 84800 - Advanced Small Animal Surgery |
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Credit Hours: 1.50. An advanced course dealing with selected surgical diseases of dogs and cats. Designed for the student who will be practicing on small animals (small animal, companion animal, or mixed animal track). A systems approach is used to teach important concepts of surgical diseases and procedures affecting each body system. Focuses on the diagnosis and treatment of diseases commonly encountered in small animal practice. Typically offered Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 85000 - Small Animal Dentistry |
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Credit Hours: 0.50. A thorough understanding and practical knowledge of the oral examination, dental prophylaxis, and tooth extraction. The principles of endodontics, periodontics, orthodontics, and restorations are discussed. Techniques useful in oral surgery, such as dental bonding and intra-oral splinting are presented. Typically offered Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 0.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 85100 - Medicine And Surgery Of Nontraditional Pets |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. An overview of clinical approach to common medical and surgical diseases of nontraditional pets. Focuses on diagnosis and treatment of common diseases encountered in small animal clinical practice. Typically offered Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 86000 - Emergency Medicine/ICU |
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Credit Hours: 0.00. Designed to teach principles of intensive medical care. Advanced monitoring, critical care technology, and nursing care principles are applied as appropriate for patients under the supervision of their attending clinician. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 86001 - Small Animal Emergency And Critical Care |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide an extensive three-week experiential clinical rotation that is focused on small animal emergency and critical care. The student will participate in receiving, triaging, and treating small animal emergency cases, as well as monitoring and treating critically ill small animal patients admitted to the Veterinary Teaching Hospital. Rounds will be topic and case oriented. For students in all tracks. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The student will understand and be able to execute the principles of patient triage.
2. The student will develop an understanding of the variety of cases seen in emergency situations.
3. The student will understand how to effectively evaluate and treat various levels of emergency, trauma, and critical care patients.
4. The student will understand and learn client communication skills utilized during emergency situations.
5. The student will understand the practical elements related to providing cost-effective, efficient and quality veterinary care for emergency patients.
6. The student will learn the principles and develop the skills for various critical care procedures and techniques.
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| VCS 86002 - Small Animal Emergency And Critical Care II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide an intensive 3-week experiential clinical rotation that is focused on small animal emergency and critical care. The student will participate in receiving, triaging, evaluating emergency cases as well as monitoring and treating critically ill small animal patients admitted to the Veterinary Teaching Hospital. There will be a focus on providing additional opportunities for the student to participate in and perform advanced critical care techniques. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To teach and encourage the students to maximally utilize the “Veterinary Team” to provide efficient and effective quality veterinary care in emergency situations.
2. To help the students develop an understanding of physiologic and pathophysiologic principles as related to emergency and critical care patients.
3. To teach the students the principles and proper execution of patient triage.
4. To help the students develop an understanding of the depth and diversity of the clientele and types of cases seen in emergency situations.
5. To teach the students to appropriately assess an emergent or trauma patient as well as formulate and implement a diagnostic and therapeutic plan for the emergent or trauma patient.
6. To teach the students to appropriately assess the critical care patient as well as formulate and adjust diagnostic and therapeutic plans for those critical care patients.
7. To teach the students the principles and skills associated with various monitoring modalities associated with emergency and critical care.
8. To teach the students client communication skills utilized during emergency situations or when discussing critical care patients.
9. To teach the students the practical elements related to providing cost effective, efficient and quality veterinary care for emergency patients.
10. To teach the students the principles and skills associated with various emergency and critical care procedures and techniques.
11. To teach the students to effectively utilize the problem oriented medical record format as it applies to the emergency patient to facilitate appropriate and thorough documentation and communication.
12. To teach the students to pursue case related information or a topic in appropriate depth using appropriate resources and to effectively communicate and apply this knowledge.
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| VCS 86100 - Small Animal Medicine I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Basic clinical experience and training in the art and science of small animal medicine. Total clinic hours 129. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 86201 - Small Animal Surgery - General I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will be expected to participate in the evaluation, treatment, and care of patients, learning from clinical case material, reviewing topics, and reading the surgical literature. Students will perform elective neutering procedures as the primary surgeon and assist in other surgical procedures. Students will participate in surgery rounds at least once each day, with every student researching and discussing the theoretical aspects of cases and making a formal case or topic presentation to other students and faculty at least once during the course. Total clinic hours 129. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 86202 - Small Animal Surgery - Orthopedic |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will be expected to participate in the small animal orthopedic service. Students will be expected to participate in the evaluation, treatment and care of patients, learning from clinical case material, reviewing topics, and reading the surgical literature. Students will gain experience performing orthopedic and neurologic examinations and localizing lesions. Students will participate in surgery rounds at least once each day, with every student researching and discussing the theoretical aspects of cases and making a formal case or topic presentation to other students and faculty at least once during the course. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 86203 - Shelter Medicine And Surgery |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will spend two weeks performing elective surgery on shelter animals in the mobile surgery unit and one week working at an off-campus shelter. The mobile surgery unit, staffed by a DVM faculty member and a full-time RVT will operate 4 days per week, estimated 12 hours per day. Students will perform independent study on the day they do not participate in mobile surgery. During the one week at the shelter, students will work approximately 50 hours spread over 5 days of the week assisting the shelter medicine veterinarian in all aspects of shelter medicine. There will be a limit of 4 students per block, with a maximum of 3 students participating in the mobile surgery unit at any time. Preference will be given to students who are planning to specialize in shelter medicine. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Improve their knowledge, technical skills, and competence in small animal elective surgery and anesthesia, including pediatric surgery, so that they will be able to safely anesthetize and, with high quality and attention to detail, perform a dog spay in 45 minutes or less.
2. Gain insight into issues in shelter medicine, including small animal population medicine, infectious disease control, animal welfare and pet relinquishment issues.
3. Improve their physical examination and patient evaluation skills, anatomical knowledge, efficiency of movement, and interpersonal communication skills.
4. Foster relationships between Purdue University and local animal shelters.
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| VCS 86300 - Small Animal Community Practice |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides students with training in outpatient small animal medicine and client communication. Special emphasis is placed on preventive medicine. Students are required to write one paper as arranged with the instructor. Total clinic hours 129. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 86502 - Large Animal Medicine I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Clinical training in problem solving of medical diseases, performance of diagnostic procedures, treatment, and care of individual animals. Emphasis on bovine cases. Total clinic hours 129. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| VCS 86600 - Large Animal Surgery I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students are exposed to, and responsible for, case-oriented problem-solving experiences with large animal surgical diseases, including lamenesses. Students may have an opportunity to focus on a particular species during a portion of the basic block. The basic block includes the development of skills and capability with the principles of surgery (e.g., anesthesia, asepsis, and wound healing) as applied to large animal patients. The basic block experience is directed to primary level care. Total clinic hours 129. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 86700 - Equine Community Practice I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will provide training in outpatient and ambulatory equine medicine, surgery, theriogenology, and preventive medicine. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 86800 - Equine Community Practice II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides students with training in outpatient and ambulatory equine medicine, surgery, theriogenology, and preventive medicine. Special emphasis on client communications and computerized practice management is provided. A special project in practice management is required. Total clinic hour 129. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 87000 - Clinical Cardiology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will actively participate in diagnostic and therapeutic procedures in all veterinary species with an emphasis on small animals. Students will be instructed and actively perform such diagnostic and therapeutic procedures including: electrocardiography, echocardiography, blood pressure determination and catheter placement. Students will be given exposure to invasive procedures such as angiography, intracavitary pressure determinations, PDA embolization, balloon valvuloplasty and pacemaker implantation. Students will receive "active" clinical instruction as well as lectures in the form of teaching rounds. Current concepts in cardiovascular medicine will be emphasized. Total clinic hours 129. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 87100 - Small Animal Medicine II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Additional clinical experience and training in the art and science of small animal medicine. Total clinic hours 129. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 87102 - Oncology I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This block is designed to provide maximum exposure to clinical and comparative oncology. Students will develop skills necessary to fully evaluate and treat canine and feline cancer patients. Students will receive two weeks of exposure to the medical oncology clinic and one week of exposure to the radiation oncology clinic. Students will gain experience with various biopsy techniques and with therapeutic modalities including chemotherapy and radiation therapy. Independent study of relevant current literature is expected. The oncology student will concentrate on handling oncology patients but will have general internal medicine responsibilities during non-clinic hours. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 87104 - Clinical Investigation In Oncology II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This elective will allow senior students the opportunity to investigate a problem in clinical oncology. The problem and method of investigation will be defined by the student and instructor. Methods of investigation available could include: 1) prospective or retrospective studies relating to the diagnosis, biological behavior, and treatment of specific canine or feline neoplasms, and 2) in vitro evaluation of tumor cells (e.g. cell culture). Oncology rounds attendance and case responsibility in oncology will also be expected. The experience gained in this course may aid in preparing the student to enter graduate or residency training. An expanded course description for the specific problem to be investigated must be placed on file in the departmental office and in the office of the Associate Dean of Academic Affairs. Total clinic hours 129. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 87105 - Pet Practice |
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Credit Hours: 6.00. Advanced instruction and clinical experience in dermatologic medicine. Students participate fully in diagnostics, therapeutics, patient management, drug studies, and research activities. Extensive self-study materials are available. Small Animal Community Practice: Students will receive training in primary care small animal and exotic pet medicine, behavior, theriogenology, client preventive medicine and overall pet wellness to promote the family-pet bond. Students will be required to write one paper as arranged with instructor. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 87201 - Clinical Veterinary Anesthesiology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will provide clinical training in anesthesiology. Students may focus on large animals, small animals, or a mixture of the both. The students will participate in daily rounds to discuss case work-up as well as advanced topics in anesthesia that are not covered in other courses. Topics may include mechanical ventilation, blood gas interpretation, neuromuscular blockade, and adjunctive anesthetic procedures (epidural analgesia, brachial plexus block, etc.) Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 87202 - Small Animal Surgery - General II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will be expected to assume greater responsibility for evaluation, treatment, and care of patients while developing greater knowledge, clinical judgment, and diagnostic capabilities that enable them to manage more complex cases. Students will learn from clinical case material, reviewing topics, and reading the surgical literature and will be given more responsibility for case management. Students will perform elective neutering procedures as the primary surgeon and assist in other surgical procedures. Students will participate in surgery rounds at least once each day, with every student researching and leading case discussions, demonstrating more initiative and independence. Each student will make a formal case or topic presentation to other students and faculty at least once during the course. Total clinic hours 129. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 87203 - Small Animal Surgery - Orthopedic II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students will be expected to assume greater responsibility for evaluation, treatment, and care of patients while developing greater knowledge, clinical judgment, and diagnostics capabilities that enable them to manage more complex cases. Students will be expected to learn from clinical case material, reviewing topics, and reading the surgical literature. Students will gain additional experience performing orthopedic examinations. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 87502 - Large Animal Medicine II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced clinical training in problem-solving of medical diseases, performance of diagnostic procedures, treatment, and care. Students may be allowed to spend up to three working days off campus to work with a veterinarian engaged in practice in the student's area of interest. This off-campus experience should enhance the student's education by complementing experience gained on campus. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 87600 - Large Animal Surgery II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students have advanced responsibility for large animal surgical patients with a species focus. Students are expected to conduct the appropriate presurgical physical examination, assist with the surgery, and be responsible for the postoperative care of most primary care-level patients and many secondary care-level patients. Total clinic hours 129. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 87700 - Large Animal Lameness |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Students are exposed to, and responsible for, case-oriented problem-solving experiences with large animal lamenesses and orthopedic diseases. The case exposure is primarily equine, but lameness students are expected to help with food animal lamenesses and orthopedics, as a comparative biomedical approach to studying locomotion and the musculoskeletal system. Depending upon the availability of lameness cases, lameness students will participate with the general clinic responsibilities and emergency duty in the large animal surgery. Students may be allowed to spend up to three days off campus to work with a veterinarian engaged in practice in the student's area of interest. This off-campus experience should enhance the student's education by complementing experience gained on campus. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 87800 - Swine Production Medicine I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced training and extensive experience in working with swine herds on a herd health management program. Total clinic hours 129. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 87900 - Bovine Theriogenology And Production Medicine I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Training and experience in working with reproductive management problems in dairy and beef herds. The importance of herd records in assessing performance and health is stressed, and training is provided in the use of computerized recording systems and ration formulation programs. Total clinic hours 129. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 87902 - Comparative Theriogenology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Training and experience in working with reproductive management problems in dairy and beef herds. The importance of herd records in assessing performance and health is stressed, and training is provided in the use of computerized recording systems and ration formulation programs. Total clinic hours 129. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 87903 - Bovine Theriogenology And Production Medicine II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced training in the areas of embryo transfer, embryo grading, artificial insemination, oviduct patency tests, and ultrasound use in ambulatory food animal practice. Training will also focus on repeat breeder cows. Additional responsibilities will be designated in the areas of herd health, production medicine and the recognition of disease processes. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 87905 - Advanced Beef Cow-Calf Production Medicine |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is designed to provide an intensive 3-week experiential clinical rotation that is focused on beef cow-calf production medicine. The students will spend about 50% of the time on herd visits and about 50% on research and writing up herd reports. Each student will be responsible for a specific area of focus on each herd visit. Purdue students taking the block will be available for back-up emergency duty on days when they are on campus. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Become increasingly proficient at taking a thorough history.
2. Improve active listening skills.
3. Develop skills in oral and written communication.
4. Learn to evaluate and analyze beef herd records and to make recommendations for improvement where indicated.
5. Learn how to find credible sources of information when the answer to a question is not known.
6. Learn the difference between a differential diagnosis and speculation. One is good and one is bad.
7. Learn to develop a team of experts to help you solve problems outside your areas of expertise.
8. Maintain a positive attitude and open-mindedness toward change.
9. Understand the economics of beef production.
10. Accept responsibility for lifelong learning and continuing education by keeping current with advances in the profession. When you’re through learning, you’re through.
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| VCS 88000 - Ruminant (Dairy) Production Medicine I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Training and faculty-directed independent study in dairy production medicine. Emphasis is on health and management from the newborn calf to the lactating dairy cow. Particular attention is paid to nutritional management, herd monitoring, and herd records analysis. Additionally, vaccination programs, facilities, and welfare auditing will be covered. The block may be customized according to the interests of the students enrolled. A limited amount of time is spent on individual animal care. Farm visits to observe different management styles and to provide troubleshooting of herd problems will also be scheduled during the block. Students may be allowed to spend up to five working days off-campus to work with a veterinarian engaged in practice in the student's area of interest. This off-campus experience should enhance the student's education by complementing experience gained on campus. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| VCS 88001 - Ruminant (Dairy) Production Medicine II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is meant to build on the knowledge gained in VCS 88000 and is directed at students that are focused on future intensive dairy practice. The structure of the block will be similar to VCS 88000, but there will be more in-depth discussion of ration building, records analysis, and mild quality. Additional farm visits will also be performed to provide exposure to different types of dairy farms that will be encountered in dairy practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 88100 - Small Animal Medicine III |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Further clinical exposure with emphasis on cases in the student's area of interest. A faculty mentor will be assigned to each student. Total clinic hours 129. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 88300 - Clinical Investigation In Theriogenology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Provides senior students an opportunity to investigate a clinical problem in a laboratory situation. The student is expected to apply one of the many research techniques available in the school to address the question. The experiences gained may allow the candidate to pursue graduate and residency training in theriogenology. An expanded course description for the specific problem to be investigated must be placed on file in the departmental office and in the office of the associate dean of academic affairs. Total clinic hours 129. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 88500 - Large Animal Medicine III |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Advanced clinical training with focused interest in a specialized type of practice, in-depth training in internal medicine, or participation in large animal related research activities. Students may be allowed to spend up to three working days off campus to work with a veterinarian engaged in practice in the student's area of interest. This experience should enhance the student's education by complementing experience gained on campus. The short off-campus experience should be arranged with the professor of record of the course at least 30 days prior to the beginning of the block. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 88600 - Large Animal Surgery III |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students at this level are expected to function with greater independence, carrying out the history, physical examination, and postoperative care of all elective and certain emergency/intensive care patients of the species of their choice. Depending upon the capabilities and competence of the student, as determined by the surgery faculty and staff, he or she will have the opportunity to conduct supervised surgical procedures. Students may be allowed to spend up to three days off campus to work with a veterinarian engaged in practice in the student's area of interest. This off-campus experience should enhance the student's education by complementing experience gained on campus. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 88601 - Large Animal Surgery III Food Animal |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will focus on food animal surgery and lameness and will only be offered 1-2 times per year. Students will be expected to function with greater independence than during LAS I and II, carrying out the history, physical examination and postoperative care of elective and certain emergency/intensive care patients. Depending upon the capabilities and competence of the student, as determined by the surgery faculty and staff, he/she will have the opportunity to conduct supervised surgical procedures. This block will focus on food animal surgical diseases through seminars, in-clinic hands-on laboratory sessions, rounds discussions and an emphasis on food animal clinical cases. Total clinic hours 129. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 88800 - Swine Production Medicine II |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a faculty-directed independent study. Students are expected to use campus, state, and national resources to deal with herd problems. The goal is to bring the knowledge base of the student to the entry level expected for a swine practitioner. Emphasis is placed on veterinary services needed to maintain top production efficiency in swine herds. Total clinic hours 129. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 89100 - Diagnostic Imaging |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Clinical training and experience in radiology and ultrasound imaging as it contributes to the practice of veterinary medicine. Seminars are based on small animal imaging. Total clinic hours 129. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 89101 - Veterinary Diagnostic - Ultrasound |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This rotation will provide opportunity for hands-on small animal ultrasound imaging. The student will have the opportunity to pre-scan the patients prior to actual scan by the radiologist. By doing so, the student will learn the ultrasound scanning techniques and real-time interpretation of ultrasonography. In addition, students will observe the scanning of veterinary patients by the radiologist and will be asked to participate in ultrasonography interpretation. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 89200 - Veterinary Forensic Medicine |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Advanced study in the field of animal health and practice of veterinary medicine. Must have completed semesters 1 and 2 of the DVM curriculum. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 89300 - Shelter Animal Medicine |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. The Shelter Animal medicine course will be offered to second and third year veterinary students. The course will cover topics essential to understanding the complexity of population medicine in a shelter environment and related welfare issues. Topics to be covered include animal shelter models (no-kill/adoption guarantee, tradition, etc.), population medicine and disease control as it relates to the environment and the animals, critical care in a shelter environment, foster care, neonatal care of shelter animals, population statistics, animal behavior and relinquishment issues, abuse and cruelty, legal and ethical issues, euthanasia, and developing and implementing animal disaster plans. Typically offered Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 89400 - Comparative Ophthalmology I |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Students are given the opportunity to develop the technical skills needed to test for vision and examine each ocular structure for abnormalities. The rotation includes clinical experience and instruction in veterinary (comparative) ophthalmology with participation in the diagnosis, therapy, and management of clinical cases and various research activities. A seminar presentation and/or special project is required. Total clinic hours 129. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VCS 89500 - Veterinary Teaching Hospital Practicum |
|
Credit Hours: 0.00. Students will be assigned to work on a service in the Veterinary Teaching Hospital over one-half of the December-January holiday period. The student will gain hands-on practical experience in the diagnosis and treatment of patients presented to the VTH. The student will also gain some experience managing emergent cases. Total clinic hours 45. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Veterinary Clinical Sciences
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VM 10200 - Careers In Veterinary Medicine |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Overview of the field of veterinary medicine presently and as anticipated for the future. Presentations will include descriptions and discussions of the nature of the professional activity, organization of veterinary medicine, career opportunities, issues confronting the profession, and the admission requirements of the profession. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Concurrent Credit
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
PU Fort Wayne
North Central
West Lafayette
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| VM 10201 - Careers In Veterinary Medicine-DL |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will present to undergraduate students an overview of the field of veterinary medicine, as it is manifest presently, and as it may develop in the future. Included will be descriptions and discussions of the many professional activities of veterinarians, the organization of the profession, and the admission procedures for veterinary education. Presentations will focus upon the people, principles and concepts of the veterinary profession. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Demonstrate an understanding of the veterinary medicine admission requirements and processes (DVM and veterinary technology).
2. Demonstrate an understanding of the career opportunities in veterinary medicine.
3. Gain an appreciation of the local-to-global perspective of veterinary medicine.
4. Gain an awareness of issues of animal and human well-being addressed by the veterinary profession.
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| VM 10500 - Introduction to Veterinary Technology-DL |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. An introduction to the profession of Veterinary Technology will be presented. It will include the many roles of veterinary technicians on the veterinary teams in practice and non-practice areas. Learning skills with an emphasis on medical terminology will be covered to help the student develop a foundation of medical vocabulary for future courses. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VM 14000 - Introduction To Veterinary Technology |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This course provides an orientation to the profession of Veterinary Technology. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
Familiarity with the various facets and career opportunities in the field of Veterinary Technology.
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| VM 20500 - Small Animal Nursing Clinical Mentorship I-DL |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This is the first of three clinical mentorships in small animal nursing. This clinical mentorship will require the veterinary technician student to work with a small animal veterinary care facility to practice several tasks under the supervision of a clinical mentor. This clinical mentorship focuses on the principles of historytaking, physical examination, simple diagnostic sample collection, parenteral and oral administration of medication, and venipuncture. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VM 20600 - Small Animal Nursing Clinical Mentorship II-DL |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This is the second of three clinical mentorships in small animal nursing. This mentorship requires the student to work with a small animal veterinary care facility to practice several tasks under the supervision of a clinical mentor. This clinical mentorship focuses on the principles of venipuncture, catheter placement, various methods of urine collection, vaginal cytology, dental prophylaxis, and ECG tracings. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VM 20700 - Small Animal Nursing Clinical Mentorship III-DL |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This is the third of three clinical mentorships in small animal nursing. This mentorship will require the student to work with a small animal veterinary care facility to practice several tasks under the supervision of a clinical mentor. This clinical mentorship focuses on the principles of oncology, dermatology, ophthalmology, and emergency care procedures. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VM 20800 - Large Animal Medical Nursing Clinical Mentorship -DL |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This clinical mentorship focuses on the principles of basic handling, nursing, and diagnostic techniques used in large animal medicine. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VM 20900 - Equine Medical Nursing Clinical Mentorship - DL |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This clinical mentorship focuses on the principles of handling, restraint, and equine nursing care. Tasks to be documented include restraint and handling techniques, data collection, basic nursing care, and adminstration of medication and treatments. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VM 21000 - Small Animal Anesthesia-Clinical Mentorship-DL |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. This mentorship will require the student to work with a small animal veterinary care facility to practice several tasks under the supervision of a clinical mentor. This mentorship focuses on the principles of anesthesia from induction, maintenance to recovery. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VM 21100 - Food Animal and Equine Anesthesia-Clinical Mentorship-DL |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This mentorship will require the student to work with a food animal or equine veterinary care facility to practice several tasks under the supervision of a clinical mentor. This mentorship focuses on the principles of large animal and equine anesthesia from induction and maintenance to recovery. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VM 21200 - Operating Room Techniques and Sterilization -Clinical Mentorship-DL |
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Credit Hours: 0.50. This clinical mentorship will require the student to work in a veterinary care facility to practice several tasks under the supervision of a clinical mentor. This mentorship focuses on the principles of operating room procedures, patient and instrument preparation for surgery and the duties of the circulating nurse and the scrub nurse. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VM 21500 - Small Animal Diag Imaging I-Clinical Mentorship-DL |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This is the first of two clinical mentorships in diagnostic imaging. This mentorship will require the student to work with a small animal veterinary care facility to practice several tasks under the supervision of a clinical mentor. This mentorship focuses on the principles of film loading, processing, presentation for viewing radiographs, care and maintenance of processors, and imaging of the thorax and abdomen. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VM 21600 - Small Animal Diag Imaging II-Clinical Mentorship-DL |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This is the second clinical mentorship in small animal diagnostic imaging. This mentorship requires the student to work with a small animal veterinary care facility to practice several tasks under the supervision of a clinical mentor. This mentorship focuses on the preparation of a technique chart, imaging of the shoulder, radius, ulna, stifle, spine, skull, and pelvis. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VM 21700 - Food Animal and Equine Diagnostic Imaging-Clinical Mentorship |
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Credit Hours: 0.50. This clinical mentorship will require the student to work with a food animal/equine veterinary care facility to practice several tasks under the supervision of a clinical mentor. This mentorship focuses on the imaging of the carpus, fetlock, tarsus, navicular projection, P3 views, and the dorsoproximal-palmarodistal view. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VM 22000 - Laboratory Animal Health I -DL |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is the first of two courses that provide basic instruction in the concepts of laboratory animal health management to the veterinary technician student. This course will place an emphasis on the basics of care and nutrition of common laboratory animals, the issues of animal welfare as they apply to research, and safety and care procedures for working in the laboratory animal environment. Students are expected to achieve a level of understanding of laboratory animal care and management that will allow them to communicate effectively with the veterinarian. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VM 22100 - Laboratory Animal Health II -DL |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is the second of two courses that provide basic instruction in the concepts of laboratory animal health management to the veterinary technician student. This course will place an emphasis on the care of laboratory animals as well as specific procedures that are used in laboratory animal medicine. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VM 22200 - Parsitology Microbiology Clinical Mentorship -DL |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This clinical mentorship focuses on the motor skills required to sample, prepare specimens for examination, and for technician level diagnostic techniques. Tasks to be documented include collection of microbiological samples, techniques for staining and testing samples, techniques for collecting and testing common parasites. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VM 22300 - Pharmacy Clinical Mentorship-DL |
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Credit Hours: 0.50. This clinical mentorship will require the veterinary technician student to work with a veterinary care facility to practice tasks under the supervision of a clinical mentor. This clinical mentorship focuses on the principles of drug order fulfillment, reconstitution of medications, correct storage of medications (including controlled substances), safe handling of hazardous medications, and inventory control procedures. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VM 22400 - Necropsy Clinical Mentorship -DL |
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Credit Hours: 0.50. This clinical mentorship focuses on the motor skills and techniques in performing a basic prosection (necropsy). Tasks include basic necropsy technique, techniques for sample collection and storage, and safety issues related to handling animal specimens. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VM 22500 - Advanced Clinical Mentorship - DL |
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Credit Hours: 1.50. This clinical mentorship will require the student to complete 120 hours of additional work experience while completing a series of selected projects related to veterinary medicine. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VM 22600 - Laboratory Animal Clinical Mentorship -DL |
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Credit Hours: 0.50. This clinical mentorship focuses on the motor skills involved with the basic handling, restraint, administration of medication and nursing care of laboratory animals. Permission of department required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VM 22700 - Clinical Pathology Clinical Mentorship-DL |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. This clinical mentorship will require the student to work with a laboratory, small or large animal veterinary care facility to practice several tasks under the supervision of a clinical mentor. This clinical mentorship focuses on the principles of blood film evaluation for different species, manual and automated CBCs, normal and abnormal cellular morphology, urinalysis, chemistry panels, and differentials. Permission of department required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VM 24100 - Safety, Prevention And Public Health |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will cover selected zoonotic diseases, occupational hazards and safety issues, related to the veterinary health care team and veterinary facility. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Select and utilize the appropriate measures to prevent occupational safety incidents and facility safety incidents.
2. Mitigate the effects of an occupational safety incident or facility safety incident.
3. Understand where to find current information related to veterinary medical occupational hazards.
4. Effectively communicate appropriate safety principles to colleagues.
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| VM 24200 - Integrations I |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. An introduction to problem based learning of the nursing process (patient evaluations, interventions, and desired resolutions) using a case based approach. This course will integrate foundational knowledge from anatomy, physiology, with information in the veterinary nursing courses. Cases will involve different domestic animal species. Students will learn using a variety of teaching modalities (lecture, group work, problem based learning). Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify and apply the components of nursing process (physical exam, patient history, SOAP).
2. Explain the rationale for using the nursing process as it relates to veterinary patient care.
3. Identify and explain how patient interventions change the physiology of the animal.
4. Integrate and apply knowledge from foundation courses to understand the rationale behind nursing intervention in clinical cases.
5. Identify individual strengths in problem solving as a part of a small group.
6. Appropriately use verbal and written communication skills with other members of the veterinary team, with clients, and the general public.
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| VM 24300 - Clilnic Rotations I |
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Credit Hours: 1.50. This course will provide the basic learning situations for developing the techniques required of veterinary technicians in pharmacy, radiology, surgery, medical nursing, and ancillary areas. Total clinic hours 9/week. Typically offered Fall.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VM 24400 - Clinical Rotations II |
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Credit Hours: 1.5. This course will provide clinical learning situations for developing techniques required for veterinary technicians in surgery, medical nursing, clinical pathology, radiology, pharmacy, and ancillary areas. Typically offered Spring.
1.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Increased awareness of clinical areas, personnel, responsibilities and basic procedures.
2. Performed basic nursing duties learned in previous courses and as they are learned in concurrent courses and by experience.
3. Participated in the utilization of the veterinary team concept and contributed to its patient care benefits.
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| VM 24500 - Management Topics for Vet Techs I -DL |
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Credit Hours: 1.50. This course is the first of two courses that provide basic instruction in the concepts of a veterinary technician's role in the management of day-to-day operations of a veterinary clinic. This course will emphasize problems related to ethical and liability issues, medical records, inventory, marketing and fees, writing cover letters and resumes, and job interviews. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VM 24600 - Management Topics for Vet Techs II-DL |
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Credit Hours: 1.50. This course is the second of two courses that provide basic instruction in the concepts of a veterinary technician's role in the management of day-to-day operations of a veterinary clinic. This course will place an emphasis on client interaction including active listening skills, effective client communication, handling emotional clients, and euthanasia and client grief. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.500 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VM 24800 - Understanding Animal Disease-DL |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. This course is a survey of common small animal and large animal diseases, their clinical signs, and how these signs can be explained by physiology and pathophysiology. The zoonotic potential for the disease and the role of the veterinary technician in the treatment, management, and education of client/owner of the affected animal is also emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| VM 24900 - Clinical Rotations III |
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Credit Hours: 3.5. This course will provide clinical learning situations for developing techniques required for veterinary technicians in surgery, medical nursing, clinical pathology, radiology, pharmacy, and ancillary areas. Typically offered Summer.
3.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Increased awareness of clinical areas, personnel, responsibilties, and basic procedures.
2. Performed nursing duties learned in previous courses and by experience.
3. Participated in the utilization of the veterinary team concept and contributed to its patient care benefits.
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| VM 25100 - Medical Math And Terminology For Veterinary Technicians |
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Credit Hours: 0.50. This course will introduce students to fundamental medical terminology and basic math and dosage calculations commonly used in veterinary medicine. The course includes both classroom and on-line components. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 0.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Sch of Vet Medicine Admin
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The student will be able to identify and recognize the part of a medical term, define the meaning of commonly used prefixes combining forms and suffixes, recognize and correctly apply approximately 350 basic medical terms.
2. The student will be able to recognize the importance of spelling and pronouncing medical terms correctly.
3. The student will be able to calculate doses of medication and fluid administration rates for patients.
4. The student will be able to calculate concentrations of percent solutions, and calculate amount of a medication to dispense given the dosage and drug concentration or strength.
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| VM 25500 - Veterinary Technology Externship |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. A six-week, off-campus work experience in a facet of veterinary technology selected as a career goal by the student. Typically offered Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VM 27700 - Management Topics For Veterinary Technicians |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Management problems with veterinary ethics, law communication, finance, and hospital maintenance will be emphasized. Students will also research special interests directly related to a technician's duties and present informative seminars to their classmates. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VM 29000 - Clinic Rotation |
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Credit Hours: 7.00. This course will provide clinical situations for practicing the techniques required of veterinary technicians in pharmacy, radiology, surgery, medical nursing, clinical pathology, and ancillary areas. Emphasis will be on performance proficiency. Total clinic hours 21/week. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 7.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Full-Time Privileges, Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VM 30100 - Seminar For Veterinary Technologists I |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Discussion of case situations that encourage development of decision making skills at the veterinary technologist level. Independent study time is allocated for selection and completion of prerequisite steps needed for participating in a practicum. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VM 32300 - Laboratory Animals And Nursing Of Non-Traditional Pets |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. This course will cover the proper methods of restraint, daily care, nursing techniques, and housing needs for the common species of laboratory animals. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand nutritional requirements, physiological data, anesthesia, blood collection, drug administration, handling, sexing, and common diseases of laboratory rodents, primates, and lagomorphs as well as non-traditional pets including small mammals, fish, amphibians, reptiles, and birds.
2. Familiarization with laboratory housing, environmental control, and environmental enrichment concepts.
3. Familiarization with basic genetics and breeding programs of laboratory animals.
4. Understand sanitation and hygiene procedures as they relate to laboratory animal management.
5. Introduce concepts of experimental methodology and regulatory compliance within laboratory animal medicine.
6. Introduce wildlife triage and wildlife nursing techniques.
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| VM 34200 - Integrations II |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. A continuation to problem based learning of the nursing process using a case based approach. This course will integrate foundational knowledge from anatomy, physiology, veterinary nursing courses, clinical pathology, pharmacology, anesthesia diagnostic imaging, microbiology and parasitology. Cases will involve different domestic animal species and laboratory animals. Students will learn using a variety of teaching modalities (lecture, group work, problem-based learning). Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Apply previous knowledge of the nursing process.
2. Apply the elements of critical thinking in case studies.
3. Integrate and apply knowledge from other courses to explain the rationale behind nursing cases.
4. Identify individual strengths of all members in problem solving as a part of small group learning.
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| VM 34300 - Clinical Rotations IV |
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Credit Hours: 5.00. This course will provide clinical learning situations for developing techniques required for veterinary technicians in surgery, medical nursing, clinical pathology, radiology, pharmacy, and ancillary areas. Typically offered Fall.
5.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Increased awareness of clinical areas, personnel, responsibilities and basic procedures.
2. Performed nursing duties learned in previous courses and by experience.
3. Participcated in the utilization of the veterinary team concept and contributed to its patient care benefits.
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| VM 34400 - Clinic Rotations V |
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Credit Hours: 5.00. This course will provide clinical learning situations for developing techniques required for veterinary technicians in surgery, medical nursing, clinical radiology, pharmacy, and ancillary areas. Typically offered Spring.
5.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Increased awareness of clinical areas, personnel, responsibilities and basic procedures.
2. Performed nursing duties learned in previous courses and by experience.
3. Participated in the utilization of the veterinary team concept and contributed to its patient care benefits.
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| VM 34500 - Management I |
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Credit Hours: 1.50. The course will introduce students to concepts related to working in and managing a veterinary practice. Emphasis will be on client communication and education as well as facilitating a job search, interviewing and cover letter and resume creation. Typically offered Spring.
1.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Create a professional cover letter and resume.
2. Properly prepare for and participate in employment interviews.
3. Utilize techniques that build excellent relationships by exceeding client expectations, providing great client service and building a rapport with clients.
4. Utilize techniques for handling emotional or difficult clients.
5. Utilize techniques for working with special needs clients.
6. Explain the grief process.
7. Discuss professionalism and legal and ethical issues related to the veterinary technology profession.
8. Describe the ways in which fees are set for products and services at a veterinary clinic.
9. Define marketing and describe how marketing strategies can be used in a veterinary clinic setting.
10. Describe inventory management strategies.
11. Identify professional organizations related to veterinary technology and veterinary practice management.
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| VM 36500 - Laboratory Animal Science |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course will cover the principles of laboratory animal science for the technologist (veterinary and LATG). Concepts of facility management, animal health and diseases, regulatory issues, compliance, and instrumentation will be presented. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VM 36600 - Concepts Of Veterinary Hospital Management |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles of management of the veterinary hospital, including human resources, inventory, clientele, and finances. Emphasis will be on the role of the veterinary hospital manager. Method of delivery is blended and will consist of one face-to-face meeting per week (75 minutes) and online discussions/activities. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Take on a leadership role in a veterinary facility and supervise and motivate other employees.
2. Plan for their own personal financial wellness.
3. Communicate effectively with clients and coworkers.
4. Utilize appropriate marketing strategies.
5. Track the financial performance of a veterinary clinic and utilize strategies to increase practice revenue and control practice expenses.
6. Utilize various inventory management strategies.
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| VM 36700 - Foundations Of Instruction For Allied Health Professionals |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Introduction to assessing student learning needs and applying teaching methods to the education of allied health, veterinary, pharmacy, and graduate students. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VM 39000 - Practicum |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. Veterinary technologist level off-campus experience in one area of interest totaling 480 hours over 12 weeks. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Individual Study
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Practicum, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VM 41400 - Seminar For Veterinary Technologists II |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Case studies from practicums will be presented in seminar format to illustrate problem analysis at the technologist level. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VM 44100 - Occupational And Public Health For Veterinary Technicians |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. The course covers selected aspects of public health and safety related to the veterinary health care team, patient, client and public. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1.Various public health challenges related to the veterinary medicine and the appropriate safety principles, the student should be able to select and utilize the appropriate measures to assist in preventing problems or mitigate their effects.
2.The means to acquire information related to public health challenges in veterinary medicine, he student should be able to seek, select, compile and effectively communicate appropriate material to their colleagues, the clients and public.
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| VM 44200 - Management II |
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Credit Hours: 1.50. This course is a continuation of the first veterinary practice management course. It will introduce students to concepts related to leading a veterinary medical team and managing the day-to-day management of the veterinary practice. Emphasis will be on human resources, marketing and financial management. Typically offered Fall.
1.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the attributes of a good leader.
2. Create a personal financial plan (i.e. budget) use credit wisely.
3. Describe strategies for recruiting, managing, and motivating employees.
4. Utilize techniques for proper delegation of work within a veterinary facility.
5. Create effective client surveys.
6. Use social media to effectively market a veterinary facility.
7. Ceate and interpret financial statements.
8. Describe techniques used for controlling expenses at a veterinary facility.
9. Assess a veterinary facility’s financial performance by utilizing industry benchmarks.
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| VM 44300 - Clinic Rotations VI |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. This course will provide clinical learning situations for developing techniques required for veterinary technicians in surgery, medical nursing, clinical pathology, radiology, pharmacy, and ancillary areas. Typically offered Spring.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1.Increased awareness of clinical areas, personnel, responsibilities and basic procedures.
2.Performed nursing duties learned in previous courses and by experience.
3.Participated in the utilization of the veterinary team concepts and contributed to its patient care benefits.
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| VM 44400 - Veterinary Technology Clinical Orientation |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is an intensive experience and clinical orientation to the Veterinary Teaching Hospital for graduates from another AVMA accredited Veterinary Technology program who wish to complete a BS degree at Purdue University. This course is a four week long, full day rotation (40 hours per week). Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Sch of Vet Medicine Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Function effectively in the clinical ancillary areas of the Veterinary Teaching Hospital complex.
2. Demonstrate compliance with VTH policies and procedures.
3. Demonstrate an understanding of Purdue nursing methodologies and skills utilized in the VTH.
4. Self-identify areas of technical skills which will require further development to attain standards of performance expected of Purdue Veterinary Technologists.
5. Perform nursing duties assigned by instructors, and participate as a fully functioning member of the veterinary team and effectively contribute to patient care.
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| VM 44500 - Veterinary Technology Senior Project |
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Credit Hours: 4.00. This is an independent study course in which the student engages in learning activities to enhance their knowledge in a particular area of veterinary technology of their choosing, demonstrate effective oral and written communication, and apply analysis, integration, and syntheses to achieve a solution. Typically offered Spring.
4.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Sch of Vet Medicine Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Acquisition of knowledge at the veterinary technologist level in an area of interest or focus.
2. Demonstrate effective oral communication.
3. Demonstrate effective written communication.
4. Demonstrate the ability to analyze, integrate, and synthesize a solution to solve a problem.
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| VM 45000 - Animals In Emergencies-Disaster Management |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. The course is intended to assist animal care providers in understanding the incident command system and developing plans that improve the care of and mitigating the impact of disasters on livestock and pets. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Sch of Vet Medicine Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Increase awareness and preparedness among animal care providers regarding animals in disasters.
2. Describe how the Incident Command System (ICS) is involved in managing animals in disasters.
3. Identify potential hazards and threats in their area - Describe how hazards affect animals and what can be done to reduce the impact of those hazards, including animal suffering and economic losses.
4. Assist in developing effective plans for managing animals in emergencies.
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| VM 45100 - Contemporary Topics In Life Skills |
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Credit Hours: 0.5. This course will introduce the student to a variety of different skills needed to be successful after graduating from college. It will introduce students to concepts related to managing a job search and evaluating job offers, establishing and using credit, investing, saving, risk assessment and managing college debt. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Sch of Vet Medicine Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Execute an effective job search.
2. Assess job offers in terms of salary, benefits, and cost of living.
3. Identify strategies for establishing credit and using it wisely.
4. Interpret a credit score and describe the information contained within a credit report.
5. Identify strategies for managing student loans.
6. Identify strategies for saving money and explain the importance of having a savings account.
7. Identify and describe the various tools one can use to invest in their retirement.
8. Identify the different types of insurance that one can obtain and explain how to determine the need for each type of insurance.
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| VM 45200 - Managing Human Resources In Veterinary Medicine |
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Credit Hours: 0.5. This course will focus on a variety of different topics specifically related to human resources management in the veterinary clinic and will build upon the concepts presented in VM 44200. It will introduce students to concepts related to the interviewing and hiring process, motivating employees, using rewards and incentives, leadership and power, training employees, EEOC and employment laws, performance appraisals, progressive discipline and harassment in the workplace. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Sch of Vet Medicine Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify strategies for identifying and hiring qualified candidates.
2. Describe various motivational theories and explain how to apply those theories in the workplace.
3. Compare the advantages and disadvantages of using rewards and incentive plans.
4. Describe the various bases of power and how that influences the employer/employee relationship.
5. Explain the importance of providing employee effective training and identify strategies for providing such training.
6. Create effective job descriptions and employee manuals.
7. Explain the purpose of performance appraisals and describe strategies for executing them.
8. Identify various employment laws and explain their purpose.
9. Define progressive discipline and describe strategies for its implementation.
10. Explain what constitutes workplace harassment and identify strategies for minimizing its occurrence and handling it effectively if it does occur.
11. Identify strategies for preventing drug and/or alcohol abuse and explain how it should be handled if it does occur.
12. Devise an appropriate protocol for firing employees.
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| VM 45300 - The Role Of The Clinical Research Technician |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is aimed for the student with a strong interest in clinical trial research. The student will gain a broader knowledge of regulatory bodies involved in research and the vital team role the clinical research technician/nurse plays during clinical trials. The student will gain exposure to histology preparations, microtome use and immuno-histological staining procedures as well as receiving clinical cases from current oncology trials. Enrollment will be capped to four students per semester. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Sch of Vet Medicine Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the technician’s role in maintaining communication between the client, referring veterinarian and the PI.
2. Obtain detailed patient histories to determine the progression and/or remission of the disease, response to treatment regimen, client call-backs and updating information to the referring veterinarian.
3. Describe the roles and purpose of IACUC and major regulatory entities involved in research.
4. Demonstrate basic knowledge of the purpose of research protocol and mechanism by which amendments are made.
5. Use computer software such as Excel or other spreadsheet software to provide organization in research protocols.
6. Perform literature searches on a research project.
7. Describe how to make basic histological preparations, how to use a microtome and perform staining procedures such as Hematoxylin & Eosin.
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| VM 45400 - Animal Rehabilitation And Physiotherapy |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is an introduction to physical rehabilitation of the veterinary patient. It is designed to instruct students in the basic principles of rehabilitation. This course will introduce the fundamentals needed in clinical practice. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Sch of Vet Medicine Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The student will be able to apply the principles of biomechanics and anatomy to the movement of animal patients.
2. The student will be able to identify clinical situations where physical rehabilitation may be applicable to patient care and develop a basic therapeutic exercise plan for a canine, feline or equine patient.
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| VM 45500 - Equine Behavior For The Veterinary Technician |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is an in-depth look at equine behavior beyond the basics covered in the nursing courses. It is designed to show how the environment in which the horse is kept can affect its behavior. This course will also demonstrate how the study of behavior is applied in equine welfare and to the solution of practical problems and problem behavior in the equine patient. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Sch of Vet Medicine Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. The student will be able to understand the natural behavior of the equine patient, recognize the different behaviors of equines in various working environments.
2. The student will be able to discuss methods used to assess the welfare of equines, appreciate the specific welfare issues associated with equines, and evaluate the current research in equine behavior and welfare.
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| VM 45600 - Advanced Ophthalmology For Veterinary Technicians |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is an in-depth look at ocular anatomy and physiology, use of exam equipment, diagnostic techniques, imaging, pharmacology, surgical instrument identification, cleaning, and care of instruments, surgical nursing, surgical procedures, anesthesia protocols and concerns that are associated with these procedures. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Sch of Vet Medicine Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Identify ophthalmic surgical instruments.
2. Explain care and use of ophthalmic surgical instruments.
3. Identify and locate ocular lesions.
4. Explain anesthetic protocols for various ophthalmic surgeries.
5. Explain the when, why, and how of advanced exam techniques including imaging.
6. Identify commonly used ophthalmic medications and relate them to ocular physiology and the treatment of eye conditions.
7. Comprehend proper equine restraint and sedation protocols.
8. Describe an equine pre purchase exam.
9. Compare and contrast “field” ophthalmology with “in clinic” ophthalmology.
10. Evaluate ophthalmic issues for sport/show horses and medication rules.
11. Identify ocular lesions associated with systemic disease.
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| VM 45700 - Advanced Neurology For Veterinary Medicine |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will focus on neuroanatomy and neurophysiology as well as explore a variety of common neurologic diseases and the basic pathophysiology behind those disease processes. Students will also learn proper nursing care techniques associated with patients with these diseases. Typically offered Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Sch of Vet Medicine Admin
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Become knowledgeable with the functional anatomy of the nervous system.
2. Localize lesions to regions of the brain, spinal cord or peripheral system.
3. Become familiar with a variety of neurologic diseases commonly presented to general or private practice and demonstrate an organized approach to identifying these diseases.
4. Ability to understand the basic principles of nursing care for neurologic diseases.
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| VM 46300 - Special Project |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Research paper in the student's focus of career interest will be presented in a seminar format. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VM 49000 - Topics In Veterinary Medicine |
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Credit Hours: 0.50 to 5.00. Advanced study in the field of animal health and practice of veterinary medicine. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.
0.500 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| VM 80900 - International Veterinary Medicine |
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Credit Hours: 0.5. The course will consist of eight lectures addressing international aspects of the following topics: zoonotic diseases, food hygiene, biosecurity, animal welfare, animal husbandry, infectious diseases, cultural competence, veterinary medical education, and role of international organizations in animal health. Participating students will be required to choose an internationally relevant topic of interest to research. The last session of the course will be a poster session in which each student will present and discuss a poster. The posters will be evaluated by a panel of 3-4 faculty members and a grade assessed. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Spring.
0.500 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students should be familiar with the international issues that impact the veterinary profession.
2. Understand the role that veternarians play in global health and education.
3. Have respect for diverse people and cultures and develop skills for working across cultures.
4. Students gain skills and knowledge to keep themselves safe when travelling overseas.
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| VM 81000 - Veterinary Externship |
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Credit Hours: 6.00. A six-week or 280-contact-hour work experience, under the direct supervision of a veterinarian, in a facet of veterinary medicine selected as a career goal by the student. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Experiential
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VM 81001 - International Externship |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. This course will allow veterinary students to establish a unique veterinary learning experience in their area of interest in an international location. Each veterinary learning experience will be designed by the student with input from faculty advisor and the professor of record. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
Learning Objectives:
1. To develop an understanding of the importance of global education.
2. Increase awareness of global health issues.
3. To become aware of international veterinary career opportunities.
4. To encourage leadership development and diversity awareness.
5. To develop an understanding of the unique issues in veterinary medicine in the geographic location of the experience and be able to communicate these to their colleagues.
6. To foster relationships between Purdue university and international colleagues.
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| VM 81002 - Veterinary Medicine Service Learning-VIDA |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. This 10 day service learning study abroad program is designed for veterinary students to gain practical experience by performing spay neuters of small animals as well as addressing wellness needs of both small and large animals. Typically offered Summer.
2.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Improve their knowledge and technical skills in surgery and anesthesia.
2. Better recognize and understand the underlying issues associated with veterinary medicine in Costa Rica and Panama and what potential sustainable and systemic solutions might assist in solving these issues while also addressing short-term issues.
3. Identify a personal characteristic (strength, weakness, skill, passion) that contributed to success and/or difficulty in completing the work in Costa Rica and Panama.
4. Foster relationships between Purdue University and international colleagues.
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| VM 81003 - International Veterinary Medicine- Directed Experience |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. This course allows veterinary students to participate in a unique faculty-led veterinary learning experience in an international location. Credit will be assigned on the basis of 1 credit for each 45-50 hours of student effort up to a maximum of 6 credits. In most instances, one week of experience will equal one credit. Each veterinary learning experience will be designed by the faculty leader to accomplish specific learning goals in the focuses area of study. The course will be offered in the summer and will vary in length from 1-6 weeks depending on the specific experience. Typically offered Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Sch of Vet Medicine Admin
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. To increase the student’s understanding of a focused area of veterinary medicine in its international context.
2. To develop an understanding of the importance of a global education.
3. To increase awareness of global health issues.
4. To become aware of international veterinary career opportunities.
5. To encourage leadership development and diversity awareness.
6. To develop an understanding of the unique issues in veterinary medicine in the geographic location of the experience and be able to communicate these to their colleagues.
7. To foster relationships between Purdue University and international colleagues.
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| VM 82000 - Applications And Integrations I |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Small group tutorial, problem-oriented approach to understanding how basic science concepts are integrated into clinical aspects of veterinary medicine. Students are expected to identify learning issues, resolve identified gaps in their knowledge base, integrate information across disciplines, and practice/develop problem-solving skills using simulated case materials and research problems. Evaluation of students will be based upon, but not limited to, tutorial group evaluation, peer evaluation, self-evaluation, and a comprehensive content and process examination. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VM 82500 - Grand Rounds |
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Credit Hours: 0.00. Provides a regular forum to bring those in the school together, focused around their common interest in veterinary medicine. Case-based presentations emphasize the basic pathophysiology of disease and clinical investigation and demonstrate the interactions between the clinical and basic sciences. Typically offered Fall Spring.
0.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| VM 83000 - Applications And Integrations II |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Small group tutorial, problem-oriented approach to understanding how basic science concepts are integrated into clinical aspects of veterinary medicine. Students are expected to identify learning issues, resolve identified gaps in their knowledge base, integrate information across disciplines, and practice/develop problem-solving skills using simulated case materials and research problems at a higher level of performance than in VM 82000. Evaluation of students will be based upon, but not limited to, tutorial group evaluation, peer evaluation, self-evaluation, and a comprehensive content and process examination that will include material from VM 82000. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VM 84000 - Applications And Integrations III |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Small group tutorial, problem-oriented approach to understanding how basic science concepts are integrated into clinical aspects of veterinary medicine. Students are expected to identify learning issues, resolve identified gaps in their knowledge base, integrate information across disciplines, and practice/develop problem-solving skills using simulated case materials and research problems at a higher level of performance than in VM 83000. Evaluation of students will be based upon, but not limited to, tutorial group evaluation, peer evaluation, self-evaluation, and a comprehensive content and process examination that will include material from the two previous semesters of this course. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VM 85000 - Applications and Integrations IV |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Small group tutorial, problem-oriented approach to understanding how basic science concepts are integrated into clinical aspects of veterinary medicine. Students are expected to identify learning issues, resolve identified gaps in their knowledge base, integrate information across disciplines, and practice/develop problem-solving skills using simulated case materials and research problems at a higher level of performance than in VM 82000, 83000, and 84000. Evaluation of students will be based upon, but not limited to, tutorial group evaluation, peer evaluation, self-evaluation, and a comprehensive content and process examination that will include material from VM 82000, 83000, and 84000. The final examination will contain an oral component. Typically offered Spring.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VM 86000 - Early Origins Of Veterinary Medicine Seminar |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Students will study the very early origins of man's fascination with animals from the Paleolithic era, and the roots of veterinary medicine in Mesopotamia, Ancient Egypt, and East and South Asia. Particular attention will be paid to works of art that help demonstrate man's fascination with animals and their well-being. This course is appropriate for students with no previous study of history or art history. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Sch of Vet Medicine Admin
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Appreciate and understand the history of the human-animal bond that ultimately led to the establishment of a respectable veterinary profession based on comparative medicine dedicated to the health of animals.
2. Explain the early history of man's fascination with animals and how this led to the development of the human-animal bond.
3. Cite examples of art that demonstrate the development of the human-animal bond.
4. Trace the development of early animal care and explain the veterinary origins in Ancient Egypt, East and South Asia.
5. Compare the role of animal "doctors" in Mesopotamia, and animal care in Ancient Egypt.
6. Describe the prehistory and speculation regarding the domestication of animals.
7. Explain the roots of veterinary medicine in East and South Asia.
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| VM 87000 - History Of Veterinary Medicine From The Ancient Greeks Through The Renaissance Seminar |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. The students will study the contributions of the ancient Greeks and Romans to the development of animal doctors. The veterinary highpoint during the Byzantine Empire and Arabian medical and veterinary progress will also be studied. Animals in the Dark Ages, equine and canine medicine in Medieval Europe, and the Italian roots of the Renaissance in medical sciences will be studied. Particular attention will be paid to works of art that help demonstrate man's fascination with animals and their well-being. This course is appropriate for students with no previous study of history or art history. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Sch of Vet Medicine Admin
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Appreciate and understand the history of veterinary progress that ultimately led to the establishment of respectable veterinary profession based on comparative medicine dedicated to the health of animals.
2. Explain the history of man’s fascination with animals in Ancient Greece and Rome and how this led to the development of veterinary medicine.
3. Cite examples of art that demonstrate the development of veterinary medicine.
4. Trace the development of early Arabian medical and veterinary progress.
5. Describe the history of animal care in the Dark Ages.
6. Explain the roots of equine and canine medicine in Medieval Europe, and describe the Italian Renaissance in medical science.
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| VM 87800 - Swine Herd Health And Diagnostic Pathology |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Arrange total clinic hours 129. Advanced training and experience in working with swine herds on a herd health management program (see VCS 87800, 129 clinic hours) and advanced training in diagnostic approaches to identification of the causes and pathogenesis of disease of mammals (see VPB 88600, 129 clinic hours). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VM 89000 - Topics In Veterinary Medicine |
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Credit Hours: 0.50 to 5.00. Advanced study in the field of animal health and practice of veterinary medicine. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.500 TO 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Individual Study
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| VM 89100 - Special Topics In Veterinary Medicine Arranged |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Opportunities for as many as 50 off-campus, three-week blocks are available for each fourth-year class. Only educational experiences that have no comparable coverage in the Purdue DVM curriculum will be acceptable. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic, Individual Study
All Sections for this Course
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| VM 89200 - Principles Of Professionalism, Jurisprudence, And Ethics |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Presentation/discussion format dealing with a broad spectrum of ethical, legal, and professional issues that impact the veterinary profession. Students are challenged to analyze the role they play as responsible members of the veterinary professional community. Typically offered Fall Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| VM 89400 - International Veterinary Medicine- Directed Clinical Experience |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. This course allows veterinary students to participate in a unique faculty-led veterinary learning experience in an international location. Credit will be assigned on the basis of 1 credit for each 45-50 hours of student effort up to a maximum of 3 credits. In most instances, one week of experience will equal one credit. Each veterinary learning experience will be designed by the faculty leader to accomplish specific learning goals in the focuses area of study. The course will be offered at various times during the clinical year and will vary in length from 1-3 weeks depending on the specific experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: Sch of Vet Medicine Admin
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 3 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. To increase the student’s understanding of a focused area of veterinary medicine in its international context.
2. To develop an understanding of the importance of a global education.
3. To increase awareness of global health issues.
4. To become aware of international veterinary career opportunities.
5. To encourage leadership development and diversity awareness.
6. To develop an understanding of the unique issues in veterinary medicine in the geographic location of the experience and be able to communicate these to their colleagues.
7. To foster relationships between Purdue University and international colleagues.
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| VM 89500 - Clinical Applications |
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Credit Hours: 2.00. Introduction to the Veterinary Teaching Hospital (VTH) and the Animal Disease Diagnostic Laboratory. Students rotate through various sections of the VTH and participate in the evaluation and management of patients. Problem-solving skills and application of material from the basic sciences are emphasized. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 2.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Clinic 1, Clinic
Offered By: Veterinary Medicine
Department: College of Veterinary Med Admn
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| WGSS 28000 - Women's Studies: An Introduction |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introductory survey of the concepts and research data in the new scholarship on women. Topics covered include biology, sexuality, socialization, family and work, creativity, and politics. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture, Recitation
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Women's Studies Program
Course Attributes: Lower Division, S General Education, GTC-Humanistic-Artistic, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Humanities, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Indiana College Network
West Lafayette
|
| WGSS 28100 - Topics In Gender Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines in-depth particular topics from the introductory course in Women's Studies. It addresses gender issues for both men and women. Possible topics include gender and popular culture, women's bodies, body image, and health, masculinities, queering gender and gender transgression. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Women's Studies Program
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| WGSS 28200 - Introduction To LGBT Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (ANTH 28200) This course offers students an introduction to the interdisciplinary study of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer lives. It provides a basic grounding in theories of sexuality and LGBT histories, identities and movements in the U.S. and globally. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Women's Studies Program
Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain a broad overview of the cultural history of sexualities both in the West and globally from the pre-modern era to the contemporary period. They will grasp the way sexual and gender identities change over time and across space. They will analyze how sexual identity intersects with gender, race, and class. They will develop a theoretical understanding of the social construction of sexuality, sexual identities and transgender identities.
|
| WGSS 38000 - Gender And Multiculturalism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course expands students' understanding of gender issues by exploring the multicultural diversity of women's lives. It examines how race, class, sexuality, and culture interact and shape society and ecology in the United States and in a global context. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Women's Studies Program
Course Attributes: S General Education, GTC-Social-Behavioral, UC-Behavior/Social Science, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| WGSS 38100 - Women Of Color In The United States |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores the diversity of racial and ethnic groups in the United States with a particular emphasis on the histories, experiences, and cultural contributions of women of color. Provides a broad introduction to the intersections of gender, race and ethnicity. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Women's Studies Program
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| WGSS 38200 - History Of Love And Marriage |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores intimate relationships and marriage practices in Western and non-Western societies from a historical and comparative perspective. Examines the changes in love and marriage in Greco-Roman societies, medieval and modern Europe, China, India and the Muslim world, among others. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Women's Studies Program
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| WGSS 38300 - Women And Work |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines race, class and gender issues as they affect working women in America. Covering women's work from domestic labor to informal economies to factories, topics include women's participation in trade unions, wage inequalities, family leave policies and sexual harrassment. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Women's Studies Program
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| WGSS 43000 - Women In African History |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (HIST 43000) African women's history is rich and deeply layered. In this course, we will examine the social, political, economic, religious, and cultural experiences of women living in Africa. Although we look at women in the pre-colonial and slave trade eras, the focus will be on women during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Much of our reading and discussion will consider not only women, but also gender as we think about women's interactions with men and children. This course is concerned with the historical forces shaping African women's lives, as well as with ways in which women have been active agents in the making of their own histories. Students can expect to engage with a number of different types of texts (e.g. firms, novels, scholarly analyses, and primary sources.) Typically offered Fall, Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Women's Studies Program
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| WGSS 48000 - Feminist Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Intensive study of a variety of contemporary and international feminist theories from an interdisciplinary perspective. Provides an overview of major trends, critical approaches, and diverse viewpoints in the field of feminist theory. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Women's Studies Program
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| WGSS 48200 - Interdisciplinary Studies In Sexuality: Scholarship On Lesbian And Gay Issues |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course offers an interdisciplinary introduction to recent work in lesbian and gay studies in various fields, including literature, history, film, cultural theory, medicine, law, and studies of sexuality. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Women's Studies Program
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop an in-depth understanding of the cultural and historical processes that shape sexual identities and practices in different cultural contexts globally.
2. Assess the impact of political, cultural, and global ideologies on systems of gender and sexuality.
3. Think critically about sexual and gender representations in the US and globally.
4. Develop an advanced understanding of queer and feminist theories of sexuality.
|
| WGSS 48300 - Global Feminisms |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Explores feminist struggles through the writings of First and Third World feminist scholars. Focuses on feminist projects within and against colonial, nationalist, religious and global contexts. Includes Third World feminist critiques of Western feminisms. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Women's Studies Program
Course Attributes: S General Education, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| WGSS 49200 - Practicum In Women's Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. This course is designed to integrate knowledge derived from women's studies scholarship with practical experience. Students will define their own projects in consultation with women's studies faculty. Periodic conferences and written reports required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Women's Studies Program
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| WGSS 49900 - Independent Study In Women's, Gender And Sexuality Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Special topics or projects under the direction of the instructor in a particular field of specialization. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Women's Studies Program
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| WGSS 58500 - Feminist Art Criticism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. (AD 58500) Analysis and discussion of feminist approaches in judging art, the representation of women in art and the concept of a female aesthetic, the role of gender, race, and class in the art criticism discourse, and the impact of feminism on women artists. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Women's Studies Program
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
|
| WGSS 59900 - Selected Topics In Women's Gender And Sexuality Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A study of selected topics taught by an instructor in whose particular field of specialization the content of the course falls. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Women's Studies Program
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Understand the influence of men’s views and control of women’s participation in sport across age, race/ethnicity and sexual orientation.
2. Understand feminist perspectives on sport.
3. Clarify the meaning of one’s own sport experience.
4. Appreciate the contributions of pioneering women in creating opportunities for women today.
5. Identify obligations to those in future generations regarding access to future sport participation.
6. Understand and appreciate the differences in experiences and perceptions of others through group work and class discussions.
7. Lean how gender ideologies impact women and men’s access to sport.
8. Interrogate masculinity and femininity in order to understanding how gender is constructed in and through sport.
9. Enhance student’s critical thinking and analytical skills
|
| WGSS 68000 - Feminist Theory |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on feminist theories at an advanced level and in a global perspective. Graduate students engage with key theoretical issues in contemporary feminist studies, and examine how feminist scholars have theorized women and gender issues across disciplines. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Women's Studies Program
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| WGSS 68100 - Contemporary Issues In Feminist Scholarship |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Applies feminist theory, knowledge, and methods to the examination of selected contemporary issues. Emphasizes ways in which theory and practice interact in feminist scholarship. Content may vary according to the issues examined. Prerequisite: WGSS 68000. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Women's Studies Program
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| WGSS 68200 - Issues In Feminist Research And Methodology |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides a methodological framework for theorizing, constructing and executing research from a feminist perspective. Students acquire knowledge of the diversity of feminist research projects and methods; they learn to pose research questions; and they will be able to prepare a research or grant proposal drawing on interdisciplinary methods. The course is designed to meet the needs of graduate students in Women’s Studies and is open to students in other programs who are interested in feminist research. The course deals with both theoretical and practical issues in methodology. Prerequisites: WGSS 68000. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Liberal Arts
Department: Women's Studies Program
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. To understand and describe the distinguishing features of feminist research from a variety of disciplines.
2. About the range of qualitative and quantitative research methods used by feminist scholars.
3. To examine how interdisciplinary feminist perspectives shape research methods.
4. About discussions of feminist epistemology, including feminist critiques of science and the development of feminist empiricist, standpoint and postmodernist epistemologies.
5. To develop the skills to interpret and critically evaluate research in women’s studies, in both interdisciplinary journals and discipline-specific journals.
6. To develop their own feminist methods and approaches by producing a research project.
|
| WLAC F1000 - Immersion Abroad Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Immersion Abroad Experience. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| WLAC F2000 - Cross-Cultural Encounters |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Cross-Cultural Encounters. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| WLAC F3500 - Introduction To Translation Studies And Interpreting |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course offers an overview in the history and theory of translation studies and interpreting, beginning practice in translation and
interpreting. This course is taught in English but is designed for students who have 300-level competence in languages offered in the department. Typically offered Fall, Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| WLAC F4000 - Islam, Gender And Confilcts |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Islam, Gender and Conflicts. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| WLAC F4500 - Computers in Translation |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Computers in Translation. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| WOST 10300 - Freshman Experience |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This three-credit, interdisciplinary course provides entering first-year students and transfer students with less than 60 credits an opportunity to become familiar with campus resources, to align academic planning and life goals, and to engage in goal setting, value exploration, and discipline specific career exploration and critical thinking. Freshman Experience offers Women's Studies and feminist perspectives on these topics. It can be taken in fulfillment of General Education requirement #9 and applied to requirements for the Women's Studies minor and the Women's Studies concentration in the Associate of Arts in Liberal Arts. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| WOST 12100 - Introduction To Women's Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An introduction to a women's studies perspective in various academic disciplines. Emphasis on the socialization process of women, the history and literature of women, the politics and theory of the women's rights movement, and the changing role of women in society. Not open to students with credit in GS 12100. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| WOST 20800 - Nutrition in Women's Health |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of women's health issues with emphasis on nutrition. Review of current research in normal and preventative nutrition throughout the lifecycle. Focus on women as individuals and on those who counsel and educate women. Course does not meet nutrition competency requirements for Nursing, Early Childhood Education or Hospital and Tourism Management majors. Not open to students with credit in F&N 208.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| WOST 23600 - Mothers And Daughters In Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course acquaints students with a new body of literature by women. Students explore mother-daughter relationships as presented in this literature to enhance their understanding of feminist approaches to life. Not open to students with credit in ENGL 23600. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| WOST 32000 - By And About Women |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This literature course will emphasize significant texts by major women writers such as Atwood, the Brontes, Cather, Chopin, Dickinson, Eliot, Glaspell, Hurston, Jewett, Lessing, Mansfield, Morrison, Oates, Rich, and Woolf. Although the class will study mainly 19th and 20th century English and American writers, the readings will not be restricted to these. In addition, the readings will also include a variety of literary genres-novel, short fiction, poetry, and drama. Not open to students with credit in ENGL 320. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| WOST 32400 - International Women's Literature |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Course presents an international perspective on women's social, political, economic and imaginative lives. It focuses on the literary efforts of women to question, challenge, and examine the conditions affecting their lives. The major emphasis will be on global literatures from Africa, the Americas, Asia, and the Middle East. This course is cross-listed with ENGL 324. Not open to students with credit in ENGL 324. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| WOST 34000 - Literature By Women Of Color |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on literature written in English by women of color living in the United States. Writers included are Africa-American, Native-American, Asian-American, and Latin/Hispanic descent. The course introduces students to the emerging body of writing by women of color, heightening awareness and appreciation of these women's literary contributions. ENGL /WOST 34000 examines some of the cultural differences among these groups, as reflected in the literature. This course also explores obstacles, particularly those related to race, gender, and class, that women of color share. Finally, the course enhances understanding of the experiences shared by women from all cultures. This course is cross-listed as ENGL 34000. Not open to students with credit in ENGL 340. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| WOST 35000 - Social Psychology Of Marriage |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed to provide an understanding of contemporary courtship, marriage, and family interaction as cultural, social, and social-psychological phenomena. Consideration of the major sources of marital strain and conflict within a heterogeneous, rapidly changing society. Not open to students who have had HDFS 350 or SOC 350. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| WOST 45000 - Sex Roles In Modern Society |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. A critical examination of the complementary roles of men and women with particular attention to problems of role adjustment in the contemporary United States. The neo-feminist movement and countermovements. Role coflicts and adjustments in such areas as family, education, employment, and the political area. Not open to students with credit in SOC 45000. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| WOST 47000 - Women In The Media |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Focusing on the contributions made by women in newspaper, television, film, and performance, this course will explore how women are shaping societal and cultural values. Not open to students with credit in COM 470. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
|
| WOST 49000 - Topics In Women's Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Topics vary. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
Calumet
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
|
| WOST H2600 - History Of American Women |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Covers American women from 1607 to the present. Focuses on the changes in the lives of American women over the centuries; family, health, education, work,
etc. It also shows the significance of women's lives and their contributions to America. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-South Bend
|
| WOST W1000 - Gender Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Designed primarily for first-year students, this course analyzes the concept of gender in culture and society. (core course)
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
|
| WOST W1050 - Introduction To Women's Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This introductory course examines both the relation of women's studies to other disciplines and the multiple ways in which gender experience is understood and currently studied. Beginning with a focus on how inequalities between women and men, as well as among women, have been explained and critiqued, the course considers the impact of social structure and culture on gender. The intersections of gender, race, class, sexual orientation, and age are investigated in both national and international contexts. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
|
| WOST W2100 - Introduction to Women's Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An interdisciplinary introduction to women's studies via readings from core discipline areas and presentation of methodological/ bibliographical tools for social science research on gender issues. Examines women's historic and contemporary status legally, politically, and economically, as well as women's struggle in identity, expression, sexuality, and lifestyle. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the Social and Behavioral Sciences distribution requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| WOST W2250 - Gender, Sexuality, and Popular Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Examination of popular cultural "makings" of masculinity, feminity and sexuality through typical representations of gender within fiction, theatre, cinema, radio, music, television, journalism, and other specular mass media. Analysis of developing internation telecommunications "superhighway" and struggles to secure increased representation of women and of feminist perspectives withing existing culture industries. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| WOST W2400 - Topics in Feminism |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Exploration of feminist scholarship on a specific topic of current interest, e.g., women and social activism; pornography; reproductive rights; lesbian and gay studies; gender in early education; contemporary women's movement. Specific topics announced in the Schedule of Classes. Suitable for students without previous women's studies courses. Approved by Arts and Sciences for the Social and Behavioral Sciences distribution requirement. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| WOST W3000 - Topics In Women's Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. An interdisciplinary study of selected themes, issues, and methodologies in women's studies. May be repeated for up to 6 credit hours. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| WOST W3010 - International Perspectives on Women |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Feminist analysis of women's legal, social and economic status in two or more cultures other than those of the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and Europe. Interdisciplinary approach. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| WOST W3020 - Topics in Gender Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Interdisciplinary approach to selected ideas, trends, and problems in women's studies. Specific topics to be announced in the Schedule of Classes and the booklet. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| WOST W3040 - Feminist Theories |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. Overview, in historical context, of feminist texts that analyze gender asymmetry in society; intersections of gender with other differences; and unequal distribution of power. In-depth study of key debates in Western feminism; selected readings by influential non-Western feminists. Required for WOST major. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| WOST W3400 - Topics in Lesbian and Gay Culture |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. This course examines, through the study of literary and/or visual texts, aspects of Lesbian and Gay culture, with attention to the artistic value of the texts as well as their significance as cultural documents. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
|
| WOST W4000 - Topics in Women's Studies |
|
Credit Hours: 3.00. An interdisciplinary approach to selected ideas, trends, and problems in women's studies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
|
| WOST W4020 - Seminar In Women's Studies |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course focuses on issues and controversies in the new scholarship on women. Recently taught as Women as Agents of Change with an emphasis placed on theories of change and women?s role in creating change in America.
. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-Columbus
TSW-Indianapolis
TSW-Kokomo
TSW-New Albany
TSW-Richmond
TSW-South Bend
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| WOST W4800 - Practicum in Women's Studies |
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Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Directed study of aspects of policy related to women's issues based upon field experience. Directed readings, practicum in social agency, papers, and analytical journal required. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
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| WOST W4950 - Readings and Research in Women's Studies |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Individual readings and research. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
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| WOST W4990 - Senior Colloquium In Women'S Studies |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. This is a culminating interdisciplinary course for advanced students who are prepared to present the results of an original major research effort on a topic in women's studies. Participants will be expected to read and evaluate the presentations of other students and participating faculty. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IUPUI
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| WOST W6010 - Women's Studies Contemporary Research Social And Behavioral Sciences |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The course surveys contemporary social/behavioral science research in women's studies. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| WOST W6020 - Survey Of Contemporary Research In Women's Studies: The Humanities |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. The course surveys contemporary humanities research in women's studies. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
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| WOST W6950 - Graduate Readings And Research In Women's Studies |
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Credit Hours: 3.00 to 6.00. Intensive study of selected topics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
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| WOST W7010 - Graduate Topics In Women's Studies |
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Credit Hours: 3.00 or 4.00. Intensive study of a major topic or topics in contemporary feminist studies. Seminar format. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
3.000 OR 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Course Attributes: Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
IU Fort Wayne
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| YDAE 15200 - Agricultural Communication Seminar |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course provides an introduction to agricultural communication as a professional field, including its current status and role within the larger U.S. mass media system. The course will also provide an overview of career options and professional skills and competencies required of agricultural communicators. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Youth Development and Ag Educ
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| YDAE 24000 - Seminar In Agricultural Education |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Development of an understanding of the origin, scope, and objectives of agricultural education; role of the agricultural science and business teacher as a professional educator; basic responsibilities of a teacher of agricultural science and business; and significance of legislation affecting agricultural education. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Youth Development and Ag Educ
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| YDAE 29000 - Special Problems In Youth Development And Agricultural Education |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Open primarily to freshmen and sophomores who desire to study special problems in agricultural communication, agricultural education, life science education, extension education, leadership education or youth development not covered in regular coursework. To be arranged with instructor or departmental representative prior to registering. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Youth Development and Ag Educ
Course Attributes: Lower Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
Learning Objectives:
1. Course will address the college Communications and Critical Thinking outcomes.
2. Demonstrate the ability to write and speak with effectiveness while considering audience and purpose.
3. Demonstrate critical thinking by using data and reasoning to develop sound responses to complex problems.
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| YDAE 31800 - Coordination Of Supervised Agricultural Experience Programs |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Record keeping and supervisory skills needed to advise and coordinate supervised agricultural experience programs for secondary agricultural science and business students. Integration of supervised agricultural experiences with programming in youth organizations and classroom instruction for secondary agricultural science and business classrooms. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Youth Development and Ag Educ
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| YDAE 31900 - Planning Agricultural Science And Business Programs |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Development of course content plans that coordinate and utilize agricultural science and business, community resources, FFA, and supervised agricultural experience programs. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Youth Development and Ag Educ
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| YDAE 35900 - Leadership In Developing The Agricultural Professional |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Leadership skills that enhance effectiveness of the agricultural professional. Students develop leadership skills through course activities and content that concentrate on team building, understanding communicating, time management, motivational skills, and goal setting. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Youth Development and Ag Educ
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| YDAE 38500 - Urban Service-Learning |
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Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Using service-learning as a pedagogy, students will have the opportunity to deepen and expand classroom learning through thoughtful, collaborative engagement with community, organizations, agencies and/or educational institutions and the people they serve. This course will offer opportunities to engage complex, real-world problems and to test the efficacy of disciplinary and interdisciplinary approaches to finding solutions. Typically offered Spring Fall.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Youth Development and Ag Educ
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 9 credits
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| YDAE 40000 - Agricultural Education Study Abroad |
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Credit Hours: 0.00 to 8.00. Utilized to record credits earned through participation in Purdue study abroad programs with cooperating foreign universities. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 8.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Youth Development and Ag Educ
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 8 credits
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| YDAE 44000 - Methods Of Teaching Agricultural Education |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Principles and procedures for teaching agricultural science and business in public schools. Must be admitted to teacher education program. Typically offered Fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Youth Development and Ag Educ
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| YDAE 44100 - Field Experience In Agricultural Education Programs |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Field experience in agricultural science and business programs to include observation and participation in the teaching process and program development activities. Typically offered Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Experiential, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Youth Development and Ag Educ
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| YDAE 46000 - Agricultural Publishing |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Learning experiences in all phases of agricultural publishing, including audience analysis, generating story ideas, researching, interviewing, writing, editing, photography, page design, desktop publishing, printing specifications and estimates, and distribution. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Youth Development and Ag Educ
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
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| YDAE 48000 - Agricultural Communication Capstone Seminar |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Prepares graduating students for entry to the workplace, assesses and enhances their communication knowledge and skills, and provides project experiences that will demonstrate their ability to communicate scientific and technical information through a variety of media. Projects will include student presentations and magazine style articles on issues of concern to agricultural and general audiences; and a final project that requires students to conceive and create a web site that uses converging media to communicate effectively a topical issue. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Youth Development and Ag Educ
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| YDAE 49000 - Special Problems |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. Open to undergraduates who desire to study special problems in agricultural communications, agricultural education, or youth development not covered in regular coursework. To be arranged with the instructor or departmental representative prior to registering. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Youth Development and Ag Educ
Course Attributes: Dept Credit, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| YDAE 49100 - Special Topics In Youth Development And Agricultural Education |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Designed for specialized topic areas for which there is no specific course, but have enough student interest to justify formalized teaching of an undergraduate-level course. The course may be repeated by a student as long as the topic being taught is not repeated. The specific topic that is offered will be indicated on the student's record. To be arranged with the instructor or departmental representative prior to registering. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Youth Development and Ag Educ
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| YDAE 49700 - Thesis Research |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. For Honors students only doing specialized youth development and agricultural education research. Arrange with academic advisor and honors research coordinator before registering. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Youth Development and Ag Educ
Course Attributes: Honors, Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
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| YDAE 49900 - Special Problems In Agricultural Communication |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00. Application of principles of mass communication in the production of agriculturally related news, feature, and magazine articles, radio and television reports, photographs, and publications in the Department of Agricultural Communication Service. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Youth Development and Ag Educ
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated for a maximum of 6 credits
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| YDAE 54000 - Program Development In Agricultural And Extension Education |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. Application of principles of agricultural and extension education. Emphasis on program development, supervised experience programs, and effective organization of an agricultural and extension education program. Typically offered Fall.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Youth Development and Ag Educ
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated up to 1 times
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| YDAE 54200 - Introduction To Agricultural Biotechnology For Educators |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (HORT 54200) This course is offered, via distance education, to help formal and informal educators understand how transgenic organisms are produced, as well as to enable them to teach science and issues surrounding agricultural biotechnology. Typically offered Summer.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Youth Development and Ag Educ
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
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| YDAE 55500 - Principles Of Extension Education |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. An overview of the origin, scope, function, objectives, and organization of the cooperative extension service, including a thorough analysis of the work of the extension educator and career opportunities. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Youth Development and Ag Educ
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| YDAE 56500 - Principles Of Adult Education |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. (EDCI 56500) Principles of adult education applied to helping adults learn, evaluating their performance, and determining their needs. Examines history, philosophy, and research of adult education. Explores techniques required in design and delivery of instruction for adults. Typically offered Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Youth Development and Ag Educ
Course Attributes: Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
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| YDAE 59000 - Special Problems |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00. A study of special problems in agricultural communications, agricultural education, or youth development not covered in regular coursework. To be arranged with the instructor or departmental representative prior to registering. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 6.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Individual Study
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Youth Development and Ag Educ
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| YDAE 59100 - Special Topics |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Specialized topics not covered in other courses. Topics, requirements, and credits to be determined yearly. To be arranged with the instructor or departmental representative prior to registering. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Indiana College Network, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Individual Study, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Youth Development and Ag Educ
Course Attributes: Upper Division, Variable Title
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| YDAE 59500 - Internship In Agricultural And Extension Education |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 10.00. A special course designed to provide practical field experience under professional supervision in selected situation related to the student's area of specialization. Amount of credit to be determined by the nature and extent of the assignment. To be arranged with the instructor of departmental representative prior to registering. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 10.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Experiential
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Youth Development and Ag Educ
Course Attributes: Internship, Upper Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| YDAE 62000 - Adolescent Development In Context |
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Credit Hours: 3.00. This course is a graduate level seminar of major issues concerning adolescents, with attention to developmental perspective. The social ecology of adolescent development-an understanding of adolescents in their social contexts- is emphasized. Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Youth Development and Ag Educ
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Students will gain broad and accurate knowledge of the basic features of physical, cognitive, social, and psychological development during the middle and high school years.
2. Students will gain an understanding of how personal characteristics such as gender, socioeconomic status, and racial or ethnic background, as well as social contexts such as the family, peer group, school, and neighborhood, interact to affect adolescent development.
3. Students will develop the capacity to critically evaluate research or writings on adolescent development and behavior, based on social scientific theory and research on adolescence.
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| YDAE 64000 - Courses Of Study In Agricultural Education Programs |
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Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00. Principles and procedures of curriculum construction applied to development and organization for courses of study in agricultural science and business. Typically offered Summer Spring.
2.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Youth Development and Ag Educ
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| YDAE 64200 - Seminar In Agricultural And Extension Education |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Identification and analysis of contemporary programs used in agricultural and extension education. Prerequisite: 12 credit hours in Education. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
1.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Youth Development and Ag Educ
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| YDAE 64300 - Current Issues In Agricultural And Extension Education |
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Credit Hours: 2.00 or 3.00. Examination of current issues in agricultural and extension education. Prerequisite: 12 credit hours in Education. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
2.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Youth Development and Ag Educ
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette Continuing Ed
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| YDAE 64400 - YDAE Graduate Seminar |
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Credit Hours: 1.00. Students are familiarized with planning and presenting YDAE research through written and oral presentations based on the student’s proposed thesis topic. Weekly attendance and participation at seminars help graduate students use appropriate and effective presentation skills, understand expectations regarding responsible conduct of research, and learn about current topics in YDAE related research areas. Typically offered Fall.
1.000 Credit hours
Syllabus Available
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Lecture
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Youth Development and Ag Educ
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Learning Objectives:
1. Develop capacity to utilize Purdue research resources.
2. Develop writing and presentation skills necessary for success in academic careers.
3. Be informed about responsible conduct of research, research ethics, and human subjects regulations.
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| YDAE 69800 - Research MS Thesis |
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Credit Hours: 1.00 to 18.00. Research MS Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.
1.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Youth Development and Ag Educ
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| YDAE 69900 - Research PhD Thesis |
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Credit Hours: 1.0 to 18.0. Research PhD Thesis. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 TO 18.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Research
Offered By: College of Agriculture
Department: Youth Development and Ag Educ
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
West Lafayette
Repeatable for Additional Credit: Yes - May be repeated an unlimited number of times
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| ZOOL Z1030 - Animal Biology |
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Credit Hours: 5.00. Emphasis on interdependence of all living things. Type forms are used to demonstrate general biological principles. Functional aspects of biology, inheritance, development, and evolution and their application to human biology. This course will not count toward a biology major. (Lab fee required.) Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.
0.000 OR 5.000 Credit hours
Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate
Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Lecture
Offered By: Regional Campus Only
Department: IUPUI Courses-IUPUI
Course Attributes: Lower Division
May be offered at any of the following campuses:
TSW-New Albany
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